| uni_code | uni_name | course_name | study_mode | duration | fees | dept_name | course_summary | intl_admi_req | qualification | awarding_body | program_modules | inst_name | inst_contact_details | inst_total_stud | inst_address | venue_name | venue_address | venue_desc | accomodation_available | acomodation_details |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | 3-2 Engineering Program | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program allows students to earn a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) or Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in physics from Adelphi and a B.S. in engineering in five years by completing three years of liberal arts education in physics at Adelphi University, then transferring to Columbia University for two years of specialized engineering training. Combining liberal arts study and specialized engineering training, these programs provide students with the opportunity to achieve both highly developed technical and communication skills. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Adelphi UniversityBlodgett Hall, Room 8Post Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4877 | The Physics Department features state-of-the-art instructional and research laboratories and facilities including a new rooftop observatory with a GPS remote-control telescope. Small classes offer personalized attention from the faculty of renowned authors and scientists. Students also have the opportunity to conduct research with leaders in their respective fields. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Accelerated MBA - Master of Business Administration Program (GOAL) | Full Time | 17 Month(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Business | This program offers a balanced, diverse and global orientation to business education. It emphasizes leadership, team building, analysis and problem solving- skills and qualities that are essential for managerial success in the twenty-first century. The program, GOAL (Graduate Opportunity for Accelerated Learning) again offer an exciting format for busy managers on a fast career track to obtain their M.B.A. degree. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | MBA | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ACC 600 Accounting For Managerial Analysis 3 cr, ACC 601 Financial Statement Analysis 3 cr, ACC 605 Tax Aspects Of Financial Transactions 3 cr, ACC 703 Advanced Auditing 3 cr, ACC 704 Advanced Federal Taxation 3 cr, ACC 708 Seminar In Accounting Theory 3 cr, BUS 653 Business Ethics International Perspectives 3 cr, BUS 662 Entrepreneurship/Intrapreneurship 3 cr, BUS 679 Strategic Management 3 cr, BUS 689 Persuasive Communications And Negotiation 3 cr BUS 690 S/T: Conflict Management. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Associate of Arts in Liberal Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program in Liberal Arts is a degree for students who want a broad, liberal arts-based degree that will prepare them for both advanced degrees and the world of work. This degree option allows students to quickly achieve a credential that can benefit their career while preparing themselves for a future bachelor’s degree program. Students can earn up to 34 credits in prior learning, making it possible to complete this degree program in two semesters. The associate’s degree includes all of the same required liberal arts core courses as the other bachelor’s degree programs at Adelphi. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Associate degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Expository and Professional Writing, Global and Societal Development, Science and the Citizen, Mathematical Problem Solving, 6-8 credits in Arts (Art, Music, Music or Art History, Communications), ns), 6-8 credits in Humanistic Studies (Literature, Philosophy History), 6-8 credits in Social Science (Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Associate of Arts in Liberal Arts - LPN Pre-Nursing Path | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program assists Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs) who want to earn a Bachelor's degree in nursing and pursue their nursing career goals. This unique program allows student to receive college credit for their LPN training and other work experiences, take courses on a schedule that allows them to continue to work full time, and finish their Bachelor's degree program in less time and at less expense than traditional undergraduate programs. Students enroll in University College and receive credit for their LPN training while they earn an Associate's Degree in Liberal Arts and prepare for admission to the School of Nursing. Then, providing they are successfully admitted to the School of Nursing, LPN students are allowed to take challenge exams that would them to exempt up to 12 credits of their Bachelor's degree program. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Associate degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:BIO 203 The Human Body I,BIO 204 The Human Body II, BIO 208 Microbiology, BIO 485 Special Topics in Biology,Quantitative Problem Solving, Science and the Citizen, Global and Societal Development, Expository and Professional Writing, Essentials of Chemistry, 6-8 credits in Arts (Art, Music, Music or Art History, Communications), 6-8 credits in Humanistic Studies (Literature, Philosophy, History), 6-8 credits in Social Science (Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Associate of Science in Emergency Services Administration | Distance / Online | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | Office of Admissions | This program is for students who want a liberal arts-based degree that will also prepare them for a career in the growing field of emergency services. This option allows students to quickly achieve a credential that can benefit their career while preparing themselves for a future bachelor’s degree program. Students can receive up to 30 credits in prior learning, including credit for their academy training, making it possible to complete this degree program in two semesters. The A.S. includes all of the same required liberal arts core courses as other bachelor’s programs at Adelphi. This program is available entirely online or can be completed taking a mixture of online and live-instruction courses. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Associate degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Emergency Medical Technician, Essentials of Firefighting,Hazardous Materials/First Responder Operations, Firefighter I, Arson Recognition, Building Construction, Incident Command, Fire or EMS Lieutenant (minimum 1 year), Asst. or Deputy Chief, Expository and Professional Writing, Humanities Electives, Principles of Emergency Services, Emergency Services Management and Administration, Legal Aspects of Emergency Services, Introduction to Financial Concepts for Emergency Services, Emergency and Disaster Preparedness, Master Planning for Public Emergency Management, Occupational Safety and Health, Management of Human Resources, Emergency Services Leadership. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Associate of Science in Emergency Services Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program is for students who want a liberal arts-based degree that will also prepare them for a career in the growing field of emergency services. This option allows students to quickly achieve a credential that can benefit their career while preparing themselves for a future bachelor’s degree program. Students can receive up to 30 credits in prior learning, including credit for their academy training, making it possible to complete this degree program in two semesters. The A.S. includes all of the same required liberal arts core courses as other bachelor’s programs at Adelphi. This program is available entirely online or can be completed taking a mixture of online and live-instruction courses. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Associate degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Emergency Medical Technician, Essentials of Firefighting,Hazardous Materials/First Responder Operations, Firefighter I, Arson Recognition, Building Construction, Incident Command, Fire or EMS Lieutenant (minimum 1 year), Asst. or Deputy Chief, Expository and Professional Writing, Humanities Electives, Principles of Emergency Services, Emergency Services Management and Administration, Legal Aspects of Emergency Services, Introduction to Financial Concepts for Emergency Services, Emergency and Disaster Preparedness, Master Planning for Public Emergency Management, Occupational Safety and Health, Management of Human Resources, Emergency Services Leadership. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | Students in this program are expected to become versed in the theories and practices central to the anthropological perspective. With this in mind, the curriculum of the department focuses on developing those skills essential to the discipline. Further, the anthropology degree curriculum focuses on developing those student skills essential for the understanding of the interdisciplinary relationships between anthropology, social and natural sciences, the humanities, and the arts. The skills acquired through the study of anthropology are transferable to other social sciences and to the larger world. | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The general education courses include GEN 100 First Year Orientation Experience, 1 credit; GEN 110 First Year Seminar, 3 credits; ENG 107 Art and Craft of Writing, 3 credits; Second Competency course, 3 credits; Distribution Courses, 24 credits. The distribution courses include 6 credits in the Arts: Art/Art History, Communications, Performing Arts, Music; 6 credits in the Humanities: English, History, International Studies, Philosophy; 6 credits in the Natural Sciences and Mathematics: Biology, Biochemistry/Chemistry, Computer Science/Mathematics, Physics; 6 credits in the Social Sciences: Anthropology, Economics, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology. The major requirements include ANT 105 Culture and Society 3; ANT 111 Cultural Anthropology 3; ANT 112 Physical Anthropology 4; ANT 113 Archaeology 4; Department Electives. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 102P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4110 | This department is the study of human culture in its widest sense, extending back to our primate origins.Because of its broad sense, anthropology provides an appreciation of the relationships among the environment, biology, and culture though time.It is a forum for a unique bridging and bonding of the natural sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Anthropology - Environmental Anthropology Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This concentration provides an opportunity for students to integrate their work in anthropology with many of the key perspectives from environmental studies. The relationship between the two fields is approached through a series of courses all taught by the anthropology faculty. The courses demonstrate the critical relationship that exists between human settlement patterns and their environmental setting. Applications are drawn from the prehistoric past up through the contemporary world. Students should contact their advisor to explore the opportunities for including these selections into their course of study. | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The modules include ANT 229 Humankind Culture and the Environment 4; ANT 265 Developing World: Culture, Conflict and Changes 3; ENV 280 Urban Environments 4; ANT 343 Primate Ecology and Sustainable Development 4; HON 486 Environmental Anthropology 4; ENV 561 Human Ecology 3; ANT 566 Populations, Health and Disease Ecology 4. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 102P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4110 | This department is the study of human culture in its widest sense, extending back to our primate origins.Because of its broad sense, anthropology provides an appreciation of the relationships among the environment, biology, and culture though time.It is a forum for a unique bridging and bonding of the natural sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Art: Art Education | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program is for students seeking New York State Certification (K-12) in the teaching of art. Art education students major in studio art and do their concentration in education. | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The required credits include 57 credits in art and art history; 28 credits Art Education sequence; 28 credits in free electives (art electives or courses taken in other departments). The required course work in art and art history include 30 credits Studio Art Foundation; 15 credits Fine Art Studios (including the capstone course Senior Portfolio in Fine Art); 12 credits Art History; Art in the World I; Art in the World II; Modern Art I; Art History Elective. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Art: Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The required course work includes ARH 196 Art and the World I 3; ARH 197 Art and the World II 3; Senior Capstone Courses: Internship 3 or Thesis Project 3. The variable requirements include 6 Elective Art History courses which may include foreign study or Adelphi's Florence Program 18; ARH 243 Art of Africa and Oceania 3; ARH 245 Art of Asia 3; ARH 247 Art of Classical Antiquity 3; ARH 248 Medieval Art 3; ARH 249 Art of the Italian Renaissance 3; ARH 250 Northern European Renaissance Art 3; ARH 251 Nineteenth Century Art 3; ARH 252 Modern Art I 3; ARH 253 Modern Art II 3; ARH 266 History of Photography 3; ARH 392 History of Graphic Design; Art History Seminars (students must take at least 3) 9. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program in addition to General Education requirements, 60-63 program credits are required for a B.S. in Chemistry and the B.A. in Chemistry. The undergraduate study of chemistry at Adelphi is based on the principle of progression: a progression from the simplest to the most difficult concepts. This progression starts with general chemistry, which introduces basic concepts, followed by surveys of the different branches of chemistry, these being organic, analytical, inorganic, physical chemistry, and biochemistry. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:General Chemistry II, General Chemistry, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Organic Laboratory, Quantitative Analysis, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Physical Chemistry I, Physical Chemistry Laboratory I, Inorganic Chemistry, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Statistics for the Natural Science, Calculus and Analytic Geometry I, Calculus and Analytic Geometry II, Physics I, Physical Chemistry II, Physical Chemistry Laboratory II, Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory, Advanced Organic Chemistry, Instrumental Methods and Physical Analysis, Biochemistry I, Biochemistry II, Computers and Chemistry. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Science BuildingRoom 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4130 | This department is the branch of the physical sciences that deals with material substances. Its purview includes the elements, the combination of elements and formation of compounds, the phenomena that arise from exposure of substances to different physical conditions, and reactions between substances. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Communication Disorders | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders | This program provides professional training in speech-language pathology and audiology within a strong liberal arts framework. Students acquire a basic knowledge of the speech, language, and hearing sciences. Courses fulfill certain of the academic and practicum requirements for clinical certification from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA). The undergraduate program also meets the core requirements for admission to graduate school. Students may select additional courses leading to New York State Certification as a Teacher of Students with Speech and Language Disabilities (TSSLD). However, student teaching is required for certification and is only offered at the graduate level. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:The Speech-Language and Hearing Professions, Oral Communication in the Professional World, Public Speaking, Sound and the Auditory Mechanism, Anatomy and Physiology of the Speech Mechanism, Phonetics, Development of Speech and Language, Introduction to Speech Science, Survey of Developmental Language Disorders, Survey of Speech Disorders, Clinical Audiology, Rehabilitation of Hearing, Observation of Speech and Hearing Rehabilitation and Diagnostic Evaluations, Clinical Practice in Speech and Hearing: A, Clinical Practice in Speech and Hearing: B, Current Issues in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, Survey of Neurogenic Disorders. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Harvey Hall Room, 1 South Avenue, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3343 | The mission of the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders (CSD), Master of Science (MS) program in Speech-Language Pathology is to provide students with a strong understanding of the connections between the scientific bases of discipline and its clinical practices. This department strive to prepare the finest professional and ethical research-based clinicians who can assess and treat children and adults with communication disorders within the scope of practice and from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program combines theoretical analysis with the empirical study of institutions. Students focus on the discipline's pragmatic aspects by studying the impact of current economic policy issues on individual, national and global scales. Department faculty conduct research in the areas of economic development, environmental economics, history of economic thought, human capital theory, labor economics, international economics, and systems of political economy. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:English 107, Competency II, Freshman Seminar, Freshman Orientation, Arts, Social Sciences, Humanities, Science/Mathematics, The Price System, The National Economy, Microeconomic Analysis, Macroeconomic Analysis. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in English - Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program in English encourages students to discover the pleasures and values of the written word in their own writing and that of acknowledged artists. The program gives students as comprehensive and acquaintance as possible with the work of important writers and interesting writers. The program also provides a close look at the ways in which good writing gains its power. The English curriculum emphasizes historical development by requiring students to take the three-semester survey called "Literature in English." Students must also take a course in literary criticism and theory called Interpretive Theories and Methods. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Medieval Literature, Renaissance Literature, 18th Century Literature, The 18th Century Novel, Contemporary Novel, Modern Poetry, Contemporary Poetry, The Romantics, The Victorians, English Novel in the 19th Century, 20th Century Literature, 19th Century Literature, Major Author(s) in English, Austen, 19th Century American Literature, American Literature Modern Period, Chaucer, Shakespeare I, Shakespeare II, Milton, Writing Fiction, Writing Poetry, Forms in Poetry, Creative Non-Fiction, Writing Plays, Advanced Fiction, Advanced Poetry, Advanced Playwriting, Topics in Creative Writing, Internship. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Harvey HallRoom 216, 1 South AvenuePost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4020 | This college offers a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in English - Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program in English encourages students to discover the pleasures and values of the written word in their own writing and that of acknowledged artists. The program gives students as comprehensive and acquaintance as possible with the work of important writers and interesting writers. The program also provides a close look at the ways in which good writing gains its power. The English curriculum emphasizes historical development by requiring students to take the three-semester survey called "Literature in English." Students must also take a course in literary criticism and theory called Interpretive Theories and Methods. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Literature in English I, Literature in English II, Literature in English III, Interpretive Theories and Methods, Medieval Literature, Renaissance Literature, 17th Century Literature, Chaucer, Shakespeare I, Shakespeare II, Milton, Major Author(s) in English, Major Author(s) in Translation, Modern Drama, Contemporary Drama, Modern Novel, Contemporary Novel, Modern Poetry, Contemporary Poetry, The Romantics, The Victorians, English Novel in the 19th Century, 20th Century Literature, 19th Century Literature, Major Author(s) in English, Austen, Major Authors(s) in Translation, 19th Century American Literature, British Literature, American Literature, Thematic Topics, Classical Heritage, Third Gender Literature, Women and Literature, The Tragic Vision, The Comic Vision, Literature and Other Arts, Adelphi in Florence, The Bible in Western Literature, Literary Criticism Theory, History of the English Language. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Harvey HallRoom 216, 1 South AvenuePost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4020 | This college offers a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Foreign Language Studies - French | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies | This program emphasizes French culture in the world in addition to fluency in the language. Students may choose to pursue a B.A. in International Studies combined with their study of French. French is the second most frequently taught foreign language in the world after English. Spoken on five continents, French is an official language of 28 countries. Knowledge of French provides an entrée into global careers that range from foreign affairs and trade to international marketing and tourism. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Level IV French, French Phonetics and Diction, Advanced French Conversation, French Grammar and Composition, French Translation Techniques, French Cross-Cultural Concepts, France Today, French Speaking World, Emergence Of Modern France I, Emergence Of Modern France II, Introduction to French Literature, Seminar in French Literature of the 19th Century, Seminar in French Literature of the 19th Century. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies, Science Building Room 216C, Adelphi UniversityPost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4050 | This department teaches the language used by people to express themselves their needs, feelings, and thoughts. Culture is woven into language; thus, while one learn another language, it is better to be able to understand how and why people of other cultures view the world differently and also gain insight into their distinctive solutions to universal problems. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Foreign Language Studies - Spanish | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies | This program emphasizes Spanish culture in the world in addition to fluency in the language. Students may choose to pursue a B.A. in International Studies combined with their study of Spanish. Spanish is the second most spoken language in the world; more than 266 million people speak it as their native language, and there are more than 30 million Spanish speakers in the United States. The demand for degreed professionals who are fluent in both English and Spanish is continually increasing. Thorough knowledge of Spanish is an asset in careers that range from legal and health care professions to foreign affairs and marketing. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Level IV Spanish, Spanish for Native Speakers, Advanced Spanish Conversation, Spanish Grammar and Composition, Spanish Translation Techniques, Spanish Cross Cultural Concepts, Spain Today, Trends And Tendencies In Hispanic America, Development Of Hispanic American Identity, Caribbean Culture And Civilization, Introduction To Hispanic Literature, Survey of the Literature of Spain, Survey of the Literature of Spain, Survey Of The Literature Of Hispanic America, Seminar In Spanish Literature, Seminar In Hispanic American Literature. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies, Science Building Room 216C, Adelphi UniversityPost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4050 | This department teaches the language used by people to express themselves their needs, feelings, and thoughts. Culture is woven into language; thus, while one learn another language, it is better to be able to understand how and why people of other cultures view the world differently and also gain insight into their distinctive solutions to universal problems. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in History | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program prepares students for graduate study in the discipline as well as for the intellectual demands of many other professions, including law, journalism, civil service, banking, and business. History majors bring to their careers highly valued abilities in research and writing, along with a sophisticated knowledge of world affairs. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Western Civilization I and II, World Civilization I and II, Additional European , United States History at any level, Non-West, Sophomore Research Skills Seminar, Senior Research Seminar , Additional History Electives. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Blodgett HallRoom 200, Adelphi UniversityPost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4790 | This department is the study of the human past, is one of the most ancient intellectual pursuits. To be without history is to be without memory, to have no knowledge of who and how people came to being. By requiring the development of such intellectual capacities as imagination, reading, writing, critical thinking, and moral judgment, history encourages the full maturation of the mind. Just as important, the study of other people in different times and places expands the student’s understanding of what it is to be human. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in International Studies - Business | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program in International Studies provides students insight of global business practices in addition to a broad base of knowledge in areas such as Economics, Accounting, Finance, Management, and Marketing. The foreign language component of the major adds valuable skills that are essential currency in a competitive career marketplace. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:International Business, Pre-Calculus For Non-Majors, The Price System, The National Economy, Principles of Accounting I, Principles of Accounting II, Legal and Ethical Environment, Financial Markets, Managerial Finance, International Finance, Principles of Management, Organizational Behavior, Marketing, Advertising Management, Introduction to International Business French/Spanish I. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in International Studies - Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies | This program combines a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Studies with foreign language study. Attaining fluency in a foreign language is a powerful asset when competing for careers in many fields, whether in the U.S. or abroad. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Social Science and Environmental Problems, Natural Science and Environmental Problems, Chemical Safety in Laboratory and Studio, Historical Geology, Human Evolution, Urban Environments, Marine Resources, The French Speaking World, Emergence of Modern France I, Emergence of Modern France II, Spain Today, Trends and Tendencies in Hispanic America, Development of Hispanic American Identity, Caribbean Culture And Civilization. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Languages and International Studies, Science Building Room 216C, Adelphi UniversityPost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4050 | This department teaches the language used by people to express themselves their needs, feelings, and thoughts. Culture is woven into language; thus, while one learn another language, it is better to be able to understand how and why people of other cultures view the world differently and also gain insight into their distinctive solutions to universal problems. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in International Studies - Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program combines a bachelor’s degree in Political Science with foreign language study. Attaining fluency in a foreign language is a powerful asset when competing for careers in many fields, whether in the U.S. or abroad. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Theories and Practice of International Relations, Comparative Politics, Race and Politics, Western European Political Systems, Politics of Development and Underdevelopment, Women and Comparative Political Development, International Law and Organization, American Foreign Policy since 1945, International Politics of East and Southeast Asia, Comparative Foreign Policy, International Political Economy, The French Speaking World, Emergence of Modern France I, Emergence of Modern France II, Spain Today, Trends and Tendencies in Hispanic America, Development of Hispanic American Identity, Caribbean Culture And Civilization. |
Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Latin American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program examines issues related to the region and to the history of the North American Hispanic groups. The field of study brings together the diverse regions of Mexico, Central and South America, and the Caribbean. Students will find that Latin American culture consists of not only Western but also Chinese, Japanese, African, and pre-Columbian strands and that a great variety of languages are spoken, such as Maya, Zapotec, Quechua, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Papiamento, Patois, and Creole. The program will prepare students to be informed about and sensitive to the needs of the multicultural population of the South and North American continents. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Cultural Anthropology, Peoples and Cultures of Mexico, The Archaeology of Mesoamerica, Introduction to Economics, History, Caribbean Culture and Civilization. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 102P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4110 | This department is the study of human culture in its widest sense, extending back to our primate origins.Because of its broad sense, anthropology provides an appreciation of the relationships among the environment, biology, and culture though time.It is a forum for a unique bridging and bonding of the natural sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Literature - Childhood and Adolescent Education | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program prepares students for advanced degrees in education in order to become certified as a school teacher. Students who achieve this degree can go onto careers in education as teachers. The degree includes coursework that gives the student an excellent academic preparation for application to graduate programs in education. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Expository and Professional Writing, Expository and Professional Writing, Global and Societal Development, 6-8 credits in Social Science (Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology), 6-8 credits in Humanistic Studies (Literature, Philosophy, History), 6-8 credits in Math/Science, 6-8 credits in Arts (Music, Art, Music or Art History, Communications), 6-8 credits in a Language (Other than English), Introduction to Literature, Introduction to American Literature, American Lit and Culture, Introduction to Poetry, Introduction to European Lit, Introduction to Drama, American Popular Novel, The Gothic Novel, Myth and Fairytale, Women and Literature, Literature and Film, The Mystery Novel, Social Protest Novel, Women of Will, American Humor. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Literature - Pre-Law | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program prepares students to pursue a career in the legal field. Students who complete this plan of study intend to apply to law school. Adelphi has a unique partnership with the New York Law School to enroll qualified students into a special “3 and 3” undergraduate and graduate degree program that would allow the student to earn a Juris Doctor degree in one less year of college than is normally required. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Introduction to Philosophy, Ethics and Morality, The History of Philosophy I, The History of Philosophy II, The History of Philosophy III, History of Philosophy IV, History of Philosophy V. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, Alumnae Quad Annex 300 Room 300, Adelphi UniversityPost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4580 | This department has its origins in the Greek term that means the "love of wisdom." Because wisdom for the ancient Greeks was thought to depend on the acquisition of knowledge, the subject originally included almost all areas of knowledge. Later changes in gathering and using knowledge led to the development of the natural and social sciences; what philosophy preserved from its origins was the practice of criticism of received ideas. How can we tell truth from opinion? How can we tell right from wrong behavior? How does science relate to other kinds of knowledge? What does it mean to say that something is beautiful? Such questions connect doing philosophy today to its ancient origins. The Adelphi program centers on the history of philosophy, and on the skills of conceptual analysis and rigor in argumentation necessary for creative thinking. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program offers an excellent intellectual foundation for many careers, including law, education, government service, business, communications, campaign management, and management consulting. The department's programs use the world as a laboratory for linking theoretical concerns with practical realities. The faculty encourage students to read with understanding, express ideas with clarity and force, and analyze political problems and issues systematically. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Introduction to the American Political System, Introduction to Politics, Public Policy Theory, Politics and the Family, Special Topics, Environment and Politics, U.S. Parties and Elections, The Modern Presidency, State and Local Government, Special Topics,Ancient and Medieval Political Theory in the Western World, Modern Political Theory in the Western World, Research Design and Methodology, Special Topics, Comparative Political Analysis, Special Topics, Theories and Practice of International Relations, Race and Politics, The American Congress, Constitutional Law: Government Powers, Individual Rights in the Constitution, The Supreme Court as a Political Institution, Law and Legal Process, Public Administration, American System of Criminal Justice, Washington Semester Internship, Washington Semester Seminar, American Political Thought, Feminist Theory, Family and Sexuality in Political Theory. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, Blodgett HallRoom 202, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4590 | This department teaches the study of the forms and processes of government that every society and social organization require. The discipline also examines the role of political systems in determining the rules by which members of a community live, the community's principles and goals, and the nature and sources of political obligation. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | This program provides students with a firm foundation in the core principles, applied practices, and research methodology. Students have access to the Institute's extensive resources and research opportunities and to a faculty whose expertise spans all the disciplines of psychology. Students pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in psychology follow a curriculum of required courses that first introduce them to general psychology and the primary disciplines. As their studies progress, they can take advantage of opportunities for laboratory work, clinical field work, and internships. Senior level seminars are offered in all the disciplines. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: General Psychology, Developmental Psychology, Psychological Statistics, Psychoanalysis, Psychological Research, Cognitive Psychology, Behavior Analysis, Neuropsychology, Environmental Psychology, Psychology of Perception, Developmental Psychology II, Social Psychology, Motivation and Emotion, Psychopathology, Theories of Personality, Introduction to Forensic Psychology, Psychology of Women, Behavior Modification, Industrial/Organizational Psychology, Psychology of Addictions, Principles of Psychological Testing, Behavior Disorders in Childhood , Introduction to Counseling and Psychotherapy, Practicum in Clinical Psychology . | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Hy Weinberg Center Room 220 Adelphi University, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4800 | Adelphi has long been recognized as a pioneer in the study of psychology. In 1972, the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies became the nation first university-based professional school of psychology. Today Derner is internationally recognized for its dedication to scholarship and its commitment to training professionals to meet the needs of a society in transition. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Sociology is the systematic study of the organization and condition of society. Using both empirical and conceptual tools, the discipline analyzes the behavior of groups and the workings of social institutions. Sociology is empirical in the sense that most sociologists gather facts, but facts do not speak for themselves. Uncovering the underlying patterns that make facts meaningful is the purpose of social theory. Sociology offers a coherent method by which social patterns can be brought to light and applied to the making of social policy decisions. The student studying for a sociology degree learns to observe, measure, report, analyze, and draw conclusions about human social behavior in all its complexity. A degree in sociology is solid preparation not only for graduate study in the field but for careers in teaching, advertising, law, and administration. In both the public and private sectors, sociologists are called upon to collect data, analyze results, and generate new knowledge. | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The general education requirements include GEN 100, First Year Orientation Experience, 1 credit; GEN 110, First Year Seminar, 3 credits; ENG 107, Art and Craft of Writing, 3 credits; Second Competency course, 3 credits; Distribution Courses, 24 credits. The distribution courses include 6 credits in the Arts: Art/Art History, Communications, Performing Arts, Music; 6 credits in the Humanities: English, History, International Studies, Philosophy; 6 credits in the Natural Sciences and Mathematics: Biology, Biochemistry/Chemistry, Computer Science/Mathematics, Physics; 6 credits in the Social Sciences: Anthropology, Economics, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology. The major requirements include SOC 100 Introduction to Sociology 3; SOC 200 Quantitative Research Methods 4; SOC 201 Qualitative Research Methods 4; SOC 202 Development of Social Thought 3; SOC 203 Contemporary Sociological Theories 3; SOC 386 Majors Seminar (Capstone). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 102 PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4110 | Adelphi has long been recognized as a pioneer in the study of psychology. In 1972, the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies became the nation first university-based professional school of psychology. Today Derner is internationally recognized for its dedication to scholarship and its commitment to training professionals to meet the needs of a society in transition. | No | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A. in Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program includes ceramics, painting, photography, printmaking, and sculpture. Ceramics students can experience a full range of possibilities in clay, from traditional pottery to ceramic sculpture. Elective courses in ceramics are available at every level, from the freshman to the senior year. Painting students progress from basic observational studies in Painting I, to more self-directed work at the higher levels. Over several semesters, they are encouraged to experiment with a variety of painting media and techniques. No particular style is promoted, instead, it helps students discover a subject and approach that reflects their individual temperament and visual inclinations. Photography classes are popular at Adelphi among majors and non-majors. Art students are eligible for elective courses in photography throughout their four years of study. Introductory printmaking courses expose students to a broad range of printing techniques, while more advanced study emphasizes the development of their personal vision and style. The new, well-equipped printmaking studio affords them the opportunity to explore traditional intaglio processes (etching, aquatint, and drypoint), relief printing techniques (woodcut, linocut, and mezzotint), silk-screen, solar etching, and printing methods that employ photography and digital imagery. Contemporary sculpture is more varied than any other area of the visual arts. At Adelphi, students have the opportunity to make objects using diverse materials and techniques including welding, casting, modeling, construction, and the use of molds to create multiples. As they progress they will focus increasingly on the processes and materials that best match their creative ambitions. | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The foundation requirements include ART 101 Fundamentals of 2D Design; ART 105 Drawing 1; ART 106 Drawing II; ART 126 3D Design; ART 190 Introductory Art Seminar; ART 196 Art and the World I; ART 197 Art and the World II; ART 211 Color: Theory and Practice; ART 240 Figure Drawing and Anatomy; ART 255 Drawing III. The required credits include 57 credits in art and art history (including ART 499 Senior Portfolio in Fine Art); 28 credits in General Education; 35 credits in free electives (art electives or courses taken in other departments). The required course work in art and art history include 24 credits Studio Art Foundation; 18 credits Fine Art Studio Electives; 3 credits Senior Portfolio in Fine Art; 12 credits Art History; Art in the World I; Art in the World II; Modern Art I; Art History Elective. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A./B.S | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | This program students spend three years at Adelphi, then transfer to Columbia for two years and get both a B.S. from Adelphi (e.g. in math or computer science) and a B.S. in engineering from Columbia. In the 4/2 program, students spend four years at Adelphi and two at Columbia, ending up with a B.S. from Adelphi and an M.S. from Columbia. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Calculus and Analytic Geometry I, Calculus and Analytic Geometry II, Calculus III, Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations, Linear Algebra, Introduction to Mathematical Methods in Physics, Physics for Science Majors I, Physics for Science Majors II, General Chemistry I, General Chemistry II, Introduction to Computer Program, Introduction to Algorithms & Data Structures, The Price System, The National Economy, Introduction to Economics. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 111 Alumnae Hall, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4480 | This department is the art and science of abstraction; it is the systematic study of quantity, structure, space, and change; to paraphrase Newton, it is the language in which the universe is written. The study of mathematics provides the abilities to analyze data, discover patterns, and reason logically. Computer Science is the fusion of abstraction and technology; it is the study of representing, processing, and communicating information, the design and analysis of algorithms, and the implementation of solutions through both hardware and software. The study of computer science is both theoretical and practical, and provides the abilities to develop and to maintain software. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A./M.A. in Scholars Teacher Education Program (STEP) Adolescent Education, Grades 7-12 | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $19550 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program integrates field-intensive programs with a strong foundation in the liberal arts and sciences. It prepares candidates to teach at the adolescent (grades 7-12) levels. Graduates who successfully complete the fifth year of the program are then eligible for New York State Department of Education certification in childhood or adolescent education. This program is both comprehensive and economical. Students in this competitive program stay together as a group throughout the program. From the start, students are assigned faculty advisers to guide them in their course and field work. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course; General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements 0836-102 STEP Orientation Seminar (1 credit), xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, 0836-221 Childhood Development (Birth to Grade 6) -or- 0836-302 Perspectives on Learning and Teaching -or- 0501-115 Developmental Psychology 0836-310 Sociolinguistic Perspectives in Childhood Education, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, 0836-305 The Child with Special Needs (25 hrs FW) 0836-306 Student Assessment, 0836-304 Community, School, and Society 0836-307 Introduction to Philosophy of Education, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.A./M.A. in Scholars Teacher Education Program (STEP) Childhood Education, Grades 1-6 | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $19550 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program integrates field-intensive programs with a strong foundation in the liberal arts and sciences. It prepares candidates to teach at the childhood (grades 1-6). Graduates who successfully complete the fifth year of the program are then eligible for New York State Department of Education certification in childhood or adolescent education. This program is both comprehensive and economical. Students in this competitive program stay together as a group throughout the program. From the start, students are assigned faculty advisers to guide them in their course and field work. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course; General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements 0836-102 STEP Orientation Seminar (1 credit), xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, 0836-221 Childhood Development (Birth to Grade 6) -or- 0836-302 Perspectives on Learning and Teaching -or- 0501-115 Developmental Psychology 0836-310 Sociolinguistic Perspectives in Childhood Education, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, 0836-305 The Child with Special Needs (25 hrs FW) 0836-306 Student Assessment, 0836-304 Community, School, and Society 0836-307 Introduction to Philosophy of Education, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.B.A. in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program is marked by constant change in theories, regulations and practices. The Department of Accounting and Law provides accounting majors with a firm educational foundation to succeed now and in the future. Students acquire both the technical accounting knowledge and the analytical and managerial skills needed to apply that knowledge to complex financial reporting. Students are trained to perform with distinction in both the public and private sectors. The profession is divided into two broad areas: financial and managerial accounting. Financial accounting is the preparation and use of accounting information for external reporting. Managerial accounting is the preparation and use of accounting information to measure managerial performance and develop plans and controls within an organization. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Art and Craft of Writing, Freshman Seminar, Orientation, The Price System, Introduction to Business, Principles of Accounting I, Second Competency, Principles of Management, The National Economy, Principles of Accounting II, Intermediate Accounting I, Business Law I, Pre-calculus, Information Technology and Applications, Intermediate Accounting II, Business Law II, Business Communications, Analytical and Statistical Modeling, Money and Banking, Cost Accounting, Managerial Finance, Organizational Behavior, Principles of Auditing, Management of Human Resources , Marketing. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.B.A. in Management | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program is as diverse as the business world itself, with some managers choosing to specialize in one of the functional areas of business: marketing, finance, human resources, and management information systems. Some managers are staff specialists who prepare information for colleagues; others are line managers who implement decisions and supervise the actions that result from those decisions; and senior managers most often work from a more generalized point of view. Management majors in the School of Business have the opportunity to consider all of these managerial modes before embarking on their careers. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Art and Craft of Writing, Orientation, The Price System, Introduction to Business, Principles of Accounting I, Principles of Management, The National Economy, Principles of Accounting II, Business Communications, Pre-calculus, Information Technology and Applications, Legal and Ethical Environment of Business, Marketing, Analytical and Statistical Modeling, Organizational Behavior, Managerial Finance, Management of Human Resources, Management of Production, Operations, and Technology, International Business, Entrepreneurship, Business Policy and Strategy. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.B.A. in Management - Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program is as diverse as the business world itself, with some managers choosing to specialize in one of the functional areas of business: marketing, finance, human resources, and management information systems. Some managers are staff specialists who prepare information for colleagues; others are line managers who implement decisions and supervise the actions that result from those decisions; and senior managers most often work from a more generalized point of view. Management majors in the School of Business have the opportunity to consider all of these managerial modes before embarking on their careers. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Financial Statement Analysis, Money and Banking, Financial Markets, Managerial Economics, Managerial Finance II, Investment Analysis, International Finance. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.B.A. in Management - Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program is as diverse as the business world itself, with some managers choosing to specialize in one of the functional areas of business: marketing, finance, human resources, and management information systems. Some managers are staff specialists who prepare information for colleagues; others are line managers who implement decisions and supervise the actions that result from those decisions; and senior managers most often work from a more generalized point of view. Management majors in the School of Business have the opportunity to consider all of these managerial modes before embarking on their careers. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Effective Human Resources Policies and Law, Compensation Management, Executive Development, Staffing: Recruitment, Selecting, and Training, Labor Relations. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.B.A. in Management - Management Informations Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program is as diverse as the business world itself, with some managers choosing to specialize in one of the functional areas of business: marketing, finance, human resources, and management information systems. Some managers are staff specialists who prepare information for colleagues; others are line managers who implement decisions and supervise the actions that result from those decisions; and senior managers most often work from a more generalized point of view. Management majors in the School of Business have the opportunity to consider all of these managerial modes before embarking on their careers. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Systems Analysis and Design, Data Communications, Database Management, Management Information Systems. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.B.A. in Management - Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program is as diverse as the business world itself, with some managers choosing to specialize in one of the functional areas of business: marketing, finance, human resources, and management information systems. Some managers are staff specialists who prepare information for colleagues; others are line managers who implement decisions and supervise the actions that result from those decisions; and senior managers most often work from a more generalized point of view. Management majors in the School of Business have the opportunity to consider all of these managerial modes before embarking on their careers. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Creative Problem Solving, Retail Management, Sales Management, Sales Promotion and Direct Marketing, Advertising Management, Marketing Research, Marketing Strategy. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.F.A. in Art: Graphic Design | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | Students wishing to concentrate in graphic/advertising design will normally do so beginning in their third year of study. Interested students will be required to present a portfolio to the art faculty consisting of 10-12 artworks selected from courses completed at Adelphi. This review will take place in March of the student’s second year. Its purpose is to encourage and support those students who demonstrate the discipline and dedication necessary for success in this demanding program. | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The freshmen year courses include ART 101 Fundamentals of 2D Design; ART 105 Drawing 1; ART 106 Drawing II; ART 126 3D Design; ART 190 Introductory Art Seminar. The sophomore year courses include ART 196 Art and the World I; ART 197 Art and the World II; ART 211 Color: Theory and Practice; ART 240 Figure Drawing and Anatomy; ART 255 Drawing III. The junior year courses include ART 301 Computer Graphic Applications I; ART 329 Computer Graphic Applications II; ART 330 Graphic Design I; ART 392 History of Graphic Design; ART 430 Graphic Design II. The senior year courses include ART 437 Advertising Design I; ART 438 Advertising Design II; ART 434 Senior Promotional Materials (capstone); ART 492 Internship. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.F.A. in Art: Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program includes ceramics, painting, photography, printmaking, and sculpture. Ceramics students can experience a full range of possibilities in clay, from traditional pottery to ceramic sculpture. Elective courses in ceramics are available at every level, from the freshman to the senior year. Painting students progress from basic observational studies in Painting I, to more self-directed work at the higher levels. Over several semesters, they are encouraged to experiment with a variety of painting media and techniques. No particular style is promoted, instead, it helps students discover a subject and approach that reflects their individual temperament and visual inclinations. Photography classes are popular at Adelphi among majors and non-majors. Art students are eligible for elective courses in photography throughout their four years of study. Introductory printmaking courses expose students to a broad range of printing techniques, while more advanced study emphasizes the development of their personal vision and style. The new, well-equipped printmaking studio affords them the opportunity to explore traditional intaglio processes (etching, aquatint, and drypoint), relief printing techniques (woodcut, linocut, and mezzotint), silk-screen, solar etching, and printing methods that employ photography and digital imagery. Contemporary sculpture is more varied than any other area of the visual arts. At Adelphi, students have the opportunity to make objects using diverse materials and techniques including welding, casting, modeling, construction, and the use of molds to create multiples. As they progress they will focus increasingly on the processes and materials that best match their creative ambitions. | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The foundation requirements include ART 101 Fundamentals of 2D Design; ART 105 Drawing 1; ART 106 Drawing II; ART 126 3D Design; ART 190 Introductory Art Seminar; ART 196 Art and the World I; ART 197 Art and the World II; ART 211 Color: Theory and Practice; ART 240 Figure Drawing and Anatomy; ART 255 Drawing III. The required credits include 72 credits in art and art history (including ART 401 and 402 Senior Thesis Project I and II); 28 credits in General Education; 20 credits in free electives (art electives or courses taken in other departments). The required course work in art and art history 24 credits Studio Art Foundation; 18 credits Fine Art Studio Electives; 3 credits Contemporary Art Seminar; 3 credits Senior Thesis Project I; 3 credits Senior Thesis Project II; 15 credits Art History; Art in the World I; Art in the World II; Modern Art I; Modern Art II; Art History Elective. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.F.A. in Studio Art - Ceramics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program begins with a rigorous studio foundation in drawing and design and culminates in concentrated study in painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, ceramics, or graphic design. Students will graduate with the confidence and the portfolio necessary for art-related employment or advanced study at the graduate level. Students embark on a four-year journey toward visual sophistication and accomplishment beginning with studio foundation classes in drawing, color, and design that explore a grammar of form organizational and procedural principles similar to the role of grammar in language. Drawing and design become useful tools in addressing the structure of form, instilling professional work habits, and revealing and clarifying a student's personal artistic vision. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: 72 credits in studio art and art history, 28 credits in General Education, 20 credits in free electives. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.F.A. in Studio Art - Painting | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program begins with a rigorous studio foundation in drawing and design and culminates in concentrated study in painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, ceramics, or graphic design. Students will graduate with the confidence and the portfolio necessary for art-related employment or advanced study at the graduate level. Students embark on a four-year journey toward visual sophistication and accomplishment beginning with studio foundation classes in drawing, color, and design that explore a grammar of form organizational and procedural principles similar to the role of grammar in language. Drawing and design become useful tools in addressing the structure of form, instilling professional work habits, and revealing and clarifying a student's personal artistic vision. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: 72 credits in studio art and art history, 28 credits in General Education, 20 credits in free electives. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.F.A. in Studio Art - Photography | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program begins with a rigorous studio foundation in drawing and design and culminates in concentrated study in painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, ceramics, or graphic design. Students will graduate with the confidence and the portfolio necessary for art-related employment or advanced study at the graduate level. Students embark on a four-year journey toward visual sophistication and accomplishment beginning with studio foundation classes in drawing, color, and design that explore a grammar of form organizational and procedural principles similar to the role of grammar in language. Drawing and design become useful tools in addressing the structure of form, instilling professional work habits, and revealing and clarifying a student's personal artistic vision. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: 72 credits in studio art and art history, 28 credits in General Education, 20 credits in free electives. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.F.A. in Studio Art - Printmaking | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program begins with a rigorous studio foundation in drawing and design and culminates in concentrated study in painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, ceramics, or graphic design. Students will graduate with the confidence and the portfolio necessary for art-related employment or advanced study at the graduate level. Students embark on a four-year journey toward visual sophistication and accomplishment beginning with studio foundation classes in drawing, color, and design that explore a grammar of form organizational and procedural principles similar to the role of grammar in language. Drawing and design become useful tools in addressing the structure of form, instilling professional work habits, and revealing and clarifying a student's personal artistic vision. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: 72 credits in studio art and art history, 28 credits in General Education, 20 credits in free electives. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.F.A. in Studio Art - Sculpture | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program begins with a rigorous studio foundation in drawing and design and culminates in concentrated study in painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, ceramics, or graphic design. Students will graduate with the confidence and the portfolio necessary for art-related employment or advanced study at the graduate level. Students embark on a four-year journey toward visual sophistication and accomplishment beginning with studio foundation classes in drawing, color, and design that explore a grammar of form organizational and procedural principles similar to the role of grammar in language. Drawing and design become useful tools in addressing the structure of form, instilling professional work habits, and revealing and clarifying a student's personal artistic vision. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: 72 credits in studio art and art history, 28 credits in General Education, 20 credits in free electives. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S. in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program in addition to General Education requirements, a total of 77-78 credits are required for a major in biochemistry, consisting of 46-47 credits in chemistry and 31 credits in cognate areas. The undergraduate study of chemistry at Adelphi is based on the principle of progression: a progression from the simplest to the most difficult concepts. This progression starts with general chemistry, which introduces basic concepts, followed by surveys of the different branches of chemistry, these being organic, analytical, inorganic, physical chemistry, and biochemistry. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:General Chemistry II, General Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Organic Laboratory, Quantitative Analysis, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Physical Chemistry I, Biochemistry I, Biochemistry II, Safety in the Laboratory and Studio, Statistics for the Natural Science, Calculus and Analytic Geometry I, Calculus and Analytic Geometry II, College Physics I, College Physics II, Biological Concepts and Methods, Biological Concepts and Methods, Physical Chemistry II, Physical Chemistry Laboratory II, Principles of Toxicology, Biochemistry of Proteins and Nucleic Acids, Bioinorganic Chemistry. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Science BuildingRoom 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4130 | This department is the branch of the physical sciences that deals with material substances. Its purview includes the elements, the combination of elements and formation of compounds, the phenomena that arise from exposure of substances to different physical conditions, and reactions between substances. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S. in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program in addition to General Education requirements, 60-63 program credits are required for a B.S. in Chemistry and the B.A. in Chemistry. The undergraduate study of chemistry at Adelphi is based on the principle of progression: a progression from the simplest to the most difficult concepts. This progression starts with general chemistry, which introduces basic concepts, followed by surveys of the different branches of chemistry, these being organic, analytical, inorganic, physical chemistry, and biochemistry. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:General Chemistry II, General Chemistry, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Organic Laboratory, Quantitative Analysis, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Physical Chemistry I, Physical Chemistry Laboratory I, Inorganic Chemistry, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Research Seminars in Chemistry, Statistics for the Natural Science, Calculus and Analytic Geometry I, Calculus and Analytic Geometry II, Physics I, Physical Chemistry II, Physical Chemistry Laboratory II, Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory, Advanced Organic Chemistry, Instrumental Methods and Physical Analysis, Biochemistry I, Biochemistry II, Computers and Chemistry. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Science BuildingRoom 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4130 | This department is the branch of the physical sciences that deals with material substances. Its purview includes the elements, the combination of elements and formation of compounds, the phenomena that arise from exposure of substances to different physical conditions, and reactions between substances. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S. in Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program prepares students for specialized roles in the financial services industry. The curriculum reflects the new global economic and financial environment by giving students a broader perspective on the ethical and global issues that impact business and finance. Students gain a greater understanding of political, social, legal, regulatory, and technological issues. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Art and Craft of Writing, Freshman Seminar, Orientation, Introduction to Business, Principles of Accounting I, Principles of Management, The National Economy, Principles of Accounting II, Intermediate Accounting I, Business Communications, Pre-calculus, Information Technology and Applications, Legal and Ethical Environment of Business, Intermediate Accounting II,Marketing, Analytical and Statistical Modeling, Money and Banking, Managerial Finance, Organizational Behavior, General Education Distribution, Financial Markets, Management of Production, Operations, and Technology, Investment Analysis, International Finance, Economics of Financial Management, Managerial Economics. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S. in Nursing | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | School of Nursing | This program is a four-year sequence of nursing and science courses leading to a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) that also meets the eligibility requirements for the New York State Registered Professional Nurse examination. This 124-credit program emphasizes a holistic approach to health and wellness and focuses on the nurse's role in research, advocacy, teaching, change, and management. The basic curriculum consists of a planned progression of nursing and science courses. The lower division courses are prerequisites to the junior-level nursing courses. The course of study builds on holistic concepts that support the connection of mind, body, and spirit. Within this framework, students explore the different approaches to promoting health and providing care during illness and meeting the demands of long-term care. Students must fulfill the undergraduate General Education requirements. Students follow a defined plan of study for each semester. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:The Human Body: Scientific Perspectives on Structure and Function I, The Human Body: Scientific Perspectives on Structure and Function II,Microbiology, Wellness through the Lifespan, Communication in Nursing, Essentials of Chemistry, Nutrition in Nursing: A Holistic Approach, Human Assessment: A Holistic Approach, Introduction to Holistic Clinical Practice, Pharmacology, Alterations in Holistic Integrity of the Childbearing Family, Alterations in Physiological Integrity I: A Holistic Approach, Alterations in Holistic Integrity of Children, Alterations in Physiological Integrity II: A Holistic Approach, Alterations in Holistic Integrity Managed in the Community, Alterations in Mental Health: A Holistic Approach, Research in Nursing, Professionalism in the Provision of Holistic Care. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Nursing | School of Nursing, Alumnae Hall Room 220, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4510 | As founder and director of the Adelphi College School of Nursing from 1942 to 1948, Dr. Mildred Montag is credited with developing the nursing program and making it an integral part of Adelphi. She is also recognized for her impact on nursing education in the United States and throughout the world. In 1942, Dr. Montag was asked by Adelphi College, under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, to determine if local hospitals would cooperate in establishing a school of nursing at Adelphi College. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi’s residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S. in Physical Education with concentration in Exercise Science or Pre-Physical Therapy/Allied Health | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program focus on the application of scientific principles to:sport skills enhancement, prevention of heart disease, adult fitness, nutritional analysis, biomechanics, injury prevention, rehabilitation, personal training. The plan of study includes field experience. This program does not lead to New York State professional teaching certification. The requirements for this program include all foundation and elective courses from Exercise Science. The additional electives should include coursework in the basic sciences such as biology, chemistry, and physics. Statistics and/or calculus may also be required. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S. in Physical Education with concentration in Sports Management | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program prepares students for careers in both the public and private sector. The Adelphi program provides students for successful careers in the areas of sport marketing, sport finance, sport administration, and sports information director. Students gain valuable experience through their internship which is a key component of the program. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:General Education requirements, Sport Management Core, Sport Management electives, Business, Communication, or Journalism electives, University Liberal Arts electives. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S./D.D.S. | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program of Adelphi University and New York University College of Dentistry allows students to earn a B.S. and D.D.S. degree within seven years. Admission standards for high school students are high. In addition, students must maintain a 3.5 GPA at Adelphi and achieve a satisfactory score on the Dental Aptitude Test to maintain their standing in the program and guarantee admission to NYU. Students in this program can choose to major in biology, biochemistry, chemistry, or other suitable subjects as long as they complete the required courses. For details on the program, follow this link. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Doctoral | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Science Building Room 103, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4200 | This department through small classes, labs, research opportunities and personal advising, students receive a solid foundation in all areas of biology that prepares them for over 200 biology-related careers and provides the groundwork for professional training in medicine, dentistry, and other health sciences. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S./D.M.D. | Full Time | 8 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program of Adelphi University and the Tufts University School of Dental Medicine in Boston allows students to earn a B.S. and D.M.D. degree within eight years. Students who are selected for this program may be eligible for admission into one of the country's most prestigious dental schools. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Doctoral | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Science Building Room 103, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4200 | This department through small classes, labs, research opportunities and personal advising, students receive a solid foundation in all areas of biology that prepares them for over 200 biology-related careers and provides the groundwork for professional training in medicine, dentistry, and other health sciences. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S./M.A. in Scholars Teacher Education Program (STEP) Adolescent Education, Grades 7-12 | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $19550 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program integrates field-intensive programs with a strong foundation in the liberal arts and sciences. It prepares candidates to teach at the adolescent (grades 7-12) levels. Graduates who successfully complete the fifth year of the program are then eligible for New York State Department of Education certification in childhood or adolescent education. This program is both comprehensive and economical. Students in this competitive program stay together as a group throughout the program. From the start, students are assigned faculty advisers to guide them in their course and field work. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course; General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements 0836-102 STEP Orientation Seminar (1 credit), xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, 0836-221 Childhood Development (Birth to Grade 6) -or- 0836-302 Perspectives on Learning and Teaching -or- 0501-115 Developmental Psychology 0836-310 Sociolinguistic Perspectives in Childhood Education, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, 0836-305 The Child with Special Needs (25 hrs FW) 0836-306 Student Assessment, 0836-304 Community, School, and Society 0836-307 Introduction to Philosophy of Education, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S./M.A. in Scholars Teacher Education Program (STEP) Childhood Education, Grades 1-6 | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $19550 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program integrates field-intensive programs with a strong foundation in the liberal arts and sciences. It prepares candidates to teach at the childhood (grades 1-6). Graduates who successfully complete the fifth year of the program are then eligible for New York State Department of Education certification in childhood or adolescent education. This program is both comprehensive and economical. Students in this competitive program stay together as a group throughout the program. From the start, students are assigned faculty advisers to guide them in their course and field work. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course; General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements 0836-102 STEP Orientation Seminar (1 credit), xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, 0836-221 Childhood Development (Birth to Grade 6) -or- 0836-302 Perspectives on Learning and Teaching -or- 0501-115 Developmental Psychology 0836-310 Sociolinguistic Perspectives in Childhood Education, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, 0836-305 The Child with Special Needs (25 hrs FW) 0836-306 Student Assessment, 0836-304 Community, School, and Society 0836-307 Introduction to Philosophy of Education, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements, xxxx-xxx General Education or Liberal Arts Major Requirements. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | B.S./O.D. | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is for students who plan to major in biology and pursue a career in optometry can take advantage of a combined program between Adelphi University and the SUNY College of Optometry. Students complete three years of study at Adelphi and then continue their studies at SUNY College of Optometry. The B.S. degree is awarded upon successful completion of the first year of optometry school. | Students should have a SAT score of at least 1200 with the math score of at least 600 with a high school grade-point average of at least 93 out of 100. They should be in the upper 10% of their high school class and must have a definite interest in the profession of optometry and have explored it. They must show evidence of community involvement and t has reasonable communication and interpersonal skills. | Doctoral | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Science Building Room 103, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4200 | This department through small classes, labs, research opportunities and personal advising, students receive a solid foundation in all areas of biology that prepares them for over 200 biology-related careers and provides the groundwork for professional training in medicine, dentistry, and other health sciences. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) Degree in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program (63 credits total) provides more flexibility in meeting the non-biology requirements, and is especially recommended for students with significant course requirements in other programs such as STEP (i.e. future high school science teachers) or the Honors College. | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Students must choose one course from each of the following category. The ecology/organismal category courses include BIO 220 Organic Evolution 3; BIO 234 Principles of Ecology 4; BIO 250 Invertebrate Zoology 4; BIO 253 Marine Biology 4; BIO 260 Animal Behavior 4; BIO 290 Vertebrate Zoology 4. The anatomy/physiology category courses include BIO 294 Comparative Anatomy 3; BIO 355 Histology 4; BIO 360 Principles of Regulatory Physiology 4; BIO 484 Neurobiology 3. The biochemistry, cell, developmental, and molecular biology courses include BIO 345 Developmental Biology 4; BIO 365 Cell Biology I 4; BIO 504 Survey of Biochemistry 4 or CHE 471 / 472 Biochemistry I and II 4; BIO 506 Introduction to Molecular Biology 4. The capstone experience courses include BIO 423 Physiological and Molecular Aspects of Nutrition 3; BIO 438 Microbial Ecology 4; BIO 465 Cell Biology II: Advanced Topics 3; BIO 498, 499 Guided Research and Guided Research: Capstone Experience 2/3; BIO 516 Behavioral Ecology 4. The elective courses include BIO 238 Fundamentals of Microbiology 4; BIO 243 Botany 4; BIO 288 Honors Colloquium 2; BIO 310 Biological Communities 4; BIO 322 Human Genetics 3; BIO 340 Nature of Viruses 3; BIO 356 Vertebrate Embryology 4; BIO 362 Jaws, Teeth, and Forensic Dentistry 4; BIO 485 Selected Topics ¾; BIO 495 Pre-Health Professions Internship 3; BIO 512 Biogeography 3; BIO 525 Introduction to TEM 4; BIO 526 Scanning Electron Microscopy 4; BIO 528 Immunology 3; BIO 540 Principles of Disease 3 ; BIO 567 Environmental Pollutants and Disease 3. The chemistry requirements include CHE 111 General Chemistry I 4; CHE 112 General Chemistry II 4; CHE 251 Organic Chemistry I 3; CHE 253 Organic Chemistry Lab I 2. The mathematics requirement includes MTH 114 Statistics for Natural Sciences 3. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Science Building Room 103, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4200 | This department through small classes, labs, research opportunities and personal advising, students receive a solid foundation in all areas of biology that prepares them for over 200 biology-related careers and provides the groundwork for professional training in medicine, dentistry, and other health sciences. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Arts in Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program provides students with a broad base of knowledge and critical thinking skills valued by employers in virtually every occupational field. The B.A. in Literature helps students develop skills in the key areas of written communication, problem solving, analytical and critical thinking, and interpersonal understanding. In addition, students gain an opportunity to develop and implement ideas, expand literacy, develop research techniques, and fine tune analytical and presentation tools. Focus is put on strengthening the student’s ability to formulate and evaluate their own arguments as well as those of others. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Arts in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program requires a total of 120 corangeit-hours of course work. The requirements for the B.S. in physics include:47 credits in Physics, 15 credits in Mathematics, 28 credits in General Education courses, 30 credits to be chosen with the help of adviser. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Perspectives in Physics, Astronomy, Beyond the Solar System, Observational Astronomy, Physics for Music Lovers, College Physics I, College Physics II, Physics for Science Majors I, Physics for Science Majors II, Physical Universe: Astronomy and Cosmology, Light-Principles and Demonstrations, The Ascent of Physics, Introduction to Mathematical Methods for Physicists,Modern Physics, Physics of Energy Sources, Statics, Dynamics, Analog Circuits, Physical Problems of Pollution, Engineering Thermodynamics, Introduction to Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics , Optics, Mathematical Methods in Physics, Theoretical Physics, Fluid Dynamics, Advanced Physics, Engineering Materials, Physical Mechanics, Electromagnetic Theory, Physics Colloquium, Undergraduate Physics Thesis I , Undergraduate Physics Thesis II, Quantum Mechanics, Principles of Environmental Physics II, Lasers and Holography. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Adelphi UniversityBlodgett Hall, Room 8Post Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4877 | The Physics Department features state-of-the-art instructional and research laboratories and facilities including a new rooftop observatory with a GPS remote-control telescope. Small classes offer personalized attention from the faculty of renowned authors and scientists. Students also have the opportunity to conduct research with leaders in their respective fields. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Arts in Social Science | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program focuses on guiding students to develop their cognitive skills, including critical thinking, creative thinking, problem solving, and decision making. The majority of University College social science majors continue their studies in graduate programs in one of the following areas: psychology, school psychology, counseling, elementary or secondary education, public administration, law, and social work. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Arts in Social Science - Childhood and Adolescent Education | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program prepares students for advanced degrees in education in order to become certified as a school teacher. Students who achieve this degree go on to careers in education and K-12 teachers. The degree includes coursework that gives the student an excellent academic preparation for application to graduate programs in education. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Expository and Professional Writing, Mathematical Problem Solving, Minority Groups in America, 6-8 Credits in Arts (Music, Music or Art History, Communications), 6-8 Credits in Social Science (Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology), 6-8 Credits in Humanistic Studies (Lit, Lang, Philosophy, History), 6-8 Credits in Language Other Than English, 6-8 Credits in Math/Science, Major Themes in European History, American Labor Past and Present, Slavery and the Civil War, World War II. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Arts in Social Sciences - Psychology Human Services Professions | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program prepares students for advanced degrees in the human services professions. Students who achieve this degree go onto careers in psychology, mental health counseling, and social work. The degree includes coursework that gives the student an excellent academic preparation for application to graduate programs in psychology, social work and the social sciences. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Expository and Professional Writing, Mathematical Problem Solving, Minority Groups in America, 6-8 Credits in Arts (Music, Music or Art History, Communications), 6-8 Credits in Social Science (Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology), 6-8 Credits in Humanistic Studies (Lit, Lang, Philosophy, History), 6-8 Credits in Language Other Than English, 6-8 Credits in Math/Science, Major Themes in European History, Developmental Psychology, Abnormal Psychology, Theories and Processes of Counseling, Addictions in American Society, Social Psychology. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Fine Arts - Acting | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Theatre | This program prepares for a leading role and provides a firm foundation in the traditions and literature of the theatre. Professionally and practically oriented, students study acting, theatre, voice, and theatre movement in a conservatory-style program under the direction of faculty of accomplished theatre and academic professionals. Unlike many other programs, the department guarantees public performances for its students. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Introduction to Stanislavsky, Dramatics, Mechanics of Voice Production, Introduction to Scene Study, Vocal Production, Theatre History I, Diction Erasing Local Accents, Intermediate Scene Study, Theatre History II, Diction Projection-Working With The Accentless Voice, Introduction to Experiencing Theatre, Actor's Lab, Performing Verse Drama, Cabaret Theatre, Rudiments of Directing, Performing Shakespeare, Directing, Stage Accents, Acting for the Camera, Manhattan Production, Independent Study, Professional Internship. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Theatre | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Theatre, PAC 251, 1 South Avenue, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4927 | This department building on its commitment to academic excellence and its role as a premiere cultural resource for area communities, Adelphi is proud to announce its new 53,000 square-foot Performing Arts Center, complete with five intimate and state-of-the-art performance venues, and rehearsal and classroom space for all three performing arts area departments. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Fine Arts - Design/Technical | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Theatre | This program combines behind-the-scenes training with practical experience. The program emphasizes the development of competence in scenic and costume rendering, scene painting, costume construction and crafts, stage lighting, and preparation of portfolio material. Students are trained in the many design aspects and technical functions of the performing arts. This study involves analysis and comparison of the historical, critical, and aesthetic contexts in which the dramatic tradition has developed. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Research, Rehearsal, and Production, History and Application of Theater Technology, Mechanical Drafting, Research, Rehearsal, and Production, Introduction to Costumes, Scenographic Techniques, Sound, Research, Rehearsal, and Production, Stage Management, Costume Construction, Research, Rehearsal, and Production, Makeup for the Stage, Research, Rehearsal, and Production, Advanced Technical Theater, Scene Design I, Lighting Design I, Scene Painting, Draping and Pattern Making, Costume Design I, Research, Rehearsal, and Production, Scene Design II, Lighting Design II, Scene Painting II, Costume Design II, Special Topics, Research, Rehearsal, and Production, Independent Study, Professional Internship. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Theatre | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Theatre, PAC 251, 1 South Avenue, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4927 | This department building on its commitment to academic excellence and its role as a premiere cultural resource for area communities, Adelphi is proud to announce its new 53,000 square-foot Performing Arts Center, complete with five intimate and state-of-the-art performance venues, and rehearsal and classroom space for all three performing arts area departments. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Dance | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Dance | This program is a performance-based program with equal time given to the study of classical and modern dance techniques. Adelphi graduates have succeeded in many areas of dance, as outstanding performers in ballet and modern dance companies, but also in other disciplines including dance journalism, dance therapy, dance lighting and design, dance on television, and commercial theatre. Other graduates have entered the teaching profession and hold positions in both academic and professional areas. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Ballet I, Ballet II, Mordern Dance I, Modern Dance II, Modern Dance for Non Majors, Ballet III, Ballet IV, Dance Improvisation, Dance Theory and Composition II,Modern Dance III, Modern Dance IV, Dance History and Criticism I, Music Rhythmic Training for Dance, Theatre Movement, Period Movement, Functional Anatomy for Dance, Ballet V, Ballet VI, Modern Dance V, Modern Dance VI, Advanced Dance Repertory, Intermediate Dance Composition I, Dance Theatre, Ballet VII, Ballet VIII, Principles of Teaching Dance, Modern Dance VII, Modern Dance VIII, Advanced Dance Composition, Dance Theatre. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Dance | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Dance, PAC 149, 1 South Avenue, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4250 | This department building on its commitment to academic excellence and its role as a premiere cultural resource for area communities, Adelphi is proud to announce its new 53,000 square-foot Performing Arts Center, complete with five intimate and state-of-the-art performance venues, and rehearsal and classroom space for all three performing arts area departments. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science (B.S.) Degree in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $27,900 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program provides a rigorous foundation in biology and related areas of science and mathematics, and is recommended for students who plan to continue on to graduate school in biology or to professional schools in the health sciences (e.g. medicine, dentistry, and optometry). | Applicants must be graduates of a recognized four-year high school or academy, or must offer acceptable evidence of official equivalent preparation. Adelphi prefers freshmen who have successfully completed a minimum of 16 academic units. Each applicant is considered, however, on the basis of his or her individual academic record, plus co-curricular activities. It is recommended that academic units include: English (4 units); science (3 units), general science may be included; mathematics (3 units); foreign language (2-3 units); additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants should have scored a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (213 for computerized score, 80 internet score). | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Students must choose one course from each of the following category. The ecology/organismal category courses include BIO 220 Organic Evolution 3; BIO 234 Principles of Ecology 4; BIO 250 Invertebrate Zoology 4; BIO 253 Marine Biology 4; BIO 260 Animal Behavior 4; BIO 290 Vertebrate Zoology 4. The anatomy/physiology category courses include BIO 294 Comparative Anatomy 3; BIO 355 Histology 4; BIO 360 Principles of Regulatory Physiology 4; BIO 484 Neurobiology 3. The biochemistry, cell, developmental, and molecular biology courses include BIO 345 Developmental Biology 4; BIO 365 Cell Biology I 4; BIO 504 Survey of Biochemistry 4 or CHE 471 / 472 Biochemistry I and II 4; BIO 506 Introduction to Molecular Biology 4. The capstone experience courses include BIO 423 Physiological and Molecular Aspects of Nutrition 3; BIO 438 Microbial Ecology 4; BIO 465 Cell Biology II: Advanced Topics 3; BIO 498, 499 Guided Research and Guided Research: Capstone Experience 2/3; BIO 516 Behavioral Ecology 4. The elective courses include BIO 238 Fundamentals of Microbiology 4; BIO 243 Botany 4; BIO 288 Honors Colloquium 2; BIO 310 Biological Communities 4; BIO 322 Human Genetics 3; BIO 340 Nature of Viruses 3; BIO 356 Vertebrate Embryology 4; BIO 362 Jaws, Teeth, and Forensic Dentistry 4; BIO 485 Selected Topics ¾; BIO 495 Pre-Health Professions Internship 3; BIO 512 Biogeography 3; BIO 525 Introduction to TEM 4; BIO 526 Scanning Electron Microscopy 4; BIO 528 Immunology 3; BIO 540 Principles of Disease 3 ; BIO 567 Environmental Pollutants and Disease 3. The chemistry requirements include CHE 111 General Chemistry I 4; CHE 112 General Chemistry II 4; CHE 251 Organic Chemistry I 3; CHE 252 Organic Chemistry II 3; CHE 253 Organic Chemistry Lab I (or equivalent) 2; CHE 254 Organic Chemistry Lab II (or equivalent) 2. The physics requirements include PHY 111 College Physics I 4; PHY 112 College Physics II 4; PHY 113 Physics for Science Majors I 4; PHY 114 Physics for Science Majors II 4. The mathematics requirement includes MTH 114 Statistics for Natural Sciences 3. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Science Building Room 103, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4200 | This department through small classes, labs, research opportunities and personal advising, students receive a solid foundation in all areas of biology that prepares them for over 200 biology-related careers and provides the groundwork for professional training in medicine, dentistry, and other health sciences. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science in Business | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program program will give the knowledge and practical intelligence needed to excel in current position and to prepare for career advancement. From a curriculum that integrates cutting-edge management theory and practice with state-of-the-art instruction, gain the knowledge and skills to stay ahead of today’s technology-driven marketplace. Graduates go on to positions in sales, management, real estate or choose to start their own businesses. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Expository and Professional Writing, Math Concepts, The National Economy (3cr), Business Policy, The Price System, Effective Business Communications, 6-8 credits in Arts (Music, Music or Art History, Communications), 6-8 credits in Social Science (Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology), 6-8 credits in Humanistic Studies (Lit., Lang., Philosophy, History), Principles of Management, Marketing, Principles of Accounting, International Business, Organizational Behavior, Principles of Accounting, Managerial Finance. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice | Full Time | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | University College | This program is an interdisciplinary major which prepares students for careers in the criminal justice system. Coursework in the Criminal Justice program combines traditional social science classes like sociology and psychology with specialized classes in areas such as criminology, forensics and law enforcement administration. By developing students’ critical thinking skills and providing a solid understanding of core issues in criminal justice, the program prepares students for professional work or graduate training. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Expository and Professional Writing, Math Concepts, The National Economy (3cr), Business Policy, The Price System, Effective Business Communications, 6-8 credits in Arts (Music, Music or Art History, Communications), 6-8 credits in Social Science (Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology), 6-8 credits in Humanistic Studies (Lit., Lang., Philosophy, History), Criminal Law, Juvenile Delinquency, Psychology of Criminal Behavior (PS), Sociology of Deviance or Outsiders: Studies in Nonconformity, Sociology of Violence, Special Topics in Police Studies, Forensic Anthropology, Gender Issues in Criminal Justice, Introduction to Forensic Psychology. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | University College | University College, Hagedorn Hall Room 201, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3412 | University College offers innovative instructional programs that accommodate the needs of busy working professionals and meet Adelphi's standard of academic excellence. The programs of study incorporate the latest in instructional technology and are designed to have an immediate impact on a student's life and career. Students receive personalized attention from dedicated faculty with extensive teaching experience. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice - Police Science | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program provides an interdisciplinary approach to the study of crime, delinquency, and social control and prepares students for graduate work or professional training. This revised major combines traditional liberal arts classes with courses in criminology, sociology of law, psychology, and law enforcement administration. The major is interdisciplinary in nature. Students may select courses in Adult Academic Programs in University College, the Derner Institute, the School of Social Work, and the departments of anthropology, political science, and sociology. Many of the required courses will be cross-listed, enabling students to receive credit toward their degree through University College or the College of Arts and Sciences. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:General Psychology, Introduction to Sociology, Criminal Justice Planning and Research, American System of Criminal Justice, Criminology , Crime and Punishment, Law and Social Inequality, Police and Community Relations, Police Organization and Administration, Forensic Science, Juvenile Delinquency, Criminal Law, Special Topics in Police Studies, Psychology of Criminal Behavior, Organized Crime, Contemporary Developments in Criminal Justice, Jaws, Teeth, and Forensic Dentistry, Forensic Anthropology, Individual Rights in the Constitution, Law and the Legal Process, Social Psychology, Introduction to Forensic Psychology, Special Topics in Social Psychology, Sociology of Violence, Sociology of Deviance, Sociology of Law, Gender Issues in Criminal Justice. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 102P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4110 | This department is the study of human culture in its widest sense, extending back to our primate origins.Because of its broad sense, anthropology provides an appreciation of the relationships among the environment, biology, and culture though time.It is a forum for a unique bridging and bonding of the natural sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice - Social Science | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program provides an interdisciplinary approach to the study of crime, delinquency, and social control and prepares students for graduate work or professional training. This revised major combines traditional liberal arts classes with courses in criminology, sociology of law, psychology, and law enforcement administration. The major is interdisciplinary in nature. Students may select courses in Adult Academic Programs in University College, the Derner Institute, the School of Social Work, and the departments of anthropology, political science, and sociology. Many of the required courses will be cross-listed, enabling students to receive credit toward their degree through University College or the College of Arts and Sciences. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Cultural Anthropology, General Psychology, Introduction to Sociology, Criminal Justice Planning and Research, American System of Criminal Justice, Criminology, Crime and Punishment, Law and Social Inequality, Individual Rights in the Constitution, Psychology of Criminal Behavior, Sociology of Law, Criminal Law, Sociology of Violence, Sociology of Deviance, Juvenile Delinquency, Forensic Science, Organized Crime, Contemporary Developments in Criminal Justice, Humankind, Culture, Environment , Jaws, Teeth, and Forensic Dentistry, Forensic Anthropology, Law and the Legal Process, State and Local Government, Social Psychology, Introduction to Forensic Psychology, Introduction to Forensic Psychology, Gender Issues in Criminal Justice. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 102P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4110 | This department is the study of human culture in its widest sense, extending back to our primate origins.Because of its broad sense, anthropology provides an appreciation of the relationships among the environment, biology, and culture though time.It is a forum for a unique bridging and bonding of the natural sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science in Emergency Services Administration | Distance / Online | Variable | US $600 per credit / unit | Office of Admissions | This program gives students the ability to complete their degree while maintaining their busy, ever-changing work schedule and life commitments. Students can also choose to take courses in a traditional, live-instruction format at Adelphi's campus locations in Garden City, Hauppauge, and Manhattan. University College live-instruction courses run on night, weekend, and accelerated schedules to meet the needs of working students. Students can complete their degree program entirely online or blended with live Students can complete their B.S. degree program entirely online or blended with live-instruction courses. Online courses are offered in an asynchronous format that allows students to complete their course work and degree on their schedule, from the comfort of their home or office computer, without the need to purchase any specialized software or hardware. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. A current new york w York State license as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:Emergency Medical Technician, Essentials of Firefighting, Building Construction, Hazardous Materials/First Responder Operations, Fire or EMS Lieutenant, Expository and Professional Writing, Science and the Citizen, Humanities Electives, Arts Electives, Introduction to Psychology, Conflict Management, Principles of Emergency Services, Emergency Services Management and Administration, Legal Aspects of Emergency Services, Introduction to Financial Concepts for Emergency Services, Emergency and Disaster Preparedness, Master Planning for Public Emergency Management, Occupational Safety and Health, Management of Human Resources, Emergency Services Leadership, Field Experience in Emergency Services Administration. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | This department is the study of human culture in its widest sense, extending back to our primate origins.Because of its broad sense, anthropology provides an appreciation of the relationships among the environment, biology, and culture though time.It is a forum for a unique bridging and bonding of the natural sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Music | This program prepares students for professional careers in performance, composition, and music business. The program is also designed for students who intend to pursue graduate studies or become music educators. Students hone their skills through a course of study that emphasizes performance experience. Coursework is augmented by on-campus visits by musicologists, performers, critics, composers, administrators, and educators who share their insights on the current trends in music. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Elementary Theory and Harmony I, Elementary Theory and Harmony II, Ear Training, Diction And Sight Singing I, Ear Training, Diction And Sight Singing II, Music Technology I, Advanced Harmony I, Advanced Harmony II, Ear Training III, Ear Training IV, Basic Keyboard Skills, Music Technology II, Workshop In Chamber Music Performance I, Form and Analysis I, Counterpoint II, Grand Opera Master Class, Special Topics, Composition, Conducting and Orchestration I, Independent Study, Development of Western Music, Opera, Major Composers Seventeenth & Eighteenth Century, Major Composers Nineteenth & Twentieth Century, Jazz: 20's 30's And 40's, Jazz: 50's, 60's And 70's, Rock n’ Roll: A Social History, Music, Culture, and Society: the U.S. Tradition, Music, Culture, & Society: Major Traditions of the World, Music, Culture, & Society: Focus on China, Music, Culture, and Society: Workshop on the Major Traditions of the World, The Arts And The Creative Process, Special Topics, Independent Study, Professional Internship. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Performing Arts Center, Department of Music, PAC 207, 1 South Avenue, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4290 | This department building on its commitment to academic excellence and its role as a premiere cultural resource for area communities, Adelphi is proud to announce its new 53,000 square-foot Performing Arts Center, complete with five intimate and state-of-the-art performance venues, and rehearsal and classroom space for all three performing arts area departments. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science in Physical Education with NYS K-12 professional certification | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program leads to New York State professional certification for teaching in grades K-12. The plan of study includes teacher preparation and the study of teaching in the gymnasium and/or the health classroom. Students may specialize as coaches, teachers, and adapted physical educators. A teaching practicum and field experience are required. In addition to meeting the University's General Education requirements, students in this program must complete:33 credits of Theoretical Foundations, 14 credits of Physical Education Methodology, 18 credits of Education Core sequence, 8 credits in Biology. Health certification may be obtained with additional health content courses. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program requires a total of 120 corangeit-hours of course work. The requirements for the B.S. in physics include:47 credits in Physics, 15 credits in Mathematics, 28 credits in General Education courses, 30 credits to be chosen with the help of adviser. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Perspectives in Physics, Astronomy, Beyond the Solar System, Observational Astronomy, Physics for Music Lovers, College Physics I, College Physics II, Physics for Science Majors I, Physics for Science Majors II, Physical Universe: Astronomy and Cosmology, Light-Principles and Demonstrations, The Ascent of Physics, Introduction to Mathematical Methods for Physicists,Modern Physics, Physics of Energy Sources, Statics, Dynamics, Analog Circuits, Physical Problems of Pollution, Engineering Thermodynamics, Introduction to Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics , Optics, Mathematical Methods in Physics, Theoretical Physics, Fluid Dynamics, Advanced Physics, Engineering Materials, Physical Mechanics, Electromagnetic Theory, Physics Colloquium, Undergraduate Physics Thesis I , Undergraduate Physics Thesis II, Quantum Mechanics, Principles of Environmental Physics II, Lasers and Holography. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Adelphi UniversityBlodgett Hall, Room 8Post Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4877 | The Physics Department features state-of-the-art instructional and research laboratories and facilities including a new rooftop observatory with a GPS remote-control telescope. Small classes offer personalized attention from the faculty of renowned authors and scientists. Students also have the opportunity to conduct research with leaders in their respective fields. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Science/Doctor of Physical Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program takes a strong prescribed liberal arts and sciences program at Adelphi University leading to a B.S. in biology or in physical education and human performance science. Following four years at Adelphi, students continue their studies at New York Medical College for another three years to earn a doctorate in physical therapy. Students are admitted provisionally to the New York Medical College program upon recommendation of the program faculty at Adelphi. Periodic academic reviews are conducted and students are expected to maintain a B+ average. New York Medical College makes its final admissions decision during the student's senior year. | Students should have a SAT score of at least 1200 with the math score of at least 600 with a high school grade-point average of at least 93 out of 100. They should be in the upper 10% of their high school class and must have a definite interest in the profession of optometry and have explored it. They must show evidence of community involvement and t has reasonable communication and interpersonal skills. | Doctoral | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Science Building Room 103, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4200 | This department through small classes, labs, research opportunities and personal advising, students receive a solid foundation in all areas of biology that prepares them for over 200 biology-related careers and provides the groundwork for professional training in medicine, dentistry, and other health sciences. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Bachelor of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Social Work | This program combines education, practice, and community service to prepare graduates to work with individuals, families, groups, and communities in a variety of human service settings. One of the oldest in the nation, and the first in the New York Metropolitan area, the B.S.W. program instills in its graduates a commitment to improve social conditions and address social problems. Based on a foundation in the liberal arts and sciences, the B.S.W. curriculum emphasizes a generalist approach to provide students the broad-based knowledge, skills, and values necessary for competent social work practice. Students may declare social work as their major upon entering Adelphi as freshmen, or may transfer into the B.S.W. program from other colleges. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are:The Human Body:Scientific Perspectives on Structure and Function I, General Psychology, Introduction to Sociology, Statistics, Western Civilization I, World Civilization I, American Civilization since 1865, Introduction to Economics, Introduction to the American Political System, Principles and Practice in Social Work I, Principles and Practice in Social Work II, Field Instruction I, Field Instruction II, Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice I, Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice II, Social Work Elective. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, Adelphi University, P.O. Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4300 | For over 50 years, the School of Social Work has trained social work practitioners dedicated to improving the lives of individuals, families, groups, and communities. Through its many programs, the School has been a driving force for ethical social work practice and a strong advocate for social justice. The School features small classes in a supportive environment that foster a close and nurturing relationship among students and faculty. The faculty have extensive teaching experience and are recognized as leaders in their respective fields. The broad base of diverse students and professionals seeking advanced degrees enhances the classroom learning and enriches the educational experience for all. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Doctor of Arts in Speech-Language Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $20200 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders | This prepares candidates for professional leadership roles in clinical administration and supervision, university teaching, and clinical research. | All applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Students may be admitted on a provisional basis if they have not received the required undergraduate training in communication disorders. Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. Admission requires three years full-time teaching experience in a K-12 setting -or- three years full-time work experience in a school pupil personnel service profession, such as guidance counseling or school psychology. The three years of full-time work experience must be completed prior to entering the program. | Doctoral | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Harvey Hall Room, 1 South Avenue, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3343 | The mission of the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders (CSD), Master of Science (MS) program in Speech-Language Pathology is to provide students with a strong understanding of the connections between the scientific bases of discipline and its clinical practices. This department strive to prepare the finest professional and ethical research-based clinicians who can assess and treat children and adults with communication disorders within the scope of practice and from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Doctor of Audiology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $20200 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders | This program optimizes the resources and facilities of the three universities. The goal of this innovative program is to train highly skilled specialists in diagnostic and rehabilitative audiology services. Students attend classes on each campus but at least one-third of the credits needed to earn the Au.D. must be taken at the home university. Students will receive a diploma from their home institution with the notation that it was awarded in conjunction with the other two universities. | Completion of a bachelor's degree is a prerequisite for admission to the Doctor of Audiology (Au.D.) program. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Harvey Hall Room, 1 South Avenue, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3343 | The mission of the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders (CSD), Master of Science (MS) program in Speech-Language Pathology is to provide students with a strong understanding of the connections between the scientific bases of discipline and its clinical practices. This department strive to prepare the finest professional and ethical research-based clinicians who can assess and treat children and adults with communication disorders within the scope of practice and from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Doctor of Philosophy in Social Work | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $19550 estimated graduate costs | School of Social Work | This program gives practitioners the skills and knowledge to effect significant change in social welfare policy and practice. Its emphasis on critical thinking and on preparing students to develop knowledge for all methods of social work practice prepares them to provide leadership in the profession as scholars, educators, researchers and administrators in social agencies. | Students must have: a Master of Social Work (M.S.W.) degree with a GPA of at least 3.3 (on a four-point scale), three years of successful post-M.S.W. professional experience, Graduate Record Examination (G.R.E.). In addition, applicants should be able to: communicate effectively, both verbally and in writing, analyze critical professional issues and form the appropriate responses, identify and conceptualize a research problem and complete a research-based dissertation, International applicants must earn a score of 585 or higher on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: SWK 810 Epistemology and Social Work Knowledge 3, SWK 842 Human Behavior Theory, Empirical Knowledge and Contemporary Practice 3, SWK 850 Comparative Approaches to Social Work Research: Quantitative 3, SWK 882 Comparative Approaches to Social Work Research: Qualitative 3, SWK 843 Social Work Practice with Individuals: Theory and Research 3, SWK 860 Social Work and Social Science 3, SWK 846 Social Work Practice with Families: Theory and Research 3, SWK 845 Cross-national Perspectives on Social Provision 3, Candidacy Examinations in epistemology, research, practice and policy, SWK 851 Foundations to Data Analysis: Univariate and Bivariate Statistics 3, SWK 848 Social Work Practice with Groups: Theory and Research 3. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, Adelphi University, P.O. Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4300 | For over 50 years, the School of Social Work has trained social work practitioners dedicated to improving the lives of individuals, families, groups, and communities. Through its many programs, the School has been a driving force for ethical social work practice and a strong advocate for social justice. The School features small classes in a supportive environment that foster a close and nurturing relationship among students and faculty. The faculty have extensive teaching experience and are recognized as leaders in their respective fields. The broad base of diverse students and professionals seeking advanced degrees enhances the classroom learning and enriches the educational experience for all. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Honors in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program students may graduate with the designation of Honors in Biology. To qualify, students must maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.5 in biology courses, satisfactorily complete Honors Colloquium(BIO 288), satisfactorily complete a minimum of two semesters of Guided Research (BIO 498/499), ubmit an acceptable thesis to the Committee on Honors and Undergraduate Research. To be admitted to the Honors Program, students should petition the Biology Department's Committee on Honors and Undergraduate Research. This petition should include a written statement of the student's interest in the program and relevant background, and should be submitted no later than two weeks prior to the students' registering for BIO 288. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Science Building Room 103, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4200 | This department through small classes, labs, research opportunities and personal advising, students receive a solid foundation in all areas of biology that prepares them for over 200 biology-related careers and provides the groundwork for professional training in medicine, dentistry, and other health sciences. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Honors in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | This program is for psychology majors who graduate with a grade-point average of 3.3 in their psychology courses may be eligible for honors in psychology. A student with a GPA of 3.6 in psychology may qualify for high departmental honors. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: General Psychology, Developmental Psychology, Psychological Statistics, Psychoanalysis, Psychological Research, Cognitive Psychology, Behavior Analysis, Neuropsychology, Environmental Psychology, Psychology of Perception, Developmental Psychology II, Social Psychology, Motivation and Emotion, Psychopathology, Theories of Personality, Introduction to Forensic Psychology, Psychology of Women, Behavior Modification, Industrial/Organizational Psychology, Psychology of Addictions, Principles of Psychological Testing, Behavior Disorders in Childhood , Introduction to Counseling and Psychotherapy, Practicum in Clinical Psychology . | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Hy Weinberg Center Room 220 Adelphi University, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4800 | Adelphi has long been recognized as a pioneer in the study of psychology. In 1972, the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies became the nation first university-based professional school of psychology. Today Derner is internationally recognized for its dedication to scholarship and its commitment to training professionals to meet the needs of a society in transition. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Joint Degree/Early Assurance Programs | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program allows students to combine an undergraduate liberal arts and sciences education at Adelphi with specialized or advanced study at a partnering university and to earn degrees from both. Programs are offered in dentistry, engineering, environmental studies, law, optometry, and physical therapy. These programs provide students with a broad, interdisciplinary perspective to complement their professional skills. Most applicants to these joint degree/early assurance programs are high school seniors but with careful planning and advisement these programs may also be open to transfer and current Adelphi students. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Pre-professional | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Adelphi UniversityScience Building Room 127, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | By offering a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in Childhood Education, Grades 1-6 | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is an initial program for students who do not currently hold certification in elementary (childhood) education. The program is built around a progressive, child-centered philosophy, one that values the multiple facets of children's experience. Attention is paid to ethnic and racial diversity; to the importance of family and community in child-rearing; and to a holistic understanding of the emotional, social, intellectual, and physical lives of children in contemporary society. In terms of pedagogical arts, candidates receive extensive preparation in literacy, mathematics, science, and social studies instruction, as well as in formal and informal methods of assessing children's progress. This program is also offered at Adelphi University's Manhattan Center. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in Early Childhood Education In-Service | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is designed for students holding New York State initial/provisional certification in an area other than Early Childhood Education. The program is also dedicated to the professional education and personal development of early childhood teachers who will use their moral purpose and vision to advocate for children. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ECH 600 Childhood Development, EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education, ELY 545 Children's Literature, ELY 625 Approaches to Teaching Literacy in Childhood Education, ECH 710 Mathematics and Technology in Childhood Education, ECH 720 Science and Technology in Childhood Education, HED 610 Health Promotion for Teachers (1 credit), ECH 600 Childhood Development, EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education, EYC 655 Children's Play: A Source of Development and Learning, EYC 660 Assessment, Observation, and Documentation in Early Childhood Settings (2 credits), EYC 670 Classroom Management for Early Educators (2 credits). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in Early Childhood Education Pre-Certification | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is designed for students without prior initial/provisional certification in a teaching. This program is committed to the growth and well being of children from birth to eight years of age. The program is also dedicated to the professional education and personal development of early childhood teachers who will use their moral purpose and vision to advocate for children. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: EYC 650 Facing History: Roots of Early Childhood Education and Foundations for Practice, ECH 600 Childhood Development, EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education, EYC 655 Children's Play: A Source of Development and Learning, EYC 551 Speech and Language Development, EYC 552 The English Language Learner Student, EYC 553 The Gifted Child, EYC 554 Working with Paraprofessionals in the Classroom, EYC 555 Block Building, EYC 556 Sensory Learning. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in Educational Leadership and Technology | Full Time | 24 Month(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is the only of its kind on Long Island. EDL's multidisciplinary approach provides students with a unique perspective on the use of standards-based policies and the role of technology at every level of educational practice. Through a combination of theoretical and field-based study, students develop proficiency in leadership and managing personnel in educational institutions. This program is specifically designed to prepare individuals for leadership roles as principals, assistant principals, department chairpersons or supervisors. Offered in conjunction with the School of Business and the College of Arts and Sciences, it combines education, business and technology courses. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. Admission requires three years full-time teaching experience in a K-12 setting -or- three years full-time work experience in a school pupil personnel service profession, such as guidance counseling or school psychology. The three years of full-time work experience must be completed prior to entering the program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: EDL 533 Computer Based Technologies in Education, EDL 553 Educational Policy, EDL 561 Management Theory and Organizational Behavior, EDL 590 Ethics, Law, and Technology, EDL 591 Technology, Pedagogy, and School Reform, BUS 500 Financial Accounting . Field-Based and Applied Courses (18 Credits): EDL 554 Research and Evaluation in Schools, EDL 555 Administrative Internship (320 hours) (5 credits), EDL 556 Supervision in the Schools (with 30-hour practicum) (4 credits), EDL 557 Technology and School Administration (with 10-hour practicum), EDL 666 School Leadership. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in Elementary Education, PreK-6 | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is designed only to those provisionally certified in elementary education PreK–6. Leads to permanent certification only. Not available for initially certified childhood teachers. The program is built around a progressive, child-centered philosophy, one that values the multiple facets of children's experience. Attention is paid to ethnic and racial diversity; to the importance of family and community in child-rearing; and to a holistic understanding of the emotional, social, intellectual, and physical lives of children in contemporary society. In terms of pedagogical arts, candidates receive extensive preparation in literacy, mathematics, science, and social studies instruction, as well as in formal and informal methods of assessing children's progress. This program is also offered at Adelphi University's Manhattan Center. Students may choose from a combination of the following, but at least two courses must be taken in any one area: Art Education, Bilingual Education, Foundations of Education, Health Studies, Liberal Arts and Sciences, Middle School Education, Literacy, Adolescence Education, Special Education, TESOL. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ECH 601 Schools and Society, ECH 620 Assessment and Interaction in Childhood Education, ECH 825 Masters Seminar: Inquiry in Teaching and Learning (Take in last semester). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in English Education | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program offers an innovative curriculum based on a strong philosophical tradition and enhanced by the latest currents in theory and research. Faculty and students in close-knit community learn together in a creative environment where all are encouraged to develop dynamic teaching styles and confident professional voices. Unique features of English Education at Adelphi include: a rich tradition in arts-based education, engagement with the community through service-learning program, a focus on composition studies and creative writing, a strong commitment to social justice and honoring diversity. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. Admission requires three years full-time teaching experience in a K-12 setting -or- three years full-time work experience in a school pupil personnel service profession, such as guidance counseling or school psychology. The three years of full-time work experience must be completed prior to entering the program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: 0809-595 Youth Literacies: Literature, Culture, and the Arts, 0809-603 The Adolescent Experience (25 hrs FW), 0801-723 Foundations of Education 0810-560 Managing Inclusive Environments (7-12) (25 hrs FW), 0122-xxx Graduate English Elective [0809-603 MUST be taken with 0810-560 for 50 hours combined field work this semester], 0809-596 Inquiry and Expression (MUST be taken after 12 credits and before 24 credits are completed), 0803-500-505 Exploring the Arts Elective. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in Mathematics Education | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program programs lead to New York State certification in Mathematics Education (7-12). This revision, which has been accompanied by a doubling of the faculty in mathematics education, includes a requirement that all students take a minimum of one graduate mathematics course (e.g., History of Mathematics), and the addition of a second pedagogical arts course that is co-taught by master mathematics teachers from the community. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: 0809-595 Youth Literacies: Literature, Culture, and the Arts, 0809-603 Adolescent Development (25 hrs FW), 0801-723 Foundations of Education 0810-560 Managing Inclusive Environments (7-12) (25 hrs FW), 0144-xxx Graduate Math Course [0809-603 MUST be taken with 0810-560 for 50 hours combined field work this semester], 0809-596 Inquiry and Expression (MUST be taken after 12 credits and before 24 credits are completed), 0803-500-505 Exploring the Arts Elective, 0809-513 Instruction and Assessment in Math Education (25 hrs FW) 0803-830 Student Teaching in Adolescence Education (6 credits), 0809-613 Secondary Math Content, Pedagogy and Assessment: Learning from Master Teachers 25 hrs FW). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in Science Education | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program lead to New York State certification in Biology, Chemistry, Physics, or Earth Science Education (7-12). This revision, which has been accompanied by a doubling of the faculty in science education, includes a requirement that all students take a minimum of one graduate science course (e.g., Contemporary Issues in Scientific Inquiry), and the addition of a second pedagogical arts course that is co-taught by master science teachers from the community. Science education faculty participate in a federal Pathways to Teaching grant which provides tuition remission for students who are willing to teach mathematics or science in under-served communities. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: 0809-595 Youth Literacies: Literature, Culture, and the Arts 0809-603 The Adolescent Experience (25 hrs FW), 0801-723 Foundations of Education 0810-560 Managing Inclusive Environments (7-12) (25 hrs FW), Graduate Science Course [0809-603 MUST be taken with 0810-560 for 50 hours combined field work this semester], 0809-596 Inquiry and Expression (MUST be taken after 12 credits and before 24 credits are completed), 0803-500-505 Exploring the Arts Elective, 0809-517 Instruction and Assessment in Science Education (25 hrs FW) 0803-830 Student Teaching in Adolescence Education (6 credits), 0809-617 Content, Pedagogy and Assessment in Science Education (25 hrs FW) Learning from Master Teachers, | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A in Social Studies Education | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program lead to New York State certification in Social Studies Education (7-12). This revision, which has been accompanied by a doubling of the faculty in social studies education, includes a requirement that all students take a minimum of one graduate mathematics course (e.g., Historiography), and the addition of a second pedagogical arts course that is co-taught by master social studies teachers from the community. Faculty in social studies education share a commitment with other departmental faculty to ideals of social justice and equality, as well as to the importance of the arts, and these concerns are interwoven throughout programs in social studies education. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: 0809-595 Youth Literacies: Literature, Culture, and the Arts 0809-603 The Adolescent Experience (25 hrs FW), 0801-723 Foundations of Education 0809-518 Instruction and Assessment in Social Studies Education (25 hrs FW), 0136-xxx Graduate History Course [0809-603 MUST be taken with 0809-518 for 50 hours combined field work this semester], 0809-596 Inquiry and Expression (MUST be taken after 12 credits and before 24 credits are completed), 0803-500-505 Exploring the Arts Elective, 0810-560 Managing Inclusive Environments (7-12) (25 hrs FW) 0803-830 Student Teaching in Adolescence Education (6 credits), 0809-618 Social Studies Content, Pedagogy, and Assessment (25 hrs FW) Learning from Master Teachers. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A. in Art Education | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | The mission of this program is to nourish the human faculties of imagination and inspiration, faculties often overlooked in traditional educational programs. Adelphi's preparation for NYS visual arts certification reflects this mission by providing course work that develops art educators who: understand artistic development across the life span through autobiographical exploration, theoretical study, field observation, and respect for different cultural histories and practices. Explore the relationship of the sensory and kinesthetic domains to art making through experientially-based course work. Clearly articulate an educational philosophy and become an advocate for the role of arts in education by studying the history and philosophy of art education. Develop a professional identity through participation in the Adelphi student chapter of the National Art Education Association (NAEA). Maintain a lively commitment to their own artistic identity and practice through on-going studio practice and a final graduation exhibition. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: 0803-525 Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Art Education, 0803-509 Artistic Development Across the Lifespan (25 hrs FW), 0807-595 Child Literacies 0810-710 Classroom Management (1-6) -or- 0809-595 Youth Literacies 0810-560 Managing Inclusive Environments (7-12), (25 hrs FW), 0803-500-505 Exploring the Arts Elective [0803-509 MUST be taken with 0810-710 OR 0810-711 for 50 hours combined field work this semester] 0803-500-505 Exploring the Arts Elective 0809-596 Inquiry and Expression (MUST be taken after 12 credits and before 24 credits are completed). -or- Studio Art Elective 0803-500-505 Exploring the Arts Elective -or- Studio Art Elective ALL FULL-TIME CANDIDATES SHOULD TAKE AND PASS THE L.A.S.T. THIS SEMESTER | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A. in General Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | This program designed to meet the needs of three distinct groups: students planning to use a master degree to advance their career, students interested in future doctoral level training but who need additional preparation to apply competitively for such a program, students with a general interest in psychology but who have not yet determined a specific career path. preclinical psychology, forensic psychology, or industrial-organizational psychology. If students choose a concentration, they must select at least five electives from that cluster plus any other two electives. However, it is not necessary to select a specific concentration. In that case, students may select any seven electives. All master’s courses are three credits. | GRE is not required. Applicants are required to have a GPA of at least 3.0 and to submit: two letters of recommendation, personal essay, transcripts from all previously attended schools, listing of grades in all undergraduate and graduate psychology courses rerequisite courses (or equivalents): Developmental Psychology (Human Development, Lifespan Development, Child Development), Statistics, Psychopathology (Abnormal Psychology) |
Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MPS 603 Psychopathology, MPS 607 Developmental Psychology, MPS 606 Research Design, MPS 646 Research Methods II: Program Evaluation, MPS 609 Cognition and Consciousness, MPS 520 Eating Disorders, MPS 608 Human Diversity, MPS 612 Contemporary Views of Psychoanalysis, MPS 613 Theories of Industrial and Organization Psychology, MPS 615 Psychology of Addictions, MPS 616 Personality Disorders: Disorders of the Self, MPS 617 Psychology of Literature, MPS 618 Trauma S/T: Dream Analysis Vocational Counseling, MPS 619 S/T: Psychology of Aging, MPS 619 S/T: Prejudice in Psychology, MPS 621 Psychology and the Movies, MPS 622 Psychology in Advertising, MPS 623 S/T: Abnormalities of the Brain and Behavior, MPS 624 S/T: Psychology of Women, 631 Employment Assessment in Organizations, MPS 625 S/T: Psychology of Optimism, MPS 625 Talent Acquisition in Organizations Executive Coaching S/T: Abuse in Intimate Relations: Therapeutic and Legal Issues. |
Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Hy Weinberg Center Room 220 Adelphi University, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4800 | Adelphi has long been recognized as a pioneer in the study of psychology. In 1972, the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies became the nation first university-based professional school of psychology. Today Derner is internationally recognized for its dedication to scholarship and its commitment to training professionals to meet the needs of a society in transition. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A. in Mental Health Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | This program prepares students to be skilled, knowledgeable, and ethical mental health counseling professionals providing services to individuals, groups, and families in a variety of settings. Graduates will demonstrate: Competency in the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders. An understanding and respect for human diversity. Strong communication skills. An ability to facilitate client growth, development, and coping skills. A respect for the ethics and standards of practice endorsed by the mental health counseling profession. | Applicants must meet the following requirements: Two letters of recommendation, Minimum GPA of 3.1, Transcripts from all previously attended schools, listing of grades in all undergraduate and graduate psychology courses, Graduate Record Examination (general only, not subject), an admission interview. Prerequisite courses (or equivalents) in the following: Developmental Psychology (Human Development, Lifespan Development, Child Development), Research Methods (Research Design, Experimental Psychology), Psychopathology (Abnormal Psychology), General Psychology (Introduction to Psychology). Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MPS 603 Personality, Psychopathology, and Diagnosis, MPS 630 Clinical Assessment, MPS 606 Research Methods I, MPS 618 Trauma, MPS 607 Developmental Psychology, PMH 502 Mental Health Counseling II, PMH 501 Mental Health Counseling I, PMH 521 Group Counseling, PMH 503 Counseling Practicum (100 hours), PMH 506 Professional Development Seminar, PMH 522 Family Counseling. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Hy Weinberg Center Room 220 Adelphi University, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4800 | Adelphi has long been recognized as a pioneer in the study of psychology. In 1972, the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies became the nation first university-based professional school of psychology. Today Derner is internationally recognized for its dedication to scholarship and its commitment to training professionals to meet the needs of a society in transition. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A. in School Psychology | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | This program combines academic studies with internships, field work, and practical to give candidates a broad base of knowledge in the fundamentals of psychology and the practical experience of working with diverse student populations. The program is committed to the ethical standards of the National Association of School Psychologists and the American Psychological Association. | GRE is not required. Applicants are required to have an overall GPA of at least 3.0 and 15 credits in psychology, which must include: general psychology, developmental child or adolescence psychology, abnormal personality or social psychology, tests and measurements statistics. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MPS 603 Personality, Psychopathology and Diagnosis, SPY 615 Neuropsychological Bases of Child Behavior and Learning, SPY 602 Psychoanalytic Theory, MPS 602 Theories of Personality, MPS 607 Developmental Psychology, MPS 609 Consciousness and Cognition, SPY 702 Multicultural Issues In Psychology, SPY 704 Gender Issues in Psychology, ECH 601 School and Society, ECH 600 Childhood Development, EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education, EEC 700 Families, Culture, and Children: Understanding Children with Special Needs, EDU 723 Special Topics: Emotional Life of Children and Possibility of Classroom as Community, SPH 603 Language Disorders in Children. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Hy Weinberg Center Room 220 Adelphi University, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4800 | Adelphi has long been recognized as a pioneer in the study of psychology. In 1972, the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies became the nation first university-based professional school of psychology. Today Derner is internationally recognized for its dedication to scholarship and its commitment to training professionals to meet the needs of a society in transition. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A. in Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program broaden students perspective and to enrich life in innumerable ways. This program seeks to nurture talent, encourage expression, and expand the boundaries of creativity. | Applicant must have earned a baccalaureate degree from an accredited four-year college and have developed a portfolio of artwork in a representative range of media. This work must have been done within the last two years. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ARH 563 Philosophy and Criticism of Art 3, ART 765 Color, Media, and Materials 3 One Art History. Elective 3: ART 793 Major Creative Project, ART 709, ART 710 Printmaking 3 ART 711, ART 712 Sculpture 3, ART 713 ART 714 Painting 3, ART 723 ART 724 Ceramics 3, ART 761 ART 762 Photography, ART 769 ART 770 Printmaking (Prerequisites: ART 709, 710) 3, ART 771 ART 772 Painting (Prerequisites: ART 713, 714) 3, ART 773 ART 774 Sculpture (Prerequisites: ART 711, 712) 3 ART 775 ART 776 Ceramics (Prerequisites: ART 723, 724). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Adelphi University, Blodgett Hall Room 302P O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4460 | The Department of Art and Art History offers a program of study that leads to the Master of Arts degree in studio art. Each student designs a program of study in consultation with a faculty advisor. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A. in TESOL (Non-Certification Track) | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is designed for international students and other candidates preparing to teach English as a Second language to adults or in programs where certification is not required. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. Applicants must meet the appropriate liberal arts course work mandated by New York States. Any course work required to meet these standards must be completed prior to the final student teaching semester. Candidates for TESOL certification are required to complete 12 credits of a language other than English. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction does not waive the student teaching requirement. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EBE600 Foundations of Bilingual and Multicultural Education: Theory and Practice*, EBE 601 TESOL I: Developing Literacy and Language Arts Skills in the ESL Classroom*, EBE 620 Linguistics for teachers: Psycho/Structural Considerations, * EBE 600 and EBE 601 are co-requisites, EBE 630 Structure of English: Pedagogical Grammar for TESOL, EBE 720 Assessment Considerations for ESL and Bilingual Populations, EBE 721 Theories of Second Language Acquisition: Socio/Cultural Considerations, Course# Course Title, EBE 602 TESOL II: Developing Literacy and Technology Skills in Content Areas (25 hrs FW), EBE 652 Paradigms of Knowing -or- ECH 601 School and Society, EBE 820 Applied Experience in TESOL (6 credits), EBE 825 Masters Seminar in TESOL. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.A. in TESOL, Grades K - 12 | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is designed for students seeking initial certification in TESOL or ESL Education. Students certified in areas other than ESL can enroll to fulfill the graduate degree requirement for professional certification in both areas. Students with initial or professional certification in areas other than ESL may earn an additional certificate by pursuing in the Advanced Certificate Program in TESOL. The department does not offer an in-service graduate degree program in TESOL for students who already hold initial certification in ESL. These students are advised to enroll in a graduate program leading to initial certification in an area other than TESOL in order to fulfill the professional certification requirements in both areas. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. Applicants must meet the appropriate liberal arts course work mandated by New York States. Any course work required to meet these standards must be completed prior to the final student teaching semester. Candidates for TESOL certification are required to complete 12 credits of a language other than English. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction does not waive the student teaching requirement. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EBE 600 Foundations of Bilingual and Multicultural Education: Theory and Practice (25 hrs FW) (Benchmark Assignment) EBE 611 Methods of Teaching Literacy and Native Language Arts in the Bilingual Classroom, EBE 601 TESOL I: Developing Literacy and Language Arts in the ESL Classroom (25 hrs FW) (Benchmark Assignment), EBE 630 Structure of English: Pedagogical Grammar for TESOL, ECH 601 School and Society EBE 720 Assessment Considerations for ESL and Bilingual Populations (Benchmark Assignment), EBE 620 Linguistics for Teachers: Psycho/Structural Considerations, EBE 721 Theories of Second Language Acquisition: Socio-Cultural Considerations (Benchmark Assignment), EDU 900 NYSTCE Review Course (0 credits), EBE 602 TESOL II: Developing Literacy and Technology Skills in Content Areas (25 hrs FW) (Benchmark Assignment), EBE 820 Student Teaching in TESOL or equivalent (see the note on student teaching below) (Benchmark Assignment), EEC 710 Classroom Management (25 hrs FW), EBE 825 Master's Seminar in TESOL (Benchmark Assignment). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. - Early Childhood Special Education Dual Certification, Birth through Grade 2 | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program leads to certification in early childhood special education. It is intended for candidates who already hold certificates in a teaching area, but not in either of the two stated areas. This program prepares exemplary educational professionals dedicated to helping children with a diverse range of abilities and disabilities reach their fullest potential. At the core of teaching philosophy is the commitment to uphold the dignity of every child and to create a climate in which all children and families are valued and respected. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education (25 hrs FW), SPH 602 Speech Language and Development, EEC 630 Human Development, Cognition, and Teaching, ELY 640 Emergent Literacy in Early Childhood Education (FW) (Prerequisite: SPH 602), EYC 665 Artistic and Creative Expression for Early Childhood Educators (2 credits), EYC 710 Development of Mathematical Thinking in Young Children (FW) (2 credits), EYC 720 Early Science and Technology in Early Childhood (25 hrs FW) (2 credits), EYC 650 Facing History: Roots of Early Childhood Education and Foundations for Practice, EYC 655 Childrens Play: A Source of Development and Learning, ECS 600 Introduction to Inclusive Early Intervention: Prematurity, Newborns, Infants, and Toddlers (FW) (Prerequisite: EEC 600), ECS 610 Creating and Maintaining Family Partnerships for Infants and Young Children with Special Needs (FW), ECS 620 Introduction to Inclusive Early Childhood Special Education: Preschool through Primary (FW). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. - Early Childhood Special Education Preservice Dual Certification | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is intended for candidates who do not hold certification in either of the stated areas. The goal is to provide teachers with the skills that meet the unique needs of children and enhance their quality of life. While some children require specialized services, this program train teachers to work in inclusive settings and regular classrooms that encourage children to become as independent as possible and to integrate them into a broad spectrum of activities. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: SPH 602 Speech and Language Development, EYC 650 Facing History: Roots of Early Childhood Education and Foundations for Practice, EYC 655 Children Play: A Source of Development and Learning, EYC 665 Artistic and Creative Expression for Early Childhood Educators (2 credits), ELY 640 Emergent Literacy in Early Childhood Education (FW) (Prerequisite: SPH 602), YC 710 Development of Mathematical Thinking in Young Children (FW) (2 credits), EYC 720 Early Science and Technology in Early Childhood (FW) (2 credits, EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education* (25 hrs FW), ECS 600 Introduction to Inclusive Early Intervention: Prematurity, Newborns, Infants, and Toddlers (FW) (Prerequisite: EEC 600), ECS 610 Creating and Maintaining Family Partnerships for Infants and Young Children with Special Needs (FW), ECS 620 Introduction to Inclusive Early Childhood Special Education: Preschool through Primary (FW) (Prerequisite: EEC 600. |
Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. - Early Childhood Special Education Single Certification, Birth through Grade 2 | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is intended for candidates who already hold certification in early childhood. The goal is to provide teachers with the skills that meet the unique needs of children and enhance their quality of life. While some children require specialized services, this program train teachers to work in inclusive settings and regular classrooms that encourage children to become as independent as possible and to integrate them into a broad spectrum of activities. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ECS 600 Introduction to Inclusive Early Intervention: Prematurity, Newborns, Infants, and Toddlers (25 hrs FW) (Prerequisite: EEC 600), ECS 610 Creating and Maintaining Family Partnerships for Infants and Young Children with Special Needs (FW), ECS 620 Introduction to Inclusive Early Childhood Special Education: Preschool through Primary (FW) (Prerequisite: EEC 600), ECS 700 Authentic Infant and Early Childhood Identification, Assessment, and Progress Evaluation (FW), ECS 710 Inclusive Curriculum, Methods, and Teaming for Infants and Young Children with Disabilities (FW) (Prerequisite: ECS 700), ECS 720 Applied Behavioral Analysis and Positive Behavioral Support: Self, Individual, and Group Management in Early Childhood (25 hrs FW) (Prerequisite: ECS 700), ECS 800 Masters Seminar in Early Childhood Special Education: Authentic Research and Advocacy (FW). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. Nursing / M.B.A. | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Business | This program incorporates contemporary management theory, business fundamentals, essential core competencies, and knowledge, skills and values of advanced professional nursing practice. The objective of this joint degree program is to prepare leaders who facilitate and embody the competencies required to help transform health service organizations and health systems, as a whole. This combined program is offered in both School of Nursing and the School of Business. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: NUR 602 Foundation A: Conceptual and Theoretical Nursing Practice 3, NUR 604 Small Group Phenomena 3, NUR 664 Collective Bargaining 1 - 3, NUR 665 Legal Issues 1, NUR 666 Ethical Issues 1, NUR 650 Nursing Research I 3, NUR 702 Health Issues, Policies and Politics 3, NUR 750 Nursing Research II 3, NUR 751 Project Advisement 0, NUR 768 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention 3, NUR 769 Roles and Functions of Nursing Service Administrator 4, NUR 770 Seminar and Practicum in Nursing Service. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. and Advanced Certificate in Early Childhood Special Education, Birth through Grade 2 | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is intended for candidates who already hold certification in early childhood, have a master degree (needed for professional or permanent certification), and are seeking additional training and certification. This program leads to certification in early childhood special education; it does not provide a degree. This program prepares exemplary educational professionals dedicated to helping children with a diverse range of abilities and disabilities reach their fullest potential. At the core of teaching philosophy is the commitment to uphold the dignity of every child and to create a climate in which all children and families are valued and respected. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ECS 600 Introduction to Inclusive Early Intervention: Prematurity, Newborns, Infants, and Toddlers (25 hrs FW) (Prerequisite: EEC 600), ECS 610 Creating and Maintaining Family Partnerships for Infants and Young Children with Special Needs (FW), ECS 620 Introduction to Inclusive Early Childhood Special Education: Preschool through Primary (FW), ECS 700 Authentic Infant and Early Childhood Identification, Assessment, and Progress Evaluation (FW), ECS 710 Inclusive Curriculum, Methods, and Teaming for Infants and Young Children with Disabilities (FW), ECS 720 Applied Behavioral Analysis and Positive Behavioral Support: Self, Individual, and Group Management in Early Childhood (25 hrs FW) (Prerequisite: ECS 700). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Biology - Non-thesis Option | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences | This program develop students' ability to analyze data, think scientifically, and understand the experimental basis of current biological knowledge. Special emphasis is placed on laboratory and field training, so that students gain experience performing experiments themselves using a variety of techniques and scientific instruments. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree in biology, biology, biochemistry or a related field. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Adelphi UniversityScience Building Room 127, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | By offering a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Biology - Research Thesis Option | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences | This program develop students' ability to analyze data, think scientifically, and understand the experimental basis of current biological knowledge. Special emphasis is placed on laboratory and field training, so that students gain experience performing experiments themselves using a variety of techniques and scientific instruments. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree in biology, biology, biochemistry or a related field. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Adelphi UniversityScience Building Room 127, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | By offering a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Childhood Special Education Studies | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | The goal of this program is to provide teachers with the skills that meet the unique needs of children and enhance their quality of life. While some children require specialized services, this program train teachers to work in inclusive settings and regular classrooms that encourage children to become as independent as possible and to integrate them into a broad spectrum of activities. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education (25 hrs FW), EEC 610 Current Topics in Special Education (Research I), EEC 620 Technology and Instruction, EEC 630 Human Development, Cognition, and Teaching, EEC 700 Families, Cultures, and Learning (10 hrs FW), EEC 705 Team Collaboration, EEC 710 Classroom Management (25 hrs FW), EEC 720 Formal and Informal Methods of Assessment (25 hrs FW), EEC 740 Math and Science Education for Special Education Students (25 hrs FW), EEC 750 Methods of Instruction (25 hrs FW), EEC 800 Master's Seminar in Special Education (Research II). | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Childhood Special Education in Inclusive Settings, Grades 1-6 In-Service Track | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is only open to candidates who hold a classroom teaching certificate in an area other than childhood or special education. The goal is to provide teachers with the skills that meet the unique needs of children and enhance their quality of life. While some children require specialized services, this program train teachers to work in inclusive settings and regular classrooms that encourage children to become as independent as possible and to integrate them into a broad spectrum of activities. Students are requested to consult an adviser for recommended course sequences, fieldwork requirements, and other program requirements. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education (25 hrs FW), ECH 601 School and Society, SPH 602 Speech and Language Development, EED 610 Health Promotion for Teachers, ELY 625 Approaches to Teaching Literacy, ECH 700 Social Studies and Critical Literacy in Childhood Education, EEC 740 Math and Science Education for Special Education Students, EEC 610 Current Topics in Special Education (Research I), EEC 620 Technology and Instruction, EEC 630 Human Development, Cognition, and Teaching, ELY 630 Literacy for the Exceptional Child (FW) Prerequisite: ELY 625), EEC 700 Families, Cultures, Professionals, and Children: Collaborating for Children with Special Needs, EEC 705 Team Collaboration. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Childhood Special Education in Inclusive Settings, Grades 1-6 Preservice Track | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program is only open to candidates with no prior classroom teaching certificates. The goal is to provide teachers with the skills that meet the unique needs of children and enhance their quality of life. While some children require specialized services, this program train teachers to work in inclusive settings and regular classrooms that encourage children to become as independent as possible and to integrate them into a broad spectrum of activities. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: S80ECH 601 School and Society, SPH 602 Speech and Language Development* May be taken concurrently with foundation courses. Required Courses (33 Credits): EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education (25 hrs FW)*, EEC 610 Current Topics in Special Education (Research I), EEC 620 Technology and Instruction EC 630 Human Development, Cognition, and Teaching, EEC 700 Families, Cultures, and Learning (FW)*, EEC 705 Team Collaboration, EEC 710 Classroom Management (FW), EEC 720 Formal and Informal Methods of Assessment (25 hrs FW), EEC 740 Math and Science Education for Special Education Students (FW), EEC 750 Methods of Instruction (25 hrs FW), EEC 800 Master's Seminar in Special Education. |
Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Childhood Special Education, Grades 1-6 | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program prepares exemplary educational professionals dedicated to helping children with a diverse range of abilities and disabilities reach their fullest potential. Through multidisciplinary course work and field-based study, students receive training that connects theory with the realities of today's educational experience. Candidates will develop competency in all the program-specific professional standards set forth by the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC). | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: EEC 600 Introduction to Special Education (25 hrs FW) SPH 602 Speech and Language Development. Required Courses (30 Credits): EEC 610 Current Topics in Special Education (Research I), EEC 620 Technology and Instruction, EEC 630 Human Development, Cognition, and Teaching, EEC 700 Families, Cultures, and Learning (10 hrs FW)* EEC 705 Team Collaboration, EEC 710 Classroom Management (25 hrs FW), EEC 720 Formal and Informal Methods of Assessment (25 hrs FW), EEC 750 Methods of Instruction (25 hrs FW), EEC 800 Master's Seminar in Special Education (Research II) ELY 630 Literacy for the Exceptional Child. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Emergency Nursing/Disaster Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Nursing | This program is designed to prepare nurses for managerial positions in the emergency department and disaster management settings. After completing the program, the graduate will be able to attain employment and successfully work in the field of disaster nursing and emergency management as a clinician, manager, educator, consultant, or researcher. | All applicants must meet the following criteria for admission to the Master's of Science program: all University admission requirements, currently licensed as a registered professional nurse in the state of New York or eligible for licensure in the state of New York, have completed a baccalaureate degree in nursing from an accredited undergraduate nursing program with a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 (B) or better, submit official transcripts of all prior academic work, have completed a basic statistics course with a grade of B or better. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: NUR 602 Frameworks for Advanced Nursing 3, NUR 606 Statistics for Nursing Research 3, NUR 657 Introduction to Emergency Management 3, NUR 690 Interventions for Human Responses to Disasters 3, NUR 607 Informatics: Health Science Information, Data and Knowledge 3, NUR 650 Seminar in Nursing Research: Conduct and Utilization 3, MGT 561 Management Theory and Organizational Behavior 3, NUR 605 Seminar in Clinical Leadership 3, NUR 702 Health Issues, Policies, and Politics in Healthcare 3, NUR 613 Special Needs of Vulnerable Groups During Disasters 3, NUR 693 Epidemics and Pandemics 3. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Nursing | School of Nursing, Alumnae Hall Room 220, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4510 | As founder and director of the Adelphi College School of Nursing from 1942 to 1948, Dr. Mildred Montag is credited with developing the nursing program and making it an integral part of Adelphi. She is also recognized for her impact on nursing education in the United States and throughout the world. In 1942, Dr. Montag was asked by Adelphi College, under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, to determine if local hospitals would cooperate in establishing a school of nursing at Adelphi College. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi’s residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Literacy Education Birth-Grade 12 | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program combines scholarship and practice in school and community settings to train literacy specialists and prepare them for leadership roles. The program will enhance the professional preparation of classroom teachers, interventional literacy teachers, clinicians, supervisors, and directors or coordinators of literacy in school districts. Completion of the program leads to New York State certification as a Literacy Specialist. The Literacy specialist preparation program was recently awarded national recognition by the International Reading Association. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ELY 600 Literacy and Research: Inquiry I, ELY 602 The Reading Writing Connection, ELY 603 Literacy in the Middle and Secondary Schools, ELY 750 Assessing and Addressing Literacy Needs I (Prerequisites: ELY 600 and ELY 602 or ELY 603), ELY 751 Assessing and Addressing Literacy Needs II (Prerequisite: ELY 750), ELY 753 Practicum in Literacy I (Prerequisite: ELY 751), ELY 754 Practicum in Literacy II (Prerequisite: ELY 753 prior to registration for this course), ELY 800 Organizing, Supervising, and Reforming Literacy Programs ELY 810 Literacy and Research: Inquiry II, ELY 521 Literature for Young Adults, ELY 545 Children's Literature, ELY 653 Language, Literacy, and Culture. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Literacy Education Birth-Grade 6 | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program combines scholarship and practice in school and community settings to train literacy specialists and prepare them for leadership roles. The program will enhance the professional preparation of classroom teachers, interventional literacy teachers, clinicians, supervisors, and directors or coordinators of literacy in school districts. Completion of the program leads to New York State certification as a Literacy Specialist. The Literacy specialist preparation program was recently awarded national recognition by the International Reading Association. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ELY 600 Literacy and Research: Inquiry I, ELY 602 The Reading Writing Connection, ELY 750 Assessing and Addressing Literacy Needs I (Prerequisites: ELY 600 and ELY 602 or ELY 603), ELY 751 Assessing and Addressing Literacy Needs II (Prerequisite: ELY 750), ELY 753 Practicum in Literacy I (Prerequisite: ELY 751), ELY 754 Practicum in Literacy II (Prerequisite: ELY 753 prior to registration for this course), ELY 800 Organizing, Supervising, and Reforming Literacy Programs, ELY 810 Literacy and Research: Inquiry II, ELY 545 Children's Literature, ELY 653 Language, Literacy, and Culture. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Literacy Education Grades 5-12 | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | This program combines scholarship and practice in school and community settings to train literacy specialists and prepare them for leadership roles. The program will enhance the professional preparation of classroom teachers, interventional literacy teachers, clinicians, supervisors, and directors or coordinators of literacy in school districts. Completion of the program leads to New York State certification as a Literacy Specialist. The Literacy specialist preparation program was recently awarded national recognition by the International Reading Association. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ELY 600 Literacy and Research: Inquiry I, ELY 603 Literacy in the Middle and Secondary Schools, ELY 750 Assessing and Addressing Literacy Needs I (Prerequisites: ELY 600 and ELY 602 or ELY 603), ELY 751 Assessing and Addressing Literacy Needs II (Prerequisite: ELY 750), ELY 753 Practicum in Literacy I (Prerequisite: ELY 751), ELY 754 Practicum in Literacy II (Prerequisite: ELY 753 prior to registration for this course), ELY 800 Organizing, Supervising, and Reforming Literacy Programs, ELY 810 Literacy and Research: Inquiry II, ELY 521 Literature for Young Adults. ELY 653 Language, Literacy, and Culture. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Harvey Hall, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4100 | The Department of Curriculum and Instruction prepares students to enter the professional education community with pride. It is committed to enhancing the skills, knowledge and spirit of candidates seeking their first teaching certification. The dedicated faculty shares a strong commitment to innovative teaching and an abiding respect for diversity. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Nursing Administration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Nursing | This program prepares nurse managers who can function in a variety of healthcare settings. Topics include nursing theories, group dynamics, communication and professional issues and trends. To prepare to serve as leaders in improving healthcare services, students study leadership roles in the healthcare field. Through the program's research component, students gain practice in analyzing and implementing research findings. | All applicants must meet the following criteria for admission to the Master's of Science program: all University admission requirements, currently licensed as a registered professional nurse in the state of New York or eligible for licensure in the state of New York, have completed a baccalaureate degree in nursing from an accredited undergraduate nursing program with a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 (B) or better, submit official transcripts of all prior academic work, have completed a basic statistics course with a grade of B or better. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: NUR 602 Frameworks for Advanced Nursing 3, NUR 604 Team Building for Nurse Leaders 3, NUR 606 Statistics for Nursing Research 3, NUR 677 Financial Literacy for Nurse Leaders 3, NUR 607 Informatics: Health Science Information, Data and Knowledge 3, NUR 650 Seminar in Nursing Research: Conduct and Utilization 3, NUR 605 Seminar in Clinical Leadership 3, MGT 561 Management Theory and Organizational Behavior 3, NUR 664 Collective Bargaining, NUR 768 Seminar in Processes of Evaluation for Nurse Leaders 3, NUR 668 Ethical and Legal Dimensions of Healthcare 3. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Nursing | School of Nursing, Alumnae Hall Room 220, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4510 | As founder and director of the Adelphi College School of Nursing from 1942 to 1948, Dr. Mildred Montag is credited with developing the nursing program and making it an integral part of Adelphi. She is also recognized for her impact on nursing education in the United States and throughout the world. In 1942, Dr. Montag was asked by Adelphi College, under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, to determine if local hospitals would cooperate in establishing a school of nursing at Adelphi College. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi’s residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Nursing Education | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Nursing | This program prepares students as nurse educators competent to function in a variety of educational and healthcare settings, but primarily to assume responsibilities as faculty members in undergraduate nursing programs. As students develop in this advanced practice role, they will acquire knowledge, skills, and values related to teaching and learning, instructional design, assessment and measurement strategies, and curriculum development implementation and evaluation in nursing education. The Capstone seminar and practicum will afford students the opportunity to be guided by expert nurse educators and to apply newly gained knowledge as the function in the nurse educator role. | All applicants must meet the following criteria for admission to the Master's of Science program: all University admission requirements, currently licensed as a registered professional nurse in the state of New York or eligible for licensure in the state of New York, have completed a baccalaureate degree in nursing from an accredited undergraduate nursing program with a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 (B) or better, submit official transcripts of all prior academic work, have completed a basic statistics course with a grade of B or better. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: NUR 602 Frameworks for Advanced Nursing 3, NUR 605 Seminar in Clinical Leadership 3, NUR 606 Statistics for Nursing Research 3, NUR 702 Health Issues, Policies, and Politics in Healthcare 3, NUR 607 Informatics: Health Science Information, Data and Knowledge 3, NUR 650 Seminar in Nursing Research: Conduct and Utilization 3, NUR 789 Educational Theories and Application to Learning 3, NUR 668 Ethical and Legal Dimensions of Healthcare 3. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Nursing | School of Nursing, Alumnae Hall Room 220, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4510 | As founder and director of the Adelphi College School of Nursing from 1942 to 1948, Dr. Mildred Montag is credited with developing the nursing program and making it an integral part of Adelphi. She is also recognized for her impact on nursing education in the United States and throughout the world. In 1942, Dr. Montag was asked by Adelphi College, under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, to determine if local hospitals would cooperate in establishing a school of nursing at Adelphi College. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi’s residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Nursing: Adult Health Nurse Practitioner | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Nursing | This program entails in-depth study of adult health nursing. The curriculum integrates theoretical knowledge and practical skills while exploring the issues and forces within the healthcare delivery system that affect the roles of the advanced practice nurse. Students have opportunities to work with advanced practice nurses and other health professionals in a variety of clinical settings. | All applicants must meet the following criteria for admission to the Master's of Science program: all University admission requirements, currently licensed as a registered professional nurse in the state of New York or eligible for licensure in the state of New York, have completed a baccalaureate degree in nursing from an accredited undergraduate nursing program with a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 (B) or better, submit official transcripts of all prior academic work, have completed a basic statistics course with a grade of B or better. Applicants should have two years of clinical nursing practice prior to enrolling in the specialty courses. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: NUR 606 Statistics for Nursing Research 3, NUR 702 Health Issues, Policy, and Politics in Healthcare 3, NUR 602 Frameworks for Advanced Nursing 3, NUR 738 Adult Health Promotion and Disease Prevention 3, NUR 650 Seminar in Nursing Research: Conduct, and Utilization 3, NUR 607 Informatics: Health Science Information, Data and Knowledge 3, NUR 755 Advanced Physical Assessment of the Adult: Clinical 2, NUR 764 Advanced Physical Assessment of the Adult 3, NUR 763 Advanced Pharmacology 3, NUR 754 Advanced Human Physiology 3, NUR 762 Advanced Pathophysiology 3, NUR 761 Advanced Practice: Professional Role and Practice Management 1 | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Nursing | School of Nursing, Alumnae Hall Room 220, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4510 | As founder and director of the Adelphi College School of Nursing from 1942 to 1948, Dr. Mildred Montag is credited with developing the nursing program and making it an integral part of Adelphi. She is also recognized for her impact on nursing education in the United States and throughout the world. In 1942, Dr. Montag was asked by Adelphi College, under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, to determine if local hospitals would cooperate in establishing a school of nursing at Adelphi College. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi’s residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Physics with Optics Concentration - Non Thesis Track | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program plays a dominant role in a multitude of technologies—lasers, communications, sensors, computers, defense, electronics, medical technologies surgery, and energy technologies, to name a few. The growing workforce needs in these areas lead to great demand and high salaries. Benefits of studying in the program: The course schedule accommodates students with full-time jobs. The program features small classes with personal attention, state-of-the-art instructional laboratories, and a faculty with a wide variety of cutting-edge research programs and innovations in optics education. The optics books authoorange by Adelphi faculty have world-wide recognition. Research facilities include laboratories for lasers, modern optics, quantum optics, nonlinear optics, laser sensors, laser cooling and trapping of atoms, energy technologies, flame diagnostics, and quantum dots (nanotechnologies). Financial aid, teaching assistantships, and research assistantships are available. | Applicants should have a bachelor’s degree in science or engineering. GPA of 3.0 or higher typically required, although work experience and other factors can partially compensate for lower GPAs. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are; PHY 502: Electrodynamics, PHY 505: Optical Instrumentation, PHY 507: Quantum Mechanics I, PHY 513: Solid State Physics for Optics, PHY 515: Modern Optics Laboratory, Elective courses: PHY 603: Lasers I, PHY 604: Lasers II, PHY 606: Physical Optics, PHY 607: Quantum Mechanics II, PHY 608: Nonlinear Optics, PHY 613: Statistical Mechanics, PHY 620: Advanced Mathematical Methods for Physics, PHY 623: Classical Mechanics, PHY 628: Atomic Physics and Spectroscopy, PHY 642: Quantum Optics, PHY 648: Fiber Optics, PHY 658: Laser Cooling and Trapping, PHY 662: Radiation, Detection, and Noise. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Adelphi UniversityBlodgett Hall, Room 8Post Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4877 | The Physics Department features state-of-the-art instructional and research laboratories and facilities including a new rooftop observatory with a GPS remote-control telescope. Small classes offer personalized attention from the faculty of renowned authors and scientists. Students also have the opportunity to conduct research with leaders in their respective fields. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S. in Physics with Optics Concentration - Thesis Track | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program plays a dominant role in a multitude of technologies—lasers, communications, sensors, computers, defense, electronics, medical technologies surgery, and energy technologies, to name a few. The growing workforce needs in these areas lead to great demand and high salaries. Benefits of studying in the program: The course schedule accommodates students with full-time jobs. The program features small classes with personal attention, state-of-the-art instructional laboratories, and a faculty with a wide variety of cutting-edge research programs and innovations in optics education. The optics books authoorange by Adelphi faculty have world-wide recognition. Research facilities include laboratories for lasers, modern optics, quantum optics, nonlinear optics, laser sensors, laser cooling and trapping of atoms, energy technologies, flame diagnostics, and quantum dots (nanotechnologies). Financial aid, teaching assistantships, and research assistantships are available. | Applicants should have a bachelor’s degree in science or engineering. GPA of 3.0 or higher typically required, although work experience and other factors can partially compensate for lower GPAs. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are; PHY 502: Electrodynamics, PHY 505: Optical Instrumentation, PHY 507: Quantum Mechanics I, PHY 513: Solid State Physics for Optics, PHY 515: Modern Optics Laboratory, Elective courses: PHY 603: Lasers I, PHY 604: Lasers II, PHY 606: Physical Optics, PHY 607: Quantum Mechanics II, PHY 608: Nonlinear Optics, PHY 613: Statistical Mechanics, PHY 620: Advanced Mathematical Methods for Physics, PHY 623: Classical Mechanics, PHY 628: Atomic Physics and Spectroscopy, PHY 642: Quantum Optics, PHY 648: Fiber Optics, PHY 658: Laser Cooling and Trapping, PHY 662: Radiation, Detection, and Noise. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Adelphi UniversityBlodgett Hall, Room 8Post Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4877 | The Physics Department features state-of-the-art instructional and research laboratories and facilities including a new rooftop observatory with a GPS remote-control telescope. Small classes offer personalized attention from the faculty of renowned authors and scientists. Students also have the opportunity to conduct research with leaders in their respective fields. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | M.S.W. / Post-Master Certificate in Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Business | This program is designed to provide the human resource professional with the personnel knowledge and skills needed to perform effectively in this rapidly changing field. Students studying for an M.S.W. degree in the School of Social Work are eligible to enroll in the Human Resources Management Certificate offered by the School of Business. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ACC 600 Accounting For Managerial Analysis 3 cr, ACC 601 Financial Statement Analysis 3 cr, ACC 605 Tax Aspects Of Financial Transactions 3 cr, ACC 703 Advanced Auditing 3 cr, ACC 704 Advanced Federal Taxation 3 cr, ACC 708 Seminar In Accounting Theory 3 cr, BUS 653 Business Ethics International Perspectives 3 cr, BUS 662 Entrepreneurship/Intrapreneurship 3 cr, BUS 679 Strategic Management 3 cr, BUS 689 Persuasive Communications And Negotiation 3 cr US 690 S/T: Conflict Management. |
Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Management | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Business | This program gives extensive knowledge of their own disciplines and develop the critical skills necessary to find innovative solutions and to become responsible leaders in a constantly changing environment. The Adelphi M.B.A. features several new or newly redesigned courses and introduces new topical concepts such as globalization, e-commerce, benchmarking for excellence, and shareholder value creation into existing courses. These changes build upon the strengths of faculty and School of Business. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | MBA | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Program Finance | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Business | This program gives extensive knowledge of their own disciplines and develop the critical skills necessary to find innovative solutions and to become responsible leaders in a constantly changing environment. The Adelphi M.B.A. features several new or newly redesigned courses and introduces new topical concepts such as globalization, e-commerce, benchmarking for excellence, and shareholder value creation into existing courses. These changes build upon the strengths of faculty and School of Business. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | MBA | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ACC 601 Financial Statement Analysis, ACC 704 Federal Taxation, ACC 704 Advanced Cost Accounting, ACC 704 Seminar in Accounting Theory, FIN 510 Securities Markets, FIN 633 Corporate Finance II, FIN 713 Seminar in Finance, FIN 737 Financial Theory and Practice, FIN 738 Investment Analysis, FIN 739 Portfolio Management, FIN 743 International Financial Management | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Program Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Business | This program gives extensive knowledge of their own disciplines and develop the critical skills necessary to find innovative solutions and to become responsible leaders in a constantly changing environment. The Adelphi M.B.A. features several new or newly redesigned courses and introduces new topical concepts such as globalization, e-commerce, benchmarking for excellence, and shareholder value creation into existing courses. These changes build upon the strengths of faculty and School of Business. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | MBA | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ACC 500 Financial Accounting 3, OPR 501 Computer Applications 3, OPR 507 Mathematics for Managers, ECA 520 Macroeconomics 3, ECA 521 Microeconomics 3, BUS 551 Legal and Ethical Environment 3, FIN 630 Corporate Finance (Prereqs. 670, 520, 521) 3, MGT 561 Management Theory and Organizational Behavior 3, MKT 580 Marketing Management 3, OPR 573 Management Information Systems (Prereq. 670) 3, OPR 670 Statistical Methods (Prereq. 507) 3. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Program Management Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Business | This program gives extensive knowledge of their own disciplines and develop the critical skills necessary to find innovative solutions and to become responsible leaders in a constantly changing environment. The Adelphi M.B.A. features several new or newly redesigned courses and introduces new topical concepts such as globalization, e-commerce, benchmarking for excellence, and shareholder value creation into existing courses. These changes build upon the strengths of faculty and School of Business. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | MBA | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ACC 601 Financial Statement Analysis, ACC 704 Federal Taxation, ACC 704 Advanced Cost Accounting, ACC 704 Seminar in Accounting Theory, OPR 574 Information Systems Analysis and Design Methods, OPR 575 Database Management Systems, OPR 576 Data Communications. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Program Marketing/E-Commerce | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Business | This program gives extensive knowledge of their own disciplines and develop the critical skills necessary to find innovative solutions and to become responsible leaders in a constantly changing environment. The Adelphi M.B.A. features several new or newly redesigned courses and introduces new topical concepts such as globalization, e-commerce, benchmarking for excellence, and shareholder value creation into existing courses. These changes build upon the strengths of faculty and School of Business. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | MBA | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: ACC 601 Financial Statement Analysis, ACC 704 Federal Taxation, ACC 704 Advanced Cost Accounting, ACC 704 Seminar in Accounting Theory, MKT 680 Sales Promotion and Direct Marketing, MKT 780 Marketing Research, MKT 781 Sales Management, MKT 782 Advertising Management, MKT 785 New Product Management, MKT 787 Consumer Behavior. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Major in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | This program is both theoretical and practical, and provides the abilities to develop and to maintain software. To graduate with a degree in mathematics or computer science, majors must have a grade-point average of at least 2.0 in all mathematics and computer science courses, with at most one grade lower than a C. This applies to those courses that have been taken at Adelphi and are in fulfillment of degree requirements. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Major | Adelphi University | The courses are:Calculus and Analytic Geometry I, Calculus and Analytic Geometry II, Linear Algebra, Introduction to Probability Theory, Theory of Numbers, Symbolic Logic, Mathematical Statistics, Introduction to Queueing Theory, Numerical Calculus, Discrete Structures, Introduction to Computer Programming, Introduction to Algorithms and Data Structures, Computer Organization and Assembly Language, Survey of Programming Languages, Software I, Software II, Software II, Algorithms and Complexity, Systems I, Senior Seminar in Information Systems, Graphical User Interface Programming, Artificial Intelligence, Computer Graphics and Image Processing, Systems II, Special Topics, Software Engineering, Database Management Systems, Computer Networks, Operating Systems. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 111 Alumnae Hall, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4480 | This department is the art and science of abstraction; it is the systematic study of quantity, structure, space, and change; to paraphrase Newton, it is the language in which the universe is written. The study of mathematics provides the abilities to analyze data, discover patterns, and reason logically. Computer Science is the fusion of abstraction and technology; it is the study of representing, processing, and communicating information, the design and analysis of algorithms, and the implementation of solutions through both hardware and software. The study of computer science is both theoretical and practical, and provides the abilities to develop and to maintain software. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Major in Computer and Management Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Business | This program is both theoretical and practical, and provides the abilities to develop and to maintain software. To graduate with a degree in mathematics or computer science, majors must have a grade-point average of at least 2.0 in all mathematics and computer science courses, with at most one grade lower than a C. This applies to those courses that have been taken at Adelphi and are in fulfillment of degree requirements. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Major | Adelphi University | The courses are:Management of Financial Resources, Pre-calculus, Elementary Functions, Discrete Structures, Introduction to Business, Introduction to Computers and Their Applications, Introduction to Algorithms and Data Structures, Introduction to Computer Science IIA, Principles of Management, Information Technology and Applications, Analytical and Statistical Modeling, Statistics for the Sciences, Management of Production and Operations, Database Management Systems, Database Management Systems, Senior Seminar in Information Systems. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Business | School of Business, Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise Room 121, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4670 | The School of Business is located in the Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise, named after legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist Horace Hagedorn, founder of Miracle Gro. Located near Long Island parks and beaches, the 75-acre Garden City campus is only 45 minutes from New York City and features state-of-the-art, Web-capable classrooms and computer labs. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Major in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program in the Environmental Studies Department provide firm, integrated foundations in both the social-political-cultural and the scientific-technical areas. This preparation will make students environmentally aware members of society in many professions, graduate study in Environmental Studies/Sciences, or both. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Major | Adelphi University | The courses are:Social Sciences and Environmental Problems, Natural Sciences and Environmental Problems, Chemical Safety in Laboratory and Studio, Senior Seminar in Environmental Studies, Internship in Environmental Studies, Humankind, Culture and the Environment, Human Evolution, The Price System,The National Economy, Weather and Climate, Environment and Politics, The Living World, Darwin to DNA, Concepts and Methods of Biology I, Concepts and Methods of Biology II, General Chemistry I, General Chemistry II, Essentials of Chemistry I, Essentials of Chemistry II, College Physics I, College Physics II, Physics I, Physics II, Survey of Statistics, Statistics for Natural Science,Psychological Statistics, Sociological Statistics. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, Science Building 103, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4170 | The fragile and delicate ecological checks and balances that have sustained life since its origin more than three billion years ago are only now beginning to be understood. But much remains to be learned; for example to predict with certainty the orbital characteristics of a weather satellite, yet ironically, are unable to predict with certainty tomorrow's weather. Harmful intrusions into the environment can be a result of how to use technology. These intrusions can also be considered in their behavioral, social and political contexts. These cultural, economic, political, scientific, technological and social complexities presented by our interactions with the environment present some of the most formidable intellectual challenges facing us today. As a consequence, any single perceived environmental issue involves the interlacing of many of our liberal arts disciplines. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Major in Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications | This program is designed to equip students with the professional skills and critical thinking abilities necessary to work as journalists in today’s rapidly evolving field. The plan of study covers writing for newspapers and magazines, digital journalism, and photojournalism. Additional courses are offered in sports journalism, propaganda, media law, and documentary filmmaking. Students have the opportunity to work both on the school’s award winning student newspaper, the Delphian, and also on P.A.W.S., the Adelphi Web radio station. Internships, which include work with both local newspapers and major network news departments, are available for the students to explore the field and showcase their skills. | Students should have a SAT score of at least 1200 with the math score of at least 600 with a high school grade-point average of at least 93 out of 100. They should be in the upper 10% of their high school class and must have a definite interest in the profession of optometry and have explored it. They must show evidence of community involvement and t has reasonable communication and interpersonal skills. | Major | Adelphi University | The courses are:Communication Theory, History Of Media and Communication, Art Of Film And Video, History Of Cinema I, Production Assistantship, Media And Children, Writing For Newpapers I, Writing For Newpapers I, Magazine Editing and Production, S/T: Photojournalism, Video I, Special Topics, Hate And Conflict: Art, Media And Political Science, Free Speech, Media Law, and Democracy, New Communication Technology and Social Change, Film II, Video II, Moving Image Workshop, Independent Study, Professional Internship, Adolescence And The Media. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications, Blodgett Hall, Adelphi UniversityPost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | This department prides itself on the creation of a learning community that challenges, supports and encourages all students at every level to reach their potential. In rigorous classes, students gain the essential skills to enable them to access, analyze and use information and to learn how to communicate in both traditional and digital contexts. The course of study culminates in a senior thesis which represents a major research project in the student’s prime area of interest.Students are mentored by a faculty with academic and professional experience in the three disciplines. Professional internships provide first-hand experience which may lead to future employment. | No | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Major in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | This program is both theoretical and practical, and provides the abilities to develop and to maintain software. To graduate with a degree in mathematics or computer science, majors must have a grade-point average of at least 2.0 in all mathematics and computer science courses, with at most one grade lower than a C. This applies to those courses that have been taken at Adelphi and are in fulfillment of degree requirements. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Major | Adelphi University | The courses are: Calculus I, Calculus II, Calculus III, Discrete Structures, Linear Algebra, Introduction to Proofs and Abstract Reasoning, Introduction to Computer Programming, Geometry I,Introduction to Probability Theory, Advanced Mathematical Modeling, Analysis, Abstract Algebra. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 111 Alumnae Hall, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4480 | This department is the art and science of abstraction; it is the systematic study of quantity, structure, space, and change; to paraphrase Newton, it is the language in which the universe is written. The study of mathematics provides the abilities to analyze data, discover patterns, and reason logically. Computer Science is the fusion of abstraction and technology; it is the study of representing, processing, and communicating information, the design and analysis of algorithms, and the implementation of solutions through both hardware and software. The study of computer science is both theoretical and practical, and provides the abilities to develop and to maintain software. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Major in Media Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications | This program spans both human e.g. interpersonal, organizational, public and intercultural and mass communication. An exciting new area in Media Studies involves understanding how emerging technologies are shaping and transforming everyday life. This concentration is designed to expose students to these different, but interrelated, areas and provide them with the necessary tools to think critically and express themselves clearly. Scholarship in human communication can include such topics as communication behaviors, nonverbal communication, adult relationships, and the role of communication in development, cognition, culture, and psychosocial behavior. Mass communication focuses on the effects of media institutions and texts on culture and society as well as the individual. | Students should have a SAT score of at least 1200 with the math score of at least 600 with a high school grade-point average of at least 93 out of 100. They should be in the upper 10% of their high school class and must have a definite interest in the profession of optometry and have explored it. They must show evidence of community involvement and t has reasonable communication and interpersonal skills. | Major | Adelphi University | The courses are:Communication Theory, History Of Media and Communication, Art Of Film And Video, History Of Cinema I, Production Assistantship, Media And Children, Writing For Newpapers I, Writing For Newpapers I, Magazine Editing and Production, S/T: Photojournalism, Video I, Special Topics, Hate And Conflict: Art, Media And Political Science, Free Speech, Media Law, and Democracy, New Communication Technology and Social Change, Film II, Video II, Moving Image Workshop, Independent Study, Professional Internship, Adolescence And The Media. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications, Blodgett Hall, Adelphi UniversityPost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | This department prides itself on the creation of a learning community that challenges, supports and encourages all students at every level to reach their potential. In rigorous classes, students gain the essential skills to enable them to access, analyze and use information and to learn how to communicate in both traditional and digital contexts. The course of study culminates in a senior thesis which represents a major research project in the student’s prime area of interest.Students are mentored by a faculty with academic and professional experience in the three disciplines. Professional internships provide first-hand experience which may lead to future employment. | No | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Major in Moving Image Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications | This program prepares students not just to ride this changing tide, but to contribute to the shape of future reality. Students are exposed to the traditional grammar of cinema while at the same time being encouraged to explore new media possibilities in this evolving “language.” A variety of cinema studies courses expose students to the wide range of effective cinema. In small intensive workshop classes, students learn digital and film production. The plan of study includes a basic production class, followed by two levels of production courses in video and two in film. These culminate in the Open Studio Workshop, a class that allows students to produce ambitious personal projects in a professionally organized structure. Students can repeat this class to gain more experience. | Students should have a SAT score of at least 1200 with the math score of at least 600 with a high school grade-point average of at least 93 out of 100. They should be in the upper 10% of their high school class and must have a definite interest in the profession of optometry and have explored it. They must show evidence of community involvement and t has reasonable communication and interpersonal skills. | Major | Adelphi University | The courses are:Communication Theory, History Of Media and Communication, Art Of Film And Video, History Of Cinema I, Production Assistantship, Media And Children, Writing For Newpapers I, Writing For Newpapers I, Magazine Editing and Production, S/T: Photojournalism, Video I, Special Topics, Hate And Conflict: Art, Media And Political Science, Free Speech, Media Law, and Democracy, New Communication Technology and Social Change, Film II, Video II, Moving Image Workshop, Independent Study, Professional Internship, Adolescence And The Media. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communications, Blodgett Hall, Adelphi UniversityPost Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | This department prides itself on the creation of a learning community that challenges, supports and encourages all students at every level to reach their potential. In rigorous classes, students gain the essential skills to enable them to access, analyze and use information and to learn how to communicate in both traditional and digital contexts. The course of study culminates in a senior thesis which represents a major research project in the student’s prime area of interest.Students are mentored by a faculty with academic and professional experience in the three disciplines. Professional internships provide first-hand experience which may lead to future employment. | No | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Arts in Community Health Promotion | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program prepares health education specialists to utilize the resources of health education in the public, private and professional sectors. The program emphasizes education as the primary factor for the promotion of health and the prevention of disease. Students learn to provide programs at all levels of the health continuum from wellness to various prevention interventions including primary (health promotion), secondary (early detection and intervention), and tertiary (rehabilitative and therapeutic). Graduates of the program are equipped with the skills and training to: assess health status and/or the need for health education programs, plan, implement, and evaluate health promotion or education programs, participate in securing funding, coordinate health education activities and resources among agencies. | All applicants must show evidence of having completed an appropriate undergraduate course of study with a cumulative GPA of 2.75 to become a degree candidate to the program. Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. All students must have a 3.0 grade-point average in order to graduate. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: HED 601 Contemporary Health Issues 3, HED 602 Research and Technology in Health Education 3, HED 603 Mind/Body Dimensions in Health 3, HED 605 Issues in Community Health 3, HED 650 Health and Cultural Diversity 3, HED 654 Mass Communication for Health Educators 3, HED 703 Dynamics of Teaching Health Education 3, HED 750 Community Health Education: Planning and Implementation 3, HED 751 Fieldwork Internship 4. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Arts in Physical Education for Students Leading to New York State certification (GATE) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program GATE(Graduate Alternative Teacher Education Program) provides an alternative track for both initial and professional certification. Students without prior certification in physical education may enter the program. This program prepare professionals to teach and promote fitness and wellness that enhance the quality of life at every age. Through a multi-disciplinary approach, students gain the skills necessary to work with individuals and diverse groups in a variety of settings that includes schools, community health centers, recreation centers, and office environments. This program is designed for students who already have New York State professional certification. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: PED 618 Advanced Exercise Physiology I 3 cr, PED 619 Advanced Exercise Physiology II 3 cr, PED 620 Clinical Aspects Of Work Physiology 3 cr, PED 621 Laboratory Investigation Work Physiology 3 cr, PED 623 Adult Fitness Programming 3 cr, PED 624 Nutrition And Physical Activity 3 cr, PED 626 Principle Of Exercise Prescription 3 cr, PED 628 Cardiac Rehabilitation 3 cr, PED 632 Introduction To Sports Management 3 cr, PED 636 Athletic Administration 3 cr, PED 637 Organization And Administration Of Physical Education 3 cr, PED 638 Sports In American Culture 3 cr, PED 639 Introduction To Sports Law 3 cr. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Arts in Physical Education for Students New York State certification | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program prepare professionals to teach and promote fitness and wellness that enhance the quality of life at every age. Through a multi-disciplinary approach, students gain the skills necessary to work with individuals and diverse groups in a variety of settings that includes schools, community health centers, recreation centers, and office environments. This program is designed for students who already have New York State professional certification. | Baccalaureate in physical education is recommended for admission, it is not required. Students must: have a 3.0 GPA, submit an evaluation paper, contact their adviser or department chairman the semester prior to graduation to request departmental approval, complete an application for graduation. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: PED 618 Advanced Exercise Physiology I 3 cr, PED 619 Advanced Exercise Physiology II 3 cr, PED 620 Clinical Aspects Of Work Physiology 3 cr, PED 621 Laboratory Investigation Work Physiology 3 cr, PED 623 Adult Fitness Programming 3 cr, PED 624 Nutrition And Physical Activity 3 cr, PED 626 Principle Of Exercise Prescription 3 cr, PED 628 Cardiac Rehabilitation 3 cr, PED 632 Introduction To Sports Management 3 cr, PED 636 Athletic Administration 3 cr, PED 637 Organization And Administration Of Physical Education 3 cr, PED 638 Sports In American Culture 3 cr, PED 639 Introduction To Sports Law 3 cr. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Arts in Physical Education with Emphasis in Adapted Physical Education | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program prepares teachers to work with mentally and/or physically challenged students in a variety of school and activity-based environments. The program is designed for teachers with prior K-12 certification in physical education. Those entering the program without this certification may be required to take additional courses to meet the program requirements. | Students entering the program have a minimum 3.0 GPA. All students are required to submit a position paper or plan of study within the first 12 credits. Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: PED 618 Advanced Exercise Physiology I 3 cr, PED 619 Advanced Exercise Physiology II 3 cr, PED 620 Clinical Aspects Of Work Physiology 3 cr, PED 621 Laboratory Investigation Work Physiology 3 cr, PED 623 Adult Fitness Programming 3 cr, PED 624 Nutrition And Physical Activity 3 cr, PED 626 Principle Of Exercise Prescription 3 cr, PED 628 Cardiac Rehabilitation 3 cr, PED 632 Introduction To Sports Management 3 cr, PED 636 Athletic Administration 3 cr, PED 637 Organization And Administration Of Physical Education 3 cr, PED 638 Sports In American Culture 3 cr, PED 639 Introduction To Sports Law 3 cr. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Arts in Physical Education with Emphasis in Exercise Physiology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program prepares students for careers in adult fitness, school-based fitness, corporate/industrial wellness, cardiopulmonary rehabilitation, and research and development. The curriculum integrates the guidelines of the American College of Sports Medicine and continuously evolves to meet the changing needs of society. Students can adapt the curriculum to follow different career paths. Curriculum includes Clinical Exercise Physiologist, Health Fitness Specialist , Sport Medicine/Athletic Training, School-based Fitness Specialist, Cardiac Rehabilitation Specialist. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: PED 285 Rhythmic Movement Fundamentals 2 cr, PED 290 Technology Applications In HPE 3 cr, PED 305 Intro. To Sport Public Relations 3 cr, PED 315 Motor Development 3 cr, PED 340 Curriculum And Teaching In Physical Education 3 cr, PED 370 Aspects Of Coaching 3 cr PED 375 Social Issues In Physical Education And Sports 3 cr, PED 380 Physical Education In The Elementary School 3 cr, PED 461 Kinesiology 3 cr PED 463 Physiology Of Exercise 3 cr, PED 469 Adapted Physical Education 3 cr, PED 470 Health And Fitness 3 cr, PED 488 Practicum: Teaching 2 cr, PED 490 Special Topics 3 cr, PED 491 Independent Study 1-6 cr, PED 492 Practicum | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Arts in Physical Education with Emphasis in Sport Management | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program prepares students for management roles in academic or professional sports. With the assistance of an adviser, graduate students tailor the sport management and business electives to target their desirable career goals. The sport management program is designed to enable students to: plan a sport management career, network in the field of sport management, become familiar with sports marketing, public relations, mass media, and technology, gain proficiency in market analysis, budget preparation, and business management, develop public speaking skills, conduct formal research, enhance career placement. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: PED 285 Rhythmic Movement Fundamentals 2 cr, PED 290 Technology Applications In HPE 3 cr, PED 305 Intro. To Sport Public Relations 3 cr, PED 315 Motor Development 3 cr, PED 340 Curriculum And Teaching In Physical Education 3 cr, PED 370 Aspects Of Coaching 3 cr PED 375 Social Issues In Physical Education And Sports 3 cr, PED 380 Physical Education In The Elementary School 3 cr, PED 461 Kinesiology 3 cr PED 463 Physiology Of Exercise 3 cr, PED 469 Adapted Physical Education 3 cr, PED 470 Health And Fitness 3 cr, PED 488 Practicum: Teaching 2 cr, PED 490 Special Topics 3 cr, PED 491 Independent Study 1-6 cr, PED 492 Practicum | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Arts in School Health Education | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | This program offers a comprehensive approach to integrating health education in elementary, middle, and secondary schools. The curriculum incorporates the best practices set forth by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards for Health Education to prepare degree candidates to: explain wellness as it relates to the health content areas, identify the connection between health education and societal issues, deliver health content through skills-based learning teach to national and New York State standards in health education, select, plan, and evaluate curriculum and teaching strategies to ensure comprehensive school health education, utilize an array of engaging instructional strategies to facilitate student learning, select, design, and implement assessment strategies to evaluate student learning and improve teaching, explain the importance of understanding individual students, their family structure, and their backgrounds, demonstrate and promote respect and appreciation of diversity, work collaboratively with colleagues, families, and the community, remain current in research and innovations in health education. | A baccalaureate in a health related area is recommended for admission, but not required. All applicants must: submit a formal application to the Adelphi University Graduate Admissions Office, show evidence of having completed an appropriate undergraduate course of study with a cumulative GPA of 2.75 or better to become a degree candidate to the program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: HED 601 Contemporary Health Issues 3, HED 602 Research and Technology in Health Education 3, HED 603 Mind/Body Dimensions in Health 3, HED 607 Health Promotion for Children and Adolescents 3, HED 621 Teaching Human Sexuality (prerequisite HED 604) 3, HED 627 School Health Programs and Policies 3, HED 650 Health and Cultural Diversity 3, HED 701 Substance Abuse Prevention (prerequisite HED 501) 3, HED 703 Dynamics of Teaching Health Education (prerequisite 12 Health Studies credits) 3, HED 792 Fieldwork Internship 1-3, EDU 600 Childhood Development 3 -or- EDU 603 The Adolescent Experience 3, EDU 601 School and Society 3. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences, Woodruff Hall Gymnasium, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4262 | The Department of Health Studies, Physical Education and Human Performance Sciences prepares professionals to be pro-active in improving the quality of life for individuals across the age spectrum. The curriculum offers a multidisciplinary approach to identifying problems, developing solutions and implementing effective programs relating to wellness, physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and personal living skills. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences | This program offers students the opportunity to specialize in three major genres: fiction, poetry, and dramatic writing. This cross-genre program is distinctive from the traditional two-genre M.F.A. programs in which students study either fiction or poetry. Its unique Professional Development Practicum introduces students to the professional and practical life of writers across many disciplines. This program is considered a terminal degree that qualifies a candidate for teaching at a college or university. For additional information, please contact: M.F.A. Program, Harvey Hall, Room 215, p - 516.877.4044, e - mfa@adelphi.edu | A baccalaureate degree is required. However, the degree does not have to be in English or literature. No GRE and foreign language is required. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Adelphi UniversityScience Building Room 127, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | By offering a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Science (M.S.) in Biotechnology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences | This program prepares students for careers in this rapidly expanding and dynamic discipline and in the related fields of pharmaceuticals, biomedical research, cancer research, and laboratory medicine. | Students must have been admitted to and completed 12 credits in the Master of Science program in Biology. Have taken GRE, or scored above 450 on GMAT. This is a requirement to take graduate courses in the School of Business. The required exam could be taken while a student was already enrolled in the M.S. program in Biology. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Adelphi UniversityScience Building Room 127, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | By offering a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Science in Speech-Language Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $20200 estimated graduate costs | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders | This program provides the academic and practicum experiences for developing clinical competence in the evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment of speech and language disorders. Graduates are employed in a variety of settings including hospitals, rehabilitation centers, clinics, schools, universities, and private practice. Students can pursue a Master of Science degree leading to professional licensure in: speech-language pathology without teaching certification peech-language pathology with teaching certification. The speech-language pathology program is available in Garden City, at the Manhattan Center, and at St. Joseph College in Patchogue, New York. Candidates are expected to attend classes at the location to which they are admitted. Candidates enrolled at the Manhattan Center and St. Joseph College sites will be required to take in-house clinical practical and clinical seminars in Garden City. |
All applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Students may be admitted on a provisional basis if they have not received the required undergraduate training in communication disorders. Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. Admission requires three years full-time teaching experience in a K-12 setting -or- three years full-time work experience in a school pupil personnel service profession, such as guidance counseling or school psychology. The three years of full-time work experience must be completed prior to entering the program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: SPH 600 Speech And Hearing Science 3 cr, SPH 601 Amplification Systems I 3 cr. SPH 602 Speech And Language Development 3 cr, SPH 603 Language Disorders In Children I 3 cr, SPH 605 Advanced Aural Rehabilitation 3 cr, SPH 606 Advanced Clinical Audiology I 3 cr, SPH 607 Advanced Clinical Audiology II 3 cr, SPH 609 Psychoacoustics And Instrumentation 3 cr, SPH 610 Speech Disorders In Children 3 cr, SPH 611 Motor Speech Disorders 3 cr, SPH 613 Advanced Anatomy, Physiology, Neurology Of The Speech Mechanism 3 cr, SPH 620 Fluency Disorders 3 cr PH 624 Acquired Language Disorders 3 cr, SPH 630 Voice Disorders 3 cr, SPH 634 Diagnostic Procedures In Speech/Language Pathology 3cr. |
Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders | Ruth S Ammon School of Education, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Harvey Hall Room, 1 South Avenue, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3343 | The mission of the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders (CSD), Master of Science (MS) program in Speech-Language Pathology is to provide students with a strong understanding of the connections between the scientific bases of discipline and its clinical practices. This department strive to prepare the finest professional and ethical research-based clinicians who can assess and treat children and adults with communication disorders within the scope of practice and from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Social Work Accelerated 16-Month Program | Full Time | 16 Month(s) | $19550 estimated graduate costs | School of Social Work | This program fosters an abiding commitment to professional values and social justice and equips students with knowledge and skills for social work practice with a wide range of clients and diverse communities. This program begins in the spring semester and is similar to the full-time program with four courses plus field internship over four semesters. The tightly structured program begins in the spring semester and the second semester is completed during a 10- week summer session, from the end of May to the beginning of August. The foundation (first) year field internship is completed three days per week for a total of 24 hours per week. The advanced (second) year is completed September to May in the subsequent academic year. This program is not recommended for individuals who are employed full-time. | Criteria for admission to this program include: A baccalaureate degree with a strong background in liberal arts, cumulative grade-point average of 3.0, personal values consistent with the Code of Ethics Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: SWK 500 Issues in Social Welfare I: History and Philosophy of Social Welfare 3, SWK 510 Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice I 3, SWK 520 Foundations of Social Work Practice I 3, SWK 557 Social Work Research I 3, SWK 559 Statistics for Social Work Research 1, SWK 690 Field Instruction I 4, SWK 501 Issues in Social Welfare II: Inequality, Inequity, and Social Justice 3, SWK 511 Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice II 3, SWK 521 Foundations of Social Work Practice II 3, SWK 542 Oppression, Diversity, and the Struggle for Human Rights 3, SWK 691 Field Instruction II 4, SWK 780 Advanced Social Work Practice with Individuals 3, SWK 710 Social Work Assessment and Diagnosis 3, SWK 758 Social Work Research II 3, SWK 7xx Social Work Elective 3, SWK 790 Field Instruction III 4. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, Adelphi University, P.O. Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4300 | For over 50 years, the School of Social Work has trained social work practitioners dedicated to improving the lives of individuals, families, groups, and communities. Through its many programs, the School has been a driving force for ethical social work practice and a strong advocate for social justice. The School features small classes in a supportive environment that foster a close and nurturing relationship among students and faculty. The faculty have extensive teaching experience and are recognized as leaders in their respective fields. The broad base of diverse students and professionals seeking advanced degrees enhances the classroom learning and enriches the educational experience for all. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Social Work Advanced Standing Program | Full Time | Variable | $19550 estimated graduate costs | School of Social Work | This program prepares students for advanced social work practice in a variety of human service settings. Students enter the advanced (second) year of the M.S.W. program during the fall, spring or summer semester and can complete the program either full-time or part-time. | Admission available to individuals who have earned a bachelor’s degree in Social Work within the last five years. The degree must have been earned from an institution accredited by the Council on Social Work Education. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: SWK 780 Advanced Social Work Practice with Individuals 3, SWK 758 Social Work Research II 3, SWK 710 Social Work Assessment and Diagnosis 3, SWK 7xx Social Work Elective 3 WK 790 Field Instruction III 4, SWK 782 or WK 786 Advanced Social Work Practice with Groups or Advanced Social Work Practice with Families and Couples 3 SWK 722 Organizational Context of Social Work Practice 3, SWK 7xx Social Work Elective 3, SWK 736 Contemporary Social Work: An Integrated Approach 3, SWK 791 Field Instruction IV 4, SWK 780 Advanced Social Work Practice with Individuals 3, SWK 710 Social Work Assessment and Diagnosis 3, SWK 790 Field Instruction III 4. |
Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, Adelphi University, P.O. Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4300 | For over 50 years, the School of Social Work has trained social work practitioners dedicated to improving the lives of individuals, families, groups, and communities. Through its many programs, the School has been a driving force for ethical social work practice and a strong advocate for social justice. The School features small classes in a supportive environment that foster a close and nurturing relationship among students and faculty. The faculty have extensive teaching experience and are recognized as leaders in their respective fields. The broad base of diverse students and professionals seeking advanced degrees enhances the classroom learning and enriches the educational experience for all. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Social Work Bilingual School Social Work Program | Full Time | Variable | $19550 estimated graduate costs | School of Social Work | This program is designed for bilingual individuals interested in working as a bilingual social worker in a New York State primary or secondary school setting. The program fosters an abiding commitment to professional values and social justice and equips students with knowledge and skills for social work practice with a wide range of clients and diverse communities. The program leads to both the MSW degree and a Certificate in Bilingual School Social Work recognized by the New York State Education Department. Field internships will include working with children and families utilizing the student’s bilingual skills. This program can be completed within any of MSW programs. Students first complete the MSW and then complete two courses (6 credits) in the School of Education. | Criteria for admission to this program include: A baccalaureate degree with a strong background in liberal arts, cumulative grade-point average of 3.0, personal values consistent with the Code of Ethics Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: SWK 500 Issues in Social Welfare I: History and Philosophy of Social Welfare 3, SWK 510 Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice I 3, SWK 520 Foundations of Social Work Practice I 3, SWK 557 Social Work Research I 3, SWK 559 Statistics for Social Work Research 1, SWK 690 Field Instruction I 4, SWK 501 Issues in Social Welfare II: Inequality, Inequity, and Social Justice 3, SWK 511 Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice II 3, SWK 521 Foundations of Social Work Practice II 3, SWK 542 Oppression, Diversity, and the Struggle for Human Rights 3, SWK 691 Field Instruction II 4, SWK 780 Advanced Social Work Practice with Individuals 3, SWK 710 Social Work Assessment and Diagnosis 3, SWK 758 Social Work Research II 3, SWK 7xx Social Work Elective 3, SWK 790 Field Instruction III 4. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, Adelphi University, P.O. Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4300 | For over 50 years, the School of Social Work has trained social work practitioners dedicated to improving the lives of individuals, families, groups, and communities. Through its many programs, the School has been a driving force for ethical social work practice and a strong advocate for social justice. The School features small classes in a supportive environment that foster a close and nurturing relationship among students and faculty. The faculty have extensive teaching experience and are recognized as leaders in their respective fields. The broad base of diverse students and professionals seeking advanced degrees enhances the classroom learning and enriches the educational experience for all. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Social Work Full-Time, Two-Year Program | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $19550 estimated graduate costs | School of Social Work | This program prepares students for advanced social work practice in a variety of human service settings. This program begins in the fall semester and is completed in two academic years. Each semester consists of four courses and three days (21 hours per week) of field internship. Students complete two separate field internships, one in the foundation (first) year and one in the advanced (second) year. This program is not recommended for individuals who are employed full time. | Criteria for admission to this program include: A baccalaureate degree with a strong background in liberal arts, cumulative grade-point average of 3.0, personal values consistent with the Code of Ethics Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: SWK 500 Issues in Social Welfare I: The History and Philosophy of Social Welfare 3, SWK 510 Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice I 3, SWK 520 Foundations of Social Work Practice I 3, SWK 542 Oppression, Diversity, and the Struggle for Human Rights 3, SWK 690 Field Instruction I 4, Issues in Social Welfare II: inequality, Inequity, and Social Justice 3, SWK 511 Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice II 3, SWK 521 Foundations of Social Work Practice II 3, SWK 557 Social Work Research I 3, SWK 559 Statistics for Social Work Research 1, SWK 691 Field Instruction II 4. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, Adelphi University, P.O. Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4300 | For over 50 years, the School of Social Work has trained social work practitioners dedicated to improving the lives of individuals, families, groups, and communities. Through its many programs, the School has been a driving force for ethical social work practice and a strong advocate for social justice. The School features small classes in a supportive environment that foster a close and nurturing relationship among students and faculty. The faculty have extensive teaching experience and are recognized as leaders in their respective fields. The broad base of diverse students and professionals seeking advanced degrees enhances the classroom learning and enriches the educational experience for all. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Master of Social Work One-Year Residency (O.Y.R.) Programs | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $19550 estimated graduate costs | School of Social Work | This program is designed specifically for human service professionals who have three or more years of social work related experience under direct M.S.W. supervision. This program prepares students for advanced social work practice in a variety of human service settings. | Criteria for admission to this program include: A baccalaureate degree with a strong background in liberal arts, cumulative grade-point average of 3.0, personal values consistent with the Code of Ethics Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: SWK 500 Issues in Social Welfare I: History and Philosophy of Social Welfare 3, SWK 510 Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice I 3, SWK 520 Foundations of Social Work Practice I 3, SWK 557 Social Work Research I 3, SWK 559 Statistics for Social Work Research 1, SWK 690 Field Instruction I 4, SWK 501 Issues in Social Welfare II: Inequality, Inequity, and Social Justice 3, SWK 511 Human Behavior Theory for Social Work Practice II 3, SWK 521 Foundations of Social Work Practice II 3, SWK 542 Oppression, Diversity, and the Struggle for Human Rights 3, SWK 691 Field Instruction II 4, SWK 780 Advanced Social Work Practice with Individuals 3, SWK 710 Social Work Assessment and Diagnosis 3, SWK 758 Social Work Research II 3, SWK 7xx Social Work Elective 3, SWK 790 Field Instruction III 4. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, Adelphi University, P.O. Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4300 | For over 50 years, the School of Social Work has trained social work practitioners dedicated to improving the lives of individuals, families, groups, and communities. Through its many programs, the School has been a driving force for ethical social work practice and a strong advocate for social justice. The School features small classes in a supportive environment that foster a close and nurturing relationship among students and faculty. The faculty have extensive teaching experience and are recognized as leaders in their respective fields. The broad base of diverse students and professionals seeking advanced degrees enhances the classroom learning and enriches the educational experience for all. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Masters of Science in Environmental Studies - Business/Environmental Economics | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program is vitally important in determining and executing environmental policy, the universes of business and congress ultimately incorporate financial and management arguments for the final implementation of environmental decisions. Persons involved in environmental fields from either universe must have the necessary tools to understand and to persuasively influence environmental decision-making. The Environmental Studies Program offers these tools to the students. | Students should have a bachelor's degree in Environmental Studies or a related field and demonstrated promise of successful achievement in the field. Courses required include basic microeconomics, political science, one year of introductory biology, one year of statistics and/or calculus, one year of chemistry and one year of physics for science majors. Computer literacy is also required. Work experience in related environmental fields will be considered with regard to the above requirements. Graduate record examination scores in the verbal and quantitative tests are required. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENV 560 International Environmental Policy 3, ENV 561 Human Ecology 3, ENV 565 Human Geography And Ethnography 3, ENV 566 Populations, Health And Disease Ecology 4, ENV 567 Environmental Pollutants and Disease 3, ENV 625 Community Ecology And Evolution 3, ENV 640 Paleopathology and Paleodemography 4, ENV 631 Special Topics In The Global Human Environment 3-4, ENV 633 Workshops In The Global Human Environment. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, Science Building 103, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4170 | The fragile and delicate ecological checks and balances that have sustained life since its origin more than three billion years ago are only now beginning to be understood. But much remains to be learned; for example to predict with certainty the orbital characteristics of a weather satellite, yet ironically, are unable to predict with certainty tomorrow's weather. Harmful intrusions into the environment can be a result of how to use technology. These intrusions can also be considered in their behavioral, social and political contexts. These cultural, economic, political, scientific, technological and social complexities presented by our interactions with the environment present some of the most formidable intellectual challenges facing us today. As a consequence, any single perceived environmental issue involves the interlacing of many of our liberal arts disciplines. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Masters of Science in Environmental Studies - Environment and Health | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | Students should have a bachelor's degree in Environmental Studies or a related field and demonstrated promise of successful achievement in the field. Courses required include basic microeconomics, political science, one year of introductory biology, one year of statistics and/or calculus, one year of chemistry and one year of physics for science majors. Computer literacy is also required. Work experience in related environmental fields will be considered with regard to the above requirements. Graduate record examination scores in the verbal and quantitative tests are required. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, Science Building 103, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4170 | The fragile and delicate ecological checks and balances that have sustained life since its origin more than three billion years ago are only now beginning to be understood. But much remains to be learned; for example to predict with certainty the orbital characteristics of a weather satellite, yet ironically, are unable to predict with certainty tomorrow's weather. Harmful intrusions into the environment can be a result of how to use technology. These intrusions can also be considered in their behavioral, social and political contexts. These cultural, economic, political, scientific, technological and social complexities presented by our interactions with the environment present some of the most formidable intellectual challenges facing us today. As a consequence, any single perceived environmental issue involves the interlacing of many of our liberal arts disciplines. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Masters of Science in Environmental Studies - Global Human Environment | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | Students should have a bachelor's degree in Environmental Studies or a related field and demonstrated promise of successful achievement in the field. Courses required include basic microeconomics, political science, one year of introductory biology, one year of statistics and/or calculus, one year of chemistry and one year of physics for science majors. Computer literacy is also required. Work experience in related environmental fields will be considered with regard to the above requirements. Graduate record examination scores in the verbal and quantitative tests are required. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENV 560 International Environmental Policy 3, ENV 561 Human Ecology 3, ENV 565 Human Geography And Ethnography 3, ENV 566 Populations, Health And Disease Ecology 4, ENV 567 Environmental Pollutants and Disease 3, ENV 625 Community Ecology And Evolution 3, ENV 640 Paleopathology and Paleodemography 4, ENV 631 Special Topics In The Global Human Environment 3-4, ENV 633 Workshops In The Global Human Environment. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, Science Building 103, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4170 | The fragile and delicate ecological checks and balances that have sustained life since its origin more than three billion years ago are only now beginning to be understood. But much remains to be learned; for example to predict with certainty the orbital characteristics of a weather satellite, yet ironically, are unable to predict with certainty tomorrow's weather. Harmful intrusions into the environment can be a result of how to use technology. These intrusions can also be considered in their behavioral, social and political contexts. These cultural, economic, political, scientific, technological and social complexities presented by our interactions with the environment present some of the most formidable intellectual challenges facing us today. As a consequence, any single perceived environmental issue involves the interlacing of many of our liberal arts disciplines. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Masters of Science in Environmental Studies - Global Physical Environment | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program involving knowledge of the physical, climatic, and abiotic resources of the world that live upon. These offerings develop current knowledge of the geologic, hydrologic, climatic, and diachronic aspects of global environmental concerns and considerations. | Students should have a bachelor's degree in Environmental Studies or a related field and demonstrated promise of successful achievement in the field. Courses required include basic microeconomics, political science, one year of introductory biology, one year of statistics and/or calculus, one year of chemistry and one year of physics for science majors. Computer literacy is also required. Work experience in related environmental fields will be considered with regard to the above requirements. Graduate record examination scores in the verbal and quantitative tests are required. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENV 501 Principles Of Earth Science I 3, ENV 502 Principles Of Earth Science II 3, ENV 570 Principles Of Toxicology 4, ENV 654 Oceanography 3, ENV 671 Climatology 3, ENV 674 Hydrogeology 3, ENV 761 Marine Geology 3, ENV 630 Special Topics In The Global Physical Environment 3-4, ENV 632 Workshops In The Global Physical Environment. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, Science Building 103, Adelphi University, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4170 | The fragile and delicate ecological checks and balances that have sustained life since its origin more than three billion years ago are only now beginning to be understood. But much remains to be learned; for example to predict with certainty the orbital characteristics of a weather satellite, yet ironically, are unable to predict with certainty tomorrow's weather. Harmful intrusions into the environment can be a result of how to use technology. These intrusions can also be considered in their behavioral, social and political contexts. These cultural, economic, political, scientific, technological and social complexities presented by our interactions with the environment present some of the most formidable intellectual challenges facing us today. As a consequence, any single perceived environmental issue involves the interlacing of many of our liberal arts disciplines. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Ph.D. in Nursing | Full Time | Variable | $14860 estimated graduate costs | School of Nursing | This program is designed to prepare expert nurse-scholars who will advance the development of knowledge for the discipline; contribute to the science of nursing; advance healthcare through teaching, research, and leadership; and improve the health of society. Students will be exposed to a breadth of ideas, information, and theories, and will discuss and debate opposing ideas. The program is grounded in philosophical and foundational core nursing knowledge as well as knowledge of research methodologies and methods. The student's focus of substantive inquiry provides the context for the application of foundational knowledge. A nurse-educator role sequence examines content and provides a precepted experience with a goal that students assume roles in education following graduation. | Applicants must: have an M.S. or M.S.N. from an accredited nursing program (CCNE or NLNAC approved), be licensed as a registered nurse (R.N.) in the state of New York, complete the Graduate Application form, provide the Admissions Committee with three professional letters of reference from a supervisor, committee chair, former professor, etc. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Course: NUR 602 Frameworks for Advanced Nursing 3 cr, NUR 604 Team Building for Nurse Leaders 3 cr, NUR 605 Seminar in Clinical Leadership 3 cr, NUR 606 Statistics for Nursing Research 3 cr, NUR 607 Informatics: Healthcare Data, Information, Knowledge 3 cr, NUR 613 Special Needs of Vunerable Groups During Diasters 3 cr, NUR 633 Adult Health Nursing I: Theory and Clinical 3 cr, NUR 634 Adult Health Nursing I: Clinical 2 cr, NUR 638 Adult Health Nursing II: Theory and Clinical 3 cr, NUR 639 Adult Health Nursing II: Clinical 2 cr, NUR 640 Summer Clinical Practicum 1 cr, NUR 650 Seminar in Nursing Research, Conduct and Utilization 3 cr, NUR 652 Interventions for Human Responses to Disaster 3 cr, NUR 653 Adult Health Nursing III: Theory and Clinical 3 cr. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Nursing | School of Nursing, Alumnae Hall Room 220, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4510 | As founder and director of the Adelphi College School of Nursing from 1942 to 1948, Dr. Mildred Montag is credited with developing the nursing program and making it an integral part of Adelphi. She is also recognized for her impact on nursing education in the United States and throughout the world. In 1942, Dr. Montag was asked by Adelphi College, under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, to determine if local hospitals would cooperate in establishing a school of nursing at Adelphi College. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi’s residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | PhD in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $28500 yearly | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | This program encompasses research, theory, psychological, biological, and social bases of behavior, along with extensive clinical practice in psycho diagnostics and psychotherapy. Clinical supervisors have had postgraduate training, and most are Diplomats of the American Board of Professional Psychology. Throughout the program, all students attend a colloquium series which serves as a forum for guest lectures and faculty and student presentations. The doctoral programs are distinctive for achieving dual goals of preparing students to be both scholars and professionals. Since its inception in 1951, the clinical psychology doctoral program meets the educational demands of students committed to a career in professional psychology. | Applicants to the doctoral programs are required to have completed undergraduate courses in general psychology, experimental psychology, statistics, developmental psychology, and abnormal psychology. Applicants are required to submit Graduate Record Exam (GRE) results (including the General Exam and the Psychology Exam). The Miller Analogies Test is not required. While the Ph.D. program does not have minimum required scores, most candidates have GRE scores considerably above 500 and GPAs well above 3.0. | Doctoral | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Courses are: PSI 620 Psychodynamics of Behavior: Freudian Theory, PSI 621 Clinical Psychopathology, PSI 625 Psychological Testing I: Advanced Clinical Psychology I, PSI 626 Psychological Testing II: Advanced Clinical Psychology II, PSI 628 Assessment of Personality PSI 630 Assessment of Learning Disabilities, PSI 632 Initial Intake Seminar I (1.5 credits) PSI 633 Initial Intake Seminar II (1.5 credits), PSI 640 Research Conference: Methods and Design (0 credits) PSI 642 Research Work Group I, PSI 644 Statistics I: Statistics Lab PSI 645 Statistics S54II: Statistics Lab , PSI 647 Research Design, PSI 734 Developmental Psychology, PSI 623 Child Psychopathology PSI 701 Case Conference II (0 credits), PSI 643 Research Work Group II PSI 713 Diagnostic Practicum II, PSI 700 Case Conference I (0 credits), PSI 722 Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy II: Comparative Theories of Psychoanalysis, PSI 712 Diagnostic Practicum I PSI 742 Research Work Group III, PSI 724 Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy I: Principles, PSI 746 Applied Clinical Research, PSI 736 Social Psychology PSI 830 Object Relations Theory. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies | Gordon F Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Hy Weinberg Center Room 220 Adelphi University, 1 South Avenue P O BOX 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4800 | Adelphi has long been recognized as a pioneer in the study of psychology. In 1972, the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies became the nation first university-based professional school of psychology. Today Derner is internationally recognized for its dedication to scholarship and its commitment to training professionals to meet the needs of a society in transition. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Pre- Health | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is for students thinking about pursuing a career in the health professions, it is important that they register in person with the Office of Pre-Professional Advising and Fellowships (OPPAF), located in Levermore Hall room 303. Students are recommended to do this as early as their first year of study. Adelphi University does not offer a specific pre-med major. Pre-health profession students can major in any subject, but must complete the required course work. Advisers are committed to helping students prepare for a career in the health professions and to supporting efforts to achieve the goal. In addition, the prestigious science faculty on the Pre-medical Council look forward to shaping the undergraduate experience as they prepare for professional study in the health professions. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Pre-professional | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Adelphi UniversityScience Building Room 127, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | By offering a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Pre-Health Preparation | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is for students who intend to enroll in medical, dental, veterinary, podiatry, or optometry school should follow a pre-professional health course of study, which includes introductory biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, and physics all one-year sequences with labs, and at least one semester of mathematics and/or statistics. Since these classes are also requirements for the Biology major, pre-health students often elect to pursue the B.S. in Biology. All pre-health students should register with the Office of Pre-professional Advising and Fellowships as early as possible and before the end of their sophomore year. Careful planning and course selection is important because the required science courses should be completed by the end of the junior year in order to take the pre-professional examinations (i.e., the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT), Dental Admission Test (DAT), etc.). Admission requirements can vary among schools; many schools have additional required or recommended prerequisites, which often include calculus, microbiology, biochemistry, and/or psychology. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Pre-professional | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Science Building Room 103, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4200 | This department through small classes, labs, research opportunities and personal advising, students receive a solid foundation in all areas of biology that prepares them for over 200 biology-related careers and provides the groundwork for professional training in medicine, dentistry, and other health sciences. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Pre-law | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is for students interested in pursing law studies. It is a student-led organization which provides information and encouragement to students considering a career in law. The Society sponsors speakers and panel discussions on issues relating to getting into law school, the different areas of legal practice, and the role of law in society. The speakers also share their own experiences of law school. Adelphi alumni currently attending law school are welcomed back to talk about their experiences. The Society works together with the Center for Career Development, the faculty's Pre-law Council, as well as the Office for Pre-Professional Advising and Fellowships to provide guidance and advice on an individual basis. | Students must have solid preparation in the sciences, a record of high academic achievement, and some basic preliminary experience in medicine (such as volunteering in a clinical setting). Health profession schools also seek applicants who possess maturity, leadership and strong interpersonal skills. Successful applicants to medical schools have a grade point average of 3.5 or better, an MCAT score of 30 and strong letters of evaluation. Adelphi students who achieve these scores and grades (or even scores somewhat lower) have an outstanding rate of success in admissions. | Pre-professional | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Adelphi UniversityScience Building Room 127, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4120 | By offering a liberal education that encompasses the study of a broad range of disciplines, Adelphi challenges students to push the frontiers of knowledge. Courses in social sciences, arts, humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences prepare students for all careers. The College offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Premed | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program prepares students for a range of careers, including medicine. Students interested in go to medical school should meet with their advisers to determine the appropriate course of study. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Pre-professional | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Adelphi UniversityBlodgett Hall, Room 8Post Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4877 | The Physics Department features state-of-the-art instructional and research laboratories and facilities including a new rooftop observatory with a GPS remote-control telescope. Small classes offer personalized attention from the faculty of renowned authors and scientists. Students also have the opportunity to conduct research with leaders in their respective fields. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | R.N. Program | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Nursing | This program is specifically designed for registered nurses with an associate's degree or diploma who want to attain a Bachelor of Science (B.S.). Students have the option of enrolling in the one-day per week ASCEND program (R.N. to B.S. program). This one-day-a-week nursing program is offered at the Garden City campus and also at off-site locations in New York City and Long Island. The undergraduate registered nurse curriculum incorporates the study of liberal arts and sciences. This 123-credit program focuses on enhancing nurses' expertise and skills and encompasses the areas of health promotion, long-term care, research, advocacy, teaching, change, and management. Registered nurses accepted into the program must fulfill the undergraduate General Education requirements. The plan of study includes science, nursing theory, and laboratory courses. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Associate degree | Adelphi University | The courses are: Survey of Statistics, The Human Body: Scientific Perspectives on Structure and Function I, The Human Body: Scientific Perspectives on Structure and Function II, Microbiology, Essentials of Chemistry I, Essentials of Chemistry II, Organizational Behavior, Theory in Nursing equivalent to Frameworks For Advanced Nursing Practice, Health Assessment, Family/Group/Community Assessment, Research in Nursing, Promoting Wellness, Client Teaching equivalent to Psycho educational Intervention, Promoting Wellness equivalent to Health Issues, Policy, and Politics in Health Care, Chronic Care, Introduction to Technology and Information Seminar in Information Literacy, Technology, and Project Management. | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Nursing | School of Nursing, Alumnae Hall Room 220, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4510 | As founder and director of the Adelphi College School of Nursing from 1942 to 1948, Dr. Mildred Montag is credited with developing the nursing program and making it an integral part of Adelphi. She is also recognized for her impact on nursing education in the United States and throughout the world. In 1942, Dr. Montag was asked by Adelphi College, under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, to determine if local hospitals would cooperate in establishing a school of nursing at Adelphi College. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi’s residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | |
| 188429 | Adelphi University | R.N. to B.S. program | Full Time | Variable | US $23,000 a year | School of Nursing | This program is designed to accommodate the schedules of working nurses, the program allows nurses to attend classes only one day each week. Registered nurses have the option of enrolling in ASCEND, the one-day per week R.N. to B.S. program.Both full-time and part-time students are eligible to enter this program. The program also provides an easy transition into the graduate nursing program. Students may take undergraduate courses at the graduate level. Following the completion of the R.N. to B.S. program, students must apply for graduation. They may then apply for admission to one of the several Master of Science programs. Students in the ASCEND program follow a set plan of study to meet the degree requirements. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Bachelor degree | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | School of Nursing | School of Nursing, Alumnae Hall Room 220, 1 South AvenueP O Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4510 | As founder and director of the Adelphi College School of Nursing from 1942 to 1948, Dr. Mildred Montag is credited with developing the nursing program and making it an integral part of Adelphi. She is also recognized for her impact on nursing education in the United States and throughout the world. In 1942, Dr. Montag was asked by Adelphi College, under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, to determine if local hospitals would cooperate in establishing a school of nursing at Adelphi College. | Yes | All residence halls have common-area lounges with television sets and microwave ovens, vending machines, mailboxes, pay phones, and coin-operated laundry facilities. Earle Hall also has quiet study lounges. Each room is equipped with Internet access and a telephone, for which there is a reasonable charge. Adelphi University, in response to interest from resident students, has designated all residence halls smoke free. This includes all public areas and student rooms. The newest of Adelphi’s residence halls opened in the fall 2003. Each of the rooms features a private bathroom and individual climate control including air conditioning. Other features include lounges on every floor, a patio, and a gracious landscaped courtyard opening onto the campus. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Scholar Teacher Education Program | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $23,000 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program enables students to earn a Bachelor of Science in physics and a Master of Science in Education in five years. The course of study combines field-intensive programs with a strong foundation in the liberal arts and sciences. Graduates who successfully complete the fifth year of the program are then eligible for New York State Department of Education certification in childhood or adolescent education. | Applicants must be graduates of an accredited four-year high school or academy or must provide documentation of equivalent studies that the University deems acceptable. Applicants are considered on the basis of their individual academic record and co-curricular activities. Students should have completed the recommended number of academic units: English 4 units, Science 3 units, Mathematics 3 units, foreign language 2-3 units, and additional 4 units to be chosen from history, social studies, and the above fields of study. Applicants must provide evidence of superior academic achievement and of proficiency in English. The minimum TOEFL score acceptable is 80 internet based score or 550 paper based score. SAT scores are required for students whose native language is English. | Masters | Adelphi University | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Adelphi UniversityBlodgett Hall, Room 8Post Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4877 | The Physics Department features state-of-the-art instructional and research laboratories and facilities including a new rooftop observatory with a GPS remote-control telescope. Small classes offer personalized attention from the faculty of renowned authors and scientists. Students also have the opportunity to conduct research with leaders in their respective fields. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 188429 | Adelphi University | Scholars Teacher Education Program (STEP) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $14860 estimated graduate costs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program is a unique program that enables students to earn a Bachelor of Science in physics and a Master of Science in Education in five years. The course of study combines field-intensive programs with a strong foundation in the liberal arts and sciences. Graduates who successfully complete the fifth year of the program are then eligible for New York State Department of Education certification in childhood or adolescent education. | Applicants should have a bachelor’s degree in science or engineering. GPA of 3.0 or higher typically required, although work experience and other factors can partially compensate for lower GPAs. Official scores for the Graduate Record Examination(GRE) or the Graduate Management Admission Test and TOEFL are required for applying this program. | Masters | ADELPHI UNIVERSITY | Adelphi University | Wendy Palczynski, Assistant Director/DSO/ARO | PO Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 3050 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Adelphi UniversityBlodgett Hall, Room 8Post Box 701, GARDEN CITY, New York, 11530, +1 516 877 4877 | The Physics Department features state-of-the-art instructional and research laboratories and facilities including a new rooftop observatory with a GPS remote-control telescope. Small classes offer personalized attention from the faculty of renowned authors and scientists. Students also have the opportunity to conduct research with leaders in their respective fields. | Yes | Adelphi offers student housing in six residence halls on the Garden City campus. The Chapman Hall , Eddy Hall , Earle Hall , Linen Hall , New Halland Waldo Hal. Students may choose from a variety of residential options during the academic year. A limited amount of housing is available over semester breaks. Adelphi also attempts to provide special accommodations to meet the needs of students with disabilities. Chapman Hall was renovated in 1999 and features multiple bathrooms on each floor. The building is located near the Adelphi University baseball field. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Earle Hall is the largest residence hall on campus, and includes the Honors College and its suites, the Student Organization Suite, the Language Lab, the Writing Center, and the Learning Center. It houses both women and men, and is located near the Olmsted Theatre and Competition Field. It shares the residential quad with Waldo Hall. Rooms on the fourth and first floors have air conditioning. Eddy Hall, renovated in 2001, features central air conditioning for each room. Each floor has a large lounge and multiple bathrooms. Eddy also houses EXCEL, a mentoring program for new freshmen. Linen hosts the English Language Service (ELS), whose students provide an element that enhances the shared experience of students from around the world. The residents of Linen appreciate a quiet and relaxed atmosphere. Rooms on the fourth floor have air conditioning. Waldo helps to form the quad, which is a favorite among residents and hosts many activities throughout the year. For additional information, please contact: Office of Residential Life and Housing, Earle Hall Room 100, Adelphi University, P.O. BOX 701, Garden City, NY 11530-0701, p - 516.877.3650, email: housing@adelphi.edu. | ||
| 131159 | American University | AU/NTL Master of Science in Organization Development | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This degree is designed primarily for full-time, mid-career working individuals who are interested in entering or advancing their careers in organization development and change. The program offers an intensive learning environment focused on theory, practice, and the development of oneself as an agent of change. Moving through the program in intact learning groups (or cohorts) enables students to master concepts of organizational development while simultaneously building their capacity to diagnose, facilitate, and intervene in their own system on a real-time basis. Supported by our faculty, many of whom have national and international reputations as leaders in the field of organizational consulting and change, this experiential learning format enhances course learning. More information about our courses can be found in our course descriptions section. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. / M.A in Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program provides a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 with a minimum grade point average of 3.20 in the major is required, and students will be admitted formally to the M.A. only after they have completed all undergraduate requirements. Students may use up to six approved credit hours at the 500 level or above to satisfy both degrees. For more information on approved graduate coursework, contact the SOC Graduate Office at ext. 2040. Students in any undergraduate major at American University are eligible for consideration. | Students can apply for admission to an SOC combined B.A. / M.A. program in the second semester of the junior year, but no later than the last undergraduate semester. Consideration for admission requires: a completed application form two written faculty recommendations a 1,000-word statement of purpose on the student's interests and abilities in communication a resume an interview with the appropriate division director | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. / M.A in Public Communication | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program enables highly qualified students to earn, in five years of full-time study, both a B.A. in any discipline and an M. A. in Communication: Public Communication. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. and M.A. in Special Education - Learning Disabilities | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | Students must have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) or higher in major and minor courses. In additional, they should earn passing scores (as set by the DC teacher licensing agency) on both the Praxis I exam: Passing Scores for Praxis I - Reading (172), Writing (171), Math (174). | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | B.A. and Master of Arts in Teaching | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | Students must have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) or higher in major and minor courses. In additional, they should earn passing scores (as set by the DC teacher licensing agency) on both the Praxis I exam: Passing Scores for Praxis I - Reading (172), Writing (171), Math (174). | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | Students should earn a passing score (as set by the District of Columbia teacher licensing agency) on PRAXIS I: Academic Skills Assessment, earn an average grade of 2.70 or higher in EDU-205 Schools and Society, EDU-320 Psychology of Education and a passing grade in EDU-321 Field Experience: Observation and Analysis, receive satisfactory recommendations from faculty, an overall cumulative grade point average of 2.70 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | EDU-205/EDU-205G Schools and Society 4:2 (3), EDU-250 Mathematics for Elementary School Teachers I (3), EDU-251 Mathematics for Elementary School Teachers II (3), EDU-319 Children’s Literature: Multicultural and International Approaches (3), EDU-320 Philosophy of Education (3), EDU-321 Field Experience: Observation and Analysis (1), EDU-330 Instructional Strategies and Teaching Methods (3), EDU-362 Classroom Management (3), EDU-371 Foundations of Reading Instruction (3), EDU-492 Service Learning in Teacher Education (1), EDU-519 The Uses of Technology in Education (3), EDU-541 Foundations of Special Education for Exceptional Children (3) or EDU-545 Overview of All Exceptionalities: The Arts in Special Education (3), EDU-552 Teaching Mathematics in Elementary Education (3), EDU-553 Teaching Language Arts in Elementary Education (3), EDU-554 Teaching Social Studies in Elementary Education (3), EDU-555 Teaching Reading in Elementary Education (3), EDU-556 Teaching Science in Elementary Education (3), EDU-499 Student Teaching (12). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Film and Media Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of Communication | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-100/COMM-100G: Understanding Mass Media 4:2 (3), COMM-105/COMM-105G: Visual Literacy 1:1 (3), COMM-200: Writing for Mass Communication (3), Basic Courses (9 credits): COMM-330: Principles of Photography (3), COMM-331: Film and Video Production (3), COMM 350: Digital Imaging (3), Intermediate Courses (15-18 credit hours): COMM-382: Writing for Visual Media (3), At least 6 credit hours from the following: COMM-434: Film and Video Production II (3), COMM-435: Introduction to Studio Television (3), COMM-454: Motion Graphics and Effects I (3), COMM-523: Intermediate Photography: Photojournalism (3); Fine Arts Photography (3), Media Studies (6 credit hours): COMM-503: Broadcast Operations and Management (3), COMM-511: History of Documentary (3), COMM-512: Social Documentary, COMM-513: Producing Film and Video (3), COMM-514: Censorship and Media (3), COMM-516: Special Topics in Visual Media and Culture (3), COMM-517: History of Cross Cultural Cinema (3), COMM-520: History of Animation (3), COMM-527: History of Photography (3), COMM-550: Financing and Marketing Independent Productions (3), COMM-558: Survey of American Cinema (3), Additional credit hours may be selected from the following to bring the total to 39-42 credit hours: COMM-438: Production Practicum (1), COMM-456: Dramatic Production (3), COMM-464: Directing for Camera (3), COMM-486: Documentary Production (3), COMM-491: Senior Professional Internship (3), COMM-529: Large Format Photography/Commercial Photography (3), COMM-561: Advanced Writing for Film (3), COMM-562: Advanced Writing for Television (3), COMM-565: Advanced Visual Media Portfolio (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in History | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | HIST-480 Major Seminar I (3 credit hours), HIST-481 Seminar II (3 credit hours) (HIST 480 and 481 must be taken in sequential order and during a single academic year), One course in ancient or medieval history, One course in Asian, East European, modern Middle Eastern, or Russian history, One course in African, African-American, or Latin American history, One course in Western European or British history at the 300 level or above, One course in U.S. history at the 300 level or above. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, American UniversityBattelle Tompkins 137, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2401 | The Department of History offers such innovative courses as Oliver Stone's America, Cinema and History, Human Rights as History, Latin American Feminism, Politics of Gender in Early Modern Europe and America, and America's Presidential Elections. During the summer, students may participate in institutes on Nuclear Studies, The Civil War, and The Ethnic Experience in the City. For all students interested in research, the National Archives, Library of Congress, and other facilities in the Washington, D.C., area provide the richest base of archival sources and published works in the United States. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Interdisciplinary Studies - Communication, Legal Institutions, Economics, and Government | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program is designed for students who want a breadth of background necessary to participate effectively in decision making for public affairs and the practical training necessary to deal with social problems as public issues. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-200 Writing for Mass Communication (3), COMM-310 Public Speaking (3), ECON-100/ECON-100G Macroeconomics 4:1 (3), ECON-200/ECON-200G Microeconomics 4:2 (3), GOVT-110/GOVT-110G Politics in the United States 4:1 (3-4) or GOVT-120 Introduction to American Politics (3-4), GOVT-391 Internship (6), GOVT-489 CLEG Seminar (3), JLS-104 Introduction to Systems of Justice (3), OVT-105/GOVT-105G Individual Freedom vs. Authority 2:1 (3), GOVT 305 Modem Political Thought (3), GOVT-306 American Political Thought (3), GOVT-215/GOVT-215G Civil Rights and Liberties 4:2 (3), GOVT-352 Law and the Political System (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, American University Roper Hall 105, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3770 | This department offers a pluralist approach to economics that embraces mainstream and heterodox perspectives and emphasizes policy applications. They believe that theoretical understanding, empirical investigation, and policy analysis are enriched by study of the evolution of economic ideas and economic institutions. They believe that thoughtful empirical work is essential for testing theoretical models and their policy implications. This commitment to pluralism, empirical analysis, and policy relevance is evident in the research of this faculty and is reflected in this undergraduate and graduate program. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Justice | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of Public Affairs | This program analyzes the foundations, functions, policies and procedures of justice. Crime and deviance are major public policy concerns in American society, and systems of justice are the major public policy responses for dealing with these problems. Cross cultural and international perspectives are brought to bear when they shed light on the nature of crime and deviance in America or on the workings of American systems of justice. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | JLS-235/JLS-235G Justice in America 4:1 (3) or JLS-104 Introduction to Systems of Justice (3), JLS-103 Critical Issues in Justice (3), JLS-205 History and Philosophy of Criminology (3), JLS-220/JLS-220G Cities and Crime 2:2 (3) or JLS-206 Justice and Deviant Behavior (3), JLS-307 Justice, Law, and the Constitution (3), JLS-309 Justice and Public Policy (3), JLS-380 Introduction to Justice Research (3) (prerequisite: STAT-202 Basic Statistics), 27 credit hours from the following with at least 15 credit hours at the 300 level or above, with one course from each of the four cluster areas: Justice, Criminology and Deviance: JLS-206 Justice and Deviant Behavior (3), JLS-215/JLS-215G Violence and Institutions 4:2 (3), JLS-253 Juvenile Delinquency: Causes, Prevention and Treatment (3), JLS-303 Drugs, Alcohol and Society (3), JLS-401 Criminal Behavior: A Psychosocial Analysis (3), JLS-517 Victimology (3), JLS-551 Comparative Justice Studies Abroad (3), Justice and Legal Process: JLS-110/JLS-110G Western Legal Tradition 2:1 (3), JLS-225/JLS-225G American Legal Culture 2:2 (3), JLS-308 Justice, Morality and the Law (3), Justice, Law Enforcement and Public Policy: JLS-210 Policing in America: An Introductory Survey (3), JLS-211 Contemporary Issues in American Law Enforcement (3), JLS-313 Organized Crime (3), JLS-315 White-Collar and Commercial Crime (3), JLS-513 Law and Economics (3), JLS-525 Law and the Corporate World (3), JLS-550 Drugs, Crime, and Public Policy (3), Justice, Corrections and Punishment: JLS-200/JLS-200G Deprivation of Liberty 4:2 (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Law and Society | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of Public Affairs | This program is an interdisciplinary program that examines the role of law as it permeates social, political, and economic institutions. The complex relation of law and justice, broadly conceived, is the central consideration in this program of study. Drawing on the social sciences and humanities, this curriculum offers an historical and international perspective on legal issues. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ECON-100/ECON-100G Macroeconomics 4:1 (3), JLS-103 Critical Issues in Justice (3), JLS-110/JLS-110G Western Legal Tradition 2:1 (3), JLS-225 American Legal Culture 2:2 (3) or JLS-310 The Legal Profession (3), JLS-307 Justice, Law, and the Constitution (3), JLS-380 Introduction to Justice Research (3) (prerequisite: STAT-202 Basic Statistics), JLS-402 Comparative Systems of Law and Justice (3), Law and the Justice System: JLS-235/JLS-235G Justice in America 4:1 (3), JLS-200/JLS-200G Deprivation of Liberty 4:2 (3), JLS-308 Justice, Morality, and the Law (3), JLS-309 Justice and Public Policy (3), JLS-310 The Legal Profession (3) (if not taken for requirement above), JLS-342 Judicial Administration (3), Sociology and Anthropology: ANTH-215/ANTH-215G Sex, Gender, and Culture 3:2 (3), ANTH-336 Social Structure (3), ANTH-431 Taboos (3), JLS-220/JLS220G Cities and Crime 2:2 (3), JLS-303 Drugs, Alcohol, and Society (3), JLS-454 Violence in America (3), JLS-517 Victimology (3), Political Science/Government: GOVT-215/GOVT-215G Civil Rights and Liberties /S 4:2 (3), GOVT-305 Modern Political Thought (3), GOVT-321 Congress and Legislative Behavior (3), GOVT-335 Democratization, Participation, and Social Movements (3), GOVT-350 Constitutional Law I: Powers and Federalism (3), GOVT-352 Law and the Political System (3), PHIL-221 Philosophy, Politics, and Society (3), SIS-321 International Law (3), Economics: ACCT-201 Legal Issues in Business (3), ECON-200/ECON-200G Microeconomics 4:2 (3), ECON-302 Comparative Economic Systems (3), ECON-309 Public Economics (3), Psychology: JLS-215/JLS-215G Violence and Institutions 4:2 (3), JLS-301 Drugs, Consciousness and Human Fulfillment (3), JLS-333 Law, Psychology, and Justice (3), JLS-352 Psychiatry and the Law (3), PSYC-205/PSYC-205G Social Psychology 4:2 (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Performing Arts - Musical Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | This program offers Performance, Technical, Arts Management, Theatre tracks. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | Perf-251 Fundamentals of Acting I (3), Perf-260 Production I: Stagecraft (3), Perf-261 Production II: Intro to Design (3), Perf-265 2 – 1-credit Theatre Practicum (Greenberg Mainstage Productions) (2), Perf-365 Theatre History I (3), Perf-366 Theatre History II (3), Perf-440 Stage Management (1), Perf-445 Capstone (3), Perf-227 Musicianship I (3), Perf-228 Musicianship II (3), Perf-340 Musical Theatre: Periods and Performance (3), Perf-346 Survey of Musical Theatre (3), Perf-252 Fundamentals of Acting II (3), Perf-556 Fundamentals of Acting IV: Audition Techniques (3), Perf-455 Dance Styles for Musical Theatre (3), Minimum 3 semesters of 1 credit dance technique courses. (3), Minimum 3 semester of 1 credit applied music: Voice (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts, American UniversityKatzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3420 | The Katzen Arts Center brings all the visual and performing arts programs at AU into one 130,000 square foot space. Designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration in the arts, the new center provides state-of-the-art instructional, exhibition, and performance space for all the arts disciplines. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Performing Arts - Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | Perf-251 Fundamentals of Acting I (3), Perf-260 Production I: Stagecraft (3), Perf-261 Production II: Intro to Design (3) , Perf-265 2 – 1-credit Theatre Practicum (Greenberg Mainstage Productions) (3) , Perf-365 Theatre History I (3) , Perf-366 Theatre History II (3), Perf-440 Stage Management (1), Perf-445 Capstone (3), One of the Following Tracks: Performance Track: Perf-252 Fundamentals of Acting II (3), Perf-350 Fundamentals of Acting III (3), Perf-556 Fundamentals of Acting IV: Audition Techniques (3), Perf-552 Directing Techniques (3), Perf-355 Voice and Speech (3), Perf-506 The Moving Body (3), Perf-557 Playwriting (3), Perf-450 Additional Advanced Rotating Topic (3), Design/Production: Perf-362 Lighting Design (3), Perf-364 Basics of Scene and Costume Design (3), Perf-450 Rotating topics in design/technology (3), Perf-552 Directing Techniques (3), ARTS-100 Art: The Studio Experience (3), ARTH-100 European Art: From Cave to Cathedral (3), Perf-557 Playwriting (3), Class in area of specialty approved by advisor (3), Perf-490 Internship or Perf-491-Independent study (3), Arts Management Track: ECON-100 Macroeconomics (3), ACCT-240 Principles of Accounting (3), Perf-362 Lighting Design OR Perf-364 Basics of Scene and Costume Design (3), Perf-450 Advanced Rotating Topics OR Class in area of specialty approved by advisor (3), Perf-570 Survey of Arts Management (3), Perf-552 Directing Techniques (3), Perf-585 Creative Theories and Criticism in Performing Arts (3), Perf-557 Playwriting (3), Perf-490 Internship or Perf-491-Independent study (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts, American UniversityKatzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3420 | The Katzen Arts Center brings all the visual and performing arts programs at AU into one 130,000 square foot space. Designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration in the arts, the new center provides state-of-the-art instructional, exhibition, and performance space for all the arts disciplines. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of Public Affairs | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | GOVT-110 Politics in the United States 4:1 (3-4) or GOVT-120 Introduction to American Politics (3), GOVT-105 Individual Freedom vs. Authority 2:1 (3), GOVT-130 Comparative Politics 3:1 (3), STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4) (also meets university math requirement), One of the following International Studies courses: SIS-105 World Politics 3:1 (3), SIS-110 Beyond Sovereignty 3:1 (3), SIS-381 Foreign Policies of the Great Powers (3), SIS-382 The Analysis of United States Foreign Policy (3), One of the following Research Methods courses: ECON-322 Introduction to Econometrics (3), GOVT-310 Introduction to Political Research (3), SIS-206 Introduction to International Relations Research (3), SOCY-320 Introduction to Social Research (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | PSYC-105. Psychology Understanding Human Behavior, PSYC-115. Psychology as a Natural Science Must be taken concurrently with PSYC-116), PSYC-116. Psychology as a Natural Science Lab (Must be taken concurrently with PSYC-115), STAT-202. Basic Statistics PSYC-325. Neurobiological Bases of Behavior, PSYC-240. Drugs and Behavior, PSYC-318. Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology, SYC-360. The Evolution of Behavior, PSYC-220. The Senses, PSYC-200. Behavior Principles, PSYC-300. Memory and Cognition, PSYC-370. Learning and Behavior, PSYC-205. Social Psychology, PSYC-215. Abnormal Psychology and Society, PSYC-235. Theories of Personality, PSYC-333. Health Psychology, PSYC-350. Child Psychology, PSYC-301. Research Methods in Psychology (3), PSYC-433. Research Design and Methods: Social Science Psychology Research (4), PSYC-480. Research Design and Methods: Experimental Psychology (4). |
American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 321 Asbury Building South Wing, American University, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1710 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Public Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of Communication | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-100/100G Understanding Mass Media (4:1), COMM-200 Writing for Mass Communication (Prereq: LIT-100, LIT-101), COMM-209 Communication and Society (Prereq: Sophomore Standing), COMM-301 Public Relations (Prereq: COMM-200, COMM-209) (Students must earn a B or higher), COMM-337 Public Relations Writing (Prereq: B or better in COMM-301), COMM-346 Public Relations Case Studies (Prereq: B or better in COMM-301), COMM 380 Public Communication Research (Prereq: B or better in COMM-301), COMM-437 Public Relations Portfolio (Prereq: COMM0337, COMM-346, COMM-380), Skills: COMM-105/105G Visual Literacy, COMM-310 Public Speaking, COMM-330 Basic Photography (Prereq: COMM-105 or ARTS-100), COMM-535 Magazine Writing, Media Studies: COMM-327 The PR Presidency, COMM-401 Legal Aspects of Communication, COMM-509 Politics and the Media, COMM-514 Censorship and the Media, COMM-515 Media, Children and Society, COMM-533 Ethical Persuasion, COMM-534 Race, Gender and the Media, Human Communication: COMM-300 Interpersonal Communication, COMM-470 Organizational Communication, COMM-472 Nonverbal Communication, COMM-475 Group Communication Management, The Practice of Public Relations: COMM-531 Political Communication, COMM-536 Entertainment Communication, COMM-537 Sports Communication, COMM-539 International Public Relations, Experimental Education (3 credits only): COMM-491 Sr. Professional Internship. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A. in Secondary/K-12 Education | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program is designed for students who wish to obtain teaching credentials in secondary education while completing their majors in the humanities, arts, natural and social sciences. To do so, students complete a second major in Secondary Education designed to meet certification requirements in the District of Columbia and make them eligible for certification in over 40 states. Students should consult with the director of Teacher Education to coordinate their general and subject-area certification requirements with other university major requirements. | Students should earn a passing score (as set by the District of Columbia teacher licensing agency) on PRAXIS I: Academic Skills Assessment, earn an average grade of 2.70 or higher in EDU-205 Schools and Society, EDU-320 Psychology of Education and a passing grade in EDU-321 Field Experience: Observation and Analysis, receive satisfactory recommendations from faculty, an overall cumulative grade point average of 2.70 or higher, a grade point average of 3.00 or higher in their primary major. | Bachelor degree | American University | EDU-205/EDU-205G Schools and Society 4:2 (3), EDU-320 Psychology of Education (3), EDU-321 Field Experience: Observation and Analysis (1), EDU-492 Service Learning in Teacher Education (1), EDU-499 Student Teaching (12), EDU-520 Reading, Writing, and Literature across the Curriculum (3), EDU-522 Principles of Effective Methods and Instruction (3), EDU-540 Methods, Materials and Management in Secondary Education I (3) (or other methods courses offered by arts and sciences departments and approved by the SOE adviser), EDU-542 Methods, Materials and Management in Secondary Education II (3), EDU-541 Foundations of Special Education for Exceptional Children (3) or EDU-545 Overview of All Exceptionalities: The Arts in Special Education (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | B.A./M.A in History | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program in history allows students to complete both degrees within five years. The principal advantage of the combined BA/MA program is that students may take two graduate courses while still undergraduates. These two courses will satisfy the requirements of both their undergraduate and graduate degrees. Students normally apply during the second semester of their junior year. They need not take the GREs. Students will be admitted formally to M.A. status only when they have completed all requirements for the B.A. in History with strong grades (3.00 grade point average on a 4.00 scale and a 3.20 in history courses). Those students moving to M.A. standing will be exempt from the usual Graduate Record Examination (GRE) admission requirement. | Admission requirements are possession of a bachelor's degree earned at an accredited college or university; a 3.2 grade-point average in the undergraduate major and a 3.0 cumulative average in the last 60 hours of undergraduate course work (based on a 4.0 system); results of Graduate Record Examinations (Verbal, Quantitative, and Analytic); letters of recommendation from two professors with whom the student has done recent work; a well-written statement of purpose, indicating educational and career objectives. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, American UniversityBattelle Tompkins 137, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2401 | The Department of History offers such innovative courses as Oliver Stone's America, Cinema and History, Human Rights as History, Latin American Feminism, Politics of Gender in Early Modern Europe and America, and America's Presidential Elections. During the summer, students may participate in institutes on Nuclear Studies, The Civil War, and The Ethnic Experience in the City. For all students interested in research, the National Archives, Library of Congress, and other facilities in the Washington, D.C., area provide the richest base of archival sources and published works in the United States. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A./M.A. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program enables qualified students to earn, in a continuous plan of study, both the B.A. in Political Science or a related discipline and the M.A. in Political Science. | Admission to the combined B.A./M.A. program requires junior standing, a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale), a completed application form (available from the Department of Government), a written faculty recommendation, an essay on the student's interests and abilities in political science and an interview with the Department of Government graduate adviser. Acceptance and participation in the B.A./M.A. program does not automatically guarantee acceptance into the graduate program. Students must apply for admission to the graduate program through the Graduate Admissions Office no later than the last undergraduate semester. The Graduate Record Examination (GRE) is required for admission to the M.A. program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.A./M.S. in Justice, Law and Society | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | Undergraduate students with majors in justice or related disciplines at the American University apply to this program through the Office of Graduate Affairs and Admissions according to its deadlines, but no later than the last undergraduate semester. Admissions decisions are based on the normal M.S. standards and procedures of the school. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | B.S. and M.A. in Special Education - Learning Disabilities | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | Students must have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) or higher in major and minor courses. In additional, they should earn passing scores (as set by the DC teacher licensing agency) on both the Praxis I exam: Passing Scores for Praxis I - Reading (172), Writing (171), Math (174). | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | B.S. and Master of Arts in Teaching | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | Students must have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) or higher in major and minor courses. In additional, they should earn passing scores (as set by the DC teacher licensing agency) on both the Praxis I exam: Passing Scores for Praxis I - Reading (172), Writing (171), Math (174). | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | B.S. in Applied Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and departmental approval. | Bachelor degree | American University | CSC 280 Introduction to Computer Science (4), STAT 202 Basic Statistics (4), MATH 221 Calculus I (4), MATH 222 Calculus II (4), MATH 313 Calculus III (4), MATH 310 Linear Algebra (3), MATH 321 Diff Equations (3), MATH 503 Foundations of Higher Mathematics (3), STAT 502 Introduction to Mathematical Statistics (3), MATH 501 Probability (3), MATH 550 Complex Analysis (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.S. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | BIO-110/BIO-110G General Biology I 5:1 (4), BIO-210/BIO-210G General Biology II 5:2 (4), BIO-300 Cell Biology with Laboratory (4), BIO-356 Genetics with Laboratory (5), BIO-499 Senior Seminar in Biology (3) CHEM-110/CHEM-110G General Chemistry I 5:1 (4), CHEM-210/CHEM-210G General Chemistry II 5:2 (4), CHEM-310 Organic Chemistry I (3), CHEM-312 Organic Chemistry I Laboratory (1), CHEM-320 Organic Chemistry II (3), CHEM-322 Organic Chemistry II Laboratory (1), MATH-221 Calculus I (4), MATH-222 Calculus II (4) or STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4), PHYS-110/PHYS-110G University Physics I 5:1 (4) (recommended) or PHYS-105/PHYS-105G College Physics I 5:1 (4), PHYS-210/PHYS-210G University Physics II 5:2 (4) (recommended) or PHYS-205/PHYS-205G College Physics II 5:2 (4). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.S. in Biology Minor | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | BIO-110/BIO-110G General Biology I 5:1 (4), BIO-210/BIO-210G General Biology II 5:2 (4), BIO-300 Cell Biology with Laboratory (4), BIO-356 Genetics with Laboratory (5), CHEM-110/CHEM-110G General Chemistry I 5:1 (4), CHEM-210/CHEM-210G General Chemistry II 5:2 (4). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.S. in Marine Science | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | BIO-110/BIO-110G General Biology I 5:1 (4), BIO-210/BIO-210G General Biology II 5:2 (4), CHEM-110/CHEM-110G General Chemistry I 5:1 (4), CHEM-210/CHEM-210G General Chemistry II 5:2 (4), CHEM-401 Geology (3), CSC-310 Introduction to Geographic Information Systems (3), ECON-100 Macroeconomics 4:1 (3), ECON-200 Microeconomics 4:2 (3), ENVS-104 Issues in Marine Science I (1), ENVS-105 Issues in Marine Science II (2), ENVS-360 Environment and the Atmosphere (3), ENVS-420 Applied Oceanography with Laboratory (4), ENVS-492 Senior Capstone in Environmental Studies (3) or ENVS-303 Environmental Issues in the Chesapeake Bay (6), MATH-221 Calculus I (4), MATH-222 Calculus II (4) or STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4), One of the following: ECON-379 Economics of Environmental Policy (3), ENVS-582 Environmental Law (3), SIS-388 International Environmental Politics (3), 9 credit hours of the following: BIO-340 Marine Biology (3), BIO-342 Marine Mammals (3), BIO-423 Introduction to Ecology (3), BIO-520 Topics in Marine Zoology with Laboratory (4), ENVS-303 Environmental Issues in the Chesapeake Bay (6), ENVS-425 Advanced Marine Ecology with Laboratory (4). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | B.S./M.S. in Health Promotion | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Masters | American University | BIO 200 (G): Structure and Function of the Human Body (5:2), CHEM 100 (G): The Molecular World (5:1), CHEM 506: Human Physiological Chemistry, HFIT 200: Lifetime Health and Fitness, HFIT 205 (G): Current Concepts in Nutrition (5:2), HFIT 240: Introduction to Health Promotion, HFIT 245 (G): Gender, Culture, and Health (4:2), HFIT 250: Strategies in Stress Reduction, HFIT 325: Exercise Physiology, HFIT 335: Health Promotion Program Planning, HFIT 410: Health Promotion Evaluation, HFIT 488: Senior Seminar, HFIT 491: Internship, HFIT 540: Health Communication, MGMT 353: Principles of Organizational Theory, Behavior, and Management, PSYC 105 (G): Psychology: Understanding Human Behavior (4:1), PSYC 333: Health Psychology, STAT 202: Basic Statistics, HFIT 510: Applied Human Physiology and Testing (4 credits), HFIT 540: Health Communication (3), HFIT 545: Nutrition for Health (3), HFIT 550: Programming for Health Promotion (3), HFIT 555: Research Methodology (3), HFIT 560: Health Promotion in Healthcare, HFIT 565: Quantitative Assessment (3), HFIT 618: Strategic Planning in Health Promotion (3), HFIT 620: Critical Issues (3), HFIT 682: Internship (3) OR HFIT 797: Master's Thesis (3), PSYC 570: Behavioral Medicine (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program is an ideal choice for students who want to connect a passion for art and culture with a quest for social and historical insight. It affords knowledge of the production and reception of art in the context of history, gender studies, literature, religion, philosophy, psychology, and archaeology, and offers a strong foundation in critical thinking, aesthetic discernment, and historical perspective. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | 2 introductory level courses, 4 courses: one each in Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance/Baroque, Modern, 6 additional courses in Art History. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Audio Production | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | This program provides students with the opportunity to explore real world issues in audio engineering through the recording of various types of music and audio for film, radio, and theater. Projects include tracking and mixing commercial music, providing Foley for films and theater, and creating original sounds with the latest software synthesizers. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | Fundamentals of Audio Technology (3), Fundamentals of Audio Technology Lab (1), Digital Audio Workstations 1 (3), Digital Audio Workstations 2 (3), Production Mixing and Mastering (3), Sound Studio Techniques 1 (3), Sound Studio Techniques 2 (3), Sound Synthesis 1 (3), Sound Synthesis 2 (3), Studio Management (3), Business of the Audio Industry (3), Audio Technology Capstone (1-6), Internship (1-6), Electronics 1, Electronics 1 Lab, Electronics 2, Acoustics, Music courses (21 credit hours) selected from the following: Music Fundamentals (3), Harmony I (3), Harmony II (3), Musicianship I (3), Musicianship II (3), History of Rock Music (3), Evolution of Jazz and Blues (3), History of Music I (3), History of Music II (3), Form and Analysis (3), Counterpoint (3), Communications courses (21 credit hours) selected from the following: Understanding Mass Media 4:1 (3), Visual Literacy (3), Principles of Photography (3), Film and Video Production 1 (3), Digital Imaging and Design (3), Web Studio (3), Film and Video Production 2 (3), Production Practicum: Creative Sound Techniques (3), Production Practicum: Techniques and Aesthetics of Editing (3), Production Practicum: Final Cut Pro (1), Production Practicum: Avid Editing (1), Production Practicum: Web Development (1.5), Production Practicum: Introduction to Gaming (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts, American UniversityKatzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3420 | The Katzen Arts Center brings all the visual and performing arts programs at AU into one 130,000 square foot space. Designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration in the arts, the new center provides state-of-the-art instructional, exhibition, and performance space for all the arts disciplines. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Communication - Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of Communication | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-333 Fundamentals of TV and VCR (3), COMM-385 Broadcast Journalism I (3), COMM-401 Legal Aspects of Communication (3), COMM-428 Broadcast Journalism II (3), COMM-432 Television Field Reporting (3), Four courses from the following: COMM-270/COMM-270G How the news media shaped History 2:2 (3) or COMM-275/COMM-275G Dissident Media: Voices from the Underground 4:2 (3) or COMM-280/COMM-280G Contemporary Media in a Global Society 3:2 (3), COMM-391 Internship (3) or COMM-392 Cooperative Educational Field Experience (3) or COMM-491 Senior Professional Internship (3), COMM-396 Selected Topics course with permission of the students adviser (3), COMM-433 Broadcast Delivery (3), COMM-490 Independent Study Project (3), COMM-503 Broadcast Operations and Management (3), COMM-504 Journalism Ethics (3), COMM-505 History of Broadcast Journalism(3), COMM-508 The media and Government (3), COMM-509 Politics and the Media (3), COMM-510 Women in Journalism (3), COMM-511 History of Documentary (3) or COMM-515 Children's Television (3), COMM-514 Censorship and the media (3), COMM-516 Special Topics in Visual media and Culture (3), COMM-546 Foreign Policy and the Press (3), COMM-547 Great books in US Journalism (3), COMM-596 Selected Topics course with permission of the students adviser (3), COMM-599 Media, Technology and Society (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Communication - Print Journalism Track | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of Communication | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-322 Editorial Policies and Methods (3), COMM-401 Legal Aspects of Communication(3), COMM-425 Advanced Reporting (3), Three courses from the following: COMM-323 Computer Techniques for Communication Studies (3), COMM-325 Feature Article Writing (3), COMM-330 Basic Photography (3), COMM-391 Internship (3) or COMM-392 Cooperative Educational Field Experience (3) or COMM-491 Senior Professional Internship (3), COMM-502 In depth Journalism (3), COMM-521 Opinion writing (3), COMM-545 Business and Economic Journalism (3), COMM-596 Selected Topics course with permission of the student’s adviser (3), Three courses from the following: COMM-270/COMM-270G How the news media shaped History 2:2 (3) or COMM-275/COMM-275G Dissident Media: Voices from the Underground 4:2 (3) or COMM-280/COMM-280G Contemporary Media in a Global Society 3:2 (3), COMM-396 Selected Topics course with permission of the students adviser (3), COMM-490 Independent Study Project (3), COMM-504 Journalism Ethics (3), COMM-505 History of Broadcast Journalism(3), COMM-508 The media and Government (3), COMM-509 Politics and the Media (3), COMM-510 Women in Journalism (3), COMM-511 History of Documentary (3) or COMM-515 Children’s Television (3), COMM-514 Censorship and the media (3), COMM-516 Special Topics in Visual media and Culture (3), COMM-546 Foreign Policy and the Press (3), COMM-547 Great books in US Journalism (3), COMM-596 Selected Topics course with permission of the students' adviser (3), COMM-599 Media, Technology and Society (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Science | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Science, Hurst 101 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | This department trains students to become effective advocates for the environment. The curriculum consists of rigorous science- and policy-based courses and experiential learning that prepare this students for exciting careers in the environmental field. The program offers undergraduate (BA/BS) and graduate (MS) degrees and a certificate (CERT) in environmental assessment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | BA in French Language and Area Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students with a strong interest in a region of the world and in a language of that region. | Students should have earned at least a 3.00 average in secondary school. Students from other regionally accredited collegiate institutions, and students in other programs at American University who have completed the freshman year, should maintain a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) to be considered for transfer to the program. | Bachelor degree | American University | SIS-105/SIS-105G World Politics 3:1 (3), One intercultural communication course from the following: SIS-140/SIS-140G Cross Cultural Communication 3:1 (3), SIS-340 Foundations of International Communication (3), SIS-341 Intercultural Communication (3), One comparative politics course from the following: GOVT-130/GOVT-130G Comparative Politics 3:1 (3), GOVT-231 Third World Politics (3), GOVT-232 Politics of Industrial Societies (3), ARTH-101 European Art: Renaissance to the Present (3), FREN-324 Civilisation Française I (3), FREN-325 Civilisation Française II (3), FREN-326 French Topics (3), FREN-327 Le Français Commercial (3), FREN-328 French Translation: Concepts and Practice (3), FREN-365 Les Registres du Français (3), FREN-432 Le Siècle des Lumières (3), FREN-433 Le Romantisme (3), FREN-434 Le Réalisme (3), FREN-435 Littérature Contemporaine (3), PHIL-311 Modern European Movements (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BA in French Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | FREN-322 Advanced French I (3) (may be replaced by other 300- or 500-level courses if warranted by language proficiency), FREN-323 Advanced French II (3) (may be replaced by other 300- or 500-level courses if warranted by language proficiency), FREN-324 Civilisation Française I (3), FREN-325 Civilisation Française II (3), Three credit hours of linguistics course work from the following: ANTH-254 Language and Culture (3), or TESL-5xx course as approved by adviser, Remaining credit hours at the 300-level or above. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in French and Communication Media - Broadcast Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-100 Understanding Mass Media 4:1 (3), COMM-200 Writing for Mass Communication (3), ANTH-225/ANTH225G Language and Human Experience 1:2, ANTH-254 Language and Culture, TESL-5XX linguistics course as approved by advisor (3), COMM-320 Reporting, COMM-333 Fundamentals of TV and VTR, COMM-385 Broadcast Journalism I, COMM-428 Broadcast Journalism II, COMM-432 Television Field Reporting. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in French and Communication Media - Print Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-320 Reporting, COMM-322 Editorial Policies and Methods, COMM-425 Advanced Reporting, Plus two additional skills courses from the following: COMM-323 Computer Techniques for Communication Studies, COMM-325 Feature Article Writing, COMM-326 Sports Journalism, COMM-330 Principles of Photography, COMM-502 In-Depth Journalism, COMM-521 Opinion Writing, COMM-545 Business and Economic Journalism. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in French and Communication Media - Public Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-301 Public Relations, COMM-337 Public Relations Writing, COMM-346 Public Relations Case Studies, COMM-380 Public Communication Research, COMM-437 Public Relations Portfolio. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in French and Communication Media - Visual Media | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-330 Principles of Photography, COMM-331 Film and Video Production I, COMM-350 Digital Imaging and Design, COMM-382 Writing for Visual Media, Plus one additional course approved by advisor. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in German Language and Area Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students with a strong interest in a region of the world and in a language of that region. The program, jointly designed and administered by the College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) and the School of International Service (SIS), builds on the strengths of the CAS Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) and the SIS field of Comparative and Regional Studies. | Students should have earned at least a 3.00 average in secondary school. Students from other regionally accredited collegiate institutions, and students in other programs at American University who have completed the freshman year, should maintain a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) to be considered for transfer to the program. | Bachelor degree | American University | SIS-105/SIS-105G World Politics 3:1 (3), One intercultural communication course from the following: SIS-140/SIS-140G Cross Cultural Communication 3:1 (3), SIS-340 Foundations of International Communication (3), SIS-341 Intercultural Communication (3), One comparative politics course from the following: GOVT-130/GOVT-130G Comparative Politics 3:1 (3), GOVT-231 Third World Politics (3), GOVT-232 Politics of Industrial Societies (3), ARTH-101 European Art: Renaissance to the Present (3), GERM-336 German Topics (3), GERM-338 Introduction to German Translation (3), GERM-432 Studies in German Film (3), GERM-336 Business German, GERM-438 German Civilization I (3), GERM-439 German Civilization II (3), HIST-239 Modern Germany Since 1848 (3), HIST-318 Nazi Germany (3), LFS-230 The Modernist Explosion, PHIL-311 Modern European Movements (3), (Part 2) Six credits of course work in social science courses, selected from the following (other appropriate area studies courses may be substituted with the approval of the major adviser): ANTH-339 Culture Area Analysis: Europe (3), ECON-351 Comparative Economic Systems (3), ECON-318 Economic History, ECON-361 Economic Development, GOVT-232 Politics of Industrial Societies (3), GOVT-432 Political Institutions and Processes in Selected Countries: Germany (3), GOVT-532 Political Institutions and Processes in Selected Regions: Western Europe (3), HIST-239 Modern Germany Since 1848 (3), HIST-318 Nazi Germany (3), SIS-331 overview of the European Community (3), SIS-355 The Relations of West European Nations (3), SIS-530 Colloquium on the Common Market (3), SIS-551 Politics and Society in Europe Since 1945 (3), SIS-557 Foreign Policy Formulation in West European States (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BA in German Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | GERM-332 German Conversation and Composition I (may be replaced by other 300- or 500-level courses if warranted by language proficiency), GERM-333 German Conversation and Composition II (may be replaced by other 300- or 500-level courses if warranted by language proficiency), GERM-438 German Civilization I (3), GERM-439 German Civilization II (3), Three credit hours of linguistics course work from the following: ANTH-254 Language and Culture (3) or TESL-5xx course as approved by adviser, Remaining credit hours at the 300-level or above. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in German and Communication Media - Broadcast Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-320 Reporting, COMM-333 Fundamentals of TV and VTR, COMM-385 Broadcast Journalism I, COMM-428 Broadcast Journalism II, COMM-432 Television Field Reporting. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in German and Communication Media - Print Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-320 Reporting, COMM-322 Editorial Policies and Methods, COMM-425 Advanced Reporting, Plus two additional skills courses from the following: COMM-323 Computer Techniques for Communication Studies, COMM-325 Feature Article Writing, COMM-326 Sports Journalism, COMM-330 Principles of Photography, COMM-502 In-Depth Journalism, COMM-521 Opinion Writing, COMM-545 Business and Economic Journalism. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in German and Communication Media - Public Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-301 Public Relations, COMM-337 Public Relations Writing, COMM-346 Public Relations Case Studies, COMM-380 Public Communication Research, COMM-437 Public Relations Portfolio. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in German and Communication Media - Visual Media | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-330 Principles of Photography, COMM-331 Film and Video Production I, COMM-350 Digital Imaging and Design, COMM-382 Writing for Visual Media, Plus one additional course approved by advisor. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in International Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of International Service | This program that allows students to gain a broad background as well as developing specialized expertise in elective areas. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | SIS-105 World Politics (3), SIS-101 Leadership Gateway (1) (For first semester SIS Freshmen only), U.S. Politics - GOVT-110, GOVT-120, GOVT-210, OR GOVT-215 (3-4), ECON-100 Macroeconomics (3), ECON-200 Microeconomics (3), SIS-140 Cross Cultural Communication (3), Western Traditions - 2 courses (6), Non-western Area Studies - 2 courses from different non-western areas: Africa, The Americas, Asia/Australia, Middle East, Russia and Central Eurasia (6). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Language and Area Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | School of International Service | This program is a 51-credit hour program jointly administered by SIS and AU’s College of Arts and Sciences. The languages and regions included in this major are French/Europe, German/Europe, Russian/Area Studies, or Spanish/Latin America. It also allows students to pursue challenging elective courses while completing required courses that give the student a solid foundation. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | SIS-105 World Politics (3), SIS-140 Cross Cultural Communication (3), GOVT-130, GOVT-231, OR GOVT-232 (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Literature - Senior Project in Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature, 237 Battelle Tompkins, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2971 | Literature holds a unique position among the disciplines. Because language is both its medium and object of study, literature serves as a point of convergence for issues that concern aesthetics, psychology, sociology, law, philosophy, anthropology, and history. At the same time, literature explores these issues from the fresh perspective of an author's singular imagination. American University's Department of Literature is also unique because, in addition to award-winning scholars and teachers concerned with the aesthetic and historical elements of literary study, our faculty includes accomplished creative writers and teachers of film. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | BA in Philosophy and Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | PHIL-105 Western Philosophy, PHIL-200 Introduction to Logic, PHIL-220 Moral Philosophy, PHIL-235 Theories of Democracy and Human Rights, PHIL-302 19th Century Philosophy, PHIL-303 20th Century Philosophy, PHIL-386 Selected Topics in Philosophy (such as Bioethics, Race and Philosophy, Kant’s Ethics, The Body, etc.), PHIL-486 Colloquium in Philosophy (3 of them, 1 credit each), PHIL-520 Seminar in Ethical Theory, RELG-185 Forms of the Sacred: Religions of the East, PSYC-205 Social Psychology, PSYC-360 Evolution of Behavior, PSYC-433 Research Design. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2925 | The Department of philosophy and religion explores the nature of the real world, the basis of human values, and foundations of reason. Students approach these issues through study of both historical literature and contemporary developments. The department's study of Western and Eastern religious traditions introduces students to a major influence on all civilizations. Journalists, diplomats, and government specialists benefit from the serious consideration of the inner workings of the religious ethos of civilizations. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Russian Language and Area Studies - Russian/Area Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students with a strong interest in a region of the world and in a language of that region. The program, jointly designed and administered by the College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) and the School of International Service (SIS), builds on the strengths of the CAS Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) and the SIS field of Comparative and Regional Studies. | Students should have earned at least a 3.00 average in secondary school. Students from other regionally accredited collegiate institutions, and students in other programs at American University who have completed the freshman year, should maintain a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) to be considered for transfer to the program. | Bachelor degree | American University | SIS-105/SIS-105G World Politics 3:1 (3), One intercultural communication course from the following: SIS-140/SIS-140G Cross Cultural Communication 3:1 (3), SIS-340 Foundations of International Communication (3), SIS-341 Intercultural Communication (3), One comparative politics course from the following: GOVT-130/GOVT-130G Comparative Politics 3:1 (3), GOVT-231 Third World Politics (3), GOVT-232 Politics of Industrial Societies (3), HIST-225 Russia: Past and Present 3:2 (3), HIST-230 Early Russian History, 988¬1700 (3), HIST-231 Imperial Russia, 1700¬1917 (3), HIST-232 Twentieth Century Russia (3), HIST-345 Russian Studies (topics) (3), LIT-367 Russian and Soviet Literature (3), LIT-368 Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy (3), RUSS-347 Introduction to Russian Literature (3), RUSS-441 Russian Media and Political Translation (3), RUSS-543 Russian Classics (3), RUSS-548 Topics in Russian Studies, (Part 2) Six credits of course work in social science courses, selected from the following (other appropriate area studies courses may be substituted with the approval of the major adviser): ANTH-339 Culture Area Analysis: Eastern Europe (3), ECON-351 Comparative Economic Systems (3), ECON-318 Economic History, ECON-361 Economic Development, ECON-552 Economic Transition in Eastern Europe and New Independent States (3), GOVT-432 Political Institutions and Processes in Selected Countries: Former USSR (3), GOVT-532 Political Institutions and Processes in Selected Regions: Eastern Europe (3), HIST-225/HIST-225G Russia: Past and Present 3:2 (3), HIST-230 Early Russian History, 988-1700 (3), HIST-231 Imperial Russia, 1700-1917 (3), HIST-232 Twentieth Century Russia (3), HIST-345 Russian Studies (topics) (3), LFS-200/LFS-200G Russia and the United States 3:2 (3), SIS-258 Contemporary Russia (3), SIS-381 Foreign Policies of the Great Powers (3), SIS-558 Authoritarianism and Democracy in Russia (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Russian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | RUSS-342 Russian Conversation and Composition I (3), RUSS-343 Russian Conversation and Composition II (3), Three credit hours of linguistics coursework from the following: ANTH-225/ANTH-225G Language and Human Experience 1:2 (3), ANTH-254 Language and Culture (3), TESL-5xx course as approved by adviser, Remaining credit hours chosen from 300-level and 500-level courses, independent studies, and internships. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Russian and Communication Media - Broadcast Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-320 Reporting, COMM-333 Fundamentals of TV and VTR, COMM-385 Broadcast Journalism I, COMM-428 Broadcast Journalism II, COMM-432 Television Field Reporting. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Russian and Communication Media - Print Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-320 Reporting, COMM-322 Editorial Policies and Methods, COMM-425 Advanced Reporting, Plus two additional skills courses from the following: COMM-323 Computer Techniques for Communication Studies, COMM-325 Feature Article Writing, COMM-326 Sports Journalism, COMM-330 Principles of Photography, COMM-502 In-Depth Journalism, COMM-521 Opinion Writing, COMM-545 Business and Economic Journalism. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Russian and Communication Media - Public Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-301 Public Relations, COMM-337 Public Relations Writing, COMM-346 Public Relations Case Studies, COMM-380 Public Communication Research, COMM-437 Public Relations Portfolio. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Russian and Communication Media - Visual Media | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-330 Principles of Photography, COMM-331 Film and Video Production I, COMM-350 Digital Imaging and Design, COMM-382 Writing for Visual Media, Plus one additional course approved by advisor. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Spanish Language and Area Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students with a strong interest in a region of the world and in a language of that region. The program, jointly designed and administered by the College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) and the School of International Service (SIS), builds on the strengths of the CAS Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) and the SIS field of Comparative and Regional Studies. | Students should have earned at least a 3.00 average in secondary school. Students from other regionally accredited collegiate institutions, and students in other programs at American University who have completed the freshman year, should maintain a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) to be considered for transfer to the program. | Bachelor degree | American University | SIS-105/SIS-105G World Politics 3:1 (3), One intercultural communication course from the following: SIS-140/SIS-140G Cross Cultural Communication 3:1 (3), SIS-340 Foundations of International Communication (3), SIS-341 Intercultural Communication (3), One comparative politics course from the following: GOVT-130/GOVT-130G Comparative Politics 3:1 (3), GOVT-231 Third World Politics (3), GOVT-232 Politics of Industrial Societies (3), HIST-241 Colonial Latin America (3), HIST-242 Latin America Since Independence (3), HIST-340 Latin American Studies (topics) (3), LFS-210/LFS-210G Latin America: History, Art, Literature 3:2 (3), SPAN-356 Spanish Topics (3) includes topics such as the social scene in Latin America, regionalism in Latin America, Mexican culture, Latin American film, religion and violence, Hispanics in the United States, the Latin American short story, Popular Culture in Latin America, Theatre in Latin America, and Post-Dictatorial Literature. SPAN-357 Introduction to Latin American Literature (3), SPAN-358 Introduction to Spanish Translation (3), SPAN-359 Advanced Spanish Translation (3), SPAN-450 Spanish Civilization I: Spain (3), SPAN-491 Spanish Internship: Proyecto Amistad (2-6), SPAN-554 Classics of Latin American Literature (3), SPAN-559 Colloquium on Latin America (3) includes lectures, reports, and critical discussions cultural trends, political and economic problems, and international relations of Latin America. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Spanish Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | SPAN-352 Spanish Conversation and Composition I (3) (may be replaced by other 300- or 500-level course if warranted by language proficiency), SPAN-353 Spanish Conversation and Composition II (3) (may be replaced by other 300- or 500-level course if warranted by language proficiency), SPAN-357 Introduction to Latin American Literature (3), SPAN-450 Spanish Civilization I: Spain (3), SPAN-491 Internship: Spanish (2-6), Three credit hours of linguistics course work from the following: ANTH-254 Language and Culture (3), TESL-5xx course as approved by adviser, SPAN-361 Intro to Spanish Linguistics, Remaining credit hours chosen from Spanish topics, colloquium, and literature courses. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Spanish and Communication Media - Broadcast Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-320 Reporting, COMM-333 Fundamentals of TV and VTR, COMM-385 Broadcast Journalism I, COMM-428 Broadcast Journalism II, COMM-432 Television Field Reporting. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Spanish and Communication Media - Print Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-320 Reporting, COMM-322 Editorial Policies and Methods, COMM-425 Advanced Reporting, Plus two additional skills courses from the following: COMM-323 Computer Techniques for Communication Studies, COMM-325 Feature Article Writing, COMM-326 Sports Journalism, COMM-330 Principles of Photography, COMM-502 In-Depth Journalism, COMM-521 Opinion Writing, COMM-545 Business and Economic Journalism. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Spanish and Communication Media - Public Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-301 Public Relations, COMM-337 Public Relations Writing, COMM-346 Public Relations Case Studies, COMM-380 Public Communication Research, COMM-437 Public Relations Portfolio. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Spanish and Communication Media - Visual Media | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | COMM-330 Principles of Photography, COMM-331 Film and Video Production I, COMM-350 Digital Imaging and Design, COMM-382 Writing for Visual Media, Plus one additional course approved by advisor. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Studio Art | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The programs allow students the opportunity to concentrate in one major area and to minor in a secondary medium. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA in Studio Art - Multimedia | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art Multimedia | This program focuses on an understanding of how multimedia has evolved in the era of digital computing, as well as the broad history of the interplay between art and technology. Multimedia integrates the visual and performing arts, graphic design, communications, audio technology, and the information sciences at American University. It involves the collaboration of specialists working in diverse disciplines | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art Multimedia | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art Multimedia, 216 Katzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | Since 2005, the Studio Art concentration in Multimedia program has been situated in the Katzen Arts Center. State-of-the-art production facilities and a shared environment with artists, designers, musicians, dancers, and creative thinkers make it possible to extend the horizons of experimentation and artistic production. In addition, students have access to the New Media Center of the Center for Teaching Excellence with support personnel and advanced systems for graphics, sound, video and multimedia production. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA/MA in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program is primarily but not solely designed for transfer students who enter the American University in their junior year with substantial background in anthropology. It allows eligible students to complete the B.A. in Anthropology and the M.A. in Public Anthropology after three years (6 semesters) of uninterrupted study. Students with interest in applied anthropology or in a field related to anthropology, such as law, social services, government service, or public health, find this degree combination especially appropriate for pre-professional training. | The standards for admission to the undergraduate major must first be satisfied. Undergraduate majors ordinarily apply at the end of their junior year. Admission decisions follow the procedures used to evaluate graduate applicants to the M.A. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Battelle-Tompkins T21, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1830 | This department has trained undergraduate and graduate students in the real-world applications of anthropological method and theory for almost 50 years. They were the second anthropology department in the USA to offer an MA in Applied Anthropology. This new BA- and MA- related initiatives in Public Anthropology, our support for critical studies in archaeology, and this Anthropology/Sociology joint PhD track in Race, Gender and Social Justice prepares students to address issues of public policy, community struggle and other locally defined concerns in their academic projects, and for employment in activist domains outside of academia. this faculty and students come from different race, ethnic and class backgrounds, nationalities and sexualities, and we are committed to maintaining an academic environment where diversity, broadly defined, can be expressed, supported and respected. Material on this website describes the degree programs, research interests and opportunities for practical training which the Department of Anthropology makes available to Student . | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA/MA program in Arts Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | This program is designed for undergraduate students pursuing a bachelor’s degree at American University. The undergraduate degree can be in any field. Application to the combined BA/MA must be made by February of the student’s junior year, minimum requirements are a 3.0 GPA and, 9 credits of advanced (300 level or higher) coursework in one or more of the arts disciplines (must be completed by the end of the junior year). An overlap of undergraduate with master’s coursework allows the student to complete both degrees within five and a half years. The program is designed to work with each student’s goals, so the overlap is determined in consultation with Student arts management advisor. Once accepted into the program, each student meets with the Director of Arts Management to begin planning her/his coursework. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts, American UniversityKatzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3420 | The Katzen Arts Center brings all the visual and performing arts programs at AU into one 130,000 square foot space. Designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration in the arts, the new center provides state-of-the-art instructional, exhibition, and performance space for all the arts disciplines. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA/MA program in Film and Media Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | BA/MA program in International Affairs | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This is a selective program open to SIS undergraduate students that permits students to earn both a BA in International Studies and a MA in International Affairs and allows certain specified graduate level courses to be applied to the requirements of both degrees. Students admitted to the BA/MA program remain as undergraduates until the BA degree is completed. Upon BA graduation clearance, students become MA only. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA/MPA of Public Administration | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program enables qualified students to earn, in a continuous plan of five years of study, both a bachelor's degree with a major in any related discipline and the Master of Public Administration. | Admission to the combined BA/MPA program requires junior standing, a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale), a completed application form (available from the Department of Public Administration and Policy), a written faculty recommendation, an essay on the student's interests and abilities in public administration, and an interview with the Department of Public Administration & Policy Chair or a Department Academic Advisor. Acceptance and participation in the combined BA/MPA program does not automatically guarantee acceptance into the graduate program. Students must apply for admission to the graduate program through the Office of Graduate Admissions no later than the last undergraduate semester. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BA/MPP of Public Policy | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program enables qualified students to earn, in a continuous plan of five years of study, both a bachelor's degree with a major in any related discipline and the Master of Public Policy. | Admission to the combined BA/MPP program requires junior standing, a cumulative grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale), a completed application form (available from the Department of Public Administration), a written faculty recommendation, an essay on the student's interests and abilities in public policy, and an interview with the Department of Public Administration & Policy Chair or a Department Academic Advisor. Acceptance and participation in the combined BA/MPP program does not automatically guarantee acceptance into the graduate program. Students must apply for admission to the graduate program through the Office of Graduate Admissions no later than the last undergraduate semester. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | PUAD-601 Methods of Problem Solving 1 (3) ,PUAD-603 Policy Formation & Implementation (3) ,PUAD-630 Public Managerial Economics (3) (only for students with economics background) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BFA in Studio Art | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The programs allow students the opportunity to concentrate in one major area and to minor in a secondary medium. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a grade point average of 2.00 on a 4.00 scale. | Bachelor degree | American University | BIO-110/BIO-110G General Biology I 5:1 (4), BIO-210/BIO-210G General Biology II 5:2 (4), BIO-300 Cell Biology with laboratory (4), BIO-356 Genetics with laboratory (5), BIO-440 Microbiology with laboratory (4), BIO-583 Molecular Biology (3), CHEM-110/CHEM-110G General Chemistry I 5:1 (4), CHEM-210/CHEM-210G General Chemistry II 5:2 (4), CHEM-310 Organic Chemistry I (3), CHEM-312 Organic Chemistry I laboratory (1), CHEM-320 Organic Chemistry II (3), CHEM-410 Biophysical Chemistry (3), CHEM-411 Biophysical Chemistry laboratory (I), CHEM-460 Insyrumental Analysis (3), CHEM-461 Instrumental Analysis Laboratory (2), CHEM-508 Human Biochemistry Laboratory (1), CHEM-560 Biochemistry I (3), CHEM-561 Biochemistry II (3), MATH-221 Calcalus I (4), MATH-222 Calculus II (4), PHYS-110/PHYS-110G University Physics I 5:1 (4), PHYS-210/PHYS-210G University Physics II 5:2 (4). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, American UniversityBeeghly Building 104, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1750 | Chemistry is the science that deals with the composition of materials, their structures and properties, the transformations they undergo, and the energy changes that accompany these transformations. Areas of study include general, organic, medicinal, physical, analytical, and inorganic chemistry, as well as biochemistry and earth science. Accredited by the American Chemical Society, the department offers programs leading to B.S. degrees in Chemistry or Biochemistry, and the M.S. degree in Chemistry. Besides training for a career or graduate study in chemistry, bachelor's students are prepared for medical or dental school, engineering programs, and other careers where technical expertise is needed. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Business Administration and Language and Culture Studies - French | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students with a passion for business and a complementary enthusiasm for a foreign language. The BLC provides students the opportunity to understand the most important connection between business and language. This degree is for students who wish to study: French, German, Russian, Spanish. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | LIT-100 College Writing (3), LIT-101 College Writing Seminar (3), MATH-211 Applied Calculus I or MATH 221 Calculus I (4), STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4), ECON-100 Macroeconomics (3), ECON-200 Microeconomics (3), ANTH-225 Language and Human Experience (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Business Administration and Language and Culture Studies - German | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students with a passion for business and a complementary enthusiasm for a foreign language. The BLC provides students the opportunity to understand the most important connection between business and language. This degree is for students who wish to study: French, German, Russian, Spanish. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | LIT-100 College Writing (3), LIT-101 College Writing Seminar (3), MATH-211 Applied Calculus I or MATH 221 Calculus I (4), STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4), ECON-100 Macroeconomics (3), ECON-200 Microeconomics (3), ANTH-225 Language and Human Experience (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Business Administration and Language and Culture Studies - Russian | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students with a passion for business and a complementary enthusiasm for a foreign language. The BLC provides students the opportunity to understand the most important connection between business and language. This degree is for students who wish to study: French, German, Russian, Spanish. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | LIT-100 College Writing (3), LIT-101 College Writing Seminar (3), MATH-211 Applied Calculus I or MATH 221 Calculus I (4), STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4), ECON-100 Macroeconomics (3), ECON-200 Microeconomics (3), ANTH-225 Language and Human Experience (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Business Administration and Language and Culture Studies - Spanish | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students with a passion for business and a complementary enthusiasm for a foreign language. The BLC provides students the opportunity to understand the most important connection between business and language. This degree is for students who wish to study: French, German, Russian, Spanish. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | LIT-100 College Writing (3), LIT-101 College Writing Seminar (3), MATH-211 Applied Calculus I or MATH 221 Calculus I (4), STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4), ECON-100 Macroeconomics (3), ECON-200 Microeconomics (3), ANTH-225 Language and Human Experience (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a grade point average of 2.00 on a 4.00 scale. | Bachelor degree | American University | CHEM-110/CHEM-110G General chemistry I 5:1 (4), CHEM-210/CHEM-210G General Chemistry II 5:2 (4), CHEM-310 Organic Chemistry I (3), CHEM-312 Organic Chemistry I Laboratory (3), CHEM-320 Organic Chemistry II (3), CHEM-322 Organic Chemistry II Laboratory (1), CHEM-350 Quantitative Analysis (3), CHEM-351 Quantitative Analysis Laboratory (2), CHEM-410 Biophysical Chemistry (3), CHEM-411 Biophysical Chemistry Laboratory (1), CHEM-460 Instrumental Analysis (3), CHEM-461 Instrumental Analysis Laboratory (2), CHEM-507 Chemical Literature (1), CHEM-510 Advanced Physical Chemistry (3), CHEM-511 Advanced Physical Chemistry Laboratory (2), CHEM-550 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (3), CHEM-552 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (1), CHEM-560 Biochemistry I (3), CHEM-561 Biochemistry II (3), MATH-221 Calculus I (4), MATH-222 Calculus II (4), MATH-313 Calculus III (4), PHYS-110/ PHYS-110G University Physics I 5:1 (4), PHYS 210/PHYS-210G University Physics II 5:1 (4), At least 3 credit hours from the following: CHEM-490 Independent Study Project (1-6), CHEM-498 Honors: Senior Year (1-3), CHEM-499 Honors: Senior Year (1-3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, American UniversityBeeghly Building 104, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1750 | Chemistry is the science that deals with the composition of materials, their structures and properties, the transformations they undergo, and the energy changes that accompany these transformations. Areas of study include general, organic, medicinal, physical, analytical, and inorganic chemistry, as well as biochemistry and earth science. Accredited by the American Chemical Society, the department offers programs leading to B.S. degrees in Chemistry or Biochemistry, and the M.S. degree in Chemistry. Besides training for a career or graduate study in chemistry, bachelor's students are prepared for medical or dental school, engineering programs, and other careers where technical expertise is needed. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program offers the concentrations are: Computer Science, Consulting/Management, Digital Electronics, Entrepreneurship, Design your own with an advisor. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | CSC-280 Introduction to Computer Science I (4), CSC-281 Introduction to Computer Science II (3), CSC-330 Organization of Computer Systems (4), CSC-520 Algorithms and Data Structures (3), CSC-521 Design and Organization of Programming Languages (3), CSC-565 Operating Systems (3), CSC-570 Database Management Systems (3), 3 credit hours of CSC courses above 300 approved by the student’s advisor, CSC-494 Capstone Project (3), CSC-494 Capstone Project (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, McKinley 102, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2743 | The Department of Computer Science offers multiple degree programs and concentrations providing individual attention and flexibility, project-oriented coursework, and unsurpassed prospects for graduate school and careers: Individual Attention, Rigorous, Creative Coursework, Internships and Career Diversity, Flexibility. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Health Promotion | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program is an emerging discipline that responds to the increasing health concerns of Americans such as increasing regular physical activity, improving nutritional choices, and managing daily stress. It has a 10-year history with graduates working in a variety of settings, such as government, hospital, and corporations; further more than half of the graduates have gone on for advanced degrees primarily in the allied health field. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and departmental approval. | Bachelor degree | American University | STAT 202 Basic Statistics (4), CSC 280 (4), MATH 221 Calculus I (4), MATH 222 Calculus II (4), MATH 313 Calculus III (4), MATH 310 Linear Algebra (3), MATH 321 Diff Equations (3), MATH 503 Foundations of Higher Mathematics (3), MATH 512 Introduction to Modern Algebra (3), MATH 520 Introduction to Analysis (3), MATH 550 Complex Analysis (3), One course from each of the following groups: Group One: MATH 521 Measure and Integration Theory (3), MATH 500 Advanced Calculus of Several Variables (3), Math 510 Geometry (3), Math 540 Topology (3), Group Two: MATH 601 Harmonic Analysis (3), MATH 505 Mathematical Logic (3), MATH 515 Number Theory (3), MATH 513 Rings and fields (3), Group Three: MATH 551 Partial Differential Equations (3), MATH 560 Numerical Analysis (3), MATH 570 History of Mathematics (3), MATH 501 Probability (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Mathematics - Second major in Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and departmental approval. | Bachelor degree | American University | CSC 280 Introduction to Computer Sciences (4), STAT 202 Basic Statistics (4), MATH 221 Calculus I (4), MATH 222 Calculus II (4), MATH 313 Calculus III (4), MATH 310 Linear Algebra (3), MATH 503 Foundations of Higher Mathematics (3), MATH 510 Geometry (3), MATH 512 Introduction to Modern Algebra (3), MATH 520 Introduction to Analysis (3), MATH 501 Probability (3), MATH 502 Introduction to Mathematical Statistics (3), MATH 585 Mathematics Education or a similar course (3), MATH 570 History of Mathematics (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Physics - Chemical Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and departmental approval. | Bachelor degree | American University | CSC-280 Introduction to Computer Science I (4), MATH-221 Calculus I (4), MATH-222 Calculus II (4), MATH-313 Calculus III (4) MATH-321 Differential Equations (3), PHYS-110 University Physics I 5:1 (4), PHYS-210 University Physics II 5:2 (4), (PHYS-110 and PHYS-210 may be waived for students with exceptional high school preparation), PHYS-365Waves and Optics (3), PHYS-370 Modern Physics (3), PHYS-430 Classical Mechanics (3), PHYS-440 Experimental Physics (3), PHYS-450 Electricity and Magnetism (3), PHYS-470 Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (3), CHEM-310 Organic Chemistry I (3), CHEM-312 Organic Chemistry I Laboratory (1), CHEM-320 Organic Chemistry II (3), CHEM-322 Organic Chemistry II Laboratory (1), CHEM-350 Quantitative Analysis (3), CHEM-351 Quantitative Analysis Laboratory (2), CHEM-410 Biophysical Chemistry (3), CHEM-411 Biophysical Chemistry Laboratory (1), CHEM-460 Instrumental Analysis (3), CHEM-461 Instrumental Analysis Laboratory (2). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, McKinley 102, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2743 | The Department of Physics prepares majors for graduate education or careers in diverse fields such as astronomy, medicine, engineering, architecture, acoustics, science education, science policy, and physics. Courses focus on the physical phenomena and properties of the universe: gravitation, electricity and magnetism, quantum mechanics, atomic and nuclear structure, fundamental particles, light and energy, and the properties of matter. Educational facilities include introductory and advanced laboratories equipped with modern technology and multiple teaching spaces tailored to foster interactive learning.Although not a formal requirement of the major, most physics majors participate in undergraduate research experiences through paid internships and independent studies. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Physics - Computational Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and departmental approval. | Bachelor degree | American University | CSC-280 Introduction to Computer Science I (4), MATH-221 Calculus I (4), MATH-222 Calculus II (4), MATH-313 Calculus III (4) MATH-321 Differential Equations (3), PHYS-110 University Physics I 5:1 (4), PHYS-210 University Physics II 5:2 (4), (PHYS-110 and PHYS-210 may be waived for students with exceptional high school preparation), PHYS-365Waves and Optics (3), PHYS-370 Modern Physics (3), PHYS-430 Classical Mechanics (3), PHYS-440 Experimental Physics (3), PHYS-450 Electricity and Magnetism (3), PHYS-470 Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (3), CSC-281 Introduction to Computer Science II (3), CSC-330 Organization of Computer Systems (4), CSC-432 Introduction to Simulation and Modeling (3), CSC-520 Algorithms and Data Structures (3), CSC-543 Object-Oriented Analysis and Design (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, McKinley 102, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2743 | The Department of Physics prepares majors for graduate education or careers in diverse fields such as astronomy, medicine, engineering, architecture, acoustics, science education, science policy, and physics. Courses focus on the physical phenomena and properties of the universe: gravitation, electricity and magnetism, quantum mechanics, atomic and nuclear structure, fundamental particles, light and energy, and the properties of matter. Educational facilities include introductory and advanced laboratories equipped with modern technology and multiple teaching spaces tailored to foster interactive learning.Although not a formal requirement of the major, most physics majors participate in undergraduate research experiences through paid internships and independent studies. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Physics - Traditional Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and departmental approval. | Bachelor degree | American University | CSC-280 Introduction to Computer Science I (4), MATH-221 Calculus I (4), MATH-222 Calculus II (4), MATH-313 Calculus III (4) MATH-321 Differential Equations (3), PHYS-110 University Physics I 5:1 (4), PHYS-210 University Physics II 5:2 (4), (PHYS-110 and PHYS-210 may be waived for students with exceptional high school preparation), PHYS-365Waves and Optics (3), PHYS-370 Modern Physics (3), PHYS-430 Classical Mechanics (3), PHYS-440 Experimental Physics (3), PHYS-450 Electricity and Magnetism (3), PHYS-470 Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (3), MATH-310 Linear Algebra (3), MATH-550 Complex Analysis (3), MATH-551 Partial Differential Equations (3), PHYS-220 Astronomy 5:2 (3), PHYS-230 Changing Views of the Universe 5:2 (3), PHYS-305 Acoustics (3), PHYS-312 Electronics I (3), PHYS-313 Electronics II (3), PHYS-322 Electronics Lab I (2), PHYS-323 Electronics Lab II (2). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, McKinley 102, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2743 | The Department of Physics prepares majors for graduate education or careers in diverse fields such as astronomy, medicine, engineering, architecture, acoustics, science education, science policy, and physics. Courses focus on the physical phenomena and properties of the universe: gravitation, electricity and magnetism, quantum mechanics, atomic and nuclear structure, fundamental particles, light and energy, and the properties of matter. Educational facilities include introductory and advanced laboratories equipped with modern technology and multiple teaching spaces tailored to foster interactive learning.Although not a formal requirement of the major, most physics majors participate in undergraduate research experiences through paid internships and independent studies. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Statistics - Applied Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and departmental approval. | Bachelor degree | American University | CSC 280 Introduction to Computer Science I (4), MATH 211 Applied Calculus I (4) and MATH 212 Applied Calculus II (3) or MATH 221 Calculus I (4) and MATH 222 Calculus II (4), MATH 310 Linear Algebra (3), MATH 501 Probability (3), STAT 202 Basic Statistics (4), STAT 300 Business and Economic Statistics (3) or STAT 302 Intermediate Statistics (3), STAT 502 Introduction to Mathematical Statistics (3), STAT 515 Regression (3), STAT 516 Design of Experiments (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS in Statistics - Mathematical Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and departmental approval. | Bachelor degree | American University | CSC 280 Introduction to Computer Science I (4), MATH 221 Calculus I (4), MATH 222 Calculus II (4), MATH 313 Calculus III (4), MATH 310 Linear Algebra (3), MATH 501 Probability (3), STAT 202 Basic Statistics (4), STAT 502 Introduction to Mathematical Statistics (3), STAT 515 Regression (3), STAT 516 Design of Experiments (3), CSC 280 Introduction to Computer Science I (4). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | BS/MA Program in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Undergraduate students should apply by the end of the junior year. Students should have a minimum grade point average of 3.2 in major courses and have completed one of the following sequences: MATH 512 Introduction of Modern Algebra I and MATH 513 Introduction of Modern Algebra II or MATH 520Introduction to Analysis I and MATH 521 Introduction to Analysis II | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | BS/MS Program in Applied Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Interested students should apply by the end of the junior year. Applicants should have a minimum grade point average of 3.2 in major courses and have complete MATH-501 Probability and STAT-502 Introduction to Mathematical Statistics by the end of the junior year. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | BS/MS Program in Statistics or Mathematics and Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | BS/MS in Mathematics and Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ANTH-250/ANTH-250G Human Origins 5:2 (3), ANTH-251 Perspectives in Cultural Anthropology (3), ANTH-253 Introduction to Archaeology (3), ANTH-254 Language and Culture (3), ANTH-339 Culture Area Analysis (3), ANTH-440 Contemporary Ethnographies (3), ANTH-450 Anthropology of Power (3), ANTH-552 Anthropological Research Methods (3), ANTH-392 Cooperative Education Field Experience (3-9), ANTH-491 Internship in Anthropology (1-6), ANTH-550 Ethnographic Field Methods (3), ANTH-560 Summer Field School: Archaeology (3-9), ANTH-210/ANTH-210G Roots of Racism and Interracial Harmony 3:2 (3), ANTH-215/ANTH-215G Sex, Gender, and Culture 3:2 (3), ANTH-220/ANTH-220G Living in Multicultural Societies 3:2 (3), ANTH-225/ANTH-225G Language and Human Experience 1:2 (3), ANTH-230/ANTH-230G India: Its Living Traditions 3:2 (3), ANTH-235/ANTH-235G Early American: The Buried Past 2:2 (3), ANTH-334 Environmental Justice (3), ANTH-337 Anthropology of Genocide (3), ANTH-350 Special Topics (3), ANTH-430 Magic, Witchcraft, and Religion (3), ANTH-431 Taboos, ANTH-498 Senior Thesis in Anthropology (3-6), ANTH-531 Archaeology (3), ANTH-532 Changing Culture (3), ANTH-534 Class and Culture (3), ANTH-535 Ethnicity and Nationalism (3), ANTH-537 Topics in Language and Culture (3), ANTH-542 Reinventing Applied Anthropology (3), ANTH-543 Anthropology of Development (3), ANTH-544 Topics in Public Anthropology (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Battelle-Tompkins T21, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1830 | This department has trained undergraduate and graduate students in the real-world applications of anthropological method and theory for almost 50 years. They were the second anthropology department in the USA to offer an MA in Applied Anthropology. This new BA- and MA- related initiatives in Public Anthropology, our support for critical studies in archaeology, and this Anthropology/Sociology joint PhD track in Race, Gender and Social Justice prepares students to address issues of public policy, community struggle and other locally defined concerns in their academic projects, and for employment in activist domains outside of academia. this faculty and students come from different race, ethnic and class backgrounds, nationalities and sexualities, and we are committed to maintaining an academic environment where diversity, broadly defined, can be expressed, supported and respected. Material on this website describes the degree programs, research interests and opportunities for practical training which the Department of Anthropology makes available to Student . | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Arts in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program combines economic theory with applied fields such as labor economics or international finance. It allows the student the flexibility of a double major with other departments in the College of Arts and Sciences, the School of International Service, the Kogod College of Business Administration, the School of Public Affairs, or the School of Communication. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ECON-100/ECON-100G Macroeconomics 4:1 (3), ECON-200/ECON-200G Microeconomics 4:2 (3), ECON-300 Intermediate Microeconomics (3) or ECON-500 Microeconomics (3), ECON-301 Intermediate Macroeconomics (3) or ECON-501 Macroeconomics (3), One of the following: ECON-480 Research Seminar in Economics (3), ECON-491 Internship (3), ECON-492 Internship in Teaching Economics (3), Study abroad course with emphasis in economics or political economy at 300-level or higher. STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4), ECON-371 International Economics: Trade (3), ECON-372 International Economics: Finance (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, American University Roper Hall 105, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3770 | This department offers a pluralist approach to economics that embraces mainstream and heterodox perspectives and emphasizes policy applications. They believe that theoretical understanding, empirical investigation, and policy analysis are enriched by study of the evolution of economic ideas and economic institutions. They believe that thoughtful empirical work is essential for testing theoretical models and their policy implications. This commitment to pluralism, empirical analysis, and policy relevance is evident in the research of this faculty and is reflected in this undergraduate and graduate program. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Arts in Graphic Design | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art Graphic Design Program | The design curriculum is highly structured and sequential in order that a reservoir of ideas and skills can be built up through courses that provide theory and techniques applicable to many purposes. Professional production methods must also be developed. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | Introduction to Graphic Design, Introduction to Typography, Computer Literacy for Design, Graphic Design History, Intermediate Typography, Print Design and the Computer, Experience Design and Computer, Design and Photography, Kinetic and Sequential Graphics, Advanced Design 1: Systems Design, User Experience Design I, Advanced Design 2: Narrative Design, User Experience Design II, Illustration, Packaging Design, Independent Study Project in Design, Internship, Cooperative Education Field Experience. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art Graphic Design Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art Graphic Design Program, American University Watkins Building 116, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The design program teaches the theory and practice of graphic communications design. This courses cover publication and editorial design, corporate identity, branding, packaging, illustration, multimedia, experience and interactive design, etc. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Arts in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | PERF-124 Harmony I (3), PERF-125 Harmony II (3), PERF-227 Musicianship I (3), PERF-228 Musicianship II (3), PERF-322 Music History I (3), PERF-323 Music History II (3), PERF-324 Form and Analysis (3), PERF-325 Counterpoint (3), PERF-445 Senior Capstone: Music (3), Arts Management: ACCT-240 Principles of Financial Management (3), ECON-100/100G Macroeconomics 4:1 (3), MKTG-300 Principles of Marketing (3), PERF-570 Survey of Arts Management (3), ACCT -241 Principles of Managerial Accounting (3) or ECON-200/200G Microeconomics 4:2 (3), Composition: Three semesters of MUS-122 (6) in Composition PERF-326 Orchestration (3), Approved PERF-451 Rotating Topics in Music course in the area of Analysis (3), MUS-434 Senior Recital of original compositions (4), Jazz Studies: PERF-226 Improvisation (3), PERF-321 The Evolution of Jazz and Blues (3), MUS-434 Senior Recital (4), Vocal Performance:PERF-251 Fundamentals of Acting I (3), PERF-356 Diction for Singers (3), MUS-434 Senior Recital (4), Study of German, Italian, or French language courses recommended, Instrumental Performance:MUS-434 Senior Recital (4), Approved PERF-451 Rotating Topics in Music course (3), History and Literature or Anthropology of Music: HIST-100/100G Historians and the Living Past 2:1 (3), Approved history (HIST-xxx) or anthropology (ANTH-xxx) course (3), Approved PERF-451 Rotating Topics in Music course (3), An approved Internship (3-6) or an additional approved PERF-451 Topics course (3), A Senior Thesis written project submitted as part of the Music Capstone course. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts, American UniversityKatzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3420 | The Katzen Arts Center brings all the visual and performing arts programs at AU into one 130,000 square foot space. Designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration in the arts, the new center provides state-of-the-art instructional, exhibition, and performance space for all the arts disciplines. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Audio Technology | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | This program provides students with the opportunity to explore real world issues in audio engineering through the recording of various types of music and audio for film, radio, and theater. Projects include tracking and mixing commercial music, providing Foley for films and theater, and creating original sounds with the latest software synthesizers. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | Fundamentals of Audio Technology (3), Fundamentals of Audio Technology Lab (1), Digital Audio Workstations 1 (3), Digital Audio Workstations 2 (3), Production Mixing and Mastering (3), Sound Studio Techniques 1 (3), Sound Studio Techniques 2 (3), Sound Synthesis 1 (3), Sound Synthesis 2 (3), Studio Management (3), Audio Technology Capstone (1-6), Business of the Audio Industry (3), Internship (1-6), Visual Literacy (3), Production Practicum: Creative Sound Techniques (3), Music Fundamentals (3), Harmony 1 (3), Harmony 2 (3), Musicianship 1 (3), Musicianship 2 (3), Physics for the Modern World (4) and Physics for the New Millennium (4) or University Physics 1 (4) and University Physics 2 (4), Electronics 1 (3), Electronics 1 Lab (2), Electronics 2 (3), Electronics 2 Lab (2), Acoustics (3), Introduction to Computer Science 1 (3), Introduction to Computer Science 2 (3), Organization of Computer Systems (3), Computer System Organizations and Programming (3), Introduction to Computer Networks (3), Applied Calculus 1 (4) or Calculus 1 (4), Waves and Optics (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts, American UniversityKatzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3420 | The Katzen Arts Center brings all the visual and performing arts programs at AU into one 130,000 square foot space. Designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration in the arts, the new center provides state-of-the-art instructional, exhibition, and performance space for all the arts disciplines. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program designed to teach broad business functions, develop students' professional skills, expand technological literacy, and build global perspective. Kogod students can tailor their degree program by specializing in a particular business discipline or by adding a major/minor in another academic area. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ACCT-240 - Principles of Financial Accounting (3), ACCT-241 - Principles of Managerial Accounting (3), FIN-365 - Business Finance (3), ITEC-200 - The Edge of Information Technology (3.0), ITEC-355 - Production/Operations Management (3), IBUS-300 - Fundamentals of International Business (3), KSB-100 - Business 1.0 (3), MGMT-201 - Global Corporate Citizenship (3), MGMT-353 - Principles of Organizational Theory, Behavior and Management (3), MGMT-458 - Business Policy and Strategy (3), MKTG-300 - Principles of Marketing (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Accounting | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program designed to teach broad business functions, develop students' professional skills, expand technological literacy, and build global perspective. Kogod students can tailor their degree program by specializing in a particular business discipline or by adding a major/minor in another academic area. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ACCT-240 - Principles of Financial Accounting (3), ACCT-241 - Principles of Managerial Accounting (3), FIN-365 - Business Finance (3), ITEC-200 - The Edge of Information Technology (3.0), ITEC-355 - Production/Operations Management (3), IBUS-300 - Fundamentals of International Business (3), KSB-100 - Business 1.0 (3), MGMT-201 - Global Corporate Citizenship (3), MGMT-353 - Principles of Organizational Theory, Behavior and Management (3), MGMT-458 - Business Policy and Strategy (3), MKTG-300 - Principles of Marketing (3), ACCT-340 - Intermediate Accounting I (3), ACCT-341 - Intermediate Accounting II (3), ACCT-345 - Cost Accounting and Strategic Cost Management (3), ACCT-443 - Federal Income Taxation of Individual and Businesses (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Finance | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program is designed to meet the growing demand of investment firms, venture capital companies, real estate firms, and major corporations for technically adept experts in finance. Graduates in this highly sought-after specialization enter the marketplace prepared to manage significant financial issues, including portfolio management, sell/lease decision-making, risk hedging, risk management, and debt/equity management. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | FIN-464 - Financial Markets and Institutions (3), FIN-465 - Derivative Securities (3), FIN-468 - Intermediate Corporate Finance (3), FIN-469 - Investment Analysis (3), FIN-474 - Real Estate Finance and Economics (3), IBUS-302 - International Finance (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Information Systems and Technology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program is designed for those students interested in combining their business education with the evolving field of information technology. Through the extensive application of coursework, students learn to design, construct, and maintain successful systems that enable greater connectivity and competition among businesses and organizations worldwide. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ITEC-455 - Introduction to Systems Analysis (3), ITEC-470 - Databases, Data Mining an Knowledge Management (3), ITEC-333 - Topics in Information Technology (3.0), ITEC-334 - Computer Programming in the Web Era (3.0), ITEC-350 - Corporate Information Strategy and Management (3), ITEC-454 - Fundamentals of Electronic Commerce (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - International Business | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program is a multidisciplinary course of study combining the international aspects of marketing, finance, accounting, and human resource management. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | IBUS-301 - International Marketing (3), IBUS-302 - International Finance (3), IBUS-402 - International Human Resource Management (3), IBUS-404 - International Accounting and Financial Consulting (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - International Finance | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program students focus on financial markets, financial management, and multinational accounting issues along with circulation of money, granting of credit, making of investments, and provision of banking facilities. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | FIN-464 - Financial Markets and Institutions (3), FIN-468 - Intermediate Corporate Finance (3), IBUS-302 - International Finance (3), IBUS-404 - International Accounting and Financial Consulting (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - International Finance | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program students focus on financial markets, financial management, and multinational accounting issues along with circulation of money, granting of credit, making of investments, and provision of banking facilities. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | FIN-464 - Financial Markets and Institutions (3), FIN-468 - Intermediate Corporate Finance (3), IBUS-302 - International Finance (3), IBUS-404 - International Accounting and Financial Consulting (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration -International Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This specialization is for students who wish to enter the fields of Human Resources or Management for the global marketplace. Students study the cultural environment of international business, international human resource management, entrepreneurship, and electronic commerce. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ITEC-454 - Fundamentals of Electronic Commerce (3), IBUS-401 - Cultural Environment of International Business (3), IBUS-402 - International Human Resource Management (3), MGMT-386 - Entrepreneurship (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration -International Marketing | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program student’s focus on marketing challenges in the global economy, including export/import management, consumer behavior, and marketing research. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | IBUS-301 - International Marketing (3), IBUS-408 - Export/Import Management (3), MKTG-301 - Consumer Behavior (3), MKTG-302 - Marketing Research (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration -Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program provides professional skills for individuals to succeed as managers and leaders. Students will find these skills make them more successful in their careers, allowing them to take on increasing responsibilities, facilitating promotions, and achieving career enhancing transfers. Specifically, students will be able to take active and productive roles in leading and working in teams, understanding their organization's performance drivers, and managing human capital. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | MGMT-381 - Managing Human Capital (3), MGMT-409 - Leading High Performance Teams (3), MGMT-386 - Entrepreneurship (3), MGMT-423 - Managing Change and Innovation (3), MGMT-465 - Negotiation (3), MGMT-484 - Consulting and Project Management (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration -Marketing | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program prepares students for successful careers in advertising, product and market research, consumer behavior, distribution strategy, client management, and sports and talent marketing. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | MKTG-301 - Consumer Behavior (3), MKTG-302 - Marketing Research (3), IBUS-301 - International Marketing (3), MKTG-311 - Internet Marketing (3), MKTG-411 - Advertising and Marketing Communications Management (3), MKTG-412 - Advertising and Promotion Campaigns (3), MKTG-421 - Brand Management (3), MKTG-431 - Direct Response Marketing (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration -Real Estate | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | Kogod School of Business | This program provides an academic and practical background for future work in the three areas of real estate, in both the private and public sectors. These are sales and brokerage, financing, and property management and development. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | FIN-365 - Business Finance (3), FIN-373 - Real Estate Principles and Transactions (3), FIN-474 - Real Estate Finance and Economics (3), FIN-475 - Real Estate Management and Development (3), FIN-373 - Real Estate Principles and Transactions (3), FIN-464 - Financial Markets and Institutions (3), FIN-465 - Derivative Securities (3), FIN-469 - Investment Analysis (3), FIN-474 - Real Estate Finance and Economics (3), FIN-475 - Real Estate Management and Development (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Business and Music | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | This program provides students a strong foundation of theoretical and hands-on coursework. The business core is consistent with the business administration curriculum and provides students with the flexibility of crossing industries | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ACCT-240 - Principles of Financial Accounting (3), ACCT-241 - Principles of Managerial Accounting (3), FIN-365 - Business Finance (3), ITEC-200 - The Edge of Information Technology (3.0), ITEC-355 - Production/Operations Management (3), IBUS-300 - Fundamentals of International Business (3), KSB-100 - Business 1.0 (3), MGMT-201 - Global Corporate Citizenship (3), MGMT-353 - Principles of Organizational Theory, Behavior and Management (3), MGMT-391 - Internship in Management, MGMT-458 - Business Policy and Strategy (3), MKTG-300 - Principles of Marketing (3), PERF-124 - Harmony I (3), PERF-125 - Harmony II (3), PERF-227 - Musicianship I (3), PERF-228 - Musicianship II (3), PERF-320 - History of Rock Music (3), PERF-321 - Evolution of Jazz and Blues (3), PERF-322 - History of Music I: From Antiquity to 1700 (3), PERF-323 - History of Music II: From 1700 to the Present (3), PERF-444 - BAM Capstone (2), PERF-491 - Performing Arts: Internship (1). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts, American UniversityKatzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3420 | The Katzen Arts Center brings all the visual and performing arts programs at AU into one 130,000 square foot space. Designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration in the arts, the new center provides state-of-the-art instructional, exhibition, and performance space for all the arts disciplines. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Bachelor of Science in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | ECON-100/ECON-100G Macroeconomics 4:1 (3), ECON-200/ECON-200G Microeconomics 4:2 (3), ECON-300 Intermediate Microeconomics (3) or ECON-500 Microeconomics (3), ECON-301 Intermediate Macroeconomics (3) or ECON-501 Macroeconomics (3), ECON-322 Introduction to Econometrics (4), One of the Following: ECON-480 Research Seminar in Economics (3), ECON-491 Internship (3), ECON-492 Internship in Teaching Economics (3), Study abroad course with emphasis in economics or political economy at 300-level or higher. ECON-505 Introduction to Mathematical Economics (3), MATH-211 Applied Calculus I (4) or MATH-221 Calculus I (4), STAT-202 Basic Statistics (4), One of the following: ACCT-240 Principles of Accounting (3), CSC-280 Introduction to Computer Science I (4), MATH-212 Applied Calculus II (3), MATH-222 Calculus II (4), MATH-310 Linear Algebra (3), ECON-322 Introduction to Econometrics (4). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, American University Roper Hall 105, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3770 | This department offers a pluralist approach to economics that embraces mainstream and heterodox perspectives and emphasizes policy applications. They believe that theoretical understanding, empirical investigation, and policy analysis are enriched by study of the evolution of economic ideas and economic institutions. They believe that thoughtful empirical work is essential for testing theoretical models and their policy implications. This commitment to pluralism, empirical analysis, and policy relevance is evident in the research of this faculty and is reflected in this undergraduate and graduate program. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Combined B.A. - M.A. in Economics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, American University Roper Hall 105, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3770 | This department offers a pluralist approach to economics that embraces mainstream and heterodox perspectives and emphasizes policy applications. They believe that theoretical understanding, empirical investigation, and policy analysis are enriched by study of the evolution of economic ideas and economic institutions. They believe that thoughtful empirical work is essential for testing theoretical models and their policy implications. This commitment to pluralism, empirical analysis, and policy relevance is evident in the research of this faculty and is reflected in this undergraduate and graduate program. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Combined B.A. and M.A. in Psychology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | Students must have a 3.00 grade point average (on a 4.00 scale) in psychology and statistics courses and must have completed at least half of the credit hours required for the B.A. in Psychology. The undergraduate statistics course required for the B.A. must be completed before applying to the M.A. program. | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 321 Asbury Building South Wing, American University, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1710 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Combined B.S./M.S. in Biology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program prepares undergraduate majors for further study in pre-professional program or doctoral programs in Biology-related disciplines as well as students interested in a science degree prior to a career in education or life science profession. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Masters | American University | BIO-566 Evolutionary Mechanisms (3), BIO-583 Molecular Biology (3), BIO-677/679 Topics in Developmental Biology or Evolutionary Biology (1), BIO-697 Research Methods in Biology (3), BIO-797 Master’s Thesis Research (5), STAT-514 Statistical Methods (3) (satisfies tool of research requirement). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Combined BA/MA in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | This program for students who are interested in a career in philosophy, careers in advocacy and social policy, other careers where analytical skills are needed, or a stronger foundation in philosophy for graduate education such as law school. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2925 | The Department of philosophy and religion explores the nature of the real world, the basis of human values, and foundations of reason. Students approach these issues through study of both historical literature and contemporary developments. The department's study of Western and Eastern religious traditions introduces students to a major influence on all civilizations. Journalists, diplomats, and government specialists benefit from the serious consideration of the inner workings of the religious ethos of civilizations. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Combined BS and MS in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. In additional, they should have a grade point average of 2.00 on a 4.00 scale. | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, American UniversityBeeghly Building 104, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1750 | Chemistry is the science that deals with the composition of materials, their structures and properties, the transformations they undergo, and the energy changes that accompany these transformations. Areas of study include general, organic, medicinal, physical, analytical, and inorganic chemistry, as well as biochemistry and earth science. Accredited by the American Chemical Society, the department offers programs leading to B.S. degrees in Chemistry or Biochemistry, and the M.S. degree in Chemistry. Besides training for a career or graduate study in chemistry, bachelor's students are prepared for medical or dental school, engineering programs, and other careers where technical expertise is needed. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Combined BS and MS in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | Students should have a minimum grade point average of 3.20. Students have completed the following by the end of the junior year: CSC-280 Introduction to Computer Science I, CSC-281 Introduction to Computer Science II, CSC-520 Algorithms and Data Structures. | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, McKinley 102, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2743 | The Department of Computer Science offers multiple degree programs and concentrations providing individual attention and flexibility, project-oriented coursework, and unsurpassed prospects for graduate school and careers: Individual Attention, Rigorous, Creative Coursework, Internships and Career Diversity, Flexibility. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Combined BS in Mathematics and MS in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | Students should have a minimum grade point average of 3.20. Students have completed the following by the end of the junior year: CSC-280 Introduction to Computer Science I, CSC-281 Introduction to Computer Science II, CSC-520 Algorithms and Data Structures. | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, McKinley 102, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2743 | The Department of Computer Science offers multiple degree programs and concentrations providing individual attention and flexibility, project-oriented coursework, and unsurpassed prospects for graduate school and careers: Individual Attention, Rigorous, Creative Coursework, Internships and Career Diversity, Flexibility. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Combined BS in Physics and MS in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | Students should have a minimum grade point average of 3.00, two letters of recommendation and a statement of purpose. | Masters | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, McKinley 102, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2743 | The Department of Computer Science offers multiple degree programs and concentrations providing individual attention and flexibility, project-oriented coursework, and unsurpassed prospects for graduate school and careers: Individual Attention, Rigorous, Creative Coursework, Internships and Career Diversity, Flexibility. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD) | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program admits selected outstanding students to pursue doctoral level studies in the law. Students usually enter the SJD program after completing the LLM degree. Some students may be required to complete some course work. All those who are admitted to the program must complete a dissertation, an original and substantial treatment of a chosen topic. This dissertation, written under the primary supervision of a dissertation advisor, is expected to be 150-300 pages long and should embody scholarship of publishable quality. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program provides opportunities for advanced study in critical/community archaeology; in race, gender and social justice (with the Department of Sociology); and in poverty, development and displacement. Coursework draws on anthropology's four-field tradition and on the cross-cultural and interdisciplinary resources within CAS and across the university. Dissertations in archaeology and cultural/social anthropology examine the dynamics of culture, power and history in North America, Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and the Middle East. Program graduates pursue careers in college teaching and in public and private settings outside of academe. The program is committed to working with students from diverse backgrounds, including those traditionally under-represented in higher education. Diverse voices and perspectives are fundamental to this program. | Applicants must meet the minimum university requirements for admission to graduate study. Admission is based on academic record, three academic letters of reference, and an example of the applicant's work, e.g., a term paper. The GRE is required, and scores should be sent directly to the department. Personal statements should follow the guidelines as posted under the "Preparing a Personal Statement" section under the "Prospective Students" button on this site. An undergraduate major in anthropology is not required. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Battelle-Tompkins T21, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1830 | This department has trained undergraduate and graduate students in the real-world applications of anthropological method and theory for almost 50 years. They were the second anthropology department in the USA to offer an MA in Applied Anthropology. This new BA- and MA- related initiatives in Public Anthropology, our support for critical studies in archaeology, and this Anthropology/Sociology joint PhD track in Race, Gender and Social Justice prepares students to address issues of public policy, community struggle and other locally defined concerns in their academic projects, and for employment in activist domains outside of academia. this faculty and students come from different race, ethnic and class backgrounds, nationalities and sexualities, and we are committed to maintaining an academic environment where diversity, broadly defined, can be expressed, supported and respected. Material on this website describes the degree programs, research interests and opportunities for practical training which the Department of Anthropology makes available to Student . | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Doctor of Philosophy in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program analyzes political economic, institutionalism, post-Keynesian and feminist perspectives as well as traditional neoclassical theory. The program is also distinguished by its emphasis on empirical methods and analysis. Combined, these two elements provide students with a broad range of skills and theoretical frameworks. Our DC location gives students additional opportunities to hone these skills while still in graduate school, as students work and do internships at government agencies such as the Bureau of Labor Statistics and think tanks such as the Economic Policy Institute and the Institute of International Economics. Our graduates contribute to leading teaching, research and policy-making institutions in the US and abroad. These include the Randolph Macon College, St. Mary’s College, University of Massachusetts-Boston, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, University of Melbourne, University of Perideniya (Sri Lanka), the University of Utah, the University of Vermont, and the University of Wisconsin-Lacrosse, as well as the US Bureau of Economic Analysis, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Central Banks of Korea, Nigeria and Turkey, and the World Bank. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, American University Roper Hall 105, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3770 | This department offers a pluralist approach to economics that embraces mainstream and heterodox perspectives and emphasizes policy applications. They believe that theoretical understanding, empirical investigation, and policy analysis are enriched by study of the evolution of economic ideas and economic institutions. They believe that thoughtful empirical work is essential for testing theoretical models and their policy implications. This commitment to pluralism, empirical analysis, and policy relevance is evident in the research of this faculty and is reflected in this undergraduate and graduate program. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Doctoral program in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program enables students to obtain intensive training in both research and applied clinical work. When a student enters our program, he/she is assigned to a faculty research mentor to begin learning about research design and methodology in areas of Psychology of interest to the student. This collaboration supports students' development of research questions that lead to thesis and dissertation projects. Faculty supervise students on topics such as Affective and Motivational Processes in Depression, Anxiety Disorders, African-American issues, Eating Disorders, Cognitive Assessment and Therapy, Smoking, Drug Expectancies, Child Clinical Issues, Sports Psychology, and Human Services Program Evaluation. We also equally emphasize clinical training. Beginning in the first semester of the program, students participate in an experiential psychotherapy practicum and receive supervision on their videotaped psychotherapy sessions with clients from the University Counseling Center; in the second and third years of the program, students participate in psychotherapy practice based on the object relations and cognitive behavioral theoretical traditions. The program's psychological assessment sequence also begins in the first year of the program. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 321 Asbury Building South Wing, American University, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1710 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Executive Leadership MPA | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program has transformed good leaders into extraordinary leaders. The Key MPA Program largely serves leaders employed by the federal government, though a significant number of state, local, nonprofit and private leaders also graduate from the program. Key courses are taught by faculty who have been selected both for their prominent reputations in public administration and demonstrated capacities to work effectively with executives. The Key program also draws on Washington and national experts to enhance the curriculum. The Key curriculum is based on courses required for American University’s Master of Public Administration degree, the sixth-ranked MPA program in the country. Course work, however, is designed solely for the Key Executive Leadership MPA Program. Each course is highly relevant to the complex roles and tasks of public-sector team leaders, managers, and executives. Each course is also continually reviewed to reflect changes occurring in business and the public sector. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Honors in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Bachelor degree | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, American University Roper Hall 105, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3770 | This department offers a pluralist approach to economics that embraces mainstream and heterodox perspectives and emphasizes policy applications. They believe that theoretical understanding, empirical investigation, and policy analysis are enriched by study of the evolution of economic ideas and economic institutions. They believe that thoughtful empirical work is essential for testing theoretical models and their policy implications. This commitment to pluralism, empirical analysis, and policy relevance is evident in the research of this faculty and is reflected in this undergraduate and graduate program. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | J.D./M.A. in International Affairs | Full Time | 3.5 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | Introduction to Theory in IR or Approved Theory Course (3) Approved Course in International Politics Field (3)Legal Rhetoric (4) IR Methods:Intro to Quantitative Analysis or Approved Course in Methods or Three 1 unit Methods Institutes (3) Approved Course in International Business, Economic or Trade Law (3) 5 Units of General International Law Course Work (5) Related SIS Field (Electives) Three courses in one established field or Three courses in a field designed by the student and approved by the Director of the Program | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | JD/MBA | Full Time | Variable | US $1,079 per credit / unit | Kogod School of Business | This program held at the Kogod School of Business provides an excellent opportunity for students who desire to combine skills and develop expertise in both business and law. This program adequately prepares students for virtually any career in either arena. Because of the unique structure of undergraduate course work and qualifications, students can earn this joint degree in four years. JD/MBA students are enrolled in both Kogod and the Washington College of Law at American University. Course work includes the MBA fundamentals, including managerial economics, financial accounting, organizational behavior, marketing management, business ethics, financial management, and management information systems. The law curriculum adds a theoretical dimension to the applied and practical study of business. | Applicants must have earned a satisfactory score on the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and a satisfactory grade point average for the last 60 hours of academic work from a Council on Postsecondary Accreditation regionally accredited institution. Applicants whose first language is not English are also required to take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) and demonstrate English language proficiency. Students are admitted to the MSA program starting in August or January. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | JD/MS in Justice, Law and Society | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | In this program, students enhance their general legal education with intensive study in the following areas: philosophical and moral foundations of justice systems, nature and causes of social problems, crime, conflict, and injustice in society, analysis of the actual operations of the criminal, juvenile, civil, and international justice systems and their impact on society, the functioning of legislative and regulatory agencies, the broad range of laws, public policies, and informal mechanisms for dealing with crime, conflict, and injustice in society and for resolving problems of justice, theories of planning and management for courts, correctional, and law enforcement institutions, strategies for introducing constructive change in justice systems, institutions and organizations involved in justice issues, including legal, constitutional, civil, criminal, social, and mental health groups, methods of research study in justice. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Doctoral | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Juris Doctor | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This academic program stresses the traditional rigor of the Socratic method and the development of critical analysis skills. After the required first-year curriculum, in the second and third years the student elects a course of study best suited to individual needs and interests, culminating in advanced courses, seminars, independent research, clinical programs, and fieldwork in private and government institutions in the Washington area. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM in International legal studies - Free Trade Agreements and Regional Integration | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program is designed to train lawyers in the technical and policy aspects of negotiating, drafting and implementing international trade agreements. Classes familiarize students with the process, structure, and rationale for trade negotiations through classroom instruction and simulation exercises. In addition, courses address technical issues, using individual regional trade agreements as case studies, and also raise issues that are relevant and can be applied to all regional trading agreements. Course work is supplemented by seminars, workshops, and internships to broaden students’ experiences. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM in International legal studies - Gender and the Law | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | The program integrates an understanding of the ways that gender permeates the structure and operation of law with the study of legal systems throughout the world. Topics include: feminist jurisprudence; comparative family law; sex-based discrimination; gender and cultural differences and international human rights; work and parenting; women’s legal history; battered women and the law; law and poverty; and economic, social, and cultural rights. In addition, students write a thesis as part of a seminar focused on gender and legal scholarship. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM in International legal studies - International Business Law | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This is designed both to give students the technical skills and knowledge required of international business lawyers and to educate them about the responsibilities lawyers have to their clients and communities. Course topics include: international business transactions, multinational enterprises, international antitrust, international and comparative tax policy, national export/import regulations, international telecommunications, domestic and international banking, the international monetary system, international financial law, international arbitration, international conflicts of law, foreign investment in developing countries, and development assistance. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM in International legal studies - International Environmental Law | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program address the legal aspects of sustainable development, introducing students to the work of both practitioners and policy makers in the field. The intellectual focus of the curriculum is on the development of practical legal strategies for addressing such problems as climate change, ozone depletion, air and water pollution, the loss of biodiversity, the extinction of species and how to balance the environmental, social and economic aspects of international transactions. Students interested in specializing in international environmental law are strongly encouraged to take courses during the Environmental Law Summer Session. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM in International legal studies - International Human Rights Law | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program focus on the continuing process of defining international rights and the creation of global and regional supervision. International humanitarian law courses address the international principles and rules regulating the conduct of armed conflicts as well as tracing their historical development. Students interested in specializing in human rights are strongly encouraged to take courses during the Summer Program of the Academy in Human Rights and Humanitarian Law. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM in International legal studies - International Organizations | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program focus on the study of the internal processes, law-making functions, and general activities of selected regional and international organizations such as the United Nations, the Organization of American States, the World Bank Group, the World Trade Organization, the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. The curriculum also includes the analysis of the relationship between organizations, their member states and non-state actors. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM in International legal studies - International and Comparative Protection of Intellectual Property | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program is designed to expose students to the full range of legal and policy problems and conflicts that arise from domestic and international regulation of copyrights, trademarks, and patents. Increasingly, minimum protections in these areas are being established in bilateral and multilateral trade agreements, including the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights. Accordingly, the specialization involves significant exposure to international trade law, as well as the legal history and comparative analysis of domestic intellectual property regimes. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM in law and government | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program is designed to transcend the traditional barriers that divide the study of administrative law, specific fields of regulatory law and policy, and constitutional law and civil rights. Our organizing educational principle is that the best prepared lawyers and analysts in fields of regulatory law have not only a firm grasp of particular subjects, but also a mastery of theories, political forces, and institutional realities that define public law in the United States. Thus, while our students can choose to focus deeply on a sub-field of regulatory law, we also promote broad examination of cross-cutting issues. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | LLM/MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $1,079 per credit / unit | Kogod School of Business | Kogod and the Washington College of Law (WCL) offer the first LLM/MBA dual degree program in the United States. This innovative program offers students the unique opportunity to earn an LLM degree from WCL and an MBA degree from Kogod within two years. Students develop both the legal and business skills necessary to tackle complex business transactions and to succeed in today's global economy. Students must begin the joint program as full-time LLM students. | Applicants must have earned a satisfactory score on the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and a satisfactory grade point average for the last 60 hours of academic work from a Council on Postsecondary Accreditation regionally accredited institution. Applicants whose first language is not English are also required to take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) and demonstrate English language proficiency. Students are admitted to the MSA program starting in August or January. | MBA | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | ACCT-607 - Accounting Concepts and Applications (3) IN-605 - Managerial Economics (3) IN-614 - Financial Management (3) TEC-614 - Quantitative Methods I: Probability & Statistics (1.5) TEC-615 - Quantitative Methods II: Inferential Statistics & Forecasting (1.5) ,ITEC-617 - Information & Technology (1.5) ,ITEC-618 - Applied Production & Operations Management (1.5) ,IBUS-610 - International Business Analysis (1.5) ,KSB-061 - Professional Success Strategies - Lab I (0) ,KSB-062 - Professional Success Strategies - Lab II (0) ,KSB-601 - Strategic Decision-Making in a Global Environment I (3) ,KSB-602 - Strategic Decision Making in a Global Environment II (3) ,MGMT-613 - Managing People in Organizations (1.5) ,MKTG-610 - Marketing Management (1.5) |
American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Law and Business JD/MBA | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | The Washington College of Law and American University's Kogod School of Business offer a four-year JD/MBA dual degree program. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Law and Business LLM/MBA | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | The Washington College of Law and the Kogod School of Business offer a dual LLM/MBA program. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | MBA | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Law and International Affairs JD/MA | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program is designed to provide lawyers interested in international transactions in the public or private sector with background in international politics and economics and, if the student so chooses, with expertise in particular regions, international communications, or international development management that is germane to international practice. The program is well suited for a lawyer or a law-trained administrator in government service whose work is transnational in nature. It also provides a perspective that is broader than that given by legal doctrine to supplement the commercial and business legal knowledge of the lawyer with a private international law practice. Application. To apply for the dual degree program, the GRE need not be taken; however, all applicants must take the LSAT. For entering law students, applications for this program are first reviewed and acted upon by the law school. Upon admission to the law school, the application is forwarded directly to the School of International Service for that school's review and decision. Continuing law students may apply after the first year of law school. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Law and Justice JD/MS | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program is designed to enhance the student's general legal education with intensive study in the following areas of concentration: philosophical and moral foundations of justice systems; nature and causes of crime and conflict; analysis of the actual operations of the criminal, juvenile, civil, and military justice systems and their impact on society; the functioning of legislative and regulatory agencies; the broad range of informal mechanisms for dealing with crime, conflict, and injustice in society; theories of planning and management for courts and correctional institutions; and strategies for introducing constructive change in justice systems. The program enables students to complete the JD and MS degrees in four years. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Law and Public Administration JD/MPA | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This dual degree program designed for students interested in examining the integral relationship of law to public administration and management. This unique combination of degrees is especially attractive for students intending to use their law degrees in the political, government or non-profit realms. The program provides a broad theoretical grounding in public administration and management, while also providing students with a practical education in the analysis and implementation of policy and law at all levels of government. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | PUAD-605 Problem Solving for Managers (3) or PUAD-601 Methods of Problem Solving I (3),PUAD-610 Management Analysis (3),PUAD-612 Public Administration in the Policy Process (3),PUAD-630 Public Managerial Economics (3),PUAD-653 The Individual and the Organization (3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Law and Public Policy JD/MPP | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program provides a broad theoretical grounding in public analysis, program evaluation and successful policy implementation and provides students with thee necessary skills to creatively address the political, financial, organizational, legal, ethical and constitutional challenges inherent in developing and delivering sound public policies. The program is designed such that both degrees can be completed in as few as eight semesters, for a total of 107 credit hours. American University’s School of Public Affairs (SPA) and the Washington College of Law (WCL) jointly offer a dual degree program in law and public policy. This unique combination of degrees is especially attractive for students intending to use their law degrees in the political, government or non-profit realms. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | M.A in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program is the appropriate preparation for a wide range of professional careers. Many positions in museums and other art institutions require an M.A. (not a PhD) in art history. The MA is also suitable for such specialized areas as visual resources, art libraries (in conjunction with a library science degree), conservation, and historic preservation. The master's degree also provides a solid foundation for those who decide to continue graduate study toward the doctorate. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | M.A in History | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program provides three biggest options concern number of fields, choice of tool of research, and the writing of a thesis. The student and advisor should also work out a tentative timetable for the completion of course work, tool of research exam, and comprehensive examination. Most students choose one field of study without writing a thesis. In this format most of the student's course work falls within the confines of a particular historical field (e.g., History of the U. S., 1607-1865 or History of Modern Europe Since 1789) and is partly designed to help him or her prepare for the comprehensive exam in that field. Although the colloquia provide particularly important information and methods, students should use their elective courses to help them cover important areas within the field, and they should also expect to do additional reading on their own. | Admission requirements are possession of a bachelor's degree earned at an accredited college or university; a 3.2 grade-point average in the undergraduate major and a 3.0 cumulative average in the last 60 hours of undergraduate course work (based on a 4.0 system); results of Graduate Record Examinations (Verbal, Quantitative, and Analytic); letters of recommendation from two professors with whom the student has done recent work; a well-written statement of purpose, indicating educational and career objectives. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, American UniversityBattelle Tompkins 137, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2401 | The Department of History offers such innovative courses as Oliver Stone's America, Cinema and History, Human Rights as History, Latin American Feminism, Politics of Gender in Early Modern Europe and America, and America's Presidential Elections. During the summer, students may participate in institutes on Nuclear Studies, The Civil War, and The Ethnic Experience in the City. For all students interested in research, the National Archives, Library of Congress, and other facilities in the Washington, D.C., area provide the richest base of archival sources and published works in the United States. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | M.A. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This is a non-thesis degree that may serve as a terminal degree for students in various life-science professions, as additional training for students seeking admission to professional schools, or as an intermediate degree for those intending to pursue further graduate study. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | BIO-550 Developmental Biology (3) ,BIO-566 Evolutionary Mechanisms (3),BIO-577 Special Topics in Developmental Biology (1),OR BIO-579 Topics in Evolutionary Biology (1) ,BIO-583 Molecular Biology (3) ,BIO-697 Research Methods in Biology (3) ,BIO-790 Biology Literature Research (3) STAT-514 Statistical Methods (3) (satisfies tool of research requirement) An additional 11 hours of approved graduate coursework | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | M.A. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program has a Political Science track and an Applied Politics track. Both tracks provide students methodological skills, training in political science theory and training to participate in practical political environments. The Political Science track places slightly more emphasis on training in the discipline of political science. The Applied Politics track places greater emphasis on practical political training. Students who choose the track in Applied Politics take a written comprehensive examination in Applied Politics. Students who choose the Political Science track must choose a concentration in American Politics or Comparative Politics. Students in the American Politics concentration must meet the requirements listed below and pass the American Politics written comprehensive examination. Students in the Comparative Politics concentration must meet the requirements listed below and pass the Comparative Politics written comprehensive examination. | Applicants must earn a satisfactory score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). All applicants are evaluated on the basis of scholastic achievement in their last 60 credit hours of undergraduate work, two letters of recommendation and an essay on career interest. Applicants who wish to be considered for departmental honor awards must apply for full-time status. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | M.A. in Public Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | COMM-640: Principles of Strategic Communication,COMM-642: Public Communication Management,COMM-644: Public Communication Writing ,COMM-646: Public Communication Practicum ,COMM-735: Public Communication Theory,COMM-738: Research Methods in Communication,COMM-744: Public Communication Seminar. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | M.F.A. in Film and Electronic Media | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program in Film and Electronic Media, Student will master the media production skills and digital techniques required to compete in the explosive new media industry. And, Student will gain the broad-based understanding of media issues and their historical and critical context necessary to begin a research or teaching career at the university level. Using American University's film, video and digital equipment and facilities, Student will explore such skills as film and video production, script writing, computer animation, digital imaging, sound production, and electronic media design and programming for CD-ROM and the World Wide Web. In the international arena, Student may receive full credit for courses taken in the film program of the Academy of Dramatic Arts in Prague Film Academy (FAMU). | Students with no prior experience in photography will be required to take a basic black and white photography course (COMM-630: Basic Photography) before taking advanced courses in media production. These three credits do not count toward the degree requirements. Production of a portfolio of original creative work in the areas of scriptwriting, film, or electronic media production under the supervision of a faculty committee and in conjunction with COMM-702 Master's Portfolio Seminar, with a grade of B or better. Thesis project details (PDF) A grade point average of 3.00 maintained during all work toward the degree. Comprehensive examination in film and electronic media. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | M.S. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This is a research degree that may serve as an intermediate degree for those intending to pursue further graduate study, as well as a necessary degree for a variety of careers in the life sciences. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | BIO-550 Developmental Biology,BIO-566 Evolutionary Mechanisms,BIO-583 Molecular Biology,BIO-697 Research Methods in Biology,BIO-797 Master's Thesis Research ,BIO-577 Special Topics in Developmental Biology (1) or BIO-57,Topics in Evolutionary Biology ,STAT-514 Statistical Methods (3) (satisfies tool of research requirement),An additional 9 hours of approved graduate course work | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | M.S. in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Admission Requirements In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | CHEM 602 Research Method Design (3) ,CHEM 603 Chemical Characterization (3) ,CHEM 604 Advanced Laboratory Techniques (3),CHEM 605 Research Seminar (3) ,CHEM-797 Master’s Thesis Research (6) or CHEM-797 Master’s Thesis Research (3) and CHEM-691 Internship in Chemistry | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, American UniversityBeeghly Building 104, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1750 | Chemistry is the science that deals with the composition of materials, their structures and properties, the transformations they undergo, and the energy changes that accompany these transformations. Areas of study include general, organic, medicinal, physical, analytical, and inorganic chemistry, as well as biochemistry and earth science. Accredited by the American Chemical Society, the department offers programs leading to B.S. degrees in Chemistry or Biochemistry, and the M.S. degree in Chemistry. Besides training for a career or graduate study in chemistry, bachelor's students are prepared for medical or dental school, engineering programs, and other careers where technical expertise is needed. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | M.S. in Environmental Science | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | The program of study is multidisciplinary, reflecting an extensive collaboration among academic departments and major teaching units of the university. The science departments of the College of the Arts and Sciences have created an innovative graduate-level environmental science course sequence that bridges many disciplines, and makes these disciplines accessible to graduate students whose academic training is in other subject areas. We have balanced the need for interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary training with the need for depth within a discipline. After initial grounding in core courses in environmental science and statistics, students concentrate in either Toxicology, Conservation Biology, or Earth and Atmospheric Science. | Admission Requirements In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, American UniversityBeeghly Building 104, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1750 | Chemistry is the science that deals with the composition of materials, their structures and properties, the transformations they undergo, and the energy changes that accompany these transformations. Areas of study include general, organic, medicinal, physical, analytical, and inorganic chemistry, as well as biochemistry and earth science. Accredited by the American Chemical Society, the department offers programs leading to B.S. degrees in Chemistry or Biochemistry, and the M.S. degree in Chemistry. Besides training for a career or graduate study in chemistry, bachelor's students are prepared for medical or dental school, engineering programs, and other careers where technical expertise is needed. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | M.S. in Justice, Law and Society | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program merges the central concerns of the undergraduate degrees offered in DJLS: justice policy and the interdisciplinary study of law. The concentration in Justice and Public Policy begins from a foundation in social science research methods with coursework on issues in criminology and criminal justice. Students primarily interested in the interdisciplinary study of law can choose either the Law and Society concentration, which combines social science and humanities perspectives on law, or the concentration in Jurisprudence and Social Thought (new for Fall 2008), which offers analytical training as a foundation for coursework in law and humanities. | Applicants must submit Graduate Record Examination test scores. A background of relevant undergraduate preparation in the social, behavioral, and administrative or managerial sciences is preferred, but not absolutely required. All applicants are evaluated on the basis of scholastic achievement in their last 60 credit hours of undergraduate work, test scores and two letters of recommendation. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA Concentration in Public Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program which began in fall 2006, is designed to provide students with training to use theories and methods of sociology in a wide range of work settings, including social activism and advocacy. The program of study leads to career paths ranging from grassroots organizing and work in community-based non-profit agencies and non-governmental organizations to employment in government agencies, legislative offices, "think tanks," advocacy organizations, or private consulting. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2475 | The Department of Sociology of the College of Arts and Sciences serves the university and students from throughout the world as a center for the advanced study of societal change, social institutions, and social processes. Its programs offer in-depth training in sociological theory and emphasize social justice and research methodology, as well as five areas of concentration: Gender and Family; Inequality and Stratification; Macrosociology; Professional/Applied Sociology; and Race, Gender, and Social Justice. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA International Media | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program combines an unusual blend of communication theory, research methods and professional production skills. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA Program in Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature | This program held at American University offers students challenging courses in a wide variety of areas, taught by outstanding scholars who are deeply engaged in their fields of intellectual inquiry. Because our department also offers an MFA in Creative Writing, students in the master’s degree program also have the opportunity to study with distinguished creative writers. In graduate seminars and other courses with unique—often interdisciplinary—topics, students develop intellectual confidence and strengthen their skills in critical reading and analytical writing. Courses focus not only on traditional periods and national literatures but on African, African American, and Asian American literatures; Latin American and other literatures in translation; literary theory; feminist theory; and cinema. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature, 237 Battelle Tompkins, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2971 | Literature holds a unique position among the disciplines. Because language is both its medium and object of study, literature serves as a point of convergence for issues that concern aesthetics, psychology, sociology, law, philosophy, anthropology, and history. At the same time, literature explores these issues from the fresh perspective of an author's singular imagination. American University's Department of Literature is also unique because, in addition to award-winning scholars and teachers concerned with the aesthetic and historical elements of literary study, our faculty includes accomplished creative writers and teachers of film. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Development Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This program is designed to train individuals with prior development experience. (The minimum requirement is two years of previous experience.) The MSDM combines skills from development, business, and public management for those specifically interested in the management of development activities including programs, projects or organizations. The research capstone of the MSDM program is an action-oriented practicum involving a field activity in a developing country or development organization. Students can also earn a dual degree MSDM/MBA in conjunction with American University's Kogod School of Business. Other dual degrees can also be accommodated, such as MSDM/Master of Public Affairs. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | ECON-603 Introduction to Economic Theory (3) (Note: May be waived. Will reduce program to 39 hours and the core course credit to 15 credit hours.) ECON-661 Survey of Economic Development ,SIS-636 Micro politics of Development (3) ,SIS-637 International Development (3) ,PUAD-614 Development Management (3) ,PUAD-612 Public Administration in Policy Process (3) or other approved administration or management class in the School of Public Affairs or Kogod School of Business. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Economic | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program provide students with thorough preparation for careers with employers needing well-trained economics professionals, including government agencies here and abroad, Congressional committees, think tanks, international, multilateral, and non-governmental organizations, consulting firms, and financial institutions. Many students in the program find internships or part-time jobs that eventually become full-time jobs or that lead to careers with public and private institutions in the Washington area or elsewhere. The department's faculty and the courses they teach address a broad range of interests. The department has an especially rich offering of courses dealing with international economic issues. Most of our faculty have carried out research or taught in other countries and bring that experience to the classroom. The department offers four different tracks within the master's program: General, Development Economics, Financial Economic Policy, and Business Economics. | To apply to the MA Program, Student must submit the completed application form, two letters of recommendation (preferably from Student current or former professors who know about Student academic potential rather than from an employer who might only know about Student success in Student job), and transcripts from previous undergraduate and graduate course work. In general, we expect a B+ average during Student last two years as an undergraduate and in any graduate course work. Only in very unusual circumstances does the department admit applicants with lower than a 3.0 Grade Point Average (on a 4 point scale). The Graduate Record Examination (GRE) general test is also required. In making our decision about Student admission, we examine Student entire file. No single part of Student application file takes precedence over the rest. From Student transcript, we learn what courses Student have taken and what grades Student have made in each of Student courses. We read Student personal statement from the application form and the letters of recommendation. Based on all of this information, we make a judgment about Student ability to succeed in our program | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, American University Roper Hall 105, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3770 | This department offers a pluralist approach to economics that embraces mainstream and heterodox perspectives and emphasizes policy applications. They believe that theoretical understanding, empirical investigation, and policy analysis are enriched by study of the evolution of economic ideas and economic institutions. They believe that thoughtful empirical work is essential for testing theoretical models and their policy implications. This commitment to pluralism, empirical analysis, and policy relevance is evident in the research of this faculty and is reflected in this undergraduate and graduate program. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Ethics, Peace, and Global Affairs | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This program offers an ethical response to contemporary global problems. This interdisciplinary program, offered jointly by International Peace and Conflict Resolution in the School of International Service and the Department of Philosophy and Religion in the College of Arts and Sciences, prepares students broadly in the practical application of ethical theory and policy analysis to difficult ethical choices in global affairs, and specifically to the dynamics of war, peace, and conflict resolution. Hallmarks of the curriculum include: interdisciplinary inquiry, solid grounding in the foundational concepts and issues of both philosophical ethics and international affairs, practical applications of ethical and policy analysis to contemporary social problems in global affairs, and interactive teaching utilizing case studies, simulations, interactive exercises, and intensive class discussion. The program builds directly on the intersection of the IPCR idea of "positive peace" and contemporary ethical theory. Students select one of six different tracks-specially selected sets of courses in a content area of specialization-that will forward their career goals. These tracks are: human rights and social justice, peace and conflict resolution, global environmental justice, ethics of development, international economic justice, and globally governance and international organization. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | PHIL-525 Seminar on Modern Moral Problems (3) ,PHIL-693 Global Ethics (3) ,SIS-607 Peace Paradigms (3) ,SIS-614 Ethics and International Affairs (3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Ethics, Peace, and Global Affairs (EPGA) | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | This program sponsored jointly with the School of International Service, applies philosophy to the dynamics of conflict, international policy, and political and social institutions. Since this is a joint program, it has separate guidelines from the other two tracks offered by the Department of Philosophy. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2925 | The Department of philosophy and religion explores the nature of the real world, the basis of human values, and foundations of reason. Students approach these issues through study of both historical literature and contemporary developments. The department's study of Western and Eastern religious traditions introduces students to a major influence on all civilizations. Journalists, diplomats, and government specialists benefit from the serious consideration of the inner workings of the religious ethos of civilizations. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Global Environmental Politics | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This interdisciplinary program builds a foundation in global environmental policy by integrating the study of environmental politics with natural science and economics. During this two-year program, students master theoretical and conceptual frameworks for analyzing environmental problems, gain experience in the practice of policy formation and implementation, and develop research, writing and professional communication skills to enable them to participate in the global environmental policy process. Recent graduates have undertaken career tracks in government agencies, non-governmental organizations, multilateral lending institutions, environmental activist groups, consulting firms, and for-profit entities. The Global Environmental Policy program is comprised of courses in global policy studies, environmental science, economics, international environmental politics, and environmental law. The policy component includes both classroom and experiential learning opportunities that build a strong foundation in the legal and political dimensions of policy formation and implementation. The natural science component consists of a two-semester sequence of environmental science courses in which students study the biophysical dimensions of environmental challenges. The economics component aims to provide a general overview of economic theory plus a specific awareness of the relationships among economics, natural resources, and the environment. Elective courses drawn from a rich selection of offerings permit students to deepen their expertise in particular areas of global environmental policy. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Affairs - Comparative and Regional Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | SIS-672 Theories of International and Comparative Studies (3) or Another approved 3 credit course in comparative theory and SIS-589 Global Political Economy- or SIS-673 Comparative and Regional Political Economy (3),Social Science Research Methodology ,Research and Writing Requirement ,Foreign Language Proficiency. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Affairs - International Economic Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This program is to provide an opportunity for non-economics majors to gain scholarly and analytical competence in international economics on a less technical, less theoretical level, i.e., more policy-oriented basis, than the level which is required of economics majors. The International Economic Relations (IER) field places more emphasis on pure economic factors than does the SIS field in International Political Economy, and it places less emphasis on quantitative and theoretical factors than the Economics Department. The emphasis in IER is on real world economic policy and transactions among sovereign countries, international organizations, multinational corporations and non-governmental organizations. Emphasis is placed on the major contemporary issues in international economic relations -- trade, finance, development, investment, and energy and natural resources. Students in this field take core courses taught in SIS as well as the Economics Department. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | ECON-603 Introduction to Economic Theory (3) or equivalent Note: Students with a strong background in economics may have this course requirement waived without substitution with permission of advisor. SIS-616 International Economics (3) (prerequisite: ECON-603 or equivalent) ,SIS-665 International Trade and Investment Relations (3) ,SIS-666 International Monetary and Financial Relations (3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Affairs - International Politics | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | SIS-672 Theories of International and Comparative Studies (3) or Another approved 3 credit course in comparative theory and SIS-589 Global Political Economy- or SIS-673 Comparative and Regional Political Economy (3),Social Science Research Methodology ,Research and Writing Requirement ,Foreign Language Proficiency. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Affairs - U.S. Foreign Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | SIS-581 Schools of Thought in Contemporary U.S. Foreign Policy (3) (if not used to fulfill requirement above) ,SIS-583 United States in World Affairs (3) ,SIS-588 International Security and Arms Control (3) ,SIS-619 Special Studies in International Politics (3) (topic approved by advisor) ,SIS-683 Congress and U.S. Foreign Policy (3) ,SIS-684 National Security Policy (3) ,SIS-685 United States-Russian/Eurasian Security Relations (3) ,SIS-689 Seminar in Policy Analysis (3) (if not used to fulfill requirement above) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Affairs/MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | The Kogod School of Business and the School of International Service (SIS) jointly offer dual programs. Generally, these programs require a student to complete at least 60 credit hours. These programs offer students the opportunity to combine solid business skills with an expertise in international studies - a particularly valuable benefit as businesses adjust to the global market, and international organizations are asked to increase productivity through better business practices. To participate in a dual degree program, you must be accepted by both schools. However, if you apply to a dual degree program through Kogod, your application will be automatically forwarded to SIS. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | MBA | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | SIS-640 International Communication (3) ,SIS-642 Cross-Cultural Communication (3) ,SIS-645 International & Comparative Communication Policy (3) ,SIS-628 Global Knowledge Economy (3) SIS-643 Political Economy of International Communication (3) ,SIS-644 Communication and Social Economic Development (3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Development | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This program provides a multidisciplinary overview of international development issues and policies that enable students to select and focus on a particular field of concentration. Students in the MAID program are given the opportunity to conduct original research to complete their program. They can do this in one of three ways – a Master's thesis; a substantial research paper and internship/cooperative education; or two substantial research papers. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | SIS-533 Population, Migration and Development (3) ,SIS-616 International Economics (3) ,SIS-650 Global Economy and Sustainable Development (3) ,SIS-635 Social Policy and Development (3) ,SIS-635 Community Development (3) ,SIS-635 Rural Development (3) ,SIS-635 Urban Development (3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Media | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | All applicants must submit two letters of reference evaluating undergraduate academic performance and suitability for graduate study in international affairs and communication. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | SIS 640 - International Communication SIS 645 - International Communication Policy COMM 549 - Topics in International Media AND ONE OF THE FOLLOWING:SIS 628 - Global Knowledge Economy ,SIS 644 - Communication and Social Economic Development COMM 640 - Principles of Strategic Communication | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Peace and Conflict Resolution | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This program Conflict Resolution is the core degree option within IPCR. The curriculum explores the following critical issues: theories on the causes of war and organized violence at the international and international levels, alternative approaches to resolving and preventing conflict, approaches to peacemaking, the formation of cooperative global relationships, cross-cultural negotiation, crisis management and response, and individual and community transformation. The curriculum is unique in the field as it bridges peace studies with conflict resolution studies in an international and cross-cultural approach. Our students learn to analyze current conflict situations and develop policy proposals for their resolution. Since culture and religion play strong roles in the resolution and transformation of conflict, students also develop strong cross-cultural communication skills. Our students have the opportunity to explore peace theory through religious and spiritual traditions, nonviolent social movements, as well as sustainable economics. Students also have the opportunity to develop practical skills in conflict resolution techniques through the classroom setting, hands-on practical institutes, and internship opportunities. These skills assist in transforming conflict through policy making, mediation, negotiation, activism, and other peace building activities. The multidisciplinary approach combines both micro-and macro-level analysis that links theory with practice and research with action to provide training in implementation of skills as well as critical analysis. Graduates will have the analytical and practical competencies to serve at all levels of public policy-making institutions. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | SIS-606 Culture and Peace and Conflict Resolution: Alternatives to Violence (3) ,SIS-607 Peace Paradigms (3) ,SIS-609 Conflict Analysis and Resolution: Theory and Practice (3) ,SIS-610 Theory of Conflict, Violence and Wars (3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Peace and Conflict Resolution/MA in Teaching | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This dual degree program prepares students to excel in the effort. It offers challenging course work, field experience, and the credentials to move you to the forefront of the growing field of conflict resolution education. Students attain expertise that is valuable to education efforts in the United States and abroad. Theoretical and practical course work is brought together with intensive on-site teaching practicum in Washington, D.C. area schools. Future secondary-school teachers learn to infuse communication, negotiation, peacemaking, problem-solving, peer-mediation, and team-building skills into teaching, classroom management, and curriculum development. Courses and resources are drawn from International Peace and Conflict Resolution in the School of International Service and from the School of Education in the College of Arts and Sciences. This 57-credit, three-year program comprises 155 specific courses, a 150-hour internship, 500 hours of student teaching, and optional weekend conflict resolution skill-building workshops. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | EDU-521 Foundations of Education (3) EDU-620 Theories of Educational Psychology and Human Development (3) - and one of the following: EDU-541 Foundations of Special Education for Exceptional Children (3) ,EDU-545 Overview of All Exceptionalities: The Arts in Special Education (3) . | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Peace and Conflict Resolution/Master of Theological Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This dual degree program combines training in international peace and conflict resolution with the theological study. Ordained and lay persons alike benefit from the study of these highly complementary disciplines. Students are required to complete a minimum of 30 credits for the Master of Arts degree at the School of International Service and a minimum of 42 credits for the Master of Theological Studies at Wesley Theological Seminary - for a total of 72 hours - to successfully earn both degrees. Students must apply and be admitted separately to each program. Students may count up to 12 credit hours from Wesley toward the M. A. in International Peace and Conflict Resolution. With SIS faculty approval, 9 credit hours fulfill the related field requirement, and 3 credit hours count toward the research requirement. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in International Training and Education | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program are encouraged to take courses and skills institutes, to engage in research activities, and to participate as volunteers or interns within programs or organizations that are concerned with the following areas: International Development Education: focuses on the role of education in international development, including education in developing countries, countries in conflict and post-conflict reconstruction, and nations in transition. Coursework in this concentration addresses such issue areas as: access, quality, and equity; the role of education in national development; flexible and alternative forms of education and schooling; policy formulation; project/program design and management; and training program design. International Exchange: focuses on the role of education in promoting global and cross-cultural knowledge and understanding necessary for an increasingly interdependent world. Coursework includes policy and planning for international exchange and study abroad, international student advising, education abroad, intercultural communication, internationalizing higher education, developing and managing education abroad programs, training program design and strategic planning. Additionally, this concentration addresses the linkages between international development education and international exchange and study abroad through the process of capacity-building. Global Education: focuses on the ways in which an international perspective can be integrated into the primary and secondary school curricula in the US. Coursework includes curriculum development, global literacy, intercultural communication, development of learning materials, training program design, and the internationalization of US institutions through international exchange, international student advising, and study abroad programs. Global Health: focuses on educating students about critical international health issues. Coursework includes Health Promotion, Global Health, and Global Health Policy. Students with this concentration often pursue careers with organizations such as the World Health Organization and Pan American Health Organization. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | EDU 598 Comparative and International Education ,EDU 610 Methods of Inquiry: Utilizing Information Effectively and EDU 621 001 Topics in Social Science Research Participatory Action Research ,EDU 612 Equity and Educational Opportunity ,EDU 618 Human Growth and Development across the Life Span ,EDU 642 Training Program Design ,EDU 685 Proseminar: International Training and Education | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | MA in Philosophy and Social Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | This program applies ethics and political philosophy to the complex social issues of today, combining philosophy with another related field to provide a grounding for designing and evaluating social policy. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2925 | The Department of philosophy and religion explores the nature of the real world, the basis of human values, and foundations of reason. Students approach these issues through study of both historical literature and contemporary developments. The department's study of Western and Eastern religious traditions introduces students to a major influence on all civilizations. Journalists, diplomats, and government specialists benefit from the serious consideration of the inner workings of the religious ethos of civilizations. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program consists of core training in sociological theory and research methods, plus concentration in one of the following specialties: race, gender, and social justice; global sociology; social inequality; gender and family; or applied/professional sociology. The program focuses on forms of inequality, their origins and patterns of reproduction, related to issues of social justice, and how these issues vary within and between societies. It is intended to produce and apply knowledge for the benefit of society. The degree program aims not only to teach academic skills, but also to develop knowledge which will be of value to those involved in working for the promotion of social equality. Courses are designed to enable students to deepen their knowledge of a specialty area, to develop advanced and systematic theoretical understandings, and to develop methodological areas for vocational and professional competence. | Applicants must meet the minimum university requirements for admission to graduate study, including a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution, with at least a 3.3 (on a 4.0 scale) grade-point average. Graduate Record Examination (GRE) test scores are required. A background in the social sciences is strongly preferred. Admission to the program is at the discretion of the department's Graduate Committee and is based on academic record and letters of recommendation from two persons able to evaluate the applicant's potential for graduate study in sociology. Provisional admission may be considered on a case-by-case basis where minimum university requirements are not fully met. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2475 | The Department of Sociology of the College of Arts and Sciences serves the university and students from throughout the world as a center for the advanced study of societal change, social institutions, and social processes. Its programs offer in-depth training in sociological theory and emphasize social justice and research methodology, as well as five areas of concentration: Gender and Family; Inequality and Stratification; Macrosociology; Professional/Applied Sociology; and Race, Gender, and Social Justice. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Spanish Latin American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program provides students with a wealth of knowledge which focuses on cultural studies, interdisciplinary Latin American Studies, international relations, literature, and language. Specialized knowledge of the Spanish language and Latin Americans can provide students with a competitive edge when pursuing careers such as education, translation, business, etc. Improved interpretive and communicative skills acquired in the program also prepare graduates for success in PhD programs valuing critical analysis. | Admission requirement s are bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.2 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in Special Education Learning Disabilities | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | EDU-502 Methods of Managing Pupils with Behavior Disorders (3) EDU-545 Overview of All Exceptionalities: The Arts in Special Education (3) or EDU-541 Foundations of Special Education for Exceptional Children,EDU-605 Methods of Psycho educational Assessment for Learning Disabilities and Emotional Disturbance,EDU-606 Theories and Methods of Diagnostic and Remedial Mathematics (3) ,EDU-607 Research Seminar in Special Education (3) ,EDU-620 Theories of Educational Psychology and Human Development (3) (or an elective approved by the student's adviser) ,EDU-644 Language Development and Remediation (3) ,EDU-645 Learning Disabilities I (3) ,EDU-646 Learning Disabilities II (3) ,EDU-671 Foundations of Reading: Diagnosis and Remediation (3) ,EDU-792 In-Service Training Project (6) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in TESOL | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program has markedly increased as changing national systems and global concerns have created an interdependent world. American University's MA in TESOL is distinctive in its focus on actual experiential learning: students plan lessons, observe classes, and design tests for English language classes. Faculty draw on their extensive teaching experience, research, and interaction with other cultures to provide pragmatic lessons and advice. This flexible program allows for full-time or part-time attendance, with most courses offered at convenient times in the evening. Courses are also offered during the AU Summer TESOL Institute. | Admission Requirements :No previous training in linguistics is required for admission. However, a background in a second language is recommended. The MA in TESOL is open to students who have at least a 3.0 average (on a 4.0 scale) in their undergraduate degree. The Graduate Record Examination is required. International students must demonstrate competence in English, equivalent to a score of 600 or better on the paper-based TOEFL (or 250 on the computer version or 100 on the internet-based version). | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MA in the History of Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | This program emphasizes the rich, multi-cultural heritage of the discipline, providing the opportunity to study Asian and Latin American philosophies as well as the traditional Western canon. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2925 | The Department of philosophy and religion explores the nature of the real world, the basis of human values, and foundations of reason. Students approach these issues through study of both historical literature and contemporary developments. The department's study of Western and Eastern religious traditions introduces students to a major influence on all civilizations. Journalists, diplomats, and government specialists benefit from the serious consideration of the inner workings of the religious ethos of civilizations. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MBA - Master of Business Administration/MA | Full Time | Variable | US $1,079 per credit / unit | Kogod School of Business | The Kogod School of Business and the School of International Service (SIS) jointly offer dual programs. These programs offer students the opportunity to combine solid business skills with an expertise in international studies - a particularly valuable benefit as businesses adjust to the global market, and international organizations are asked to increase productivity through better business practices. | Applicants must have earned a satisfactory score on the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and a satisfactory grade point average for the last 60 hours of academic work from a Council on Postsecondary Accreditation regionally accredited institution. Applicants whose first language is not English are also required to take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) and demonstrate English language proficiency. Students are admitted to the MSA program starting in August or January. | MBA | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | ACCT-607 - Accounting Concepts and Applications (3) ,FIN-605 - Managerial Economics (3) ,FIN-614 - Financial Management (3) ,ITEC-614 - Quantitative Methods I: Probability & Statistics (1.5) ,ITEC-615 - Quantitative Methods II: Inferential Statistics & Forecasting (1.5) ,ITEC-617 - Information & Technology (1.5) ,ITEC-618 - Applied Production & Operations Management (1.5) ,IBUS-610 - International Business Analysis (1.5) ,KSB-061 - Professional Success Strategies - Lab I (0) ,KSB-062 - Professional Success Strategies - Lab II (0) ,KSB-601 - Strategic Decision-Making in a Global Environment I (3) ,KSB-602 - Strategic Decision Making in a Global Environment II (3) MGMT-613 - Managing People in Organizations (1.5) ,MGMT-615 - Legal, Ethical, & Social Issues in Business (1.5) ,MKTG-610 - Marketing Management (1.5) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MFA in Drawing | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program is centered around a critiquing seminar that is required during every semester of study and is led by a rotation of our faculty. Students are guaranteed diverse and extensive access to and instruction from multiple full-time faculty as part of the seminar offering. The seminar requirement is supplemented with additional offerings in theory, drawing, art history, and studio electives in multiple traditional and new media. Given our standing as a highly respected liberal arts institution, we also make it possible for our students to gain access to study with respected faculty outside of the arts. Students are also served by a prestigious visiting artist program that guarantees repeated individualized access to prominent internationally recognized visiting artists throughout the course of each semester. This visiting artist program is unique because of the degree and continuity of contact that students have to individual visiting artists. Because of the intensity and commitment that is required, and in order to ensure and maintain the benefits and opportunities afforded by the program, part-time study is not available. | Admission to the MFA program is competitive. The process includes screening 20 images of the artist’s work and reviewing a resume of the applicant's art background. Portfolios should include: 20 images on CD (it is recommended although not required that applicants send 15 images of primary medium including painting, sculpture, installation, printmaking, drawing, or new media and 5 images of support medium such as drawing),Resume, Cover letter, Any video or media work should be included on a CD as a quicktime or on DVD. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MFA in Installation | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program is centered around a critiquing seminar that is required during every semester of study and is led by a rotation of our faculty. Students are guaranteed diverse and extensive access to and instruction from multiple full-time faculty as part of the seminar offering. The seminar requirement is supplemented with additional offerings in theory, drawing, art history, and studio electives in multiple traditional and new media. Given our standing as a highly respected liberal arts institution, we also make it possible for our students to gain access to study with respected faculty outside of the arts. Students are also served by a prestigious visiting artist program that guarantees repeated individualized access to prominent internationally recognized visiting artists throughout the course of each semester. This visiting artist program is unique because of the degree and continuity of contact that students have to individual visiting artists. Because of the intensity and commitment that is required, and in order to ensure and maintain the benefits and opportunities afforded by the program, part-time study is not available. | Admission to the MFA program is competitive. The process includes screening 20 images of the artist’s work and reviewing a resume of the applicant's art background. Portfolios should include: 20 images on CD (it is recommended although not required that applicants send 15 images of primary medium including painting, sculpture, installation, printmaking, drawing, or new media and 5 images of support medium such as drawing),Resume, Cover letter, Any video or media work should be included on a CD as a quicktime or on DVD. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MFA in Multimedia | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program is centered around a critiquing seminar that is required during every semester of study and is led by a rotation of our faculty. Students are guaranteed diverse and extensive access to and instruction from multiple full-time faculty as part of the seminar offering. The seminar requirement is supplemented with additional offerings in theory, drawing, art history, and studio electives in multiple traditional and new media. Given our standing as a highly respected liberal arts institution, we also make it possible for our students to gain access to study with respected faculty outside of the arts. Students are also served by a prestigious visiting artist program that guarantees repeated individualized access to prominent internationally recognized visiting artists throughout the course of each semester. This visiting artist program is unique because of the degree and continuity of contact that students have to individual visiting artists. Because of the intensity and commitment that is required, and in order to ensure and maintain the benefits and opportunities afforded by the program, part-time study is not available. | Admission to the MFA program is competitive. The process includes screening 20 images of the artist’s work and reviewing a resume of the applicant's art background. Portfolios should include: 20 images on CD (it is recommended although not required that applicants send 15 images of primary medium including painting, sculpture, installation, printmaking, drawing, or new media and 5 images of support medium such as drawing),Resume, Cover letter, Any video or media work should be included on a CD as a quicktime or on DVD. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MFA in Painting | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program is centered around a critiquing seminar that is required during every semester of study and is led by a rotation of our faculty. Students are guaranteed diverse and extensive access to and instruction from multiple full-time faculty as part of the seminar offering. The seminar requirement is supplemented with additional offerings in theory, drawing, art history, and studio electives in multiple traditional and new media. Given our standing as a highly respected liberal arts institution, we also make it possible for our students to gain access to study with respected faculty outside of the arts. Students are also served by a prestigious visiting artist program that guarantees repeated individualized access to prominent internationally recognized visiting artists throughout the course of each semester. This visiting artist program is unique because of the degree and continuity of contact that students have to individual visiting artists. Because of the intensity and commitment that is required, and in order to ensure and maintain the benefits and opportunities afforded by the program, part-time study is not available. | Admission to the MFA program is competitive. The process includes screening 20 images of the artist’s work and reviewing a resume of the applicant's art background. Portfolios should include: 20 images on CD (it is recommended although not required that applicants send 15 images of primary medium including painting, sculpture, installation, printmaking, drawing, or new media and 5 images of support medium such as drawing),Resume, Cover letter, Any video or media work should be included on a CD as a quicktime or on DVD. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MFA in Sculpture | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program is centered around a critiquing seminar that is required during every semester of study and is led by a rotation of our faculty. Students are guaranteed diverse and extensive access to and instruction from multiple full-time faculty as part of the seminar offering. The seminar requirement is supplemented with additional offerings in theory, drawing, art history, and studio electives in multiple traditional and new media. Given our standing as a highly respected liberal arts institution, we also make it possible for our students to gain access to study with respected faculty outside of the arts. Students are also served by a prestigious visiting artist program that guarantees repeated individualized access to prominent internationally recognized visiting artists throughout the course of each semester. This visiting artist program is unique because of the degree and continuity of contact that students have to individual visiting artists. Because of the intensity and commitment that is required, and in order to ensure and maintain the benefits and opportunities afforded by the program, part-time study is not available. | Admission to the MFA program is competitive. The process includes screening 20 images of the artist’s work and reviewing a resume of the applicant's art background. Portfolios should include: 20 images on CD (it is recommended although not required that applicants send 15 images of primary medium including painting, sculpture, installation, printmaking, drawing, or new media and 5 images of support medium such as drawing),Resume, Cover letter, Any video or media work should be included on a CD as a quicktime or on DVD. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MFA in printmaking | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program is centered around a critiquing seminar that is required during every semester of study and is led by a rotation of our faculty. Students are guaranteed diverse and extensive access to and instruction from multiple full-time faculty as part of the seminar offering. The seminar requirement is supplemented with additional offerings in theory, drawing, art history, and studio electives in multiple traditional and new media. Given our standing as a highly respected liberal arts institution, we also make it possible for our students to gain access to study with respected faculty outside of the arts. Students are also served by a prestigious visiting artist program that guarantees repeated individualized access to prominent internationally recognized visiting artists throughout the course of each semester. This visiting artist program is unique because of the degree and continuity of contact that students have to individual visiting artists. Because of the intensity and commitment that is required, and in order to ensure and maintain the benefits and opportunities afforded by the program, part-time study is not available. | Admission to the MFA program is competitive. The process includes screening 20 images of the artist’s work and reviewing a resume of the applicant's art background. Portfolios should include: 20 images on CD (it is recommended although not required that applicants send 15 images of primary medium including painting, sculpture, installation, printmaking, drawing, or new media and 5 images of support medium such as drawing),Resume, Cover letter, Any video or media work should be included on a CD as a quicktime or on DVD. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1670 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. We provide students with the tools to understand the historical and contemporary criteria for the making of art works; foster rigorous and unique investigation; promote an environment of enthusiasm, dedication, and intensive effort; and prepare students for careers in the arts. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MS Applied Science in Biotechnology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program aim to training graduate students for immediate employment in their chosen biotechnology field, rather than preparing them for future graduate study. As well as a set of core skills or tools classes in computing and statistics that all students in the program complete, there are compulsory internship and research capstone courses. The biotechnology students also choose from a set of elective courses within their field (e.g. molecular biology, bioinformatics & genomics, proteomics) and additional professional/business courses. The majority of classes are in the evening to accommodate working professionals. Two other PSM tracks offered at AU are Applied Computing and Environmental Science and Assessment. | Admission Requirements In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MS Applied Science in Environmental Science and Assessment | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program aim to training graduate students for immediate employment in their chosen environmental field, rather than preparing them for future graduate study. As well as a set of core skills or tools classes in computing and statistics that all students in the program complete, there are compulsory internship and research capstone courses. The Environmental Science & Assessment students also choose from a set of elective courses within their field (e.g. environmental science I & II, environmental risk assessment) and additional professional/business courses. The majority of classes are in the evening to accommodate working professionals. Two other PSM tracks offered at AU are Applied Computing and Biotechnology. | Admission Requirements In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | MS in Environmental Science | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program involves extensive collaboration among academic departments at the university. We offer an innovative graduate-level environmental science course sequence that bridges many disciplines and makes environmental science accessible to graduate students whose academic training is in other subject areas. Our course of study balances interdisciplinary work with in-depth training in the discipline. Our outstanding faculty are nationally recognized scholars in natural products chemistry, marine science, environmental toxicology, ecology, conservation biology, environmental chemistry, and environmental statistics. Students benefit from individualized attention and close interaction with the faculty in small classes. After initial grounding in core courses in environmental science and statistics plus two graduate courses in environmental policy, the student chooses a concentration in either earth and atmosphere science, toxicology, or conservation biology. All students participate in an environmental research seminar and practicum that provides an opportunity to establish links between policy and science in an applied context. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | ENVS-580 Environmental Science I (3) ,ENVS-581 Environmental Science II (3) ,STAT-514 Statistical Methods (3) ,CSC-610 Introduction to Geographical Information Systems (3) ,ENVS-681 Environmental Research Seminar and Practicum (3) (see below for additional info),One of the following: ENVS 690 Environmental Science Research (3) or,ENVS 691 Internship (1-3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | MS in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3120 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. They offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Major in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Major | American University | SOCY 150 Global Sociology, SOCY 315 Major Social Theorists, SOCY 320 Intro to Social Research, SOCY 392 Co-Operative Education or SOCY 491 Internship or an approved course with the consent of the Department Chair, SOCY 492 Major Seminar in Sociology, STAT 202 Basic Statistics, SOCY 415 Current Issues in Social Theory, SOCY 515 Models of Societal Development, SOCY 423 Social Policy Research, SOCY 525 Social Advocacy and Social Change, SOCY 580 Social Policy Analysis. | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2475 | The Department of Sociology of the College of Arts and Sciences serves the university and students from throughout the world as a center for the advanced study of societal change, social institutions, and social processes. Its programs offer in-depth training in sociological theory and emphasize social justice and research methodology, as well as five areas of concentration: Gender and Family; Inequality and Stratification; Macrosociology; Professional/Applied Sociology; and Race, Gender, and Social Justice. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Arts Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | PERF-570 Survey of Arts Management (3),PERF-571 Marketing in the Arts (3),PERF-674 Financial Management (3),PERF-673 Fundraising Management for the Arts (3),PERF-596 Cultural Policy (3),PERF-691 Internship (6) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Performing Arts, American UniversityKatzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3420 | The Katzen Arts Center brings all the visual and performing arts programs at AU into one 130,000 square foot space. Designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration in the arts, the new center provides state-of-the-art instructional, exhibition, and performance space for all the arts disciplines. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Interactive Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program provides sharpen writing, reporting and editing skills. Construct stories on the Web and learn to write effectively for an on-line audience. Study the relationship of business, ethics and the law to on-line media. Learn how to design readable news Web sites that incorporate digital sound and video. Become a pioneer and help shape a new information medium. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in News Media Studies Weekend Format for Professionals | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program provides Mid-career journalists who want a highly reputable, advanced degree. Media practitioners interested in teaching. Public relations professionals dealing with media. Professionals who aspire to teach at the university level. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program provide the basis for further doctoral-level work or prepare students for immediate employment in a wide range of careers. Many students pursuing the Master of Arts degree in Psychology at American University go on to doctoral study in clinical and experimental psychology. Other graduates of the Department of Psychology are pursuing careers in related areas, including clinical-medical research, teaching, counseling and policy formulation, law enforcement, and government work. The low student-faculty ratio, small class size, and close supervision of student progress by individual faculty advisors provide students with a strong foundation for study in the field of psychology. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 321 Asbury Building South Wing, American University, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1710 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Public Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program in Public Anthropology prepares students in archaeology and cultural/social anthropology for careers in public service, community organizing and social advocacy. Through coursework, research projects and internship experiences, students explore the workings of culture, power and history in everyday life and acquire skills in critical inquiry, problem solving and public communication. Coursework in related fields - Sociology, Public History, Education, International Development, Justice, Law and Society - enhances these perspectives and skills. Program graduates are prepared for employment in the DC area, other US locations and international settings. They work with projects in such areas as cultural resource management, women's and minority health, educational equity, refugee resettlement, human rights and environmental justice. | M.A students may focus their graduate studies in Cultural/Social Anthropology or in Archaeology. Both concentrations combine classroom and experiential/field-based learning activities as appropriate for each student's career plans and political goals. Personal statements should follow the guidelines as posted under the "Preparing a Personal Statement" section under the "Prospective Students" button on this site. Pathways after graduation will range widely and include working as researchers, public intellectuals, community leaders, and grassroots organizers. All graduates will be prepared to engage the possibilities of anthropological theory and method for illuminating social problems, past and present, articulating social justice, and building social change. The GRE is required, and scores should be sent directly to the department. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | ANTH-531 Topics in Archaeology ,ANTH-532 Changing Culture ,ANTH-534 Class and Culture,ANTH-535 Ethnicity and Nationalism ,ANTH-537 Topics in Language and Culture,ANTH-541 Anthropology and State Policy,ANTH 542 Reinventing Applied Anthropology,ANTH-543 Anthropology of Development,ANTH-544 Topics in Public Anthropology,ANTH-550 Ethnographic Field Methods ,ANTH-631 Foundations of Social and Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 634 Foundations of Archaeology | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Battelle-Tompkins T21, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1830 | This department has trained undergraduate and graduate students in the real-world applications of anthropological method and theory for almost 50 years. They were the second anthropology department in the USA to offer an MA in Applied Anthropology. This new BA- and MA- related initiatives in Public Anthropology, our support for critical studies in archaeology, and this Anthropology/Sociology joint PhD track in Race, Gender and Social Justice prepares students to address issues of public policy, community struggle and other locally defined concerns in their academic projects, and for employment in activist domains outside of academia. this faculty and students come from different race, ethnic and class backgrounds, nationalities and sexualities, and we are committed to maintaining an academic environment where diversity, broadly defined, can be expressed, supported and respected. Material on this website describes the degree programs, research interests and opportunities for practical training which the Department of Anthropology makes available to Student . | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and M.A. in International Peace and Conflict Resolution | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | Graduates receive an M.A. in International Peace and Conflict Resolution from the School of International Service and the M.A.T. in secondary education from the School of Education, Teaching & Health. | Applicants must hold an accredited bachelor's degree with a cumulative grade point average of at least a B+ (3.30 or higher on a 4.00 scale) and should have at least 24 credit hours of social science course work relevant to international studies. Students who do not meet these minimum requirements, if otherwise admissible, are assigned additional course work specified at the time of admission. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | EDU-521 Foundations of Education (3) ,EDU-541 Foundations of Special Education for Exceptional Children (3) or EDU-545 Overview of All Exceptionalities: The Arts in Special Education ,EDU-620 Theories of Educational Psychology and Human Development | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program is designed for the student with no previous background or preparation in education who wishes to acquire teaching certification in elementary or secondary education or English for speakers of other languages. Students interested in international training and development may seek secondary certification in an appropriate content area. | In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants must earn a satisfactory score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) and earn a passing score on the Praxis I: Pre-Professional Skills Assessments (PPST®). Passing scores (as set by the District of Columbia teaching licensing agency) are Reading 172, Writing 171 and Math 174.Students seeking secondary education certification must have completed sufficient course work in the subject in which they are seeking licensure, such as biology, chemistry, dance, English, French, German, mathematics, physics, social studies, Spanish, or theater. Students seeking certification in English for speakers of other languages must be proficient in English. It is strongly recommended that native speakers of English have some background in at least one other language. International students are expected to demonstrate competence equivalent to a score of 600 or better on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) in order to be endorsed for certification. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | EDU-519 Uses of Technology in Education,EDU-601 Teaching Reading in the Elementary School,EDU-602 Teaching Language Arts in the Elementary School ,EDU-603 Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School,EDU-604 Teaching Science in the Elementary School,EDU-608 Teaching Social Studies in the Elementary School,EDU-609 Effective Teaching for Diverse Learners,EDU-619 Children's Literature: Multicultural and International Approaches (3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Teaching Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program recognizes the significance of education in contemporary life, the potential of education for each individual, and the special responsibly to produce educators for the twenty-first century. Programs are offered mostly at night, which is a boon to our graduates, most of whom work. The Master of Arts in Teaching is designed for the student with no previous background or preparation in education who wishes to acquire teaching certification in elementary or secondary education or English for speakers of other languages. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Teaching Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program recognizes the significance of education in contemporary life, the potential of education for each individual, and the special responsibility to produce educators for the twenty-first century. Programs are offered mostly at night, which is a boon to our graduates, most of whom work. The Master of Arts in Teaching is designed for the student with no previous background or preparation in education who wishes to acquire teaching certification in elementary or secondary education or English for speakers of other languages. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Arts in Teaching in ESOL | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program is designed for students who wish to acquire ESOL teaching certification for grades K-12 and are not already certified to teach in another area. The MAT: ESOL program prepares teachers to work effectively with diverse student populations. This program is run in conjunction with the School of Education, which formally awards the degree. | Admission Requirements :No prior study of linguistics or teaching education is required. Applicants must earn a satisfactory score on the Graduate Record Examination and the Praxis I examination, and have at least a bachelor's degree with a grade-point average of at least a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). Native English speakers should have some background in at least one language other than English. International students must demonstrate proficiency in English, either by scoring at least 600 (or 250 on the computer-based version of the test) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). In addition, non-native speakers of English must demonstrate the oral skills in English necessary to teach in an American public school. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | TESL-500 Principles of Linguistics ,TESL-501 English Language Teaching I (Prerequisite for TESL-502) ,TESL-502 English Language Teaching II ,MAT:ESOL students must do a supervised 40 hour observation/practice teaching component in conjunction with BOTH the ELT I and II courses. Placement for this practicum will be made by Karen DiGiovanni (see below).TESL-503 Structure of English ,TESL-523 Second Language Acquisition ,TESL-524 Reading and Writing in the ESL/EFL Classroom ,TESL-527 Cultural Issues in the ESL/EFL Classroom ,TESL-531 Language Assessment | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $1,079 per credit / unit | Kogod School of Business | This program is flexible and provides a solid grounding in theory combined with the skills needed to manage in an environment of rapid technological development and tightly integrated international markets. The Kogod MBA prepares students for the realities of today's business world. MBA students may pursue two career tracks and may tailor the MBA to their career goals and interests. Alternately, students may elect to combine their Kogod MBA career tracks career tracks with up to nine credits taken outside of the business school or at other universities in the Washington, D.C. MBA consortium. For example, a Kogod MBA student with a career track in marketing could take public relations courses at American University's School of Communication. American University's Kogod School of Business is a member of the Consortium of Universities of the Metropolitan Washington Area. The Consortium consists of ten universities that coordinate the use of their respective facilities. These universities include American University, Catholic University of America, Gallaudet University, George Mason University, The George Washington University, Georgetown University, Howard University, Marymount University, the University of the District of Columbia, and the University of Maryland. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | MBA | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Education in Curriculum and Instruction (M.Ed.) | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program is designed for students with a background in educational theory and practice, offers extended study in the field and in areas of elementary education, secondary education and educational technology. The program follows the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) guidelines for advanced programs and offers the opportunity for students to earn National Board for the Professional Teaching Standards Certification. Students select a focus within the program including Literacy, Global Literacy, Educational Leadership and Educational Technology with a Math or Science Concentration. | In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants must earn a satisfactory score on the Graduate Record Exam (GRE). The GRE is required for applicants whose highest earned degree is a baccalaureate and for students who have completed a master’s degree with less than a 3.5 GPA, and may be required for those with master’s degrees and GPAs above 3.5. Applicants should have had at least three years of full-time teaching experience at the time of enrollment, and should have a standard teaching license. Applicants whose teaching experience occurred more than ten years ago are encouraged to apply. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Fine Arts Program in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature | The program offers a balance among intensive writing workshops, literature courses, and specialized courses and internships. The combination of these offerings permits students to enter fully into a community of writers and glimpse a range of possibilities for a career in writing after graduation. Students are free to pursue a single genre or to explore several genres. Alumni of the MFA Program in Creative Writing have gone on to diverse jobs in writing and the arts. | Admission Requirements: In addition to meeting the minimum university requirements for graduate study, applicants should have a grade point average of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) in undergraduate literature courses. Although an undergraduate major in literature is desirable, applications from candidates who have majored in other fields will also be considered, provided that they can demonstrate substantial study of literature or other pertinent background in the discipline. Both full- and part-time students are welcome in the program. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Literature, 237 Battelle Tompkins, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2971 | Literature holds a unique position among the disciplines. Because language is both its medium and object of study, literature serves as a point of convergence for issues that concern aesthetics, psychology, sociology, law, philosophy, anthropology, and history. At the same time, literature explores these issues from the fresh perspective of an author's singular imagination. American University's Department of Literature is also unique because, in addition to award-winning scholars and teachers concerned with the aesthetic and historical elements of literary study, our faculty includes accomplished creative writers and teachers of film. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of International Service | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | This program, experienced international affairs professionals are able to broaden their knowledge, enhance their intellectual development, expand their professional effectiveness, and strengthen their international leadership skills and knowledge. After completion of the program, graduate will have both the skills and the certification to meet the demands of executive level service in the dynamic private, public, and not-for-profit sectors. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Laws (LLM) | Full Time | Variable | $59919 per 12 credit hours | Washington College of Law | This program enables graduate students from U.S. and foreign law schools to engage in advanced research and to specialize in the above-mentioned areas through aca demic study and practical experience with international financial institutions and organizations, as well as with U.S. government agencies, nongovernmental organizations, private businesses, and law firms. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Washington College of Law | Washington College of Law, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 274 4000 | The WashingtonCollege of Law (WCL) equips students in unique ways to navigate this new reality. A top law school that provides an excellent legal education in all areas of the law, WCL has renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics and externships), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, and gender. The Washington College of Law consisted of nine students, including its first male student in 1898.Hardly contrasting from the first catalog in 1898, the WCL's catalog of 1923-1924's course of study only required students to complete three years of study to receive their Bachelor of Law degree. Today, in 2003, requirements are much stricter. A degree of juris doctor (JD) is conferred upon students who satisfactorily complete no fewer than 86 semester hours, including all required courses, with a quality point index of 2.0 (C) or better, who are in residence at this law school for at least three full academic years or the equivalent, who have fulfilled the upper-level writing requirement, and who are recommended for the degree by the faculty. Credit hour requirements are normally met in six semesters (three academic years) of full-time study or in eight semesters (four academic years plus at least one summer session) of part-time study. Degree requirements make it mandatory that resident semesters be taken at the law school unless waived by the registrar on the basis of extraordinary, compelling personal circumstances. A semester is a period of instruction of at least 70 class days, excluding reading and examination periods, or the equivalent. A semester credit requires one hour of classroom contact per week for one semester. A maximum of 12 no classroom credits (18 if enrolled in a clinic) may be applied toward the 86 credits required for the JD degree. Such credits include but are not limited to those in clinical programs, externship fieldwork, independent studies, and moot court. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Laws and Master of Public Administration LLM/MPA | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program provides a broad theoretical grounding in public administration and management, while also providing students with a practical education in the analysis and implementation of policy and law at all levels of government. The program is designed such that both degrees can be completed in as few as three semesters, assuming attendance during summer terms, for a total of 42 credit hours. American University’s School of Public Affairs (SPA) and the Washington College of Law (WCL) jointly offer a dual degree program in law and public administration. The program is especially attractive for attorneys who hope to practice and innovate in the political, governmental and not-for-profit realms. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Laws and Master of Public Policy LLM/MPP | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This unique combination of degrees is especially attractive for students intending to use their law degrees in the political, government or non-profit realms. The program provides a broad theoretical grounding in policy analysis, program evaluation, and successful policy implementation and provides attorneys with the necessary skills to creatively address the political, financial, organizational, legal, ethical and constitutional challenges inherent in developing sound public policies. The program is designed such that both degrees can be completed in as few as three semesters, assuming attendance during summer terms, for a total of 45 credit hours. American University’s School of Public Affairs (SPA) and the Washington College of Law (WCL) jointly offer a dual degree program in law and public policy. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - Arts Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This specialization prepares students for the administrative work associated with the presentation of music, theater, and other arts. For faculty advice on this concentration consult Sherburne Laughlin, Director of the Arts Management Program. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This concentration helps students to understand the strategic role of human resource planning, develop skills to prepare employees for change, and improve management and employee relationships. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - International Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This concentration helps students understand the nature of management responsibilities that bridge different cultures, including those involving foreign relations, international organizations (including NGOs), and social and economic development. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - Management Consulting | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program provide a variety of services to government agencies, including the analysis and design of administrative systems. Similar functions are carried out by auditing and inspection organizations within established agencies. This concentration helps students prepare to exercise the responsibilities of management consultants and promote institutional change. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - Nonprofit Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program play a substantial role in the formulation and delivery of public services. This concentration schools students in the many administrative challenges involved in grassroots representation, social action, international aid, community and economic development, and presentation of the arts through nonprofit organizations. For faculty advice on this concentration, please consult Professor Anna Amirkhanyan. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | PUAD-605 Problem Solving for Managers (3) or PUAD-601 Methods of Problem Solving I (3) ,PUAD-610 Management Analysis (3) ,PUAD-612 Public Administration in the Policy Process (3) ,PUAD-616 Legal Basis of Public Administration (3) or PUAD-608 Comparative Administrative Systems (3 credits) [This course is for international students returning to countries without Anglo-American or European legal traditions, with permission of the academic advisor] PUAD-630 Public Managerial Economics (3) ,PUAD-653 The Individual and the Organization (3) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - Policy Analysis | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This program provides large number of persons perform policy analysis, evaluate public programs, or conduct research on behalf of the public at large. By merging required MPA management courses with the MPP analytic core, this concentration combines knowledge about the administrative functions essential to policy analysis with the skills necessary to conduct the actual analysis. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - Public Financial Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This concentration provides Financial managers, budget officers, and financial analysts are found throughout government. They analyze budget proposals, forecast revenues, collect taxes, allocate monies, advise legislators, inspect programs, and prepare financial statements. The financial management concentration helps to prepare students for the many responsibilities involved with the management of public funds. For faculty advice on this concentration, consult Professor Dan Mullins or Jocelyn Johnston. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - Public Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This concentration strengthens the knowledge and skills of people called upon to work as line managers or administrative support staff in public service organizations. It draws upon the strengths of the department as a national center for the teaching of public management. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) - State and Local Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | This concentration prepares students for the political and administrative intricacies of delivering public services in an increasingly intergovernmental context. For faculty advice on the concentration consult Professor Jocelyn Johnston. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Science in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $1,079 per credit / unit | Kogod School of Business | This program is offered full and part time, and provides advanced study for students who want to pursue accounting careers within a variety of organizational settings. The MSA is designed for students who: Have an undergraduate accounting degree and seek a fifth year of professional education to satisfy 150-hour CPA licensure requirement, or Have a business undergraduate degree, or Have a non-business undergraduate degree | Applicants must have earned a satisfactory score on the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and a satisfactory grade point average for the last 60 hours of academic work from a Council on Postsecondary Accreditation regionally accredited institution. Applicants whose first language is not English are also required to take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) and demonstrate English language proficiency. Students are admitted to the MSA program starting in August or January. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Science in Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $1,079 per credit / unit | Kogod School of Business | This program offers students a rigorous and intellectually sophisticated framework for analyzing decision-making in finance and finance-related areas. Students are prepared to be significant contributors in developing and providing leadership in businesses, non-profits, international and regulatory agencies, financial firms and any other organization where financial decision-making is important. | Applicants must have earned a satisfactory score on the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and a satisfactory grade point average for the last 60 hours of academic work from a Council on Postsecondary Accreditation regionally accredited institution. Applicants whose first language is not English are also required to take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) and demonstrate English language proficiency. Students are admitted to the MSA program starting in August or January. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Science in Finance and Real Estate | Full Time | Variable | US $1,079 per credit / unit | Kogod School of Business | This program offers students a rigorous and intellectually sophisticated framework for analyzing decision-making in these areas that prepares students to be significant contributors in developing and providing leadership to new and continuing businesses, non-profits, government agencies and other organizations. The program focuses on skill development, particularly with Argus and Excel. | Applicants must have earned a satisfactory score on the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and a satisfactory grade point average for the last 60 hours of academic work from a Council on Postsecondary Accreditation regionally accredited institution. Applicants whose first language is not English are also required to take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) and demonstrate English language proficiency. Students are admitted to the MSA program starting in August or January. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Science in Health Promotion Management | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program was the first in the U.S. to integrate the business, science, and art of health promotion. The primary objective of the degree is to provide a competency-based, multidisciplinary academic track for individuals interested in health promotion. Graduates assume leadership and managerial positions in a variety of corporate, private, community, hospital, school, non-profit, and managed care health promotion settings. Our innovative program as won the prestigious Professional Preparation Award from the Association for Worksite Health Promotion and is internationally recognized for its leadership in the development of progressive curricula in the field of health promotion. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | HFIT 510: Applied Human Physiology and Testing (4 credits) ,HFIT 540: Health Communication (3) ,HFIT 545: Nutrition for Health (3) ,HFIT 550: Programming for Health Promotion (3) ,HFIT 555: Research Methodology (3) ,HFIT 560: Health Promotion in Healthcare ,HFIT 565: Quantitative Assessment (3) ,HFIT 618: Strategic Planning in Health Promotion (3) ,HFIT 620: Critical Issues (3) ,HFIT 682: Internship (3) OR HFIT 797: Master's Thesis (3) ,PSYC 570: Behavioral Medicine (3). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Master of Science in Taxation | Full Time | Variable | US $1,079 per credit / unit | Kogod School of Business | This program is to develop a strong general and technical competency in the field of taxation. Intensive professional level skill-building in written and oral communication, information systems technology and interpersonal relations is emphasized throughout the curriculum. In addition, the program instills the highest standards of personal integrity and professional ethics. | Applicants must have earned a satisfactory score on the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and a satisfactory grade point average for the last 60 hours of academic work from a Council on Postsecondary Accreditation regionally accredited institution. Applicants whose first language is not English are also required to take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) and demonstrate English language proficiency. Students are admitted to the MSA program starting in August or January. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | Kogod School of Business | Kogod School of Business, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1900 | American University's Kogod School of Business is among the best business schools in the Washington, D.C. area, and is the school of choice for interdisciplinary business education. Kogod offers graduate and undergraduate business degrees with an unmatched opportunity to integrate business education with other renowned AU disciplines such as international services, law and politics. Kogod's dual degrees and programs, strong co-curricular programs, endowed scholarships, thought-leading research and comprehensive career services attract high quality students and faculty. Established in 1955, Kogod has a highly diverse population that is driven to make a difference in the world. The school works closely with the business community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business environment. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master's (M.A.) in Film and Video | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program in film and video will equip Student with the critical skills and professional tools to prepare Student for a career in media production, including documentaries; education, training, and industrial films; videos; multimedia presentations; episodic television; and full-length theatrical features. Within this broad framework, Student may further choose to emphasize studies in film, video, multimedia production, digital photography, or script writing. Student can sharpen Student skills and build Student résumé with an internship or cooperative education field experience in one of the Washington area's many cable networks or media production facilities. By enrolling in classes in film theory, history and criticism, and elective courses chosen from extensive offerings in performing arts, literature and the humanities, Student will provide depth to Student understanding and perspective. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master's (M.A.) in Journalism - Broadcast | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program will examine the role of the media in Washington institutions, how the news business operates and ethical decision-making. At AU,they will use the latest technology as Student gain the skills and confidence to enter today's competitive broadcast and cable journalism marketplace. As a student, cover actual news events and topics of interest as Student refine Student skills. They can view a montage of some recent student work when they look at our classes and projects. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Master's (M.A.) in Journalism - Print | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of Communication | This program is supplemented with internships and co-ops at national and local news organizations with bureaus or headquarters in Washington. Many special events, including the School of Communication's American Forum program, enable students to hear government and media leaders discuss critical issues facing media and society. Students select an area of specialization for in-depth study: public policy journalism, international journalism, or economic communication. Previous experience in communication is useful, but not required. In order to be considered for the program, however, candidates must demonstrate a strong professional commitment related to the track and specialization selected. The program, designed to be completed in one year, challenges students academically, professionally and personally. All students complete a series of core courses that provide a strong foundation in the ethics and principles of journalism. The balance of coursework provides students with an opportunity to develop specialized skills and knowledge. All courses throughout the program emphasize strong writing skills. In addition, faculty put a premium on teaching students to gather information effectively and efficiently from all sources, including computer tools, databases, spreadsheets and the Internet. Journalism Graduate Degree Requirements. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | COMM-601: Legal Aspects of Communication,COMM-624: Principles and Practices of Journalism,COMM-710: Seminar in Public Affairs (Grade of "B" or better required.)COMM-724: Reporting of Public Affairs Elective Courses (12 credit hours) | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Communication | School of Communication, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2060 | The School of Communication is the only professional school in Washington that brings journalism, film and public relations together, with an international perspective and a focus on new media - digital, interactive, and social media. They offer MFA, MA and BA degrees in Film and Media Arts, International Media, Journalism, and Public Communication. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Master's International Program/ MA in TESOL | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | This program enables participants to qualify for Peace Corps TEFL assignments through graduate course work leading to an MA in TESOL. MIP / MA TESOL participants can qualify or Peace Corps Assignments in Secondary School TEFL Instruction, University English Teaching, and University level English Teacher Training. At the completion of the program, participants are ready to enter the job market with excellent academic credentials and significant overseas teaching experience. MIP / MA TESOL students who successfully complete their Peace Corps service earn, at no cost, six credits of Cooperative Education Field Experience. In addition, they are waived from the three-credit TESOL Practicum course based on their Peace Corps teaching experience. | Admission Requirements :No prior study of linguistics or teaching education is required. Applicants must earn a satisfactory score on the Graduate Record Examination and the Praxis I examination, and have at least a bachelor's degree with a grade-point average of at least a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). Native English speakers should have some background in at least one language other than English. International students must demonstrate proficiency in English, either by scoring at least 600 (or 250 on the computer-based version of the test) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). In addition, non-native speakers of English must demonstrate the oral skills in English necessary to teach in an American public school. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | TESL.500 Principles of Linguistics,TESL.501 English Language Teaching I (Prerequisite for TESL.502),TESL.502 English Language Teaching II,TESL.503 Structure of English (prerequisite: TESL.500),TESL.522 Language Acquisition OR TESL.523 Second Language Acquisition,TESL.527 Cultural Issues in the ESL/EFL classroom OR ANTH.537 Topics in Language and Culture OR ANTH.554 Topics in Public Anthropology: Anthropology of Education,TESL-531 Language Assessment ,TESL-541 Teaching Grammar OR TESL-542 Teaching Pronunciation,TESL-620 ELT III (waived). | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Language and Foreign Studies, American University 324 Asbury Bldg, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2381 | The Department of Language and Foreign Studies (LFS) at American University taught in the target language provides solid language skills and depth of cultural understanding in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, and Turkish. Instruction for individuals interested in teaching English to non-English speakers is provided through the TESOL program (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). LFS offers an online Language Placement Test to help students find appropriate classes. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Masters in Teaching in English for Speakers of Other Languages | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program recognizes the significance of education in contemporary life, the potential of education for each individual, and a special responsibility to produce educators for the twenty-first century. Programs are offered mostly at night, which offers convenience to students who work. The Master of Arts in Teaching in ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages) is designed for students who wish to acquire ESOL teaching certification for grades K-12 and are not already certified to teach in another area. The Masters in Teaching in ESOL program prepares teachers to work effectively with diverse student populations and enables graduates to teach K-12 in Washington, D.C., and in more that 30 states. | Admissions Requirements in Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university; 3.0 GPA in the last 60 hours (90 quarter hours) of undergraduate work; scores from the GRE General Aptitude test; two letters of recommendation; a well-written Statement of Purpose; Praxis I; TOEFL score of 600 paper / 250 computer for all international students whose first language is not English. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Ph.D in History | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, American UniversityBattelle Tompkins 137, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2401 | The Department of History offers such innovative courses as Oliver Stone's America, Cinema and History, Human Rights as History, Latin American Feminism, Politics of Gender in Early Modern Europe and America, and America's Presidential Elections. During the summer, students may participate in institutes on Nuclear Studies, The Civil War, and The Ethnic Experience in the City. For all students interested in research, the National Archives, Library of Congress, and other facilities in the Washington, D.C., area provide the richest base of archival sources and published works in the United States. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Ph.D in International Service | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | School of International Service | The program prepares students for careers as teachers and scholars at universities and research institutes in both the private and public sectors.offers excellent preparation in the foundational fields of transnational study: Comparative and Regional Studies, International Relations and Social Theory. Our students also take a two-course multiple-methodology sequence that trains them in theories of knowledge and in the breadth of qualitative and quantitative research techniques used in the social sciences today. To ensure the highest quality, these core seminars are limited to PhD students only. Once students acquire a firm foundation, they have considerable opportunities for pursuing further study with depth and focus. SIS offers programs in Comparative and Regional Studies, International Communication, International Development, International Economic Policy, International Peace and Conflict Resolution, International Politics, Global Environmental Policy and United States Foreign Policy. Students are also welcome to develop their own field of specialization. Students plan their programs with the Director of Doctoral Studies, the Doctoral Program Academic Adviser and individual faculty. Our emphasis is on tailoring the program to fit each student's needs. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of International Service | School of International Service, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1600 | The School of International Service (SIS) is a community comprised of scholars, practitioners, and students from around the world. Providing a unique environment for learning and professional development, SIS faculty focuses on interactive learning and involves students in ongoing research projects. From coffee houses to workshops, proseminars to skills modules, SIS students have the unique opportunity to individually tailor their program of study to meet career goals. SIS also offers opportunities to publish work, give professional presentations, or just share ideas and interests with other members of the school. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Ph.D. in Justice, Law and Society | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | The Ph.D. program at American University’s School of Public Affairs is a small, rigorous, interdisciplinary doctoral program with an emphasis on careers in academic research and teaching, or in applied research. The program offers courses in six different doctoral fields. Students may choose their own combination of fields to suit their academic interests and research goals. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Ph.D. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | The Ph.D. program at American University’s School of Public Affairs is a small, rigorous, interdisciplinary doctoral program with an emphasis on careers in academic research and teaching, or in applied research. The program offers courses in six different doctoral fields. Students may choose their own combination of fields to suit their academic interests and research goals. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Ph.D. in Public Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $1,178 per credit / unit | School of Public Affairs | The Ph.D. program at American University’s School of Public Affairs is a small, rigorous, interdisciplinary doctoral program with an emphasis on careers in academic research and teaching, or in applied research. The program offers courses in six different doctoral fields. Students may choose their own combination of fields to suit their academic interests and research goals. | Student must include Strong academic credentials,Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | School of Public Affairs | School of Public Affairs, Ward Circle Building 4400 Mass Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2940 | The School of Public Affairs at American University, in Washington, D.C., is a nationally top-ranked school of its kind (U.S. News and World Report) and provides education at the graduate, executive and undergraduate levels. This distinguished faculty and leading programs prepare leaders for careers in today's public service - the fastest growing and most dynamic section of the economy, where government, nonprofit and private enterprise converge. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Ph.D. program in BCAN | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program provides a rigorous and flexible graduate education. The three major areas of focus are Behavior , Cognition , and Neuroscience. Students can get in-depth training in one of these traditional areas in a largely apprenticeship style. However, if they wish, they can also combine any of these focus areas or even design their individually tailored focus area with one or more faculty mentors. In all cases, the objective is to achieve academic expertise in a specific content area through research and core coursework while broadening the scope of knowledge and research skills through electives and laboratory rotations. The strengths of our program lie in our eclectic approach, affiliations with prestigious area institutions such as NIH, Walter Reed, Georgetown Medical School, quality teaching opportunities, and flexibility in training. BCAN members from other disciplines besides Psychology enhance each of our focus areas by offering their expertise and supervision in diverse research topics in Biology, Chemistry, Linguistics, Computer Science, and Physics. Indeed , in addition to psychology majors, we welcome students whose undergraduate or masters degrees are in other fields such as computer science or biology, as well. Please feel free to contact the director for more general information or any of the BCAN faculty for more specific information. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 321 Asbury Building South Wing, American University, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1710 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Ph.D. program in BCAN | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program provides a rigorous and flexible graduate education. The three major areas of focus are Behavior , Cognition , and Neuroscience. Students can get in-depth training in one of these traditional areas in a largely apprenticeship style. However, if they wish, they can also combine any of these focus areas or even design their individually tailored focus area with one or more faculty mentors. In all cases, the objective is to achieve academic expertise in a specific content area through research and core coursework while broadening the scope of knowledge and research skills through electives and laboratory rotations. The strengths of our program lie in our eclectic approach, affiliations with prestigious area institutions such as NIH, Walter Reed, Georgetown Medical School, quality teaching opportunities, and flexibility in training. BCAN members from other disciplines besides Psychology enhance each of our focus areas by offering their expertise and supervision in diverse research topics in Biology, Chemistry, Linguistics, Computer Science, and Physics. Indeed , in addition to psychology majors, we welcome students whose undergraduate or masters degrees are in other fields such as computer science or biology, as well. Please feel free to contact the director for more general information or any of the BCAN faculty for more specific information. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | PhD Concentration in Race, Gender, Social Justice | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program provides coursework, internships and dissertation projects assume a foundation in anthropological theory and method, build on that foundation to explore the complex intersections of race, class, gender and sexuality in historical and contemporary settings, and use those perspectives to advance equality and social justice. The mission statement for this concentration is listed above, under Doctor of Philosophy in Anthropology. Degree requirements are listed below. For more information, contact the program coordinator in the Department of Anthropology. | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Doctoral | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | ANTH-531 Topics in Archaeology: Archaeology and Politics,ANTH-532 Changing Culture ANTH-535 Ethnicity and Nationalism ,ANTH-537 Topics in Language and Culture: Language, Literacy and Schooling ,ANTH-541 Anthropology and State Policy ,ANTH-542 Reinventing Applied Anthropology | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 321 Asbury Building South Wing, American University, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 1710 | The Department of Art at American University encompasses the creative activities of the fine arts, painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and multimedia; the artistic applications of design; and theoretical and historical concerns of art history. We offer degree programs in Art History (see ARTifacts, the art history program newsletter), Graphic Design, and Studio Art, as well as a joint program in Multimedia Design and Development with the School of Communication and an array of elective courses. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. |
| 131159 | American University | Premedical and Health Professional Programs | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is an adjunct support structure, not a major. Traditionally, many premedical students have majored in the natural sciences. However, the medical professions generally are seeking well-rounded students. Hence, they also are interested in students from other disciplines with a broadly based liberal education, reflecting the social, ethical, and cultural roles played by health care professionals. Students interested in medical careers may major in any field, but must make careful plans to take the necessary preparatory courses in a timely fashion. | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Pre-professional | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, American University Hurst Hall 101, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2176 | The Department of Biology provides courses in the life sciences, emphasizing advances in molecular genetics, embryology, development and evolutionary biology. Faculty members conduct research in developmental biology, evolutionary biology, neurobiology, microbiology, ecology, oceanography, immunology, and molecular biology. Students are encouraged to participate in research projects at all levels. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 131159 | American University | Second Majors in Philosophy and Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $32,816 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | Students should have scores of TOEFL - Internet-based test score of 80 or higher; or Computer-based test score of 213 or higher; or Paper-based test score of 550 or higher, IELTS - Composite Score of 6.5 or higher, SAT I - Critical Reading score of 530 or higher, ACT (with writing test) - English sub-score of 23 or higher. | Major | American University | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religion, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 2925 | The Department of philosophy and religion explores the nature of the real world, the basis of human values, and foundations of reason. Students approach these issues through study of both historical literature and contemporary developments. The department's study of Western and Eastern religious traditions introduces students to a major influence on all civilizations. Journalists, diplomats, and government specialists benefit from the serious consideration of the inner workings of the religious ethos of civilizations. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | ||
| 131159 | American University | Special Education for Learning Disabilities (MA) | Full Time | Variable | US $1,111 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | This program provides practical teaching experience at the Lab School of Washington, an innovative day school for children and adults with severe learning disabilities. Founded in 1967 by Sally Smith, the school provides a rich learning environment in which students learn by doing. The academic curriculum is grounded in the performing and visual arts, which, Smith says, “ignite the whole learning process, especially for children with learning disabilities.” | Student must include Strong academic credentials, Proof of a rigorous secondary school curriculum, An essay (topics are included in the application), Two letters of recommendation, Proof of financial resources, Demonstrated English Proficiency. | Masters | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY | American University | Evelyn Levinson, Director | 1000 | 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education, Teaching and Health, Gray Hall Room 119 American University, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW, WASHINGTON, District Of Columbia, 20016, +1 202 885 3720 | The faculty of the School of Education, Teaching and Health contributes to the development and support of socially responsible and change-oriented education and health professionals and the motivation for theorized professional practice. At the center of this mission is a belief in a democratic society. As such School of Education, Teaching and Health is dedicated to the development of critically literate, reflective, caring, highly skilled professionals, who through advocacy research, and the development of programs predicated on the principles of participation and equity, contribute to social change and the promotion of a socially just society in a linguistically and culturally diverse, rapidly changing, and increasingly technological world. | Yes | American University offers temporary housing at the beginning of each semester to currently registered students who are in the midst of searching for permanent housing. Housing is available in barracks-style rooms in Anderson Hall, and holds up to 12 students at any given time. The cost is $17.00/per person, per night and is billed directly to your student account. Each student is given a desk and chair, bed, and bookshelf for the duration of their stay. Housing is available for Fall 2007 from August 17 - September 10, 2007 in Anderson Hall. Temporary Housing is on a first come, first serve basis. We are not permitted to reserve housing. To check into Temporary Housing, please go to the Anderson-Centennial Hall Front Desk, present your student ID, and fill out the registration card. | |
| 168740 | Andrews University | Associate of Arts in Bible Work and Evangelistic Ministries | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages | This degree is offered through a cooperative effort between Andrews University and ARISE Institute. It prepares students to serve as Bible Workers and Bible Work Supervisors. The first semester is normally at ARISE Institute for practical training in front-line evangelistic ministry while the last three semesters are at Andrews University. This degree is not intended to prepare students for pastoral ministry. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Associate degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages, Griggs Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3177 | The Department seeks to enable students to contribute to the development of family, community, and church through training in both the theoretical knowledge and the practical application of a sound, Bible-based Christianity. The Religion degree provides solid Christian support for pre-professional programs such as medicine, dentistry, law, and many others. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Associate of Fine Arts in Digital Mutimedia | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Associate degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia, Harrigan Hall 229, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3450 | Andrews University is proud of its long history of excellence, a tradition carried on in this Digital Multimedia and Photography program. It is the goal of the College of Technology to fuel creativity with current technology creating marketable and competitive individuals. Andrews is a community as well as a university with students interacting with faculty and staff spiritually and socially as well as in the classroom. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Associate of Fine Arts in Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Associate degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia, Harrigan Hall 229, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3450 | Andrews University is proud of its long history of excellence, a tradition carried on in this Digital Multimedia and Photography program. It is the goal of the College of Technology to fuel creativity with current technology creating marketable and competitive individuals. Andrews is a community as well as a university with students interacting with faculty and staff spiritually and socially as well as in the classroom. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Associate of Technology in Agriculture - Dairy Herd Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management | This program offers hands-on training in dairy nutrition, reproduction, milk harvesting, cattle health and disease, and provides the classroom knowledge necessary to manage a modern, computerized dairy. Work scholarships at Andrews University Dairy can cover most of their tuition, room, and board. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Associate degree | Andrews University | ANSI 114 - Introduction to Animal Science, ANSI 250 - Dairy Facilities, ANSI 278 - Dairy Health and Disease, ANSI 305 - Animal Nutrition, ANSI 340 - Production / Management of, ANSI 430 - Lactation Physiology, ANSI 440 - Animal Reproduction, AGRI 270 - Management of Agriculture Enterprises, AGRI 304 - Forage Crop Production, AGRI 395 - Internship in, Major Electives, Religion - 6 Credits, Language / Communication - 6 Credits, Arts / Humanities / Social Sciences - 3 Credits, Natural Physical Sciences / Math - 0 to 3 Credits, Computer Tools - 0 or 3 Credits, PE / Wellness - 2 Credits, Service - 0. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | In the U.S., the dairy business is huge - literally. Modern dairy operations manage herds of 15,000 cattle, and thanks to gains in technology and research, milk production per cow is rising exponentially. Given the scope and complexity of dairy operations, it's easy to understand why there is such a demand for college-educated, dairy herd specialists. In fact, in 2004, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projected over 48,000 annual job openings reserved for people with college degrees in agricultural fields. And not only are dairy specialists in high demand, but the dairy industry is one of the most lucrative areas of agriculture. According to the USDA, dairy products top the commodities list in terms of farm value of production, and large Michigan dairies offer salaries of over $60,000 / year. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Associate of Technology in Horticulture - Landscape Design | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture | This degree gets student started in the area of horticulture student would like to work in. Students can go straight into the workforce as a landscape foreman, estate grounds manager, or assistant golf course superintendent, among other things. Students can also use it as a springboard to move on to the four-year BT degree. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Associate degree | Andrews University | AGRI 118 - Soil Science, AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, HORT 105 - Plant Science, HORT 135 - Landscape Drafting and Design, HORT 226 - Woody Plant Identification, HORT 228 - Herbaceous Plant Identification, HORT 350 - History of Landscape Design, CHEM 110 - Introduction to Inorganic and Organic ChemistryReligion - 6 Credits, Language / Communication - 6 Credits, Arts / Humanities / Social Sciences - 3 Credits, Natural Physical Sciences / Math - 0-3 Credits, Computer Tools - 0 or 3 Credits, PE / Wellness - 2 Credits, Service - 0 Credits. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | A degree in landscape design from Andrews University will not only prepare student to be competitive player in the job market, but will also teach student to balance design with good stewardship. The landscape design program at Andrews University is committed to protecting the earth's natural resources and believes that quality education is achieved when classroom experience is integrated with practical, hands-on experience. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Associate of Technology in Horticulture - Landscape Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management | This program gets student started in the area of horticulture student would like to work in. Student can go straight into the work force as a greenhouse technician, nursery foreman, plant propagator or into grounds maintenance, among other things. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | AGRI 118 - Soil Science, AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, HORT 105 - Plant Science, HORT 208 - Propagation of Horticultural Plants, HORT 211 - Landscape Equipment, HORT 217 - Turf grass Management, HORT 226 - Woody Plant Identification, HORT 228 - Herbaceous Plant Identification, HORT 346 - Landscape Administration and Maintenance, 8-11 Major Elective Credits. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | In the U.S., the dairy business is huge - literally. Modern dairy operations manage herds of 15,000 cattle, and thanks to gains in technology and research, milk production per cow is rising exponentially. Given the scope and complexity of dairy operations, it's easy to understand why there is such a demand for college-educated, dairy herd specialists. In fact, in 2004, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projected over 48,000 annual job openings reserved for people with college degrees in agricultural fields. And not only are dairy specialists in high demand, but the dairy industry is one of the most lucrative areas of agriculture. According to the USDA, dairy products top the commodities list in terms of farm value of production, and large Michigan dairies offer salaries of over $60,000 / year. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | B.S. Completion Program for Registered Nurses | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nursing | This program is already holding an Associate's degree. The B.S. completion student is expected to identify health needs, assess health status, plan and implement suitable nursing interventions, utilize previously mastered concepts and skills to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions, and readjust plans as needed. | Students should have RN license in the United States (No exceptions are granted to this policy), Minimum GPA of 2.50, Minimum combined GPA for cognates of 2.50. A grade of C- is unacceptable for any cognate course, Physical examination report that must include: Tuberculin skin test (chest X-ray if positive) and yearly thereafter, Proof of immunization or serum immunity for measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, and hepatitis B, Proof of either having had chickenpox (dates of disease or tested for varicella-zoster antibodies) or the immunization, Current CPR certification. For those applicants whose native language is not English, the following may be substituted for the Nelson Denny test: MELAB-score of 80, TOEFL-score of 550 (paper based) or score of 213 (computer based). | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nursing, Marsh Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3311 | The Department of Nursing prepares nurses at the baccalaureate and masters degree levels. This preparation is for life-long Christian work in nursing service, technology, practice, education, leadership and research to the local, national, and international communities. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | B.S. in Dietetics | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness | This program includes two academic components: pre-Dietetics and Dietetics. The first component (Pre-Dietetics) consists of two years of study in which the student completes 35 credits of prerequisite and general education courses. The second component (Dietetics) consists of a two-year period in which 38 credits in professional and cognate courses are completed. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Anatomy and Physiology I, English Comp I, Nutrition, Civilizations and Ideas I, God and Human Life, Computer Tools, Professional Dietetics, Fit for Life, Anatomy and Physiology II, Civilizations and Ideas II, Communication Skills, Food Science, Intro to Inorg. and Org. Chem., General Microbiology, Contemporary Social Issues or Culture, Place and Interdependence, Philosophy of Service, Intro to Biological Chemistry, Jesus in His Time and Ours, English Comp II, Intro to Psychology, Language of Arts, Nutrition in Life Cycle, Food Service Management I, Management and Organization, Personal Spirituality and Faith, Fundamentals of Accounting, Food Service Management II, Nutrition and Metabolism, Human Resources Mgt, Reasoning with Functions, Enjoyment of Music, Medical Nutrition Therapy I, Nutrition and Wellness, Research Methods, Religion and Ethics in Mod, Society, Community Nutrition I. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness, Marsh Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3370 | Department of Nutrition of Andrews University's mission is to prepare dietetic and nutrition professionals for service in their church, society, and the world and to influence the community at large to affirm the Adventist lifestyle, including the vegetarian diet. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | B.S. in Health | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness | This program that emphasizes health promotion. The 67-credit program includes courses in biology, chemistry, marketing, psychology, and sociology. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness, Marsh Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3370 | Department of Nutrition of Andrews University's mission is to prepare dietetic and nutrition professionals for service in their church, society, and the world and to influence the community at large to affirm the Adventist lifestyle, including the vegetarian diet. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | B.S. in Nutrition Science | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness | The Nutrition Science program is specially designed to meet the needs of pre-Medicine, pre-Dentistry, and pre-Physician's Assistant students. With a current emphasis on disease prevention and preventative health, many physicians and dentists are specializing in health promotion. The 62-credit program includes courses in biology, chemistry, zoology, nutrition and physics. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | CHEM 131 General Chemistry I, ENGL 115 English Composition I, RELT 100 God and Human Life, BIOL 165 Found. Of Biology, CHEM 231 Organic Chemistry I, CHEM 241 Org. Chemistry I Lab, RELB 210 Jesus in His Times/Ours, ENGL 215 English Composition II, HIST 117 Civilization and Ideas I, FDNT 124 Food Science, BCHM 421 Biochemistry, FDNT 310 Nutrition and Life Cycle, PHYS 141 General Physics, RELT 250 Personal Spirituality and Faith, BHSC 100 Philosophy of Service, FDNT 448 Nutrition and Wellness, RELT 340 Religion and Ethics in Modern Society, MUHL 214 Enjoyment of Music. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness, Marsh Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3370 | Department of Nutrition of Andrews University's mission is to prepare dietetic and nutrition professionals for service in their church, society, and the world and to influence the community at large to affirm the Adventist lifestyle, including the vegetarian diet. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA Economics - Pre-Law | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | The degree is designed for individuals who seek to become professional economists or to pursue graduate or professional school. This major is frequently selected by those planning a degree in law or medicine. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | HIST117 Civilizations and Ideas I, RELT100 God and Human Life, INFS110 Introductory Computer Tools, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, HLED120 Fit for Life COMM104 Communication Skills, HIST118 Civilizations and Ideas II, ENGL115 English Composition I, ECON226 Principles of Microeconomics, MATH141 Calculus 1 BHSC100 Philosophy of Service, STAT285 Elementary Statistics, ENGL215 English Composition II, ECON334 Intermediate Microeconomics, ECON335 Intermediate Macroeconomics. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Communication - Communication Management | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | In this program, students will learn communication skills and theory with special reference to improving human interaction. It includes all of the core communication courses, and others such as persuasion, effective presentation, intercultural communication, interpersonal communication, group dynamics, and leadership. If managing and being responsible for development and progress interests student, a combination of communication, business, and management will further their goals. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Communication - International Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This program includes all core communication courses, as well as courses in anthropology and political science, and other multidisciplinary courses that are chosen in consultation with an advisor. In this program, students will learn communication skills and theory with special reference to improving human interaction. It includes all of the core communication courses, and others such as persuasion, effective presentation, intercultural communication, interpersonal communication, group dynamics, and leadership | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | The degree is designed for individuals who seek to become professional economists or to pursue graduate or professional school. This major is frequently selected by those planning a degree in law or medicine. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Civilizations and Ideas I, RELT100 God and Human Life, INFS110 Introductory Computer Tools, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, HLED120 Fit for Life, COMM104 Communication Skills, HIST118 Civilizations and Ideas II, ENGL115 English Composition I, ECON226 Principles of Microeconomics, MATH141 Calculus, BHSC100 Philosophy of Service, STAT285 Elementary Statistics, ENGL215 English Composition II, ECON334 Intermediate Microeconomics, ECON335 Intermediate Macroeconomics, RELT340 or Rel. and Ethics in Mod. Society or RELT390 Christian Business Ethics. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Economics - Pre-Dentistry | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | The degree is designed for individuals who seek to become professional economists or to pursue graduate or professional school. This major is frequently selected by those planning a degree in law or medicine. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | BIOL165 Foundations of Biology, RELT100 God and Human Life, INFS110 Introductory Computer Tools, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, COMM104 Communication Skills, BIOL166 Foundations of Biology, HIST118 Civilizations and Ideas II, ENGL115 English Composition I, MATH141 Calculus I, PHYS141 General Physics, HIST117 Civilizations and Ideas I, CHEM131 General Chemistry I, ECON226 Principles of Microeconomics, CHEM132 General Chemistry II, ENGL215 English Composition II, STAT285 Elementary Statistics, CHEM231 Organic Chemistry I, CHEM232 Organic Chemistry II, ECON335 Intermediate Macroeconomics. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Economics – Pre-Med | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | The degree is designed for individuals who seek to become professional economists or to pursue graduate or professional school. This major is frequently selected by those planning a degree in law or medicine. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | BIOL165 Foundations of Biology, RELT100 God and Human Life, INFS110 Introductory Computer Tools, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, COMM104 Communication Skills, BIOL166 Foundations of Biology, HIST118 Civilizations and Ideas II, ENGL115 English Composition I, MATH141 Calculus I, PHYS141 General Physics, HIST117 Civilizations and Ideas I, CHEM131 General Chemistry I, ECON226 Principles of Microeconomics, CHEM132 General Chemistry II, ENGL215 English Composition II, STAT285 Elementary Statistics, CHEM231 Organic Chemistry I, CHEM232 Organic Chemistry II, ECON335 Intermediate Macroeconomics. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Elementary Education, Second Major in English | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ENGL185: Much Ado About English (3 credits), ENGL250: Writing Instruction K-8 (3 credits), ENGL267: Approaches to Literature (3 credits), ENGL270: American Literature to 1900 (3 credits), ENGL300: Modern English Grammar (3-4 credits), ENGL345: Introduction to Rhetoric (3 credits), ENGL378: Modern Literature in English (4 credits), ENGL407: Literature for Children (2-3 credits), ENGL460: Linguistics (3 credits), One of: ENGL375: English Literature I (to 1660)(3 credits), ENGL376: English Literature II (1660-1900) (3 credits). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Nethery Hall 106, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3298 | The English Department, within a framework of Christian faith and purpose, develops graduates who are competent, creative and critical readers, writers, and thinkers, capable of a variety of careers. Andrews University's MA program in English facilitates, within a Christian context, the development of scholarly and teaching abilities that complement students' career choice and prepare them for further graduate study. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in English with Literature Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program introduces students to the range of human experience across genders, cultures, geographies, times, and nations. Students are introduced to critical literary theory and learn to apply their knowledge to the reading and analysis of literary texts. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ENGL 185: Much Ado About English (3 credits), ENGL 267: Approaches to Literature (3 credits), ENGL 345: Introduction to Rhetoric (3 credits), ENGL 460: Linguistics (3 credits) ENGL 450: Literary Criticism (3 credits), One of ENGL 255: Studies in Literature (Biblical, World, or Women's) (3 credits), ENGL 425: Literary Topics (with a cultural literature topic) (3 credits), or ENGL 445: Cultural Literature (3 credits), Three of ENGL 270: American Literature to 1900 (3 credits), ENGL 375: English Literature I (to 1660, 3 credits), ENGL 376: English Literature II (1660-1900, 3 credits), ENGL 378: Modern Literature in English (4 credits). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Nethery Hall 106, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3298 | The English Department, within a framework of Christian faith and purpose, develops graduates who are competent, creative and critical readers, writers, and thinkers, capable of a variety of careers. Andrews University's MA program in English facilitates, within a Christian context, the development of scholarly and teaching abilities that complement students' career choice and prepare them for further graduate study. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in English with Writing Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program prepares students for professional careers as writers or teachers of writing. Students develop writing skills in creative, expository, academic, and professional genres and learn to adapt their writing for a variety of audiences and rhetorical contexts. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ENGL 185: Much Ado About English (3 credits), ENGL 267: Approaches to Literature (3 credits), ENGL 345: Introduction to Rhetoric (3 credits), ENGL 460: Linguistics (3 credits), ENGL 315: Professional Writing (3 credits), ENGL 438: Advanced Composition (3 credits), ENGL 454: Approaches to Writing (3 credits), ENGL 467: Creative Writing (3 credits), Two of: ENGL 270: American Literature to 1900 (3 credits), ENGL 375: English Literature I (to 1660, 3 credits), ENGL 376: English Literature II (1660-1900, 3 credits), ENGL 378: Modern Literature in English (4 credits). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Nethery Hall 106, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3298 | The English Department, within a framework of Christian faith and purpose, develops graduates who are competent, creative and critical readers, writers, and thinkers, capable of a variety of careers. Andrews University's MA program in English facilitates, within a Christian context, the development of scholarly and teaching abilities that complement students' career choice and prepare them for further graduate study. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in French Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies | This program is designed for students who want to know more about French civilization and who are interested in professions such as medicine, law, teaching, and journalism, as well as those wishing to pursue graduate studies in French. The program also complements such majors as Communications, English, French, History, Music, Nursing, and Social Work. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | FREN171 Elementary French I (with lab), FREN172 Elementary French II (with lab), FREN275 Intermediate French (with lab), FREN360 Advanced Practice in French, FREN401 Fundamentals of Translation, FREN402 French for Interpreters, FREN415 Advanced French Communication, FREN420 Francophone Cultures: The New World and 3rd World, FREN430 Contemporary French Culture and Society, FREN445 French Literature and Film, FREN460 French for International Trade, INLS400 Topics in, INLS458 Methods of Foreign Language Instruction: K-12, INLS495 Directed Study (optional study tour). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies, Griggs Hall 109, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3180 | International Language Studies (INLS) provides its students with communicative competence in a second language, promotes a greater understanding of and appreciation for the significance of language in human interaction, fosters interest in other cultures, and encourages intellectual development through enhanced cognitive and analytical skills. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in History | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program enables students to understand the past and its relationship to the present through a variety of American, European and non-western history courses, training in a foreign language, hands-on experience in historical research, and an introduction to historical philosophy and theory. The program teaches students to evaluate sources, whether written or oral, trace the workings of cause and effect through time, and synthesize information and present it clearly in written form. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, Nethery Hall 122, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3292 | The History and Political Science Department serves Andrews students in several ways. It provides general educational courses required for all students and offers degree programs for those interested in further study of American and European history, political science, or social studies.Faculty in the department aid students in understanding the relationship of the past and present and demonstrate how local, national, and international political processes affect and respond to events. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Journalism - Media Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This program prepares students for careers as writers and editors for newspapers, magazines and publishing houses, and, when taken with a minor in media studies, opens up a whole variety of exciting media careers. The media studies emphasis includes core communication courses, electives, English, media literacy, introduction to mass communication, photography, and nine additional credits that reflect a balance of art, design, and technical courses. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Language for International Trade | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies | The major consists of study in the following three areas: (1) specialized studies in language, (2) business and economics, and (3) required cognates. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies, Griggs Hall 109, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3180 | International Language Studies (INLS) provides its students with communicative competence in a second language, promotes a greater understanding of and appreciation for the significance of language in human interaction, fosters interest in other cultures, and encourages intellectual development through enhanced cognitive and analytical skills. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Music with Bachelor of Business Administration | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program prepares students for pursuing career options, which combine the skills and creativity of business and the musical arts. Upon completion students receive two separate but integrated degrees: a Bachelor of Business Administration with a major to be chosen in consultation with a Department of Music advisor from among BBA majors listed in the School of Business section of this bulletin, and a Bachelor of Arts: Music. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Music with Minor in one of the following Business Administration, Economics, Management, Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | In this program, students select a minor in one of the following: Business Administration, Economics, Management or Marketing. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program includes government, public policy making, international affairs and comparative politics combined with substantial course work in a second discipline of the student’s choice. A foreign language is required. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, Nethery Hall 122, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3292 | The History and Political Science Department serves Andrews students in several ways. It provides general educational courses required for all students and offers degree programs for those interested in further study of American and European history, political science, or social studies.Faculty in the department aid students in understanding the relationship of the past and present and demonstrate how local, national, and international political processes affect and respond to events. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Family Studies is the study of the family and relationships in both the lifespan and the social context. The family is, indeed, the basic unit of society. It is within the family--however that group is structured--that the majority of social mores and actions are learned. Family Studies as an academic discipline wrestles with contemporary issues affecting families and their stability and strength. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, PSYC220 Human Development – Lifespan (Or other developmental course), PSYC438 Workshop: Midwestern Psychological Convention (or an equivalent professional convention), PSYC432 Research Methods II: Introduction, PSYC433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design - Experimental and Survey, PSYC434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS PSYC364 Learning and Behavior, PSYC449 Psychopharmacology, PSYC465 Physiological Psychology, PSYC471 Behavior Modification, PSYC445 Cognitive Psychology, PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology, PSYC454 Theories of Personality, PSYC460 Psychology of Abnormal Behavior, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, BIOL111, 112 Anatomy and Physiology I and II or BIOL165, 166 Foundation of Biology I and II, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, RELT340 Religion and Ethics in Modern Society, SOCI119 Principles of Sociology or ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC235 Culture, Place and Interdependence, ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, SOCI425 Racial and Ethnic Relations, BHSC440: Topics in Cultural Psychology (an international tour via Andrews, student missionary experience, or attending Adventist Colleges Abroad). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Psychology - Behavioral Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Behavioral Neuroscience is a new interdisciplinary program at AU that is based in Behavioral Science, Biology and Mathematics. Its purpose is to provide new opportunities for undergraduates to prepare for exciting careers in the fascinating, rapidly growing scientific fields which involve the study of the brain and its control of behavior. Students will be involved in hands-on, laboratory experiences, using the latest equipment as well as class work which will emphasize neuronal function, processing by the brain and the latest understanding of topics such as perception, memory, cognition, sensory input, the basis for mental and emotional disorders, drug addiction and other topics. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | PSYC180 Dealing with Your Mind, BIOL165, 166 Foundation of Biology I and II, ZOOL475 Neurobiology, CHEM131,132 General Chemistry I and II, CHEM231,232 Organic Chemistry I and II, CHEM241,242 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I and II or PHYS141,142 General Physics or PHYS241,242 Physics for Scientists and Engineers, PHYS271, 272 Physics for Scientists Laboratory, PSYC364 Learning and Behavior, PSYC445 Cognitive Psychology, PSYC449 Psychopharmacology, BIOL165, 166 Foundation of Biology I and II, ZOOL475 Neurobiology, CHEM131,132 General Chemistry I and II, CHEM231,232 Organic Chemistry I and II, CHEM241,242 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I and II or PHYS141,142 General Physics or PHYS241,242 Physics for Scientists and Engineers, PHYS271, 272 Physics for Scientists Laboratory, PSYC364 Learning and Behavior, PSYC445 Cognitive Psychology, PSYC449 Psychopharmacology. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Psychology - Health Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Health psychologists apply the “whole person” approach to understanding and integrating biological, psychological, and social factors as they impact an individual’s life--throughout the life-span. The possibilities resulting from behavior change underscore health psychologists’ interests in helping people behave in ways that promote wellness, adjust to potential and developing health problems and participate effectively in treatment and rehabilitation programs. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, PSYC220 Human Development–Lifespan (or other developmental course), PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology, PSYC432 Research Methods II: Introduction, PSYC433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design–Experimental and Survey, PSYC434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, PSYC450 Social Psychology, BHSC450 Community Health and Human Disease, PSYC210 Introduction to Health Psychology, PSYC319 Stress Management or PSYC420 Human Sexuality, PSYC460 Psychology of Abnormal Behavior, PSYC465 Psychological Psychology or PSYC454 Theories of Personality, PSYC471 Behavior Modification or PSYC364 Learning and Behavior. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Psychology - Pre-Professional Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, PSYC220 Human Development – Lifespan (Or other developmental course), PSYC438 Workshop: Midwestern Psychological Convention (or an equivalent professional convention), PSYC432 Research Methods II: Introduction, PSYC433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design - Experimental and Survey, PSYC434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, PSYC364 Learning and Behavior, PSYC445 Cognitive Psychology, PSYC449 Psychopharmacology, PSYC465 Physiological Psychology, PSYC471 Behavior Modification, PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology, PSYC454 Theories of Personality, PSYC460 Psychology of Abnormal Behavior, PSYC410 Social Gerontology, PSYC486 Psychological Assessment. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Public Relations - International Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | In this program, student learns to develop awareness of audience and to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences using all types of media. The public relations student takes the communication core, an upper division communication course in persuasion or group dynamics and leadership, media law and ethics, and all courses taught in public relations. Recommended minors include marketing, graphic imaging, behavioral sciences, English, or graphic design. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages | This program is designed specifically for the pre-professional student, Religion majors often take on a second major or minor. Students have often combined their Religion degree with studies in English, Psychology, and Biology, among others. Religion offers Christian perspective and insight in a myriad of differing fields. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages, Griggs Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3177 | The Department seeks to enable students to contribute to the development of family, community, and church through training in both the theoretical knowledge and the practical application of a sound, Bible-based Christianity. The Religion degree provides solid Christian support for pre-professional programs such as medicine, dentistry, law, and many others. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Sociologists are interested in the patterns and processes of human social relations. They focus on what goes on between groups of people (vs. Psychologys interest in what goes on inside peoples heads), types of intangible exchanges (vs. Economists interest in commercial exchanges), and concentrate primarily on modern industrial societies (vs. Anthropologys interest in preliterate human groups). The whole range of human behavior and examination of the various forms of social organizations are open to the sociologist, with equal interest in the past, present, and future versions of those organizations. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design-Experimental and Survey, SOCI434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory SOCI20 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, SOCI315 Criminology Or SOCI345 Juvenile Delinquency, SOCI420 Medical Sociology Or SOCI415 Substance Abuse in American Society, SOCI425 Racial and Ethnic Relations Or SOCI430 Gender Roles in Contemporary Society, SOCI360 Introduction to International Development Or SOCI350 Introduction to Social Policy ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC220 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, RELT340 Religion and Ethics in Modern Society, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, FMST456 Marriage and the Family, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Sociology - Community and International Development | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | PSYC101 Intro to Psychology, RELT100 God and Human Life, ENGL115 Engl. Comp I, HIST117 Civilizations and Ideas I, PHIL224 Intro to Philosophy, INFS100 Computer Tools, MATH145 Reasoning with functions, HIST118 Civilization and Ideas II, HLED120 Fit and Well, COMM104 Communications Skills, Choose one from this list: ANTH124 Intro to Anthropology , ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics, SOCI432 Research Methods II, ENGL215 English Comp. II, Life Science: BIOL208 Prin. Environmental Sciences, Choose one from this list: RELB210 Jesus in His Time and Ours, RELT250 Personal Spirit. And Faith, RELT225 Doctrine of Adventist FaithIDSC211 Creativity and the Arts Phys. Education, SOCI433 Research Methods III, SOCI434 Research Methods IV, BHSC235 Culture, Place and Interdependence , Choose one from this list: PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC450 Community Health, SOCI360 Intro to Internat. Development, BHSC220 Contemporary Social Issues, Phys. Education, SOCI350 Intro to International Development, RELP325 Prep. For Mission Service, SOCI480 Field experience. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Sociology - Deviant Behavior Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | This program is one of the consequences of modern life has been a dramatic increase in the rate of violence and other criminal behavior in contemporary society. Professionals in this area study theories of juvenile and adult deviant and criminal behavior as well as analyses of historical and contemporary criminal justice systems and procedures. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI345 Juvenile Delinquency, SOCI415 Substance Abuse in American Society or SOCI120 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, SOCI420 Medical Sociology, SOCI425 Racial and Ethnic Relations, SOCI430 Gender Roles in Contemporary Society, SOCI432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design - Experimental and Survey, SOCI434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory, FMST454 Family Violence Across the Lifespan, PSYC458 Advanced Theories of Addiction and Treatment, SOCI315 Criminology, BHSC220 An Interdisciplinary Approach to Contemporary Social Issues, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, RELT340 Religion and Ethics in Modern Society, ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, PSYC450 Social Psychology, PSYC420 Human Sexuality, PSYC460 Psychology of Abnormal Behavior. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Sociology - Emergency Preparedness Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | BHSC/SOWK 408 Introduction to Emergency Preparedness, BHSC/SOWK 425 Emergency Planning, BSAD 426/526 Emergency Management, BHSC/SOWK 449 Disaster Response and Emergency Operations, COMM 435/535 Crisis Communications, BHSC/SOWK 478 Principles and Practice of Hazards Mitigation, SOCI/SOWK 477 Community Assessment and Capacity Mapping, BHSC 490 Capstone in Emergency Preparedness (Practicum). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Sociology - Sociology of the Family Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Traditionally, the family has been a foundation of society. Today the family is rapidly changing in structure and function. Professionals in this area study the changing family. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI345 Juvenile Delinquency or SOCI315 Organization and Work, SOCI420 Medical Sociology, SOCI425 Racial and Ethnic Relations, SOCI432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design - Experimental and Survey, SOCI434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory, FMST350 Family Cultural Perspectives, FMST456 Marriage and the Family, SOCI120 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, SOCI430 Gender Roles in Contemporary Society, BHSC220 An Interdisciplinary Approach to Contemporary Social Issues, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, RELT340 Religion and Ethics in Modern Society, ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, FMST310 Parent-Child Relationships, FMST454 Marriage and the Family, FMST460 Management and Decision Making in the Family, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, PSYC420 Human Sexuality, PSYC450 Social Psychology. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Spanish Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies | This program is designed for students who want to know more about Hispanic civilization and who are interested in professions such as medicine, law, teaching and journalism, as well as those wishing to pursue graduate studies in Spanish. The program also complements such majors as Communications, English, French, History, Music, Nursing, and Social Work. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | SPAN171 Elementary Spanish I (with lab), SPAN172 Elementary Spanish II (with lab), SPAN275 Intermediate Spanish (with lab), SPAN315 Spanish Conversation and Composition (with lab), SPAN325 Spanish for Medical Professions, SPAN416 Spanish for Native Speakers, SPAN420 Advanced Spanish Written and Oral Communication, SPAN426 Contemporary Spain (Study Tour), SPAN436 Spanish-American Culture (Study Tour), SPAN446 Spanish and Latin American Drama, SPAN447 Spanish for Translation, SPAN448 Spanish and Latin American Literature and Film, SPAN449 Spanish for Interpreters, SPAN460 Spanish for International Trade, INLS400 Topics in (Study Tour), INLS458 Method of Foreign Language Instruction: K-12, INLS495 Directed Study (optional study tour). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies, Griggs Hall 109, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3180 | International Language Studies (INLS) provides its students with communicative competence in a second language, promotes a greater understanding of and appreciation for the significance of language in human interaction, fosters interest in other cultures, and encourages intellectual development through enhanced cognitive and analytical skills. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA in Theology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages | This program meets the requirements for entrance into the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary. Student can specialize their study with an emphasis in either Personal Ministry or Youth Ministry, depending on their long term goals. If students are planning on a career in education, students can add a second emphasis in Secondary Education. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion and Biblical Languages, Griggs Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3177 | The Department seeks to enable students to contribute to the development of family, community, and church through training in both the theoretical knowledge and the practical application of a sound, Bible-based Christianity. The Religion degree provides solid Christian support for pre-professional programs such as medicine, dentistry, law, and many others. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA with Secondary Certification | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Communication Arts, English, French (K-12 Major), History, Music Education (K-12), Religion (SDA cert. only), Spanish (K-12 major). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BA/BBA in Language and International Business | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies | This program is a double degree for undergraduates planning to enter a career in international business. The LIB-joint degree provides students with both practical, on-site work experience and a thorough academic background in international affairs. The Language for International Trade major trains students in French or Spanish language and culture for business and professional positions. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Language Studies, Griggs Hall 109, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3180 | International Language Studies (INLS) provides its students with communicative competence in a second language, promotes a greater understanding of and appreciation for the significance of language in human interaction, fosters interest in other cultures, and encourages intellectual development through enhanced cognitive and analytical skills. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BBA in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | This program is concerned primarily with (1) measuring income, expenditures, and wealth generated by a business enterprise, and (2) communicating information about the financial condition of economic organizations and the results of their financial activities. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Fundamentals of Accounting, Fundamentals of Accounting, Communication Skills, Philosophy of Service, Introductory Computer Tools, English Composition, God and Human Life, Fit for Life, Principles of Sociology, Precalculus Algebra, Introduction to Psychology, Principles of Macroeconomics, Principles of Microeconomics, English Composition II, Inf. Systems Theory and Appl, Civilization and Ideas II, Intermediate Accounting, Business Communications (A), Business Law, Intermediate Accounting, Management and Organization, International Env. Of Business, Business Finance. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BBA in Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | The finance major is designed to prepare students for careers in financial management. Through a carefully coordinated sequence of courses, the program covers many of the factors that influence financial decision making and provides specific tools for analyzing and interpreting financial data. Students will acquire skills that will help them launch a career in the areas of corporate finance, investments, banking, and financial planning. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ACCT121 Fundamentals of Accounting, COMM104 Communication Skills, INFS110 Introductory Computer Tools, RELT100 God and Human Life, SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, ACCT122 Fundamentals of Accounting, BHSC100 Philosophy of Service, ENGL115 English Composition I, HLED120 Fit for Life, MATH166 Precalculus Algebra, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, ENGL215 English Composition II, Rel. Elective (See below), INFS215 Inf. Systems Theory and Appl., ECON226 Principles of Microeconomics, STAT285 Elementary Statistics, HIST118 Civilizations and Ideas II, ACCT321 Intermediate Accounting, MKTG310 Principles of Marketing, BSAD355 Management and Organization, Gen. Elective, FNCE317 Business Finance BSAD365 International Env. of Business, FNCE410 Intermediate Business Finance. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Art Direction/Advertising Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Freshman Year: Introduction to Photography, Introduction to Drawing, Introduction to Digital Media, Civilization and Ideas I, Fit and Well, Reasoning with Functions, Basic Design, Introduction to Mass Communication, God and Human Life, Communication Skills, English Composition I, Sophomore Year: Prehistoric to Medieval Art, Digital Imaging, Creativity and the Arts, Computer Tools, Beginning Media Writing, Introduction to Graphic Design, History of Photography, Introduction to Video, Civilization and Ideas II, Personal Spirituality and Faith, Activity Course, Junior Year: Renaissance to Modern Art, Principles of Marketing, Design for Visual Communication, Introduction to Psychology, Astronomy, Activity Course, Advertising and Promotion, Design for Visual Communication, Persuasion, Philosophy of Service, Scientific Inquiry II, Senior Year: Group Dynamics and Leadership, Media Law and Ethics, Religion and Ethics in Modern Society, English Composition II. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Graphic Design | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | Employing sophisticated technology along with traditional techniques, graphic designers shape this visual environment, combining words and images into messages that inform, persuade, or call to action both individuals and larger audiences. It is a field that combines art and technology with business and culture. Designers create work that is useful and responds directly to the needs of others. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Freshman Year: English Composition I, History I, Philosophy of Service, Wellness, Drawing, Basic Design, Social Science, History II, Religion, Painting and Color, Digital Graphics, Sophomore Year: Creativity in the Arts, Printmaking, Art History, Intro to Graphic design, Digital Imaging, Communication, Religion, 3-D and Sculpture, Art History, Typography, Junior Year: Natural Science, PE, Intro to Photography, Advanced Digital Imaging, Graphic Design Emphasis, English Composition II, Math, Religion, Core Elective, Graphic Design Emphasis, Senior Year: Religion, Art History, Core Elective, Graphic Design Emphasis, Computer Tools, Graphic Design Emphasis, Portfolio/Senior Show. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Multimedia Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia, Harrigan Hall 229, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3450 | Andrews University is proud of its long history of excellence, a tradition carried on in this Digital Multimedia and Photography program. It is the goal of the College of Technology to fuel creativity with current technology creating marketable and competitive individuals. Andrews is a community as well as a university with students interacting with faculty and staff spiritually and socially as well as in the classroom. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | The program is oriented towards defining photography as a fine arts medium and offers a thorough background in the aesthetic applications and technical aspects of photography. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Video Production | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia, Harrigan Hall 229, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3450 | Andrews University is proud of its long history of excellence, a tradition carried on in this Digital Multimedia and Photography program. It is the goal of the College of Technology to fuel creativity with current technology creating marketable and competitive individuals. Andrews is a community as well as a university with students interacting with faculty and staff spiritually and socially as well as in the classroom. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Visual Art - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | This program with an emphasis in: Ceramics, Painting, hotography, Pre-Art Therapy, Printmaking. |
Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Visual Art - Painting | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | This painting students are encouraged to work creatively and to find a personal style. It offers instruction and learning experiences for all types of painting from social realism to post-modernism. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Visual Art - Pre-Art Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | This program is recommended for those planning to do graduate work in art therapy and enter that profession. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Visual Art - Printmaking | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | Visual Art majors at Andrews learn how to translate their inner feelings, intuition, curiosity, and keen sense of observation to their art. Through the creative process of painting, students learn about themselves and the world in which they live. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BFA in Web Design | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia, Harrigan Hall 229, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3450 | Andrews University is proud of its long history of excellence, a tradition carried on in this Digital Multimedia and Photography program. It is the goal of the College of Technology to fuel creativity with current technology creating marketable and competitive individuals. Andrews is a community as well as a university with students interacting with faculty and staff spiritually and socially as well as in the classroom. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | The Behavioral Sciences (sometimes known as the social sciences) all share an interest in the same subject matter: human behavior. Behavioral scientists seek a holistic understanding of human behavior including needs, purposes, and commitments. They attempt to combine or integrate the perspectives coming from many disciplines, especially emphasizing anthropological, psychological, and sociological contributions. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ANTH124 Introduction to Anthropology or ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology or SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology or SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory, PSYC/SOCI432 Research Methods II: Introduction, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology BHSC220 Contemporary Social Issues or BHSC235 Culture, Place and Interdependence, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Behavioral Sciences - Anthropological Archaeology Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ANTH124 Introduction to Anthropology or ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology or SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI/PSYC432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory or PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology, PSYC101 Intro to Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology ANTH124 Introduction to Anthropology or ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, ANTH205 Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH435 Museum and Lab Methods, ANTH478 Arch and Ethnographic Perspectives on the Middle East, ANTH496 Supervised Fieldwork in Anthropological Archaeology, ANTH440 Topics: Archaeology and the Bible (OTST510), ANTH440 Topics: Bible Lands Explorations (OTST514), ANTH440 Topics: Archaeology of Palestine (OTST614), BIOL330 History of Earth and Life, RELB110 Biblical Backgrounds. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Behavioral Sciences - Anthropology Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Anthropologists study humankind in all its aspects: archaeological, biological, ethnological and linguistic. They seek to learn of human development, culture, and interaction in social groups. Usually anthropologists concentrate in one of four subfields: cultural anthropology, archaeology, linguistics, or physical anthropology, but there are also sub-fields in applied anthropology, applied archaeology, sociocultural anthropology, biological and medical anthropology, and many other areas. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ANTH124 Introduction to Anthropology or ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology or SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI/PSYC432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory or PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology, PSYC101 Intro to Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for Behavioral Sciences, ANTH124 Introduction to Anthropology or ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, ANTH205 Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH455 Ethnography, ENGL440 Language and Culture or COMM436 Intercultural Communication, ANTH415 Urban Anthropology, ANTH417 Applied/Development Anthropology, ANTH478 Archaeological an Ethnographical Perspectives on the Middle East, ANTH496 Supervised Fieldwork in Anthropology or Archaeology, BIOL330 History of Earth and Life, COMM436 Intercultural Communication, HIST468 FMST350 Family Cultural Perspectives, MUHL458 American and World Music, RELG360 Topics in Religion: World Religions or SOCI360 Introduction to International Development, SOCI425 Racial and Ethnic Relations. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Behavioral Sciences - International Community Development Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ANTH124 Introduction to Anthropology or ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology or SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory or PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology, PSYC101 Intro to Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology, SOCI350 Introduction to Social Policy, SOCI360 Introduction to International Development, SOCI470 Demography, SOCI480 Field Experience, ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC450 Community Health and Human Disease, BSAD355 Management and Organization, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, SOCI415 Substance Abuse in American Society, SOCI433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design - Experimental and Survey, SOCI434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and PSS ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC220 Contemporary Social Issues, BHSC235 Culture, Place and Interdependence, BIOL208 Principles of Environmental Science, FDNT230 Nutrition, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, RELT348 Christians Business Ethics, RELP325 Preparation for Mission Service. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Behavioral Sciences - Public Health Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Public health professionals utilize a broad educational background in their work. The interdisciplinary nature of the public health profession fits naturally into the Department of Behavioral Sciences: psychology, wellness, health, sociology, and community development are all components of the public health professional’s skills. Majors can look forward to strong job prospects upon completion of either undergraduate or graduate programs. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ANTH124 Introduction to Anthropology or ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology or SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, PSYC101 Intro to Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology, PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology or SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory, SOCI/PSYC432 Research Methods II: Introduction, BHSC450 Community Health and Human Disease, PSYC319 Stress Management or PSYC471 Behavior Modification, SOCI415 Substance Abuse, SOCI420 Medical Sociology, ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, ECON225 Macroeconomics, SOCI120 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, SOCI350 Introduction to Social Policy, SOCI360 Introduction to International Development, SOCI433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design-Experimental and Survey, SOCI434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, SOCI470 Demography, SOCI480 Field Experience, BIOL111, 112 Anatomy and Physiology or BIOL165 Foundations of Biology, BIOL208 Principles of Environmental Science, CHEM110 Introduction to Inorganic and Organic Chemistry or CHEM131,132 General Chemistry I and II, FDNT230 Nutrition, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, RELT348 Christians and the Environment. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Behavioral Sciences - Student Development Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Student Development specialists work in 2-year community or junior colleges and 4-year colleges and universities roviding a broad range of counseling services. |
Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology or SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, PSYC210 Introduction to Health Psychology, SOCI/PSYC432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI/PSYC433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Des-Exp and Survey, PSYC450 Social Psychology, PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology or SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory, PSYC204 Dynamics of Personal and Social Adjustment, PSYC252 The Psychology of Adolescence, Youth, and Aging, PSYC420 Human Sexuality, PSYC466 Psychology of the Exceptional Child, SOCI120 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, SOCI345 Juvenile Delinquency, SOCI480 Field Experience, EDPC430 Introduction to Residence Hall Administration, EDTE389 Work Conference: Topic, EDPC302 Educational Psychology, EDTE165 Philosophical and Social Foundations of Education, EDTE228 Strategies for Educating Exceptional and Diverse Learners, EDTE408 Principles of Teaching and Learning, EDTE417 Teaching Reading in the Secondary Content Areas, EDTE424 Classroom Testing and Evaluation, EDTE459 Methods for Teaching Secondary School: Area, EDTE476 Methods for Integrating Instructional Technology: Topic, EDTE480 First Days of School Experience, EDTE487 Student Teaching Seminar, EDTE488 Student Teaching (Level). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Biophysics | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Haughey Hall 211, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3430 | Department of Physics strives to integrate physical reality, mathematical representations, Seventh-day Adventist faith, and personal spirituality. Physics faculty and students work together to increase physical awareness, creativity, and analytical skill in order to honor their Creator, build communal responsibility and understanding, and prepare to serve in the professions, scientific research and development, education, and government. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Communication Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This program is designed for teacher certification to meet the requirements of the state of Michigan for teaching Communication Arts on the secondary level. Students will receive training on how to effectively teach speech, media literacy, listening, writing, graphic design, drama and photography within a communication arts context. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Elementary Education, Major in Language Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | COMM280: Voice and Diction (3 credits), COMM450: Communication in the Classroom (3 credits), EDTE418: Methods for Teaching Beginning REading (3 credits), ENGL250: Writing Instruction K-8 (3 credits), ENGL267: Approaches to Literature (3 credits), ENGL300: Modern English Grammar (3-4 credits), ENGL407: Literature for Children (2-3 credits), SPPA435: Communication Development and Disorders for Classroom Teachers (3 credits), Two courses from: ENGL270: American Literature to 1900 (3 credits), ENGL375: English Literature I (to 1660) (3 credits), ENGL376: English Literature II (1660-1900) (3 credits), ENGL378: Modern Literature in English (4 credits), One from: ENGL438: Advanced Composition (3 credits), ENGL454: Approached to Writing (3 credits), ENGL467: Creative Writing (3 credits) (repeatable with different content). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Nethery Hall 106, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3298 | The English Department, within a framework of Christian faith and purpose, develops graduates who are competent, creative and critical readers, writers, and thinkers, capable of a variety of careers. Andrews University's MA program in English facilitates, within a Christian context, the development of scholarly and teaching abilities that complement students' career choice and prepare them for further graduate study. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Elementary Education, Major in Language Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | COMM280: Voice and Diction (3 credits), COMM450: Communication in the Classroom (3 credits), EDTE418: Methods for Teaching Beginning REading (3 credits), ENGL250: Writing Instruction K-8 (3 credits), ENGL267: Approaches to Literature (3 credits), ENGL300: Modern English Grammar (3-4 credits), ENGL407: Literature for Children (2-3 credits), SPPA435: Communication Development and Disorders for Classroom Teachers (3 credits), Two courses from: ENGL270: American Literature to 1900 (3 credits), ENGL375: English Literature I (to 1660) (3 credits), ENGL376: English Literature II (1660-1900) (3 credits), ENGL378: Modern Literature in English (4 credits), One from: ENGL438: Advanced Composition (3 credits), ENGL454: Approached to Writing (3 credits), ENGL467: Creative Writing (3 credits) (repeatable with different content). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Nethery Hall 106, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3298 | The English Department, within a framework of Christian faith and purpose, develops graduates who are competent, creative and critical readers, writers, and thinkers, capable of a variety of careers. Andrews University's MA program in English facilitates, within a Christian context, the development of scholarly and teaching abilities that complement students' career choice and prepare them for further graduate study. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Elementary Education, Major in Social Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This degree is only open to students taking Elementary Education Certification. The Elementary Education Major is open only to students working for elementary education certification. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, Nethery Hall 122, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3292 | The History and Political Science Department serves Andrews students in several ways. It provides general educational courses required for all students and offers degree programs for those interested in further study of American and European history, political science, or social studies.Faculty in the department aid students in understanding the relationship of the past and present and demonstrate how local, national, and international political processes affect and respond to events. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Family Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Family Studies is the study of the family and relationships in both the lifespan and the social context. The family is, indeed, the basic unit of society. It is within the family--however that group is structured--that the majority of social mores and actions are learned. Family Studies as an academic discipline wrestles with contemporary issues affecting families and their stability and strength. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | FMST115 Introduction to Family Studies, FMST310 Parent-Child Relationships, FMST350 Family Cultural Perspectives, FMST454 Family Violence Across the Lifespan, FMST456 Marriage and the Family, FMST460 Management. and Decision Making in the Family, FMST470 Field Experience, PSYC220 Human Development – Lifespan, PSYC252 Psychology of Adolescence, Youth and Aging, PSYC420 Human Sexuality, ANTH420 Food and Culture, COMM320 Interpersonal Communication, COMM445 Family Communication, PSYC319 Stress Management, PSYC410 Introduction to Counseling and Psychotherapy, PSYC466 Psychology of the Exceptional Child, SOCI120 Medical Sociology, SOCI345 Juvenile Delinquency, SOCI350 Introduction to Social Policy, SOCI430 Gender Roles in Contemporary Society, SOCI460 Death and Grief in Contemporary Society, SOWK315 Christian Perspectives on Ethics and Diversity. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Family Studies - Family and Consumer Sciences Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Family Studies is the study of the family and relationships in both the lifespan and the social context. The family is, indeed, the basic unit of society. It is within the family--however that group is structured--that the majority of social mores and actions are learned. Family Studies as an academic discipline wrestles with contemporary issues affecting families and their stability and strength. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | BHSC450 Community Health and Human Disease, FMST310 Parent-Child Relationships, FMST350 Family Cultural Perspective, FMST454 Family Violence Across the Lifespan, FMST456 Marriage and the Family, FMST460 Management and Decision Making in the Family, PSYC220 Human Development – Lifespan, PSYC252 The Psychology of Adolescence, Youth, and Aging, PSYC420 Human Sexuality, SOCI120 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, HLED120 Fit and Well, FDNT230 Nutrition, BSAD104 Introduction to Business, BSAD210 Small Business Management, FNCE206 Personal Finance. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | This program with emphasis in applied mathematics, preparation for secondary school mathematics teaching, or preparation for graduate study in mathematics. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Haughey Hall 121, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3424 | Department of Mathematics seeks to provide leadership in the mathematical sciences by: Preparing students with the mathematical understanding, problem-solving skills, and dispositions that enable them to excel in their chosen careers; Increasing mathematical and scientific knowledge through publication and presentation; Supporting the broader mathematics education community and mentoring others for generous service through a committed Christian life. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | This program for students preparing for secondary school mathematics teaching. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Haughey Hall 121, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3424 | Department of Mathematics seeks to provide leadership in the mathematical sciences by: Preparing students with the mathematical understanding, problem-solving skills, and dispositions that enable them to excel in their chosen careers; Increasing mathematical and scientific knowledge through publication and presentation; Supporting the broader mathematics education community and mentoring others for generous service through a committed Christian life. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Haughey Hall 211, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3430 | Department of Physics strives to integrate physical reality, mathematical representations, Seventh-day Adventist faith, and personal spirituality. Physics faculty and students work together to increase physical awareness, creativity, and analytical skill in order to honor their Creator, build communal responsibility and understanding, and prepare to serve in the professions, scientific research and development, education, and government. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Physics Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Haughey Hall 211, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3430 | Department of Physics strives to integrate physical reality, mathematical representations, Seventh-day Adventist faith, and personal spirituality. Physics faculty and students work together to increase physical awareness, creativity, and analytical skill in order to honor their Creator, build communal responsibility and understanding, and prepare to serve in the professions, scientific research and development, education, and government. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program major equips students with unique knowledge and skills that can lead to success in a wide range of areas. It prepares students for careers in teaching, government and politics, law, and for graduate student in a wide range of professional and academic areas. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, Nethery Hall 122, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3292 | The History and Political Science Department serves Andrews students in several ways. It provides general educational courses required for all students and offers degree programs for those interested in further study of American and European history, political science, or social studies.Faculty in the department aid students in understanding the relationship of the past and present and demonstrate how local, national, and international political processes affect and respond to events. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Social Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program is open to all students and fulfills This requirements for those seeking secondary certification in the field. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, Nethery Hall 122, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3292 | The History and Political Science Department serves Andrews students in several ways. It provides general educational courses required for all students and offers degree programs for those interested in further study of American and European history, political science, or social studies.Faculty in the department aid students in understanding the relationship of the past and present and demonstrate how local, national, and international political processes affect and respond to events. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Sociologists are interested in the patterns and processes of human social relations. They focus on what goes on between groups of people (vs. Psychologys interest in what goes on inside peoples heads), types of intangible exchanges (vs. Economists interest in commercial exchanges), and concentrate primarily on modern industrial societies (vs. Anthropologys interest in preliterate human groups). The whole range of human behavior and examination of the various forms of social organizations are open to the sociologist, with equal interest in the past, present, and future versions of those organizations. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI345 Juvenile Delinquency or SOCI315 Criminology, SOCI415 Substance Abuse in American Society or SOCI120 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, SOCI420 Medical Sociology, SOCI425 Racial and Ethnic Relations, SOCI430 Gender Roles in Contemporary Society, SOCI432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design-Experimental and Survey, SOCI434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory, ELECTIVES–9 (Choose 3 of the following 4 classes): FMST456 Marriage and the Family, SOCI410 Social Gerontology, SOCI460 Death and Grief in Contemporary Society, SOCI470 Demography ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, PSYC450 Social Psychology, RELT340 Religion and Ethics in Modern Society. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Sociology - Community and International Development | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | PSYC101 Intro to Psychology, RELT100 God and Human Life, ENGL115 Engl. Comp I, HIST117 Civilizations and Ideas I, PHIL224 Intro to Philosophy, INFS100 Computer Tools, MATH145 Reasoning with functions, HIST118 Civilization and Ideas II, HLED120 Fit and Well, COMM104 Communications Skills, Choose one from this list: ANTH124 Intro to Anthropology , ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics, SOCI432 Research Methods II, ENGL215 English Comp. II, Life Science: BIOL208 Prin. Environmental Sciences, Choose one from this list: RELB210 Jesus in His Time and Ours, RELT250 Personal Spirit. And Faith, RELT225 Doctrine of Adventist FaithIDSC211 Creativity and the Arts Phys. Education, SOCI433 Research Methods III, SOCI434 Research Methods IV, BHSC235 Culture, Place and Interdependence , Choose one from this list: PSYC269 History and Systems of Psychology, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC450 Community Health, SOCI360 Intro to Internat. Development, BHSC220 Contemporary Social Issues, Phys. Education, SOCI350 Intro to International Development, RELP325 Prep. For Mission Service, SOCI480 Field experience. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Sociology - Deviant Behavior Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | This program is one of the consequences of modern life has been a dramatic increase in the rate of violence and other criminal behavior in contemporary society. Professionals in this area study theories of juvenile and adult deviant and criminal behavior as well as analyses of historical and contemporary criminal justice systems and procedures. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI345 Juvenile Delinquency, SOCI415 Substance Abuse in American Society or SOCI120 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, SOCI420 Medical Sociology, SOCI425 Racial and Ethnic Relations, SOCI430 Gender Roles in Contemporary Society, SOCI432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design - Experimental and Survey, SOCI434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory, FMST454 Family Violence Across the Lifespan, PSYC458 Advanced Theories of Addiction and Treatment, SOCI315 Criminology, BHSC220 An Interdisciplinary Approach to Contemporary Social Issues, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, RELT340 Religion and Ethics in Modern Society, ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, PSYC450 Social Psychology, PSYC420 Human Sexuality, PSYC460 Psychology of Abnormal Behavior. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Sociology - Emergency Preparedness Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | BHSC/SOWK 408 Introduction to Emergency Preparedness, BHSC/SOWK 425 Emergency Planning, BSAD 426/526 Emergency Management, BHSC/SOWK 449 Disaster Response and Emergency Operations, COMM 435/535 Crisis Communications, BHSC/SOWK 478 Principles and Practice of Hazards Mitigation, SOCI/SOWK 477 Community Assessment and Capacity Mapping, BHSC 490 Capstone in Emergency Preparedness (Practicum). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Sociology - Sociology of the Family Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | Traditionally, the family has been a foundation of society. Today the family is rapidly changing in structure and function. Professionals in this area study the changing family. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, SOCI345 Juvenile Delinquency or SOCI315 Organization and Work, SOCI420 Medical Sociology, SOCI425 Racial and Ethnic Relations, SOCI432 Research Methods II: Introduction, SOCI433 Research Methods III: Advanced Research Design - Experimental and Survey, SOCI434 Research Methods IV: Advanced Statistical Analysis and SPSS, SOCI474 Social Thought and Theory, FMST350 Family Cultural Perspectives, FMST456 Marriage and the Family, SOCI120 Marriage Dynamics and Growth, SOCI430 Gender Roles in Contemporary Society, BHSC220 An Interdisciplinary Approach to Contemporary Social Issues, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, RELT340 Religion and Ethics in Modern Society, ANTH200 Cultural Anthropology, BHSC230 Research Methods I: Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences, ECON225 Principles of Macroeconomics, FMST310 Parent-Child Relationships, FMST454 Marriage and the Family, FMST460 Management and Decision Making in the Family, PHIL224 Introduction to Philosophy, PSYC420 Human Sexuality, PSYC450 Social Psychology. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology | The program provides excellent background and preparatory work for entering a graduate program in either speech-language pathology or audiology. Graduates of the program consistently report they were very well prepared for graduate work. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Introduction to Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, Fieldwork, Pre-Clinical Observation, Anatomy and Physiology of Speech and Hearing, Applied Phonetics, Speech Science, Normal Language Development, Child Language Disorders, Basic Audiology, Audiological Procedures, Articulationand Phonology: Development and Disorders, Seminar in Communication Disorders, Clinical Principles and Practices, Communication Development and Disorders for Classroom Teachers, Disorders of Voice and Fluency, Adult Neurogenic Disorders, Aural Rehabilitation, Clinical Practium in Speech-Language Pathology, Clinical Practicum in Audiology. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, 157 Bell Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3468 | The Department of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology at Andrews University provides quality Christian education focusing on the knowledge and practice of speech-language pathology and audiology. Majors are expected to become knowledgeable about a variety of communication disorders, their etiology, and treatment; develop professional oral and written language and demeanor; treat all patients with respect regardless of age, gender, or ethnicity; provide effective clinical services; and successfully prepare for graduate education or for a position in the work force. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS in Visual Arts Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | This has also been the degree choice for several students who loved art, but also wanted to be pre-med. There is enough room in this degree to allow for completion of the pre-med requirements as well as the BS requirements within four years. This degree is taught in collaboration with the School of Education and includes courses in art history, electives in teaching methods and a concentration in advanced studio art. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BS with Secondary Certification | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Behavioral Science (Behavioral Studies), Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Integrated Science, Mathematics, Mathematics Education, Physics, Social Studies, Visual Arts Education (K-12). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BT in Airframe and Powerplant | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance, 3898 Griggs Dr, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3120 | Airframe and Powerplant Maintenance provides a world of opportunities to the individual who enjoys working with aircraft.It is a professional career that involves a scientific knowledge of principles and practice in areas such as metal structures, composites, welding, machining, electrical components and systems, electronics, environmental systems, aircraft instruments, fuel systems, hydraulics and pneumatics, engine overhaul, reciprocating engine systems, propellers, and jet engine systems, and much more. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BT in Airframe and Powerplant / Business | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance, 3898 Griggs Dr, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3120 | Airframe and Powerplant Maintenance provides a world of opportunities to the individual who enjoys working with aircraft.It is a professional career that involves a scientific knowledge of principles and practice in areas such as metal structures, composites, welding, machining, electrical components and systems, electronics, environmental systems, aircraft instruments, fuel systems, hydraulics and pneumatics, engine overhaul, reciprocating engine systems, propellers, and jet engine systems, and much more. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | BT in Airframe and Powerplant / Flight | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of A and P Maintenance, 3898 Griggs Dr, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3120 | Airframe and Powerplant Maintenance provides a world of opportunities to the individual who enjoys working with aircraft.It is a professional career that involves a scientific knowledge of principles and practice in areas such as metal structures, composites, welding, machining, electrical components and systems, electronics, environmental systems, aircraft instruments, fuel systems, hydraulics and pneumatics, engine overhaul, reciprocating engine systems, propellers, and jet engine systems, and much more. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Art in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | This program of study is recommended for those who plan to do graduate work in the humanities or who plan to enter professions that appreciate a broad overview of history and culture. Someone might take Art History as a first degree with an interest in pursuing a graduate degree that would lead to work in museum curatorship, art restoration, gallery directing, writing and editing literary works, or teaching. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Art in Pre-Art Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | Pre-Art Therapy is recommended for those planning to do graduate work in art therapy and enter that profession. A behavioral science minor is required for the BA and a series of selected Behavioral Science courses for the BFA. These classes allow students to begin exploring the relationship between the creative process and the healing process. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Art in Visual Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | Visual Art majors at Andrews learn how to translate their inner feelings, intuition, curiosity, and keen sense of observation to their art. Through the creative process of painting, students learn about themselves and the world in which they live. In this painting program we emphasize perceptions of form and color, a strong sense of 2-D design, and an awareness of the visual world as a subject matter for aesthetic and intellectual response. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or, an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Design, Art and Design Center, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3279 | The department of Art and Design at Andrews University offers a wide range of courses and programs for both general students and art majors that prepare students for many rewarding careers. Students believe that artistic talents are given by God--not simply for amusement or hobby, but for genuine fulfillment. This programs are structured around this philosophy, and student support and encourage this students upon this basis. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Arts in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Arts with Elementary Certification | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | English, History, French (K-12), Spanish (K-12). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Commercial Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia, Harrigan Hall 229, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3450 | Andrews University is proud of its long history of excellence, a tradition carried on in this Digital Multimedia and Photography program. It is the goal of the College of Technology to fuel creativity with current technology creating marketable and competitive individuals. Andrews is a community as well as a university with students interacting with faculty and staff spiritually and socially as well as in the classroom. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Fine Art Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia | College of Technology, Department of Digital Media and Photography, Program of Digital Multimedia, Harrigan Hall 229, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3450 | Andrews University is proud of its long history of excellence, a tradition carried on in this Digital Multimedia and Photography program. It is the goal of the College of Technology to fuel creativity with current technology creating marketable and competitive individuals. Andrews is a community as well as a university with students interacting with faculty and staff spiritually and socially as well as in the classroom. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Instrumental Emphasis, Keyboard Emphasis, Vocal Emphasis, Minor in Music, Minor in Elementary Music Education. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Instrumental Emphasis, Keyboard Emphasis, Vocal Emphasis, Minor in Music, Minor in Elementary Music Education. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Music in Music Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Allied Health Administration | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences | This program is designed for health-care professionals seeking the academic background to prepare them for advancement into management/administrative positions within their own areas of expertise or in healthcare in general. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Transfer credits accepted from AS degree or certificate program, General education (complete Bachelor of Sciences general education requirements), Business/Administration Courses, Practicum Administration. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences, Halenz Hall 326, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3336 | Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences prepares students who are committed to preserving and protecting the dignity of life and death. We promote values and attitudes consistent with the Seventh-day Adventist Christian lifestyle. We strive to instill in students a lifelong personal quest for individual growth and fulfillment and for continual excellence in healthcare practice. Our department offers a four-year Bachelor of Science in Clinical and Laboratory Science (BSCLS), and CLS certificate or categorical certificates in five distinct areas of CLS for degree-holding students. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Animal Science - Management | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Animal Science/Pre-Vet Studies | This program prepares students for animal-related careers in zoos, stables, farms, pet shops and kennels, dude ranches, year-round camps, or research settings. Those planning to move on to Veterinary Medicine need to take the additional chemistry and physics classes that most vet schools require. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | AGRI 270 - Management of Agriculture Enterprises, AGRI 395 - Internship in, AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, ANSI 114 - Introduction to Animal Science, ANSI 305 - Animal Nutrition, ANSI 340 (2 Species) - Production / Management of, ANSI 425 - Issues in Animal Agriculture, Research and Medicine, ACCT 121 - Fundamentals of Accounting, 6 - 10 Major Electives, BIOL 165 - Foundations of Biology, BIOL 166 - Foundations of Biology, CHEM 131 - General Chemistry I, CHEM 132 - General Chemistry II, Religion - 12 Credits, Language / Communication - 9 - 13 Credits, Arts / Humanities - 12 - 13 Credits, Natural / Physical Sciences - 9 - 10 Credits, Mathematics - 2-4 Credits, Computer Tools - 0 or 3 Credits, Social Sciences - 6 Credits, PE / Wellness - 3 Credits. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Animal Science/Pre-Vet Studies | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Animal Science/Pre-Vet Studies, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | A degree in Animal Science from Andrews University prepares student to choose from a wide variety of employment opportunities: Veterinarian, Veterinary Technician, Veterinary Assistant, Dairy Producer, Sheep Rancher/Farmer, Gamer Farm Manager, Professional Horse Trainer, Riding Instructor, Reproduction Specialist, Nutrition Specialist, Equine Dentist, University Professor/Educator, Peace Corp Worker/Food Security, Interpreter at Zoological Parks, Nature Centers, Animal Theme Parks, Animal Scientist. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Animal Science - Pre-Veterinary Medicine | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Animal Science/Pre-Vet Studies | This program prepares students for animal-related careers in zoos, stables, farms, pet shops and kennels, dude ranches, year-round camps, or research settings. Those planning to move on to Veterinary Medicine need to take the additional chemistry and physics classes that most vet schools require. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, ANSI 114 - Introduction to Animal Science, ANSI 305 - Animal Nutrition, ANSI 340 (1 Species) - Production / Management of, ANSI 379 - Small Animal Health and Disease, ANSI 420 - Canine Gross Anatomy, ANSI 425 - Issues in Animal Agriculture, Research and Medicine, ANSI 435 - Animal Genetics, ANSI 440 - Animal Reproduction, ANSI 445 - Physiology of Farm Animals, 6-10 Major Electives, BIOL 165 - Foundations of Biology, BIOL 166 - Foundations of Biology, CHEM 131 - General Chemistry I, CHEM 132 - General Chemistry II . | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Animal Science/Pre-Vet Studies | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Animal Science/Pre-Vet Studies, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | A degree in Animal Science from Andrews University prepares student to choose from a wide variety of employment opportunities: Veterinarian, Veterinary Technician, Veterinary Assistant, Dairy Producer, Sheep Rancher/Farmer, Gamer Farm Manager, Professional Horse Trainer, Riding Instructor, Reproduction Specialist, Nutrition Specialist, Equine Dentist, University Professor/Educator, Peace Corp Worker/Food Security, Interpreter at Zoological Parks, Nature Centers, Animal Theme Parks, Animal Scientist. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Architectural Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Architecture | In this program, Architectural Studies is declared as a major and upon successful completion, receives an undergraduate degree. Students taking the Bachelor of Science degree with a major in architectural studies may seek advanced degrees or employment in the construction industry, the arts, business, or other fields. | Students must meet the minimum GPA requirements to proceed from Pre-Arch Year One to Pre-Arch Year Two. Upon the completion of the pre-architecture years in the School of Architecture students must apply for acceptance into the professional program. A student must have a cumulative GPA of 2.75 to continue into Professional Year Three. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Architecture | School of Architecture, Architecture Building, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6003 | The main building of the School of Architecture was constructed and occupied by the Architecture Department in 1985, and provides accommodations for the majority of its needs. The combined architecture facilities include four studios, two classrooms, the Architecture Resource Center (ARC), a 70-seat lecture hall, a CAD lab, a conference room, administrative offices, nine faculty offices, a model shop, a photo studio, the slide collection, exhibition and jury space. In 1994 the main Architecture building was extensively renovated to enlarge the Architecture Resource Center (library) and the CAD lab. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Architecture | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Architecture | This degree is a prerequisite for the professional 5-1/2 year Master of Architecture degree. Students receive a Bachelor of Science in Architecture after completing program year four. Students who receive this degree may seek advanced degrees or employment in the construction industry, the arts, business, or other fields. | Students must meet the minimum GPA requirements to proceed from Pre-Arch Year One to Pre-Arch Year Two. Upon the completion of the pre-architecture years in the School of Architecture students must apply for acceptance into the professional program. A student must have a cumulative GPA of 2.75 to continue into Professional Year Three. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Architecture | School of Architecture, Architecture Building, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6003 | The main building of the School of Architecture was constructed and occupied by the Architecture Department in 1985, and provides accommodations for the majority of its needs. The combined architecture facilities include four studios, two classrooms, the Architecture Resource Center (ARC), a 70-seat lecture hall, a CAD lab, a conference room, administrative offices, nine faculty offices, a model shop, a photo studio, the slide collection, exhibition and jury space. In 1994 the main Architecture building was extensively renovated to enlarge the Architecture Resource Center (library) and the CAD lab. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Halenz Hall Room 225, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3247 | NMR 60 MHz continuous wave, proton NMR instrument (museum piece) has been maintained by Dr. Dwain Ford and Dr. David Alonso. The manufacturer stopped providing service back in the early 80s. This new JEOL instrument is a multinuclear, 400 MHz FT-NMR. The magnet is actively shielded and is equipped with an 8 place autosampler and autotune unit. The NMR was installed during the 2001 fall semester. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is an academic degree that prepares students for a wide variety of careers. And depending on that career choice, the student should choose from among the eight emphases that it offer to best position themselves for a life of service. The eight emphases are: Behavior/Mathematics - Behavioral neuroscience with a strength in mathematics, Biomedical - Preparation for application to medical school, Botany - Plant systematic, physiology, or pathology, Molecular Biology - Preparation for research and biotechnology, Neurobiology - Preparation for research in neurobiology, Neuroscience - Behavioral neuroscience with a strength in biology, Special - An emphasis tailored to the student's own needs, Zoology - Animal science, basic research. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Foundations of Biology, General Ecology, Genetics, Cellular and Molecular Biology I, Genetics, Cellular and Molecular Biology II, Historical and Philosophical Biology, Questions in Biology: Analysis, Evaluation and Answers, Principles of Environmental Science, Marine Ecology (offered only at Marine Station), Biogeography, Medical Botany, Marine Botany (offered only at Marine Station), Biodiversity of Vascular Plants, Vertebrate Zoology, Marine Invertebrates (offered only at Marine Station), Entomology, Paleobiology, Plant Anatomy, Animal Development, Human Embryology, Histology, Immunology, Immunology Lab, Molecular Genetics, Plant Physiology, Systems Physiology, Animal Behavior. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Price Hall 218, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3243 | Department of Biology is committed to helping students achieve educational, occupational, and personal excellence. The department offers a range of biology emphases at the undergraduate and graduate level, preparing students to succeed in postgraduate and professional programs, industry, or the teaching profession. It emphasize the responsible, environmentally sensitive use of global resources and have made it our mission not only to train scientists, teachers, and health professionals, but also to nurture lasting relationships and instill ethical and moral values in our students. It also believe that academic excellence need not be sacrificed for a Christian education. This is evidenced by the quality of the graduates, who often go on to excel in some of the highest ranked graduate and professional programs in the nation. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Research/Cooperative Experience: An on-campus or off-campus research or cooperative educational experience. The student may satisfy this requirement by matriculating in CHEM495, HONS497, 498, or IDSC380. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Halenz Hall Room 225, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3247 | NMR 60 MHz continuous wave, proton NMR instrument (museum piece) has been maintained by Dr. Dwain Ford and Dr. David Alonso. The manufacturer stopped providing service back in the early 80s. This new JEOL instrument is a multinuclear, 400 MHz FT-NMR. The magnet is actively shielded and is equipped with an 8 place autosampler and autotune unit. The NMR was installed during the 2001 fall semester. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Chemistry (American Chemical Society Approved Program) | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Halenz Hall Room 225, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3247 | NMR 60 MHz continuous wave, proton NMR instrument (museum piece) has been maintained by Dr. Dwain Ford and Dr. David Alonso. The manufacturer stopped providing service back in the early 80s. This new JEOL instrument is a multinuclear, 400 MHz FT-NMR. The magnet is actively shielded and is equipped with an 8 place autosampler and autotune unit. The NMR was installed during the 2001 fall semester. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Clinical Laboratory Science - 1st Degree | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | BIOL165 Foundations of Biology, ENGL115 English Composition I, STAT285 Elementary Statistics, CLSC110 Medical Terminology, CLSC105 Introduction to Clinical Laboratory Science, RELT100 God and Human Life BIOL166 or BIOL112 Foundations of Biology II or Anatomy and Physiology I or COMM104 Communications Skills, PSYC101 Introduction to Psychology, HLED120 Fit for Life, PEAC One activity course, RELT A religion course, CHEM231 General Chemistry I, CLSC250 Fundamentals of Clinical Chemistry, CLSC320 Principles of Immunology, ENGL215 English Composition II, RELT A religion course, CHEM132 General Chemistry II, CLSC230 Fundamentals of Clinical Microbiology, GEN ED Arts and Humanities Course, SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, HEM231 Organic Chemistry I, CHEM241 Organic Chemistry I Lab, RELT A religion course, PHYS141: General Physics if pre-med or pre-den, CHEM232 Organic Chemistry II. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences, Halenz Hall 326, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3336 | Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences prepares students who are committed to preserving and protecting the dignity of life and death. We promote values and attitudes consistent with the Seventh-day Adventist Christian lifestyle. We strive to instill in students a lifelong personal quest for individual growth and fulfillment and for continual excellence in healthcare practice. Our department offers a four-year Bachelor of Science in Clinical and Laboratory Science (BSCLS), and CLS certificate or categorical certificates in five distinct areas of CLS for degree-holding students. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Clinical Laboratory Sciences - 2nd Degree | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences | This program is designed for individuals who already hold a baccalaureate degree. Completion of the Clinical Year Program (3 semesters) plus the pre-clinical summer semester allows post-baccalaureate students to earn a second bachelor’s degree and be eligible to write United States national certification examinations in order to work as a certified Clinical Laboratory Scientist/Medical Technologist. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | CLSC401 Clinical Year Seminar I, CLSC411 Hematology, CLSC421 Clinical Immunology, CLSC431 Clinical Microbiology, CLSC441 Immunohematology, CLSC451 Clinical Chemistry, CLSC400 Specimen Procurement and Processing - Lecture and Lab, CLSC402 Clinical Year Seminar II, CLSC412 Hemostasis, CLSC432 Special Microbiology, CLSC442 Transfusion Medicine, CLSC452 Clinical Chemistry and Body Fluids, CLSC460 Clinical Laboratory Systems, Second Session (Practicum -- Clinical Sites), CLSC400 Specimen Procurement and Processing - Practicum Portion, CLSC433 Clinical Microbiology Practicum, CLSC463 Clinical Microscopy Practicum, CLSC413 Clinical Hematology and Hemostasis Practicum, CLSC423 Clinical Immunology Practicum, CLSC443 Clinical Immunohematology Practicum, CLSC453 Clinical Chemistry Practicum, CLSC495 Practicum Project. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences, Halenz Hall 326, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3336 | Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences prepares students who are committed to preserving and protecting the dignity of life and death. We promote values and attitudes consistent with the Seventh-day Adventist Christian lifestyle. We strive to instill in students a lifelong personal quest for individual growth and fulfillment and for continual excellence in healthcare practice. Our department offers a four-year Bachelor of Science in Clinical and Laboratory Science (BSCLS), and CLS certificate or categorical certificates in five distinct areas of CLS for degree-holding students. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Computing | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Computer Science | This program offers a variety of alternatives for the student, depending on the student's career goals. Two emphases are available in Computing - Computer Science and Software Systems. Computer Science focuses on a study of the computer itself as well as on its role in an application area. Software Systems is an applied study of computing, focusing on the development and maintenance of software in an application area. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Introduction to Computer Programming, Computer Science I, Computer Science II, Data Structures and Algorithms, Directed Computer Language Study, Database Application Programming, Internet Technologies, Programming Languages, Object-Oriented Design and Programming, Numerical Methods and Analysis, Formal Theory of Computation, Operating Systems, Network Computing and Architecture, Secondary Methods: Computer Science, Software Engineering, Computer Architecture, Software Engineering Group Project, Database Concepts and Theory Computer Graphics, Artificial Intelligence, Independent Study, Special Projects, Compiler Construction, Advanced Database Systems. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Computer Science | College of Technology, Department of Computer Science, Haughey Hall 312, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3420 | Computer Science is a scientifically oriented discipline that studies computer architecture and areas of computer applications. Areas of study include artificial intelligence, compilers, computer graphics, computer networks, operating systems, software development, and analytical theory. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This program is a professional degree with an emphasis in the curriculum and methodology of teaching in the elementary school setting. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Language Arts, Social Studies, Biology, Integrated Science, Mathematics, Behavioral Science. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering - Electrical and Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Engineering | This program is focuses on the area of digital systems, communication systems, and computer-controlled instrumentation and computer simulation. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Engineering | College of Technology, Department of Engineering, Haughey Hall 312, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3420 | Department of Engineering and Computer Science aspires to be a place of choice for engineering and computer science education where dedicated students and faculty grow together to reach their God-given potential for service to society and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering - Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Engineering | This program focuses on the elements of mechanical design and the electromechanical elements of smart machines. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Engineering | College of Technology, Department of Engineering, Haughey Hall 312, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3420 | Department of Engineering and Computer Science aspires to be a place of choice for engineering and computer science education where dedicated students and faculty grow together to reach their God-given potential for service to society and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Horticulture - Landscape Design | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture | This program is ideal for students who would like to work in an area of landscape design that requires a graduate or postgraduate degree. Students will begin preparing for a career in commercial and residential design, specialized city planning or teaching landscape design. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | AGRI 118 - Soil Science, AGRI 240 - Fundamentals of Irrigation, AGRI 308 - Prinicples of Weed Control, AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, HORT 105 - Plant Science, HORT 135 - Landscape Drafting and Design, HORT 226 - Woody Plant Identification, HORT 315 - Landscape Construction, HORT 350 - History of Landscape Design, HORT 365 - Urban Landscape Design, HORT 375 - Landscape Estimating, HORT 378 - Integrated Pest / Disease Managment, HORT 429 - Computer Landscape Design, HORT 448 - Advanced Landscape Design and Graphics, BIOL 165 - Foundations of Biology, BIOL 166 - Foundations of Biology, BOT 430 - Plant Anatomy, BOT 475 - Biodiversity of Vascular Plants, ZOOL 459 - Entomology, CHEM 131 - General Chemistry I, CHEM 132 - General Chemistry II, Language / Communication - 9-13 Credits, Arts / Humanities - 12-13 Credits, Natural / Physical Science - 9-10 Credits, Mathematics - 2-4 Credits, Computer Tools - 0 or 3 Credits, Social Sciences - 6 Credits, PE/Wellness - 3 Credits. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | A degree in landscape design from Andrews University will not only prepare student to be competitive player in the job market, but will also teach student to balance design with good stewardship. The landscape design program at Andrews University is committed to protecting the earth's natural resources and believes that quality education is achieved when classroom experience is integrated with practical, hands-on experience. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Horticulture - Landscape Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management | This program is ideal for students who would like to work in an area of horticulture that requires a graduate or post graduate degree. Student will begin preparing for a career in plant pathology and diseases, integrated pest management, plant genetics, nutrition, teaching, public horticulture and others. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | AGRI 118 - Soil Science, AGRI 240 - Fundamentals of Irrigation, AGRI 308 - Principles of Weed Control, AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, HORT 105 - Plant Science, HORT 135 - Landscape Drafting and Design, HORT 208 - Propagation of Horticultural Plants, HORT 211 - Landscape Equipment, HORT 212 - Floriculture Production, HORT 217 - Turf grass Management, HORT 226 - Woody Plant Identification, HORT 228 - Herbaceous Plant Identification, HORT 315 - Landscape Construction, HORT 346 - Landscape Administration and Maintenance, HORT 350 - History of Landscape Design, HORT 359 - Greenhouse Environment and Construction, HORT 360 - Arboriculture, HORT 378 - Integrated Pest/Disease Management, BIOL 165 - Foundations of Biology, BIOL 166 - Foundations of Biology, BOT 430 - Plant Anatomy, BOT 475 - Bio diversity of Vascular Plants, ZOOL 459 - Entomology, CHEM 131 - General Chemistry I, CHEM 132 - General Chemistry II. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | In the U.S., the dairy business is huge - literally. Modern dairy operations manage herds of 15,000 cattle, and thanks to gains in technology and research, milk production per cow is rising exponentially. Given the scope and complexity of dairy operations, it's easy to understand why there is such a demand for college-educated, dairy herd specialists. In fact, in 2004, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projected over 48,000 annual job openings reserved for people with college degrees in agricultural fields. And not only are dairy specialists in high demand, but the dairy industry is one of the most lucrative areas of agriculture. According to the USDA, dairy products top the commodities list in terms of farm value of production, and large Michigan dairies offer salaries of over $60,000 / year. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nursing | In this program, students just beginning their college education will enroll in the NCLEX preparatory program. Students already holding an Associates degree and/or are already an R.N. will enroll in the B.S. completion program for R.N.s. Both prepare students for a career in professional nursing, are approved by the Michigan Board of Nursing and have full accreditation from the National League for Nursing Accreditation Commission (NLNAC). | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Nursing Pharmacology I, Nursing Pharmacology II, Introduction to Nursing Concepts, Fundamentals of Nursing Theory and Practice, Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing, Health Assessment, Pathophysiology, Transitions in Nursing, Medical-Surgical: Community-based Nursing, Medical-Surgical: Acute-care Nursing, Complementary Wellness and Restoration I, Families in Stress and Crisis, High Acuity Nursing, Comprehensive Overview, Leadership in Nursing, The Childbearing Family, The Developing Child, Nursing Research, Community Nursing, Complementary Wellness and Restoration II, Senior Nursing Internship. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nursing, Marsh Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3311 | The Department of Nursing prepares nurses at the baccalaureate and masters degree levels. This preparation is for life-long Christian work in nursing service, technology, practice, education, leadership and research to the local, national, and international communities. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Social Work | The program is accredited by the Council on Social Work Education through the year 2011. The foundation curriculum consists of five areas of emphasis that are required in every BSW program: Human Behavior and the Social Environment, Social Welfare Policy, Research, Professional Practice, and Practicum. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | SOWK230 Intro to Comm. Service, COMM104 Communication Skills, HIST117 Civilizations and Ideas I, HIST118 Civilizations and Ideas II, ENGL115 English Comp I, SOCI119 Principles of Sociology, HLED120 Fit and Well, PLSC104 American Government, PE Activity Course, PSYC101 Intro to Psychology, RELT100 God and Human Life, MATH145 Reasoning with Functions, SOWK315 Values, Ethics and., SOWK320 Intro to Counseling Skills Diversity, IDSC211 Creativity and the Arts, PSYC301 Human Dev.-Lifespan, IDSC237 Indiv State and Marketplace, ENGL215 English Comp II, SOWK325 Social Welfare Institutions, RELT250 Personal Spirituality and Faith, SPAN171 Elementary Spanish I, BIOL100 Human Biology. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Social Work | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Social Work, Nethery Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6196 | Department of Social Work is to prepare individuals for excellence during a lifetime of professional service and Christian compassion in action. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Technology in Agriculture | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Agribusiness | This program providing a well-rounded and practical training that will enable you to manage, supervise, or own a production agriculture or agriculture-related business, including feed, fertilizer, seed and equipment sales. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | AGRI 118 - Soil Science, AGRI 206 - Farm Machinery, AGRI 270 - Management of Agriculture Enterprises, AGRI 300 - Field Crop Production, AGRI 304 - Forage Crop Production, AGRI 308 - Principles of Weed Control, AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, ANSI 114 - Introduction to Animal Science, HORT 105 - Plant Science, HORT 378 - Integrated Pest / Disease Management, Cognate Requirements - 4 Credits, CHEM 110 - Introduction to Inorganic and Organic Chemistry, Business Emphasis - 18 Credits, ACCT 121 - Fundamentals of Accounting, ACCT 122 - Fundamentals of Accounting, BSAD 341 - Business Law I, BSAD 355 - Management and Organization, ECON 226 - Principles of Microeconomics, FNCE 317 - Business Finance, Language / Communication - 9 Credits, Arts / Humanities - 3 Credits, Natural / Physical Sciences - 6 Credits, Mathematics - 2-4 Credits, Computer Tools - 0 or 3 Credits, Social Sciences - 3 Credits, PE / Wellness - 2 Credits, Service - 2+ Credits. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Agribusiness | College of Technology, Department of Animal Science, Program of Agribusiness, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | The word agriculture makes most people picture fields of corn and John Deere tractors. But if student think that's all there is to agriculture, students are in for a big surprise.At Andrews University, student will discover that agriculture encompasses much more than just planting crops. In fact, while the agriculture industry employs 17% of the population, only 2% are actively involved in the production of food. Offering a blend of horticulture, animal science, and business, an agribusiness degree gives students more unified, big picture perspective on the agriculture industry as a whole. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Technology in Flight | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight, 3898 Griggs Road, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3547 | From pilots to maintenance technicians, the aviation, aerospace and air transportation industries employ over 2 million individuals. And, based on current forecasts, demand for qualified graduates in the field will only increase.Right now there are more jobs available than pilots to fill them. They get calls on a regular basis from operators looking for pilots and maintenance technicians. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Technology in Flight and Business | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight, 3898 Griggs Road, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3547 | From pilots to maintenance technicians, the aviation, aerospace and air transportation industries employ over 2 million individuals. And, based on current forecasts, demand for qualified graduates in the field will only increase.Right now there are more jobs available than pilots to fill them. They get calls on a regular basis from operators looking for pilots and maintenance technicians. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Technology in Flight and Maintenance | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight, 3898 Griggs Road, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3547 | From pilots to maintenance technicians, the aviation, aerospace and air transportation industries employ over 2 million individuals. And, based on current forecasts, demand for qualified graduates in the field will only increase.Right now there are more jobs available than pilots to fill them. They get calls on a regular basis from operators looking for pilots and maintenance technicians. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Technology in Horticulture - Landscape Design | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture | This program allows student to take more classes that focus on their specific area of interest. This is the career specialist's degree, preparing student for business management or ownership in the green industry. There are several emphases to choose from, including landscape design, installation and maintenance, greenhouse and nursery management, vegetable cultivation, and tree fruit production. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | AGRI 118 - Soil Science, AGRI 240 - Managment of Agriculture Enterprises, AGRI 308 - Principles of Weed Control, AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, HORT 105 - Plant Science, HORT 135 - Landscape Dreafting and Design, HORT 226 - Woody Plant Identification, HORT 228 - Herbaceous Plant Identification, HORT 315 - Landscape Construction, HORT 346 - Landscape Administration and Maintenance, HORT 378 - Integrated Pest / Disease Management, CHEM 110 - Introduction to Inorganic and Organic Chemistry, Religion - 12 Credits, Language / Communication - 9 Credits, Arts / Humanities - 3 Credits, Natural / Physical Sciences - 6 Credits, Mathematics - 2-4 Credits, Computer Tools - 0 or 3 Credits, Social Sciences - 3 Credits, PE / Wellness - 2 Credits. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture | College of Technology, Department of Agriculture, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | A degree in landscape design from Andrews University will not only prepare student to be competitive player in the job market, but will also teach student to balance design with good stewardship. The landscape design program at Andrews University is committed to protecting the earth's natural resources and believes that quality education is achieved when classroom experience is integrated with practical, hands-on experience. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Technology in Horticulture - Landscape Management | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management | This program combines a major and minor and allows student to take more classes that focus on their specific area of interest. This is a career specialist's degree, preparing student for business management or ownership in the green industry. There are several emphases to choose from, including landscape design, installation and maintenance, greenhouse and nursery management, vegetable cultivation, and tree fruit production. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | AGRI 118 - Soil Science, AGRI 240 - Fundamentals of Irrigation, AGRI 308 - Principles of Weed Control, AGRI 405 - Research Seminar, HORT 105 - Plant Science, HORT 135 - Landscape Drafting and Design, HORT 208 - Propagation of Horticultural Plants, HORT 211 - Landscape Equipment, HORT 217 - Turf grass Management, HORT 226 - Woody Plant Identification, HORT 228 - Herbaceous Plant Identification, HORT 315 - Landscape Construction, HORT 346 - Landscape Administration and Maintenance, HORT 378 - Integrated Pest/Disease Management, HORT 212 - Floriculture Production, HORT 350 - History of Landscape Design, HORT 359 - Greenhouse Environment and Construction, HORT 360 - Arboriculture, HORT 375 - Landscape Estimating. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management | College of Technology, Department of Dairy Herd Management, Smith Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6006 | In the U.S., the dairy business is huge - literally. Modern dairy operations manage herds of 15,000 cattle, and thanks to gains in technology and research, milk production per cow is rising exponentially. Given the scope and complexity of dairy operations, it's easy to understand why there is such a demand for college-educated, dairy herd specialists. In fact, in 2004, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projected over 48,000 annual job openings reserved for people with college degrees in agricultural fields. And not only are dairy specialists in high demand, but the dairy industry is one of the most lucrative areas of agriculture. According to the USDA, dairy products top the commodities list in terms of farm value of production, and large Michigan dairies offer salaries of over $60,000 / year. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Bachelor of Technology in International Aviation Relief | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Bachelor degree | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight | College of Technology, Department of Aeronautics, Program of Aviation Flight, 3898 Griggs Road, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3547 | From pilots to maintenance technicians, the aviation, aerospace and air transportation industries employ over 2 million individuals. And, based on current forecasts, demand for qualified graduates in the field will only increase.Right now there are more jobs available than pilots to fill them. They get calls on a regular basis from operators looking for pilots and maintenance technicians. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | DScPT | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $849 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy | This course DScPT where it represents one of the most clinically relevant programs in the United States! The program utilizes a combination of short course format, independent study and distance learning to minimize time away from home while providing necessary didactic contact. Applicants are also able to receive credit for previous achievements through our competency review process. Graduates will leave the program certified as an orthopedic manual therapist and will have the credentials to market themselves as one of the most respected orthopedic specialists in their area. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy, Physical Therapy Building 131, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 2878 | Department of Physical Therapy mission is to provide a quality Physical Therapist education within a cooperative learning environment that promotes Christian values. The physical therapy department provides resources and encourages faculty to continue their educational, professional, and spiritual growth. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Higher Ed Administration | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | This course Doctor of Education (EdD) in Higher Ed Admin are designed to prepare experienced practitioners for senior administrative and policy-making positions. The EdD program primarily serves those seeking administrative and executive positions. Graduates typically work in the following professional areas: Research, Teaching, Policy leadership, College administration at all levels, Community college leadership and management, Student personnel administration, Corporate and post-secondary policy analysis. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Common Core (minimum 16, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL500 Administration Orientation, EDAL520 Foundations of Educational Leadership, EDAL655 Higher Education Finance, EDAL670 Technology for Leaders, LEAD886 Advanced Internship: (Topic), EDCI Any EDCI Graduate course, EDFN500 Phil. Foundations of Educ. Psych. Concentration Area, EDAL640 Higher Education Law, EDAL667 Leadership in Higher Education, EDAL674 Administration of Student Services, EDAL675 College Student Development Theory, EDAL676 Administration of Academic Services, LEAD789 Advanced Seminar: (Topic), Electives (As Needed) In consultation with your advisor. Cognate Area, Choose from outside Educational Administration, such as Business, Communication, Social Work, Psychology, Curriculum, Leadership, Research Electives, or transfer credits. Educational Research; EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDRM505 Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. I, EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. II, LEAD637 Issues in Research, Research Electives; EDRM604 Design and Analysis of Ed. and Psych. Surveys, EDRM605 Qual. Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM613 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. III, EDRM648 Workshop EDRM690 Independent Study: (Topic) (1-3), HIST650 Historical and Soc. Science Research Methods, Dissertation, EDRM880 or LEAD880 Dissertation Proposal Devel., LEAD899 Doctoral Dissertation. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in K-12 Ed Administration | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | This course Doctor of Education (EdD) in K-12 Ed Admin prepare participants for professional careers in education as superintendents or elementary and secondary school administrators. These programs also prepare leaders for service in many types of agencies and organizations. Those specifically served by these degrees are the following: Teachers with master's degrees interested in transitioning into educational administration and securing an additional degree while completing their NAD administration certification and endorsement, Principals of K-8, K-10, K-12, and 9-12 schools, Supervisors of instruction, Superintendents of schools, Those interested in teaching Educational Administration at the higher education level. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Common Core (minimum 15, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL500 Administration Orientation, EDAL520 Foundations of Educational Leadership, EDAL645 Educational Finance, EDAL670 Technology for Leaders, LEAD886 Advanced Internship: (Topic); EDCI Any EDCI Graduate Course; EDFN500 Phil. Foundations of Educ. and Psych., Concentration Area (minimum 18, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL560 School Law, EDAL565 Leadership for SDA Education, EDAL570 Principles of Educational Supervision, EDAL635 Human Resources Administration, EDAL660 Planning and Operating Educational Facilities, EDAL664/665 Elem./Secondary School Leadership, LEAD525 Public Relations: Community Partnerships, Educational Research (12): EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDRM505 Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. I, EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. II-1, LEAD637 Issues in Research, Cognate Area (12): Choose from outside Educational Administration, such as Business, Communication, Social Work, Psychology, Curriculum, Leadership, Research, or transfer credits. Dissertation (16): EDRM880 or LEAD880 Dissertation Proposal Dev., LEAD899 Doctoral Dissertation (14); Electives (As Needed): In consultation with your advisor. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Education in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This course Doctor of Education in Curriculum and Instruction is more a professionally-oriented degree, the EdD is designed for educational leaders who contribute to the field of education through their work in the field, developing curricula, supervising, and leading out in instructional improvement and school change. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | I: Christian Philosopher; EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations, EDCI730 Curriculum Theory, Plus one additional Foundations course to fit in Role I or Role II, II: Learning Theorist; EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, III: Servant Leader, EDCI620 Systems Concepts and Change EDCI886 Internship (EdD students), IV: Effective Communicator; V: Capable Researcher (29-32 cr); EDRM505 Res Meth in Educ. and Psych. EDRM611 Appl Stat in Educ and Psych. I, EDRM710 Seminar in Research Methodology, EdD Students: EDCI655 Curriculum Development Research, Select one basic research method course: EDRM604 Design and Analysis of Ed. and Psyc. Surveys EDRM605 Qualitative Research Meth. in Ed. and Psych. EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Ed. and Psyc. II, HIST650 Hist and Soc. Science Research Methodologies. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Ministry | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Doctor of Ministry mission is to provide structured, rigorous, advanced training in ministry by equipping students with needed competencies and leadership skills. The program engages qualified people in an active learning environment so that they may reach advanced levels of ministry effectiveness. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Higher Ed Administration | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | This course Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Higher Ed Admin are designed to prepare experienced practitioners for senior administrative and policy-making positions. The PhD degree is more research oriented and requires more courses in advanced research methodologies. The PhD program serves those who wish to pursue careers in research and teaching. Graduates typically work in the following professional areas: Research, Teaching, Policy leadership, College administration at all levels, Community college leadership and management, Student personnel administration, Corporate and post-secondary policy analysis. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Administrative Core (minimum 16, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL500 Administration Orientation, EDAL520 Foundations of Educational Leadership, EDAL655 Higher Education Finance, EDAL670 Technology for Leaders, EDCI Any EDCI Graduate course, EDFN500 Phil. Foundations of Educ. and Psych., LEAD886 Advanced Internship: (Topic), Concentration Area; EDAL640 Higher Education Law, EDAL667 Leadership in Higher Education, EDAL674 Administration of Student Services, EDAL675 College Student Development Theory, EDAL676 Administration of Academic Services, LEAD789 Advanced Seminar: (Topic), Electives (As Needed); In consultation with your advisor. Cognate Area (12); Choose from outside Educational Administration, such as Business, Communication, Social Work, Psychology, Curriculum, Leadership, Research Electives, or transfer credits. Educational Research; EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDRM505 Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM605 Qual. Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. I,EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. II (1-3), LEAD637 Issues in Research (2), Research Electives, EDRM604 Design & Analysis of Ed. and Psych. Surveys, EDRM613 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. III, EDRM648 Workshop EDRM690 Independent Study: (Topic); HIST650 Historical and Soc. Science Research Methods, Dissertation (16); EDRM880 or LEAD880 Dissertation Proposal Devel, LEAD899 Doctoral Dissertation. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in K -12 Ed Administration | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | This course Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in K -12 Ed Admin prepare participants for professional careers in education as superintendents or elementary and secondary school administrators. These programs also prepare leaders for service in many types of agencies and organizations. The PhD degree is more research-oriented and requires more courses in advanced research methodologies. Those specifically served by these degrees are the following: Teachers with master's degrees interested in transitioning into educational administration and securing an additional degree while completing their NAD administration certification and endorsement. Principals of K-8, K-10, K-12, and 9-12 schools, Supervisors of instruction, Superintendents of schools, Those interested in teaching Educational Administration at the higher education level. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Common Core (minimum 15, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL500 Administration Orientation, EDAL520 Foundations of Educational Leadership, EDAL645 Educational Finance, EDAL670 Technology for Leaders, LEAD886 Advanced Internship: (Topic), EDCI Any EDCI Graduate Course, EDFN500 Phil. Foundations of Educ. and Psych., Concentration Area (minimum 18, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL560 School Law, EDAL565 Leadership for SDA Education, EDAL570 Principles of Educational Supervision, EDAL635 Human Resources Administration, EDAL660 Planning and Operating Educational Facilities EDAL664/665 Elem./Secondary School Leadership, LEAD525 Public Relations: Community Partnerships, Educational Research: EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDRM505 Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM605 Qual. Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. I, EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. II, ,LEAD637 Issues in Research, Cognate Area: Choose from outside Educational Administration, such as Business, Communication, Social Work, Psychology, Curriculum, Leadership, Research, or transfer credits. Dissertation: EDRM880 or LEAD880 Dissertation Proposal Dev., LEAD899 Doctoral Dissertation, Electives (As Needed): In consultation with your advisor. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Philosophy in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This course Doctor of Philosophy in Curriculum and Instruction is designed for leaders who contribute to education through original, theoretical and conceptual research. Additional program requirements for this degree include a second basic-research course and an advanced research-methodology course. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | I: Christian Philosopher; EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations, EDCI730 Curriculum Theory, Plus one additional Foundations course to fit in Role I or Role II, II: Learning Theorist; EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, III: Servant Leader, EDCI620 Systems Concepts and Change EDCI886 Internship (EdD students), IV: Effective Communicator; V: Capable Researcher (29-32 cr); EDRM505 Res Meth in Educ. and Psych. EDRM611 Appl Stat in Educ and Psych. I, EDRM710 Seminar in Research Methodology, PhD students: Select two basic research method courses, EDRM604 Design & Analysis of Ed. and Psych. Surveys, EDRM605 Qualitative Research Meth. in Ed. Psych., EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Ed. and Psych HIST650 Hist. Soc. Science Research Methodologies, Select one advanced research method course: EDRM613 Applied Statistics in Ed. and Psych. III, EDCI885 Applied Research. Dissertation (both EdD & PhD students): EDRM880 Dissertation Proposal Development, EDCI889 Doctoral Seminar, VI: Lifelong Learner, EDCI725 Doctoral Orientation Seminar, EDCI889 Doctoral Seminar; VII: Subject Matter Expert; VIII: Program Designer; EDCI547 Found of Curriculum Development, EDCI686 Curriculum Past and Present, IX: Reflective Instructor; EDCI565 Improving Instruction, EDCI665 Adv Instructional Models; X: Skilled Assessor; EDCI545 Assess and Eval of Learning, EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDCI696 Project Implementation. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Philosophy in Religion | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Doctor of Philosophy in Religion's primary purpose is to provide teacher-scholars for church-operated colleges, seminaries, and universities around the world. he Doctor of Philosophy degree in religion prepares teacher-scholars in the fields of New Testament Studies, Old Testament Studies, Theological Studies, Adventist Studies, and Mission and Ministry Studies for colleges and seminaries operated by the Seventh-day Adventist Church around the world. When students apply to the PhD program in religion, they select one of the five areas of study listed below: Adventist Studies, Mission and Ministry Studies, New Testament Studies, Old Testament Studies, Theological Studies. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Philosophy in Religious Education | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Doctor of Philosophy in Religious Education Programs prepare men and women to fulfill the teaching and discipline mandates of the gospel commission. The PhD in Religious Education prepares men and women to be scholars, teachers and researchers in specialized teaching and discipline ministries of the Church. All candidates further develop the core competencies of a religious educator and select an area of specialization for intense study and research using research methodologies of the social sciences. Areas of Specialization: Campus Spiritual Leadership, Education History, Family Life Education, Theological Curriculum and Instruction. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Physical Therapy | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy | This course Doctor of Physical Therapy prepares students for independent practice by emphasizing areas such as differential diagnosis, pharmacology, radiology, health promotion and wellness and practice management. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy, Physical Therapy Building 131, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 2878 | Department of Physical Therapy mission is to provide a quality Physical Therapist education within a cooperative learning environment that promotes Christian values. The physical therapy department provides resources and encourages faculty to continue their educational, professional, and spiritual growth. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Doctor of Theology | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Doctor of Theology's primary purpose is to provide teacher-scholars in the fields of biblical and theological studies for the Seventh-day Adventist Church—primarily its institutions of higher learning (colleges, seminaries, universities) around the world. The Doctor of Theology degree, based on the Master of Divinity degree, trains teacher-scholars in the fields of biblical studies and theology for service in the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This academic degree meets the need of individuals in areas of the world where a The is the preferred academic degree. The normal doctorate in religion is the PhD. The program is offered in two fields of study with areas of emphasis as listed below: Biblical and Theological Studies. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | EdD in Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course EdD in Educational Psychology prepares individuals for educational psychology positions. It prepares college and university instructors, generally in the areas of human development, personality, learning and instruction. Educational psychologists also work in schools, businesses, industries and various human development settings. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC515 Psychological Development: The Growth Years, EDPC525 Psychology and Education of Exceptional Children, EDPC605 Psychological Development: Adulthood and Aging, EDPC625 Biopsychology, EDPC626 Cognitive Psychology, EDPC 644 Psychological Testing, EDPC645 Professional Ethics for Counselors and Psychologists, EDPC676 Theories of Personality, EDPC736 Field Work in Educational Psychology, EDPC834 Seminar in Educational/School Psychology, EDPC651 Assessment I: Behavioral and Educational Appl., or EDTE424 Classroom Testing and Evaluation, EDPC Elective. EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology, EDPC620 History and Systems of Psychology, or a non-psychological foundations course. EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM606 Qualitative Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology I, EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology II, EDRM710 Seminar in Research Methods 1, EDRM880 Dissertation Proposal Development. Electives; By advisement. Dissertation Requirement; EDPC899 Doctoral Dissertation. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | EdD in Educational Psychology - School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course EdD in Educational Psychology - School Psychology prepares individuals for the professional practice of school psychology. Doctoral-level school psychologists work in public and private schools systems, colleges and universities, preschool and child-development centers, and private practice. Typical responsibilities include assessment, diagnosis, consultation, program planning and intervention services to preschool and school-age children with educational, emotional and behavioral problems. This is a professional degree that is aimed at preparing school psychologists for added responsibility in the area of supervision or more in-depth understanding of school psychological practice and research methodology. It is planned to be a continuation of the EdS degree. Certification/licensure as a school psychologist is advisable. If certification has not been met prior to enrollment in the doctoral program, the sequence of courses from the EdS program must be completed as part of the doctoral program. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | School Psychology Focus; EDPC629 Psychopathology: Classification and Treatment; EDPC676 Theories of Personality, EDPC834 Seminar in Educational/School Psychology, Supervision Focus, EDAL560 Legal Aspects of Education, EDAL570 Principles of Educational Supervision, EDAL635 Human Resources Administration. EDRM605 Qualitative Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM612 App. Stat. in Ed and Psych II, EDRM710 Sem. in Research Method., EDRM880 Dissertation Proposal Development. EDPC626 Cognitive Psychology, EDPC638 Group Processes, EDPC686 Therapies for Children: Theory and Practice. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | EdD in Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | EdS in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This course EdS in Curriculum and Instruction prepares experienced teachers for leadership positions in teaching, supervising, curriculum design, and instructional improvement at the elementary, secondary, K–12, or higher education levels. EdS students specializing in the elementary and/or secondary levels must: Qualify for Seventh-day Adventist and/or public-school certification in the area(s) of specialty prior to graduation. Achieve a minimum of two years satisfactory classroom experience prior to receiving the EdS degree. The curriculum for the EdS degree consists of a minimum of 64 semester credits beyond the baccalaureate degree. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EdS Core — (35-37) credits; I: Christian Philosopher, EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations, II: Learning Theorist; EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, III: Servant Leader , EDCI620 Systems Concepts and Change, IV: Effective Communicator; V: Capable Researcher; EDRM505 Res Meth in Educ. and Psych. EDRM611 Appl Stat in Educ and Psych. I, VI: Lifelong Learner; EDCI725 Doctoral Orientation Seminar, VII: Subject Matter Expert, VIII: Program Designer; EDCI547 Found of Curriculum Devel, EDCI650 Curriculum Design, EDCI686 Curriculum Past and Present, IX: Reflective Instructor, EDCI565 Improving Instruction, EDCI665 Adv Instructional Models, X: Skilled Assessor; EDCI545 Assess and Eval of Learning, EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDCI696 Project Implementation, EdS Electives — (27-29); Electives are selected by advisement to expand personal development within targeted roles. Examples of specializations and cognates for the EdS degree are listed below with those for the doctoral degrees. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | EdS in Higher Ed Administration | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | This course EdS in Higher Ed Admin provides advanced graduate education and training of high quality mid-level administrators for postsecondary institutions. It prepares professionals seeking administrative advancement and service to local institutions of higher education. This degree is appropriate for positions such as: Assistant dean, Assistant to the president, Director and in-service directors, Department chairperson in selected areas, Program manager. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Common Core (minimum 15, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL520 Foundations of Educational Leadership, EDAL655 Higher Education Finance, EDAL670 Technology for Leaders, LEAD886 Advanced Internship: (Topic), EDCI Any EDCI Graduate course, EDFN500 Phil. Foundations of Educ. and Psych., Concentration Area (minimum 18, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL640 Higher Education Law, EDAL667 Leadership in Higher Education, EDAL674 Administration of Student Services, EDAL675 College Student Development Theory, EDAL676 Administration of Academic Services, LEAD789 Advanced Seminar: (Topic), Electives (As Needed); In consultation with your advisor. Cognate Area (9); Choose from outside Educational Administration, such as Business, Communication, Social Work, Psychology, Curriculum, Leadership, Research, or transfer credits. Educational Research, EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDRM505 Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. I, LEAD637 Issues in Research, Research Electives; EDRM604 Design and Analysis of Ed. and Psych. Surveys, EDRM605 Qual. Research Methods in Educ. and Psych., EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. II, EDRM613 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. III, EDRM648 Workshop, EDRM690 Independent Study: (Topic), HIST650 Historical and Social Sci. Research Methods. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | EdS in K-12 Ed Administration | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | This course EdS in K-12 Ed Admin program prepares candidates to serve as principals, supervisors, or superintendents in elementary and/or secondary systems. Those specifically served by this degree are the following: Principals of K-8, K-10, K-12, and 9-12 schools, Supervisors of instruction, Superintendents of schools, Teachers with master's degrees interested in transitioning into educational administration and securing an additional degree while completing their NAD administration certification or endorsement. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Common Core (minimum 15, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL500 Administration Orientation, EDAL520 Foundations of Educational Leadership, EDAL645 Educational Finance, EDAL670 Technology for Leaders, LEAD886 Advanced Internship: (Topic), EDCI Any EDCI Graduate Course, EDFN500 Phil. Foundations of Educ. and Psych. Concentration Area (minimum 18, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL560 School Law, EDAL565 Leadership for SDA Education, EDAL570 Principles of Educational Supervision, EDAL635 Human Resources Administration, EDAL660 Planning and Operating Educational Facilities, EDAL664/665 Elem./Secondary School Leadership, LEAD525 Public Relations: Community Partnerships , Educational Research, EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDRM505 Research Methods in Educ. and Psych. EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Educ. and Psych. I, LEAD637 Issues in Research, Cognate Area; Choose from outside Educational Administration, such as Business, Communication, Social Work, Psychology, Curriculum, Leadership, Research, or transfer credits. Electives (As Needed); In consultation with your advisor. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | EdS in Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | EdS in School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course EdS in School Psychology provides training for a professional career as a certified or licensed school psychologist. EdS-level school psychologists work primarily in public and private-school systems, preschool settings, and child-development centers. Typical responsibilities are assessment, diagnosis, consultation, program planning, and intervention services to preschool and school-age children with educational, emotional, and behavioral problems. A 1200-hour internship in a school is required. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC515 Psychological Development: The Growth Years, or EDUC520 Psychological Development: The Life Span, EDPC525 Psychology and Education of Exceptional Children, EDPC625 Biopsychology, EDPC626 Cognitive Psychology, EDPC640 Multicultural Issues for Counselors and Psychologists. EDPC540 Behavioral and Emotional Problems of Children, EDPC555 Early Childhood Issues in Assessment, EDPC618 Issues in School Psychology, EDPC635 Theories and Techniques of Counseling, EDPC638 Group Processes, EDPC654 Practicum in School Psychology, EDPC651 Assessment I: Behavioral and Educational Applications EDPC652 Assessment II: Cognitive Applications, EDPC653 Assessment III: Advanced Interpretative and Processing, Applications; EDPC672 Psychoeducational Consultation, EDPC686 Therapies for Children, EDPC810 Internship in School Psychology. SPED645 Advanced Diagnosis and Educational Therapy in Reading. EDPC644 Psychological Testing, EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Information Systems Major | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | The Information Systems major is designed to produce graduates equipped with the ability to integrate information systems into the business environment, to explore methods of leveraging business functions through information systems, and to function in entry-level, information systems positions with a basis for continued career growth. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Major | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | International Business Major | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | This major enables students to acquire a knowledge base that develops their capacity to work for an organization that operates in a global setting. Students may select electives in one academic discipline that suits their special area of interest, or take any of the elective courses listed below to meet the degree requirements. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Major | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | M.S. in Nutrition and Wellness | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness | This course M.S. in Nutrition and Wellness is offered through the Department of Nutrition and Wellness and is a graduate program of the College of Arts and Sciences at Andrews University. This new program incorporates: Basic knowledge of running a wellness program, The ability to serve the public with responsible public education, Promotion of lifestyle change. Three options are available for completing the M.S. in Nutrition and Wellness. Option 1; Completion of research thesis. Option 2; Non-thesis option available only to those planning to seek registration with the American Dietetic Association (ADA). This option includes completion of a Dietetic Internship that involves 8 months of full-time work in the areas of clinical nutrition, community nutrition, and food service administration. Option 3; Non-thesis option that involves completion of a research project rather than a research thesis. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Applicants must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited institution with an overall GPA of 2.6 and have completed the following prerequisites: Intro to Chemistry, Biochemistry, Basic Nutrition, Advanced Nutrition, Anatomy and Physiology, Statistics. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Nutrition Core Requirements (20 credits); FDNT 448 Nutrition and Wellness, FDNT 498 Research Methods, FDNT 545 Nutrition and Wellness Programs, FDNT 565 Current Issues in Nutrition and Wellness, FDNT 586 Professional Experience, FDNT 680 Research Seminar, MKTG 500 Survey of Marketing, PETH 460 Exercise Physiology. Option 1 Thesis, FDNT 699 Master's Thesis (6 credits); Electives* 6 credits, Option 2 Dietetic Internship, FDNT 594 Dietetic Internship (4 + 4 credits), Electives* 4 credits, Option 3 Project, FDNT 698 Research Project (3 credits), Electives* 9 credits. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Nutrition and Wellness, Marsh Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3370 | Department of Nutrition of Andrews University's mission is to prepare dietetic and nutrition professionals for service in their church, society, and the world and to influence the community at large to affirm the Adventist lifestyle, including the vegetarian diet. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Communication - Advancement and Communication | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This course MA in Communication - Advancement and Comm prepares graduates to work in careers in fund raising, development and advancement in non-profits such as hospitals, foundations, associations, colleges and universities. An internship is highly recommended, and students graduating with this degree can look forward to such areas as donor prospecting, major gifts, events planning, alumni relations directing, and capital campaigns or in management. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Core: (12 cr); COMM 515 Communication Theories, COMM 520 Communication Research Methodology, COMM 648 Communication Workshop, COMM 651 Communication Research Seminar I, COMM 652 Communication Research Seminar II, Additional/Elective Comm Courses (12 cr); Selected from Department of Communication courses according to Plan of Study, with approval of student's supervisory committee. Additional Courses in Emphasis (12 cr); PREL 510 Advancement and Communication, BSAD 500 Survey of Management, Plus electives selected with approval of supervisory committee, Non-thesis: 2 of 3 Projects (4 cr), COMM 589 Internship/Practicum in Communication, COMM 599 Production Project in Communication, COMM 695 Research Project in Communication, Thesis: (4 cr); COMM 695 Research Project in Communication plus Statistics. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Communication - Communication Management | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This course MA in Communication - Comm Management repairs graduates for careers at the management level in such positions as directors of communication, program and firm management, non-profit management and administration, and managing entrepreneurial communication firms. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Core: (12 cr); COMM 515 Communication Theories, COMM 520 Communication Research Methodology, COMM 648 Communication Workshop, COMM 651 Communication Research Seminar I, COMM 652 Communication Research Seminar II, Additional/Elective Comm Courses: (12 cr) Selected from Department of Communication courses according to Plan of Study, with approval of student's supervisory committee. Additional Courses in Emphasis: (12 cr); COMM 590 Grad Seminar: Leadership Communication, COMM 590 Grad Seminar: Organizational Communication Plus electives selected with approval of supervisory committee, Non-thesis: 2 of 3 Projects (4 cr), COMM 589 Internship/Practicum in Communication, COMM 599 Production Project in Communication, COMM 695 Research Project in Communication, Thesis: (4 cr), COMM 695 Research Project in Communication plus Statistics Course. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Communication - Interdisciplinary | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This course MA in Communication - Interdisciplinary is customized with the approval of the student's supervisory committee to create an interdisciplinary degree for preparation for a career that integrates two disciplines. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Core:(12 cr); COMM 515 Communication Theories, COMM 520 Communication Research Methodology, COMM 590 Graduate Seminar, COMM 651 Communication Research Seminar I, COMM 652 Communication Research Seminar II, Additional/Elective Comm Courses: (12 cr) Selected from Department of Communication courses according to Plan of Study, with approval of students supervisory committee. Additional Courses in Secondary Area:(12-15 cr), Chosen from disciplines other than communication, Projects: 2 of 3 Projects(4 cr); COMM 589 Internship/Practicum in Communication, COMM 599 Production Project in Communication, COMM 695 Research Project in Communication, Thesis is optional, Portfolio is required. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Communication - International Community and Communication | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This course MA in Communication - Intl Community and Comm repairs graduates for careers at the management level in such positions as directors of communication, program and firm management, non-profit management and administration, and managing entrepreneurial Communication firms. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Core: (12 cr); COMM 515 Communication Theories, COMM 520 Communication Research Methodology, COMM 648 Communication Workshop, COMM 651 Communication Research Seminar I, COMM 652 Communication Research Seminar II, Additional/Elective Comm Courses:(12 cr) Selected from Department of Communication courses according to Plan of Study, with approval of student's supervisory committee, Additional Courses in Emphasis: (12 cr), COMM 590 Grad Seminar: Development and Communication, COMM 590 Grad Seminar: International, Communication, Plus electives selected with approval of supervisory committee Non-thesis: 2 of 3 Projects, COMM 589 Internship/Practicum in Communication, COMM 599 Production Project in Communication, COMM 695 Research Project in Communication, Thesis: COMM 695 Research Project in Communication plus Statistics Course. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Communication - Media Studies | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This course MA in Communication - Media Studies prepares graduates for a wide variety of careers associated with media. This emphasis may be customized with the student's committee's approval to create a specialty track, such as those listed below, for preparation for a specific career within communication. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Core: (12 cr); COMM 515 Communication Theories, COMM 520 Communication Research Methodology, COMM 648 Communication Workshop COMM 651 Communication Research Seminar I, COMM 652 Communication Research Seminar II, Additional/Elective Comm Courses: (12 cr) Selected from Department of Communication courses according to Plan of Study, with approval of student's supervisory committee. Additional Courses in Emphasis: (12 cr), Electives in Public Relations, Journalism, and New Media selected with approval of supervisory committee, Non-thesis: 2 of 3 Projects (4 cr), COMM 589 Internship/Practicum in Communication, COMM 599 Production Project in Communication, COMM 695 Research Project in Communication, Thesis: (4 cr), COMM 695 Research Project in Communication plus Statistics Course Portfolio is required. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, Nethery Hall 209, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6314 | Department of Communication is a Christ-centered, team-based, student-focused community That develops excellent communicators, who meet the challenges of church and society. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Community Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course MA in Community Counseling program at Andrews University is housed in the Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology. The Community Counseling program is designed to prepare students to function as professional counselors in community agencies and mental health settings, such as the following: (a) mental health centers, (b) family counseling centers and (c) solo or group private practice. The program is accredited by CACREP, the Council for the Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs, a specializing accrediting body recognized by COPA, the Council on Post-Secondary Accreditation. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This course MA in Curriculum and Instruction is designed to prepare persons for work at the elementary and secondary levels with emphasis upon pedagogy, curriculum development, and the improvement of instruction. A minimum of 32 credits is required in the areas of educational foundations, professional concentrations, research, and electives. While programs in curriculum and instruction are designed for experienced educators, provision is made for individuals desiring a career change. These persons may be required to earn more than the minimum 32 credits. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | I: Christian Philosopher; EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations, II: Learning Theorist; EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, III: Servant Leader; EDCI620 Systems Concepts and Change, IV: Effective Communicator; The development of this role is required in departmental activities such as courses, seminars, and ACCIS Conferences to be documented in portfolio. V: Capable Researcher; EDRM505 Res Meth in Educ. and Psych. EDCI699 Thesis (optional); VI: Lifelong Learner; EDCI525 Master’s Orientation Seminar, VII: Subject Matter Expert; VIII: Program Designer; EDCI547 Found of Curric Development, IX: Reflective Instructor; EDCI565 Improving Instruction, X: Skilled Assessor; EDCI545 Assess and Eval of Learning; EDCI696 Project Implementation, MA Electives; Course electives are selected by advisement to fit the student’s professional goals. MA-level specializations: CURRICULUM EMPHASIS (select from); EDCI607 Curriculum: (topics); EDCI611 Design and Development of Training Programs, EDCI650 Curriculum Design, EDCI655 Curriculum Development Research, EDCI686 Curriculum Past and Present, INSTRUCTION EMPHASIS (select from); EDCI610 Teaching the Adult Learner, EDCI617 Instruction: (topics); EDCI645 Adv. Diag and Ed Therapy in Reading, EDCI665 Adv. Instructional Models (topic); TECHNOLOGY EMPHASIS (all required); EDCI617 Instruction: Instructional Design, EDCI617 Instruction: Technology Integration, EDCI637 Tech: School Lab Administration, EDCI637 Tech: Classroom Software Applications, EDCI637 Tech: Authoring Systems, EDCI676 Technology for Learning. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Educational Psychology - Development Psychology Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course MA in Educational Psychology - Development Psychology Emphasis is aimed at those who wish to specialize in the area of human development. It is of interest to people who wish to work in children or adult facilities or community colleges and desire a strong psychological understanding of development. Graduates from this program also go on to do a doctorate in Educational Psychology, Developmental Psychology or School Psychology. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC515 Psychological Development - The Growth Years, EDPC516 Psychology of Character Development, EDPC605 Psychological Development - Adulthood and Aging, EDPC676 Theories of Personality, EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology, EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology I. Students, choose two courses from the following EDPC525, EDPC540,EDPC554, EDCI565 or EDPC625 OR choose one and write a thesis. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Educational Psychology - General Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course MA in Educational Psychology - General Emphasis provides a broad perspective of this field with emphasis on learning, development, testing and research. The General Emphasis allows one to choose the areas in which they wish to develop individual strengths. These areas are presented in depth through varied instructional modes. This program is designed to train graduate students to become college instructors, educational consultants, or researchers in the field of Educational Psychology. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC520 Psychological Development - Life Span, EDPC644 Psychological Testing, EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology, EDRM505 Research methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Educational Psychology I, Electives 12 credits by advisement, limited to courses from the above emphases, EDPC course, or courses in instruction from the School of Education. Three credits may be fulfilled by writing a thesis. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Educational Psychology - Instructional Psychology Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course MA in Educational Psychology - Instructional Psychology Emphasis is specifically designed for teachers who wish to expand their understanding of the teaching and learning process. It is also recommended for those students who plan to continue in an EdS in School Psychology program. The courses are designed to assist the teacher and others who wish to broaden their understanding of the learner and learning environments. This emphasis is of interest to teachers who wish to renew their certification or move up on the salary scale and at the same time improve their understanding of children and how they learn. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC515 Psychological Development - The Growth Years, EDPC525 Psychology and Education of Exceptional Children, EDPC540 Behavioral and Emotional Problems of Children, EDCI565 Improving Instruction, EDPC644 Psychological Testing, Course Foundations/Research/Statistics; EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology, EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology I, Electives Credits; 3 credits to be chosen in consultation with an advisor. It is presumed that these courses will assist in the understanding of the learner and/or the learning environment. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Educational Psychology - Research Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course MA in Educational Psychology - Research Emphasis is designed for those interested in applying research and statistical principles for solving problems in educational, psychological and social settings. Graduates of the program may be consultants in research agencies, instructors in colleges and universities, and/or pursue doctoral degrees in research, statistics, measurement and evaluation. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDRM604 Design and Analysis of Educational and Psychological Surveys, EDRM605 Qualitative Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology II, EDRM613 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology III, EDPC699 Thesis, EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology, EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology I, EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC520 Psychological Development - The Life Span, EDPC644 Psychological Testing. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in English | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This course MA in English where Students studying for the MA in English take a balanced array of courses in literature and literary theory, composition and rhetoric, and language. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Required core courses; ENGL589: Graduate Seminar, ENGL597: Research Methods, ENGL595: Project Research or ENGL699: Master's Thesis (a minimum of 1 credit). Additional required courses ENGL450: Literary Criticism, ENGL589: Graduate Seminar. At least one graduate course from each of the three areas of literature, composition, and language. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Nethery Hall 106, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3298 | The English Department, within a framework of Christian faith and purpose, develops graduates who are competent, creative and critical readers, writers, and thinkers, capable of a variety of careers. Andrews University's MA program in English facilitates, within a Christian context, the development of scholarly and teaching abilities that complement students' career choice and prepare them for further graduate study. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Higher Ed Administration | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | This course MA in Higher Ed Admin prepares students for entry-level and mid-management level positions at public and private colleges or universities and community colleges in different areas of student affairs, such as: Admissions and Enrollment, Financial services management, Residence halls administration, Religious and social activities coordination, Athletic and recreation administration, Health services, International student services, Other related areas. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Common Core (minimum 15, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL500 Administration Orientation, EDAL520 Foundations of Educational Leadership, EDAL655 Higher Education Finance, EDAL670 Technology for Leaders, EDAL680 Administration Internship and Fieldwork, EDC Any EDCI Graduate course, EDFN500 Phil. Foundations of Educ. and Psych., Concentration Area; (minimum 14, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL640 Higher Education Law, EDAL667 Leadership in Higher Education, EDAL674 Administration of Student Services, EDAL675 College Student Development Theory, LEAD689 Seminar: (Topic), Electives (As Needed); In consultation with your advisor. Educational Research; EDRM505 Research Methods in Educ. and Psych. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in K-12 Ed Administration | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | This course MA in K-12 Ed Admin is designed for post-baccalaureate participants who desire to obtain a degree in educational administration with or without Seventh-day Adventist North American Division (NAD) administrative endorsement. For NAD certification purposes, participants need to have an NAD professional teaching certificate, which requires graduate work in two of the following areas: learning theory/style, curriculum, improvement of instruction, education of the exceptional student, trends and issues in education, and multicultural education. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Common Core (minimum 15, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL500 Administration Orientation (1-2) EDAL520 Foundations of Educational Leadership (2-3) EDAL645 Educational Finance (2-3) EDAL670 Technology for Leaders (1-3) EDAL680 Administration Internship and Fieldwork (1-12) EDCI Any EDCI Graduate Course, EDFN500 Phil. Foundations of Educ. and Psych., Concentration Area (minimum 14, with more credits available from variable credit courses): EDAL560 School Law, EDAL565 Leadership for SDA Education, EDAL570 Principles of Educational Supervision, EDAL635 Human Resources Administration, EDAL660 Planning & Operating Educational Facilities, EDAL664/665 Elem./Secondary School Leadership, Educational Research, EDRM505 Research Methods in Educ. and Psych. Electives (As Needed); In consultation with your advisor. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in School Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course MA in School Counseling where the program includes course work and experiences required for endorsement as a school counselor. Students working toward certification as K-12 school counselors should consult with the coordinator of the School Counseling program about the requirements of the state where they plan to work. Some states require teacher certification in order to obtain school counselor endorsement. The program is accredited by CACREP, the Council of the Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs, a specializing accrediting body recognized by COPA, the Council of Post-Secondary Accreditation. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology, EDPC520 Psychological Development–The Life Span, EDPC530 Professional Issues in School Counseling, EDPC554 Career Development, EDPC635 Theories and Techniques of Counseling, EDPC638 Group Processes, EDPC640 Multicultural Issues for Counselors and Psychologists, EDPC644 Psychological Testing, EDPC645 Professional Ethics for Counselors and Psychologists, EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology. EDPC525 Psychology and Education of Exceptional Children, EDPC540 Behavioral and Emotional Problems of Children, EDPC545 Administration of Guidance Services. EDPC650 Practicum in Counseling, EDPC655 Internship in Counseling. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MA in Teaching English as a Second Language (TESL) | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This course MA in Teaching English As a Second Language (TESL) where Students studying for the MA in English take a balanced array of courses in literature and literary theory, composition and rhetoric, and language. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Required core courses; ENGL589: Graduate Seminar. ENGL597: Research Methods, ENGL595: Project Research (a minimum of 1 credit) or ENGL699: Master's Thesis. Additional required courses: ENGL465: TESL Methods (2 credits), ENGL466: Phonetics and Phonology, ENGL469: Second Language Acquisition, ENGL505: Practicum, ENGL530: Discourse Analysis, ENGL540: Language and Culture, One of: ENGL435: Topics in Linguistics, ENGL525: Topics, Two from: ENGL474: Development of Modern English, A writing course (ENGL550 recommended), or A literature course. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Nethery Hall 106, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3298 | The English Department, within a framework of Christian faith and purpose, develops graduates who are competent, creative and critical readers, writers, and thinkers, capable of a variety of careers. Andrews University's MA program in English facilitates, within a Christian context, the development of scholarly and teaching abilities that complement students' career choice and prepare them for further graduate study. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MAT in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This course MAT in Elementary Education is designed to prepare graduate-level students for teacher certification. The MAT degree is a professional degree program designed to meet the needs of a wide range of individuals. Typically, MAT students include: Individuals who have earned a bachelor's degree and now seek teacher certification at the elementary or secondary level, Individuals already holding teacher certification, but seeking an additional certificate at another level, Individuals holding elementary or secondary teacher certification, but wishing to broaden their professional training, Individuals holding secondary teaching certification and wanting to add a specific subject area endorsement. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Students must also complete the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) before admission to the program, or during the first semester of enrollment. Application to a Teacher Preparation Program is made directly to the TLC department during the first semester of coursework. Applicants should either hold an undergraduate degree with a major or minor in the teaching area in combination with the MAT program. During the first semester, students must also have completed at least six credits in basic education courses, and have passed the MTTC Basic Skills Test. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MAT in Reading Education | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This course MAT in Reading Education is designed to prepare graduate-level students for teacher certification. The MAT degree is a professional degree program designed to meet the needs of a wide range of individuals. Typically, MAT students include: Individuals who have earned a bachelor's degree and now seek teacher certification at the elementary or secondary level, Individuals already holding teacher certification, but seeking an additional certificate at another level, Individuals holding elementary or secondary teacher certification, but wishing to broaden their professional training, Individuals holding secondary teaching certification and wanting to add a specific subject area endorsement. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MAT in Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This course MAT in Secondary Education is designed to prepare graduate-level students for teacher certification. The MAT degree is a professional degree program designed to meet the needs of a wide range of individuals. Typically, MAT students include: Individuals who have earned a bachelor's degree and now seek teacher certification at the elementary or secondary level, Individuals already holding teacher certification, but seeking an additional certificate at another level, Individuals holding elementary or secondary teacher certification, but wishing to broaden their professional training, Individuals holding secondary teaching certification and wanting to add a specific subject area endorsement. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Students must also complete the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) before admission to the program, or during the first semester of enrollment. Application to a Teacher Preparation Program is made directly to the TLC department during the first semester of coursework. Applicants should either hold an undergraduate degree with a major or minor in the teaching area in combination with the MAT program. During the first semester, students must also have completed at least six credits in basic education courses, and have passed the MTTC Basic Skills Test. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MS Degree in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | This course MS Degree in Special Education leads to the Michigan State Certification in Special Education in the area of Learning Disabilities and a Masters in Science Degree in Education. MS candidates seeking certification must qualify for a valid State of Michigan teaching certificate before the degree can be granted. The MS program can be taken concurrently with the MAT program; this entails working on a general education and special education advance degree simultaneously. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDFN500 Philosophical Found. of Educ and Psychology, EDPC515 Psychological Dev. -The Growth Years, EDPC632 Assessment II: Behavioral and Educ, EDPC644 Psychological Testing, EDPC672 Psychoeducational Consultation, EDTE630 Sem: Legal and Ethical Issues in Spec Ed, EDTE645 Adv. Diagnosis and Educ Therapy in Reading, EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, Specialty - EDCI617 Instruction: Developmentally, EDCI665 Adv. Instr. Models: SPED, EDCI680 Field Work: Special Education, EDCI689 Seminar: Current Trends/Learning, Prerequisites - 15 credits (These classes may be taken for either undergraduate/graduate credit); EDPC525 Psych. and Educ. of Exceptional Children or, EDTE228 Strategies for Educ. Except., EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC540 Behavioral and Emotional Problems, EDTE420 Literacy Intervention Strategies, SPPA435 Comm Dev. and Disorders. Dissertation (both EdD & PhD students): EDRM880 Dissertation Proposal Development, EDCI889 Doctoral Seminar, VI: Lifelong Learner, EDCI725 Doctoral Orientation Seminar, EDCI889 Doctoral Seminar; VII: Subject Matter Expert; VIII: Program Designer; EDCI547 Found of Curriculum Development, EDCI686 Curriculum Past and Present, IX: Reflective Instructor; EDCI565 Improving Instruction, EDCI665 Adv Instructional Models; X: Skilled Assessor; EDCI545 Assess and Eval of Learning, EDCI636 Program Evaluation, EDCI696 Project Implementation. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum | School of Education, Department of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum, Bell Hall Room 014, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3465 | Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum offers teacher certification as well as undergraduate and graduate programs in education. This Teacher Preparation Program is accredited by the Michigan State Board of Education. Also, all of the degree and certification programs in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum are accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). They are also approved by the North American Division Office of Education of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Michigan teaching credentials have reciprocity with a number of states and Canadian provinces. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MS in Software Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Technology, Department of Engineering | This course MS in Software Engineering is an applied study of computing focusing on the software development process through the application and synthesis of principles from computer science and related fields. Emphasis is placed on practical results balanced by scientific foundation. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Technology, Department of Engineering | College of Technology, Department of Engineering, Haughey Hall 312, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3420 | Department of Engineering and Computer Science aspires to be a place of choice for engineering and computer science education where dedicated students and faculty grow together to reach their God-given potential for service to society and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MS in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | MSA in Community and International Development | Full Time | 1.5 - 2 years | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | This course MSA in Community and International Development is an 18-24 month graduate program. On a basic level, students will explore the social science foundations especially in regard to probing the meaning of people-centered development. Students will develop skills related to program planning, implementation, and evaluation and will gain knowledge in principles of organizational behavior, leadership, and management as they relate to non-profit organizations. Further, ethical principles and financial analysis for assuring individual and organizational accountability will be covered. Social research methods and techniques of communicating with stakeholders about their community development plans will be mastered. Students will obtain competency in at least one concentration emphasis to meet the career goals of the student. The Field Practicum will require the student to undertake a 300 hour internship. This program places a strong emphasis on project management and there are six equally important components in the practice of project cycle management namely Programming, Identification, Formulation, Financing, Implementation and Evaluation. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Behavioral Sciences, Nethery Hall 123, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3152 | Department of Behavioral Sciences is concerned with the study of how human beings think and behave, both as individuals and in social, spiritual and cultural settings. By providing you with the discoveries and procedures accumulated from this versatile field of study, this goal is to empower student to utilize their knowledge to further the mission of Seventh-day Adventists and to restore men and women to the image of this Maker. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Major in Mathematical Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | This program is available only as a second major, to those taking a degree in another field. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Major | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Haughey Hall 121, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3424 | Department of Mathematics seeks to provide leadership in the mathematical sciences by: Preparing students with the mathematical understanding, problem-solving skills, and dispositions that enable them to excel in their chosen careers; Increasing mathematical and scientific knowledge through publication and presentation; Supporting the broader mathematics education community and mentoring others for generous service through a committed Christian life. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Management Program | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | Management is a broad-based discipline. The faculty offers courses for students who desire either a specific business emphasis within management or a general business degree. Most management graduates enter into an internship or training program where they can integrate their general business skills with specific job responsibilities. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | No qualification | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Marketing Program | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | Marketing provides a well-rounded business education for those considering opening their own business or for careers in areas such as advertising and promotion, retail or marketing management, marketing research, sales, or international business. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | No qualification | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance | School of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The Department of Accounting, Economics, and Finance offer majors that are intellectually stimulating, professionally challenging, and rewarding. They endeavor to provide the best preparation possible for careers in business, government, academia, and the church. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Arts in Music | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Students with an earned baccalaureate degree within any major, assuming adequate undergraduate preparation in music. Adequate preparation includes mastery of music theory equivalent to content of MUCT242 Music Theory IV, MUCT152 Ear Training Laboratory II, and MUCT251 Music Technology Laboratory I; mastery of music history equivalent to content of MUHL446-448 Music Literature and Style (Antiquity to 20th Century); and mastery of level of performance appropriate to the specific chosen masters program. Students who have completed programs comparable to the baccalaureate degree from non-United States institutions. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Core--11; MUCT535 (4 credits); MUHL519; MUHL524 (2 credits); MUHL695 (2 credits). Additional courses--21; MUHL524 (2 credits), Music Performance--2-4; Music Education--3 (May be chosen from music education or area Literature and Pedagogy courses.); Thesis/Project/Recital--2-6; Electives--6-10 (May be chosen from music, art, art history, literature). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Arts in Music Ministry | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Students with an earned baccalaureate degree within any major, assuming adequate undergraduate preparation in music. Adequate preparation includes mastery of music theory equivalent to content of MUCT242 Music Theory IV, MUCT152 Ear Training Laboratory II, and MUCT251 Music Technology Laboratory I; mastery of music history equivalent to content of MUHL446-448 Music Literature and Style (Antiquity to 20th Century); and mastery of level of performance appropriate to the specific chosen masters program. Students who have completed programs comparable to the baccalaureate degree from non-United States institutions. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Music Components--34; Sacred Music--19; CHMN519 (2 credits), CHMN537 (2 credits), CHMN590 (2 credits), MUED648 (1 credit), MUHL519 (3 credits), MUHL695 (1 credit), MUHL698 (2 credits), MUPF506 (6 credits), Other Studies in Music--15; MUCT535 (2 credits), MUED451 (3 credits), MUPF500 (1 credit), MUPF500 (Applied Music, any one area, 6 credits), MUPF575 (1 credit); Electives--2; Ensemble--NC; 4 semesters: 2 choral, 1 handbell, 1 student choice; MUPF489 Seminary Cognate--6; Required: CHMN534 (2 credits); Choose one (1) of the following: CHMN545 (2 credits), CHMN527 (2 credits); Choose one (1) of the following: CHIS674 (2 credits), one course in biblical studies (2 credits). | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Arts in Pastoral Ministry | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Master of Arts in Pastoral Ministry degree program offers professional training to mature pastors experienced in ministry. Normally such persons (if male) are ordained ministers unable to leave their parish and come to the seminary campus for extended periods of time. The seminary provides the major part of this professional training at off-campus centers in North America and various international sites. This program provides opportunity for mature persons whose ministerial functions make it impossible to study at the seminary for extended periods of time to engage in a study program leading to a professional degree. This degree is not a substitute for the MDiv degree, the basic training for the Adventist ministry. The MA in Pastoral Ministry serves both the English-speaking and Spanish-speaking Adventist ministry in North America. While admission to the program is the same for both groups of applicants, the curriculum reflects the emphases for the English and Hispanic ministry tracks. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Arts in Religion | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $728 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Master of Arts in Religion is an academic program involving 1 year of specialized study beyond the baccalaureate-degree level. The MA in Religion degree is offered with these orientations: (1) Research Orientation which requires a thesis and a modern language relevant to the student's research, usually French or German; and (2) General Academic Orientation, which requires comprehensive examinations. The program requires a minimum of 32 credits. Only 500-and 600-level courses are accepted. The purpose of this program is to provide specialized training within the broader setting of the various disciplines of the Seminary. Students may choose an area of emphasis from those listed below: Archaeology and History of Antiquity, Biblical-Theological Studies (Affiliation and Extensions Program only), Biblical and Cognate Languages, Church History, Intertestamental (Jewish) Studies, Jewish and Muslim Faiths, Mission Studies, New Testament Studies, Old Testament Studies, Theological Studies. The MA in Religion degree with the research orientation is designed to fulfill the needs of students planning further graduate study in biblical studies, religion, or theology. The general academic orientation should fulfill the needs of students who plan to engage in religious or secular endeavors which require a strong background in an emphasis. The MA in Religion is offered both on campus and at affiliation and extension centers outside the United States. When offered at affiliation sites, the program may reflect context-sensitive needs in its curriculum as approved by the seminary faculty. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Arts in Religious Education | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Master of Arts: Religious Education is an interdisciplinary academic program that prepares both professional and lay pastor-teachers for leadership roles in settings where religious, moral, and spiritual nurture and growth are primary concerns. Areas of Specialization: Family Life Education, Campus Spiritual Leadership, Denominational Certification for Secondary Religion Teaching, And Other Options Customized by the Student in Consultation with an Advisor. Students electing to obtain a graduate certificate in family life education or campus spiritual leadership can continue to study and obtain all of the requirements for the MA: Religious Education either by coming to campus full time or by coming to campus for summer intensives that require pre-campus and post-campus academic work. Other options require campus residency throughout the program. The curriculum is designed with core courses and a selected area of emphasis. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Arts in Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This course Master of Arts in Teaching, the student is prepared to teach biology in secondary schools. This degree is offered through the School of Education. A minor or its equivalent in biology on the undergraduate level is a prerequisite. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Price Hall 218, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3243 | Department of Biology is committed to helping students achieve educational, occupational, and personal excellence. The department offers a range of biology emphases at the undergraduate and graduate level, preparing students to succeed in postgraduate and professional programs, industry, or the teaching profession. It emphasize the responsible, environmentally sensitive use of global resources and have made it our mission not only to train scientists, teachers, and health professionals, but also to nurture lasting relationships and instill ethical and moral values in our students. It also believe that academic excellence need not be sacrificed for a Christian education. This is evidenced by the quality of the graduates, who often go on to excel in some of the highest ranked graduate and professional programs in the nation. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Arts in Teaching English | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | ENGL460: Linguistics, ENGL465: TESL Methods, ENGL469: Second Language Acquisition, ENGL505: Practicum, Two from: ENGL466: Phonetics and Phonology, ENGL525: Topics; ENGL540: Language and Culture. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Nethery Hall 106, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3298 | The English Department, within a framework of Christian faith and purpose, develops graduates who are competent, creative and critical readers, writers, and thinkers, capable of a variety of careers. Andrews University's MA program in English facilitates, within a Christian context, the development of scholarly and teaching abilities that complement students' career choice and prepare them for further graduate study. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Arts in Youth Ministry | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Master of Arts in Youth Ministry degree is a professional program designed to equip men and women with competencies needed for an effective ministry to youth and young adults in local church and para-church settings. The program is focused on teaching, evangelizing, discipline, and counseling adolescents. The MA in Youth Ministry requires intensive study in the specialized field of youth ministry. The graduate of the MA in Youth Ministry is competent to: Develop, direct, and evaluate youth ministry programs in the local church and other targeted areas with both professional and theological competency, Recruit, nurture, and disciple youth in Christian service and vocation, Recruit, nurture, and disciple adult youth leaders, Develop the ability to reflect constructively and theologically upon the content and process of youth ministry. Serve in a variety of vocations, such as youth pastor, dormitory dean, local church youth leader, conference youth director, academy bible teacher, and guidance counselor. Students who seek ordination or plan to serve in general pastoral or church leadership positions should consider, as an alternative, the Master of Divinity program as stipulated by North American Division policy (L 05 05 and L 05 15). The Master of Divinity program also has an emphasis in Youth Ministry. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Divinity | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $728 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Master of Divinity degree program provides basic post-graduate professional preparation for ministry with a broad exposure to all fields of theological study. The program applies biblical, historical, linguistic, theological, philosophical, ethical, missiological, pastoral, and evangelistic instruction to the practical work of the church. Practical field experience is a vital part of this program. The Master of Divinity program is recommended as the basic training for Adventist ministry by the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists and the North American Division. It is a 3-year professional program beginning in the summer (or autumn) semester of each year. Students can complete the 96-credit program in 7 semesters with summers free. However, the seminary schedule is so arranged that MDiv students who have no deficiencies and who have adequate financial support may accelerate their studies by taking 7 semesters in sequence, including summers, and complete the program in less than 3 years. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Music - Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Students with an earned baccalaureate degree within any major, assuming adequate undergraduate preparation in music. Adequate preparation includes mastery of music theory equivalent to content of MUCT242 Music Theory IV, MUCT152 Ear Training Laboratory II, and MUCT251 Music Technology Laboratory I; mastery of music history equivalent to content of MUHL446-448 Music Literature and Style (Antiquity to 20th Century); and mastery of level of performance appropriate to the specific chosen masters program. Students who have completed programs comparable to the baccalaureate degree from non-United States institutions. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Core--11; MUCT535 (4 credits); MUHL519; MUHL 524 (2 credits); MUHL695 (2 credits); Additional courses--min. 24; MUED430 (3 credits) Topics in Music Education; MUED515, 521; MUPF506; MUHL524 (2 credits); Area Literature and Pedagogy course (3 credits); Major Performance--2-4 Thesis/ Project/Recital--2-6; Electives--0-4. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Music - Music Performance | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Students with an earned baccalaureate degree within any major, assuming adequate undergraduate preparation in music. Adequate preparation includes mastery of music theory equivalent to content of MUCT242 Music Theory IV, MUCT152 Ear Training Laboratory II, and MUCT251 Music Technology Laboratory I; mastery of music history equivalent to content of MUHL446-448 Music Literature and Style (Antiquity to 20th Century); and mastery of level of performance appropriate to the specific chosen masters program. Students who have completed programs comparable to the baccalaureate degree from non-United States institutions. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Specialization: Organ, piano, string, or voice; Core--11; MUCT535 (4 credits); MUHL519; MUHL524 (2 credits); MUHL695 (2 credits) Additional courses--min. 23; Area Literature and Pedagogy courses (6 credits); MUPF506 (organ and voice majors), 538 (string majors), 575, MUPF420 (voice majors) Major Performance, Music Electives--0-5; MUPF489 Specialization: Instrumental or choral conducting, Core--11; MUCT535 (4 credits); MUHL519; MUHL524 (2 credits); MUHL695 (2 credits); Additional courses--min. 23; Advanced Conducting--min. 9; MUPF575; MUED464 (2 credits); Music Electives--4; Cognate field--6. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Hamel Hall 207, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3555 | Department of Music philosophy is expressed in two pillars that provide the foundation for all they do in the Department. Modeled by faculty, these form the undergirding upon which we individually and collectively build all this artistic, academic, and inter-personal endeavors. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Science - Mathematics and Science | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | This course is designed for students who wish to acquire a breadth of knowledge which cannot be achieved within any one discipline among mathematics, biology, chemistry and physics. Such a degree may be useful for secondary or middle-school teachers who teach mathematics and science subjects, but who do not desire a traditional MAT program; for those who wish to develop skills in areas of overlap in these disciplines; for those who wish to study the interrelationships among the disciplines; and for those who wish further preparation for careers in industry or government. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Students must hold a baccalaureate degree with a major in one of the above areas with a cumulative GPA of at least 2.60 (4.00 system) and have earned credit or demonstrated proficiency in the following prerequisites: CPTR125 (FORTRAN or C++) or CPTR151; MATH141, 142, 240, 286; and two out of three year-long laboratory science courses: BIOL165, 166, CHEM131, 132 and PHYS241, 242, 271, 272. A student may be admitted with deficiencies in the above courses, but this exception requires the student to take additional credits beyond the minimum 32 credits required. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Haughey Hall 121, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3424 | Department of Mathematics seeks to provide leadership in the mathematical sciences by: Preparing students with the mathematical understanding, problem-solving skills, and dispositions that enable them to excel in their chosen careers; Increasing mathematical and scientific knowledge through publication and presentation; Supporting the broader mathematics education community and mentoring others for generous service through a committed Christian life. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Science in Administration | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course MSA Degree in Church Administration is designed for individuals who wish to specialize in church administration at a level of expertise not available in the MDiv program. The MSA program prepares students to serve as presidents, treasurers, and/or institutional administrators. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Science in Biology | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This course Master of Science in Biology is an advanced academic degree that prepares students to continue on for a Ph.D. or perhaps to work in a high level research lab or state lab as a research associate or technician. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | BIOL165,166 Foundations of Biology; BIOL348 General Ecology; BIOL372 Genetics, Cellular and Molecular Biology I; BIOL372 Genetics, Cellular and Molecular Biology II; BIOL449 Historical and Philosophical Biology; BIOL451, 452 Questions in Biology: Analysis, Evaluation and Answers; ELECTIVES: ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY; BIOL208 Principles of Environmental Science; BIOL479 Marine Ecology; BIOL487 Biogeography, BOT450 Medical Botany, BOT468 Marine Botany; BOT475 Biodiversity of Vascular Plants; ZOOL454 Vertebrate Zoology; ZOOL458 Marine Invertebrates; ZOOL459 Entomology; ELECTIVES: MORPHOLOGICAL BIOLOGY; BIOL428 Paleobiology; BOT430 Plant Anatomy; ZOOL315 Animal Development; ZOOL316 Human Embryology; ZOOL465 Histology; ELECTIVES: FUNCTIONAL BIOLOGY; BIOL418 Immunology; BIOL419 Immunology Lab, BIOL445 Molecular Genetics, BOT470 Plant Physiology, ZOOL464 Systems Physiology, ZOOL484 Animal Behavior. OTHER ELECTIVES; BIOL444 Electron Microscopy in Biological Investigations, BIOL446 Electron Microscopy Laboratory, BIOL447 Tissue Culture; BIOL475 Biology of Bacteria; ZOOL425 Parasitology; ZOOL475 Neurobiology. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, Price Hall 218, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3243 | Department of Biology is committed to helping students achieve educational, occupational, and personal excellence. The department offers a range of biology emphases at the undergraduate and graduate level, preparing students to succeed in postgraduate and professional programs, industry, or the teaching profession. It emphasize the responsible, environmentally sensitive use of global resources and have made it our mission not only to train scientists, teachers, and health professionals, but also to nurture lasting relationships and instill ethical and moral values in our students. It also believe that academic excellence need not be sacrificed for a Christian education. This is evidenced by the quality of the graduates, who often go on to excel in some of the highest ranked graduate and professional programs in the nation. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Science in Clinical Laboratory Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences | This course Master of Science in Clinical Laboratory Sciences(MSCLS) is a professional degree designed to meet the needs of the Clinical Laboratory Scientist (CLS) in an increasingly complex healthcare environment. With the amount of, and demand for, laboratory testing increasing each year, a significant need exists for CLS professionals, but particularly for individuals with advanced technical knowledge, management skills, and leadership abilities. In response to the diversity of career skills required by the clinical laboratory scientist (medical technologist), the degree features a variety of program emphases, including concentrations in biomedical sciences, business and management, and education. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences, Halenz Hall 326, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3336 | Department of Clinical and Laboratory Sciences prepares students who are committed to preserving and protecting the dignity of life and death. We promote values and attitudes consistent with the Seventh-day Adventist Christian lifestyle. We strive to instill in students a lifelong personal quest for individual growth and fulfillment and for continual excellence in healthcare practice. Our department offers a four-year Bachelor of Science in Clinical and Laboratory Science (BSCLS), and CLS certificate or categorical certificates in five distinct areas of CLS for degree-holding students. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Social Work | This course Master of Social Work is a professional degree enabling the graduate to enter practice as an advanced level practitioner. Graduates are prepared to work in a variety of interpersonal clinical or administration and development practice emphases. The foundation curriculum for the MSW consists of five areas of course content: Human Behavior and the Social Environment, Social Welfare Policy, Research, Professional Practice, and Practicum. Accreditation for the MSW degree has been granted through the Council on Social Work Education. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Social Work | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Social Work, Nethery Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6196 | Department of Social Work is to prepare individuals for excellence during a lifetime of professional service and Christian compassion in action. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Master of Theology | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | This course Master of Theology degree requires one year of full-time, specialized study beyond the MDiv degree. This program gives qualified students an opportunity for graduate study and research in 1 particular area of theological study with appropriate minors. The Master of Theology is an academic degree that provides the opportunity for full-time specialized study beyond the Master of Divinity degree. The MTh degree requires a minimum of 48 credits of 500-, 600-, and 800-level courses. The purpose of the MTh degree is to provide specialized training in a major area of study with a cognate area closely related to the major area of emphasis. MTh students are advised by the chair of the department, or his/her appointee, and the director of the MTh Program. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, Theological Seminary, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3536 | Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year masterSeventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary was voted into existence in 1936 by action of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It operated in Washington, D.C. until it was transferred to Berrien Springs, Michigan, in 1960. Here it became a school of the newly established Andrews University. The Seminary is fully accredited by The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada. The primary mission of the Seminary is to prepare ministers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This is done especially by means of the 3-year Master of Divinity program. There are also 2-year master’s programs in Youth Ministry and in Pastoral Ministry. In addition, the Seminary offers the 1-2 year academic Master of Arts in Religion program and the Master of Theology. Three doctoral programs are also offered: Doctor of Ministry, Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, and Doctor of Theology. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Masters of Business in Administration | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Business Administration | This course Masters of Business in Administration at Andrews University is characterized by academic quality, attention to research, close individual student/professor interaction, and an emphasis on the spiritual dimensions of the various content fields. The university welcomes students in harmony with these ideals to apply for admission to its graduate program. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. Completion of a recognized four-year bachelor's degree, A cumulative 3.00 grade point average (on a 4.00 scale) on all prior post-secondary study, An acceptable GMAT score (minimum required score of 400). | MBA | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Core Requirements: 24 semester credits; ACCT620 Financial Statement Analysis, BSAD515 Organizational Behavior, BSAD620 Christian Ethics, Service and Society, BSAD689 Strategic Management, ECON525 Global Macroeconomic Analysis, ECON530 Operations / Managerial Economics FNCE675 Financial Management, MKTG680 Marketing Strategy, Elective Courses: Electives (choose a minimum of three courses 9 semester credits from the following): ACCT586 Tax Research, ACCT615 Accounting Theory, BSAD530 Management of Not-For-Profit Organizations, BSAD545 International Management, BSAD560 Intercultural Business Relations, BSAD615 Management of Quality, BSAD670 Human Resources Seminar, FNCE526 International Financial Management, FNCE680 Investment Strategy, INFS510 Management Information Systems, MKTG540 Marketing for Non-Profit Organizations. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration | School of Business Administration, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The School of Business Administration offers high quality education in business at the bachelors and masters levels to all who qualify both church members and others of goodwill. This emphasize excellence in teaching in this disciplines, challenging students to search for knowledge and for that wisdom illuminated by Christian insight in preparation for service to the world. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Masters of Science in Administration - Church Administration | Full Time | Variable | $728 per credit hour | School of Business Administration | This course Master of Science in Administration - Church Administration is for students seeking management roles in church or church-related organizations. Offered jointly by the School of Business and the SDA Theological Seminary, the program blends business management and church management. Students must take any lacking prerequisite courses in addition to the 33 graduate credits required for the MSA degree. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. A four-year baccalaureate degree from an accredited American university or senior college, or its equivalent outside the U.S. GPA: A minimum undergraduate GPA of 2.60, GRE or GMAT : Submission of a satisfactory GRE or GMATscore taken within the past five years. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | MSA Core Requirements; BSAD515 Organizational Behavior, BSAD620 Christian Ethics, Service and Society, MKTG680 Marketing Strategy 9 semester credits, School of Business Electives (select two of the following); ACCT635 Accounting and Finance for Managers, BSAD530 Management of Not-for-Profit Organizations, BSAD560 Intercultural Business Relations, BSAD670 Human Resources Seminar, FNCE680 Investment Strategy, MKTG540 Marketing for Non-Profit Organizations 6 semester credits, SDA Theological Seminary Electives (Choose at least one course from each cluster); Cluster 1: CHMN527 Church Leadership and Administration, CHMN630 Leadership Development, CHMN638 Seminar in Leadership, CHMN655 Dynamic Group Strategies, Cluster 2: CHMN539 Church Growth and the Equipping Pastor, CHMN606 Techniques in Church Planting, CHMN612 Urban Mission, MSSN635 Contemporary Issues in Mission; Cluster 3: CHMN529 Church and Personal Finance, CHMN545 Pastoral Ministries and Church Policy, CHMN643 Christian Professional Ethics, THST615 Doctrine of the Church, Cluster 4: CHMN525 Hispanic-American Culture and Its Expressions, CHMN535 Issues in Black Church Leadership, CHMN585 Cross-Cultural Communication, THST634 Christian Social Ethics, Cluster 5: CHMN518 Interpersonal Relationship Skills, CHMN570 Perspectives in Communication, COMM475 Effective Presentations, PREL460 Development. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Business Administration | School of Business Administration, Chan Shun Hall, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3632 | The School of Business Administration offers high quality education in business at the bachelors and masters levels to all who qualify both church members and others of goodwill. This emphasize excellence in teaching in this disciplines, challenging students to search for knowledge and for that wisdom illuminated by Christian insight in preparation for service to the world. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | PhD in Counseling Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course PhD in Counseling Psychology prepares students for the practice of counseling psychology in schools, colleges, agencies, hospitals, churches, businesses, industries, and private settings. It is the intent of the program to prepare graduates for licensure as professional psychologists. Students should consult with the appropriate authorities regarding requirements in the states or countries in which they wish to practice. Counseling psychology students may specialize in Adult, Child/Adolescent, or Marriage and Family Services. Specialties should be developed within a student's course plan in close consultation with their advisor. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC520* Psychological Development - The Life Span, EDPC635 Theories and Techniques of counseling, EDPC638 Group Processes, EDPC644 Psychological Testing, EDPC650 Practicum in Counseling, EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology I, *Recommended prerequisites. EDPC620 History and Systems of Psychology, EPC625 Biopsychology, EDPC580 Social Psychology, or EDPC640 Multicultural Issues for Counselors and Psychologists, EDPC616 Psychology of Religious Experience, EDPC626 Cognitive Psychology, EDPC629 Psychopathology: Classification and Treatment, EDPC676 Theories of Personality. EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology (additional School of Education historical and psychological foundations requirements are met by EDPC514 and 620. EDPC550 Personality Assessment, EDPC554 Career Development, EDPC651 Assessment I: Behavioral and Educational Applications, EDPC652 Assessment II: Cognitive Applications, EDPC645 Professional Ethics for Counselors and Psychologists, EDPC686 Therapies for Children: Theory and Practice, EDPC687 Therapies for Adults: Theory and Practice, EDPC737 Seminar in the Supervision of Counselors, EDPC745 Practicum in Counseling Psychology, EDPC820 Internship in Counseling Psychology, EDPC835 Seminar in Counseling Psychology, and two of the following: EDPC622 Seminar on Special Topics, EDPC688 Group Therapy, EDPC689 Marital and Family Therapy. EDRM605 Qualitative Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology II, EDRM613 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology III, EDRM710 Seminar in Research Methodology, EDRM880 Dissertation Proposal Development. EDPC899 Doctoral Dissertation. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | PhD in Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course PhD in Educational Psychology prepares individuals for educational psychology positions. It prepares college and university instructors, generally in the areas of human development, personality, learning and instruction. Educational psychologists also work in schools, businesses, industries and various human development settings. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | EDPC514 Psychology of Learning, EDPC515 Psychological Development: The Growth Years, EDPC525 Psychology and Education of Exceptional Children, EDPC605 Psychological Development: Adulthood and Aging, EDPC625 Biopsychology, EDPC626 Cognitive Psychology, EDPC 644 Psychological Testing, EDPC645 Professional Ethics for Counselors and Psychologists, EDPC676 Theories of Personality, EDPC736 Field Work in Educational Psychology, EDPC834 Seminar in Educational/School Psychology, EDPC651 Assessment I: Behavioral & Educational Appl., or EDTE424 Classroom Testing and Evaluation, EDPC Elective; EDFN500 Philosophical Foundations of Education and Psychology, EDPC620 History and Systems of Psychology, or a non-psychological foundations course. EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM606 Qualitative Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology I, EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology II, EDRM710 Seminar in Research Methods, EDRM880 Dissertation Proposal Development. Electives; By advisement. Dissertation Requirement EDPC899 Doctoral Dissertation. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | PhD in Educational Psychology - School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | This course PhD in PhD in Educational Psychology - School Psychology prepares individuals for the professional practice of school psychology. Doctoral-level school psychologists work in public and private school systems, colleges and universities, preschool and child-development centers, and private practice. Typical responsibilities include assessment, diagnosis, consultation, program planning and intervention services to preschool and school-age children with educational, emotional and behavioral problems. This is a professional degree that is aimed at preparing school psychologists for added responsibility in the area of supervision or more in-depth understanding of school psychological practice and research methodology. It is planned to be a continuation of the EdS degree. Certification/licensure as a school psychologist is advisable. If certification has not been met prior to enrollment in the doctoral program, the sequence of courses from the EdS program must be completed as part of the doctoral program. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | School Psychology Focus; EDPC629 Psychopathology: Classification and Treatment, EDPC676 Theories of Personality, EDPC834 Seminar in Educational/School Psychology, Supervision Focus, EDAL560 Legal Aspects of Education, EDAL570 Principles of Educational Supervision, EDAL635 Human Resources Administration. EDRM505 Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM604 Design and Analysis of Education and Psychology Surveys, EDRM606 Qualitative Research Methods in Education and Psychology, EDRM611 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology I, EDRM612 Applied Statistics in Education and Psychology II, EDRM613 Applied Statistics in Education & Psychology III, EDRM710 Seminar in Research Methods 1, EDRM880 Dissertation Proposal Development. DPC626 Cognitive Psychology, EDPC638 Group Processes, EDPC686 Therapies for Children: Theory and Practice. | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, Bell Hall Room 151, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3473 | Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology is to: Prepare professional psychologists, counselors, and learning specialists who are committed to excellence and world-wide service, Provide training based on a Christian worldview and philosophy that promotes the balanced development of the mental, physical, social, and spiritual nature of persons, Respect human diversity and the uniqueness of each person as one created by God, Uphold the principles of Scripture as a guide for interpersonal relations. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||
| 168740 | Andrews University | PhD in Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $849 per credit hour | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Leadership and Educational Administration, Bell Hall Room 173, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6580 | Department of Leadership and Educational Administration is home to three overlapping yet distinct academic programs. Leadership is a competency-based and job-embedded program for leaders in environments as diverse as education, business, nursing, clergy, and government organizations. The two educational administration programs prepare leaders for service specifically in educational settings: K-12 Educational Administration is for leaders of primary or secondary schools or school systems, while Higher Education Administration is for administrators in colleges and universities. | Yes | Dormitory - Double occupancy $3250 per year, for Single occupancy $5688 per year. On Campus Housing costs per months; For Efficiency - $445 to $455, For One Bedroom - $520 to $545, For Two Bedroom - $525 to $605, Three Bedroom - $585 to $720, Four Bedroom - $715 and Housing Deposit $320. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Physics as a Second Major | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Major | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Haughey Hall 211, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3430 | Department of Physics strives to integrate physical reality, mathematical representations, Seventh-day Adventist faith, and personal spirituality. Physics faculty and students work together to increase physical awareness, creativity, and analytical skill in order to honor their Creator, build communal responsibility and understanding, and prepare to serve in the professions, scientific research and development, education, and government. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | ||||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Pre-Law | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program is a designation added to any other major offered by Andrews and informs student advisor that you would like to attend law school after completing a college degree. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Pre-professional | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, Nethery Hall 122, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3292 | The History and Political Science Department serves Andrews students in several ways. It provides general educational courses required for all students and offers degree programs for those interested in further study of American and European history, political science, or social studies.Faculty in the department aid students in understanding the relationship of the past and present and demonstrate how local, national, and international political processes affect and respond to events. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Pre-Professional in Public History | Full Time | Variable | US $19,514 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This major areas include museum management, archival management, and historic preservation, as well as the production of historical programs for the media. | Students should have at least a 2.25 cumulative high school and/or college GPA is required for admission to Andrews University; or an overall GED score of at least the 50th percentile, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries, a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. | Pre-professional | Andrews University | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, Nethery Hall 122, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 3292 | The History and Political Science Department serves Andrews students in several ways. It provides general educational courses required for all students and offers degree programs for those interested in further study of American and European history, political science, or social studies.Faculty in the department aid students in understanding the relationship of the past and present and demonstrate how local, national, and international political processes affect and respond to events. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Professional Master of Architecture | Full Time | 5.5 Year(s) | $728 per credit hour | School of Architecture | This course Professional Master of Architecture consists of a 5.5 years track comprising a pre-professional Bachelor of Science in Architecture degree and then a Master of Architecture degree. When earned sequentially, the degree track results in the accredited professional education. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Architecture | School of Architecture, Architecture Building, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6003 | The main building of the School of Architecture was constructed and occupied by the Architecture Department in 1985, and provides accommodations for the majority of its needs. The combined architecture facilities include four studios, two classrooms, the Architecture Resource Center (ARC), a 70-seat lecture hall, a CAD lab, a conference room, administrative offices, nine faculty offices, a model shop, a photo studio, the slide collection, exhibition and jury space. In 1994 the main Architecture building was extensively renovated to enlarge the Architecture Resource Center (library) and the CAD lab. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Professional Master of Architecture | Full Time | 3.5 Year(s) | $728 per credit hour | School of Architecture | This course Professional Master of Architecture consists of a 3.5 years track is designed for students who have previously earned an undergraduate degree that may be in an unrelated area of study. Acceptance is required to both the University School of Graduate Studies and the School of Architecture 3-1/2 year program. Graduate standards of scholarship apply to all coursework. Under this option, the student spends the first two years completing the undergraduate prerequisite architectural core courses. The final year is the same as the final year of the 5-1/2 year Master of Architecture degree track which results in the professional degree, accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB). | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Masters | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | School of Architecture | School of Architecture, Architecture Building, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6003 | The main building of the School of Architecture was constructed and occupied by the Architecture Department in 1985, and provides accommodations for the majority of its needs. The combined architecture facilities include four studios, two classrooms, the Architecture Resource Center (ARC), a 70-seat lecture hall, a CAD lab, a conference room, administrative offices, nine faculty offices, a model shop, a photo studio, the slide collection, exhibition and jury space. In 1994 the main Architecture building was extensively renovated to enlarge the Architecture Resource Center (library) and the CAD lab. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 168740 | Andrews University | Transitional DPT | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $849 per credit hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy | This course Transitional DPT purpose is to allow the working clinician to gain the additional knowledge necessary to transition them academically to the entry-level DPT. The program utilizes a combination of short course format, independent study and distance learning to minimize time away from home while providing necessary didactic contact. The graduate should leave the program with greater skills in the area of medical screening, differential diagnosis, education and research. | Students who don't speak English as a first language will need to demonstrate the ability to pursue studies in the English language by passing either the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or MELAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), both of which are offered in most countries. All Andrews undergraduate programs require a 550 on the TOEFL or an 80 on the MELAB in order to fulfill the English language requirement. The test must be recent - within one year prior to admission. Applicants from outside the United States are required to supply support for sponsorships together with twelve months of bank documentation for all personal and family funds. These documents should prove financial ability to sustain educational expenses for the duration of the educational program, prior to the issuance of the I-20 form, to secure a U.S. student visa. Additionally, international students, excluding those from Canada and Mexico, (graduate and undergraduate) are required to remit a deposit of $2000 plus payment in full for the first semester to the Student Financial Services Office. | Doctoral | ANDREWS UNIVERSITY | Andrews University | BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 6321 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy, Physical Therapy Building 131, Andrews University, BERRIEN SPRINGS, Michigan, 49104, +1 269 471 2878 | Department of Physical Therapy mission is to provide a quality Physical Therapist education within a cooperative learning environment that promotes Christian values. The physical therapy department provides resources and encourages faculty to continue their educational, professional, and spiritual growth. | Yes | The Andrews residence hall spec sheet reads almost like a hotel brochure: air conditioning, cable TV, internet, fitness centers, laundry facilities, spacious lobbies, room service...alright, so there’s no room service, unless students have got an over-obliging roommate. Meier and Burman Halls provide so much more than a place to sleep and study. The Meier and Burman and Lamson halls provide the following facilities: Health Club, Kitchenettes, Laundry Rooms, Lobbies, Meeting Spaces. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Art - Art History | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Art - Art Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program includes study in performing arts and history of performance as well as related studies in such fields as African/African-American Studies, American Indian Studies, History, Languages and Literatures and Women's Studies. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Art - Museum Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program has a strong focus on curatorial and management areas of the museum world, which prepares students for careers in museums, galleries and arts organizations. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Film - Film and Media Production | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | In this program, students receive a comprehensive practical knowledge of production, awareness of the impact of media and entertainment on the audience and an understanding of the role of the artist in society. They have access to digital cameras, lighting, and sound equipment in a new teaching studio. Post-production facilities include multiple computer editing stations and the curriculum’s course work in ethics in entertainment and dramatic analysis are two other unique components. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Film - Filmmaking Practices | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Students in this program receive grounding in production practice, independent film producing, entertainment ethics and an understanding of the role of the artist in society. The curriculum’s course work in ethics in entertainment and dramatic analysis are two unique components of the program. Students completing the degree will be prepared for entry level positions in film production, producing and management, or advanced graduate level education. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Film and Media Studies - Media Industries | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | Students in the Media Industries area of emphasis analyze the growing integration of storytelling, advertising, brands, and audiences within the current film and media landscape, with a particular focus on corporate structure, production culture and regulation. Grounded in the Humanities, this track culminates in a capstone experience in which student’s intern at a media company or organization. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies, P O Box 870402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6747 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Film and Media Studies - Media and Society | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | This program provides students with skills that can be applied in a number of fields: from the entertainment industry, including film, television and new media, to local media arts organizations, teaching and research. Based in a broad liberal arts education focused on the humanities, students graduate with the ability to think analytically and speak and write clearly and persuasively - skills in demand across almost all sectors of the global economy. The program develops these skills through a variety of discussion-based and writing intensive courses. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies, P O Box 870402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6747 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Film and Media Studies - Screenwriting | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | The practice of screenwriting shapes entertainment, challenges social convention and informs global culture. The screenwriting area of emphasis is grounded in the humanities, empowering students to discover their distinct voices while creating stories with a critical and creative edge. Students gain the necessary skills to craft compelling narratives that provoke, inspire and entertain diverse audiences. Students pursuing the screenwriting track will complete at least three scripts for film, television, video games or new media. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies, P O Box 870402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6747 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Film and Media Studies - Styles and Genres | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | Students pursuing the Styles and Genres area of emphasis study aesthetics, authorship, genres, and national cinemas within the broader context of the humanities. The courses that make up this track culminate in a capstone experience in which students write a critical, theoretical, or historical essay on the media arts. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies, P O Box 870402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6747 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Students gain a general appreciation of the principal fields of human knowledge while acquiring training in such areas as theatre and performance studies, performance and directing, design and production, new work development, theatre for youth and film. The program provides an excellent broad based foundation for work in the arts or entertainment professions or readies students for further training at graduate schools or conservatories. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Theatre - Acting | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | This program involves comprehensive academic and hands-on theatre study with an emphasis on performance. Student artists and scholars gain a general appreciation of the principal fields of human knowledge while acquiring training in such areas as theatre and performance studies, performance and directing, design and production, new work development, theatre for youth and film. It provides an excellent broad based foundation for work in the profession or readies students for further training at graduate schools or conservatories. The program's liberal arts emphasis prepares graduates for a variety of occupations. The concentration in acting offers students advanced study that can lead to careers in theatre, film or media, ranging from regional/seasonal theatrical production opportunities to work in television and film, as well as careers in education and other related arts disciplines. | Applicant must complete pre-requisite or co-requisite courses THP 202, 272, 277 and THE 220; all with a grade of B- or higher. They should participate in any capacity in at least one Main Stage or Student Production Board production. The admission process consists of the submission of a one-page letter of intent, resume and an unofficial transcript (minimum 2.50 overall GPA and a 3.00 Theatre GPA required) to the acting concentration coordinator, and a formal interview conducted during the spring semester. Retention in the concentration is based on satisfactory artistic and academic progress, production participation, evidence of a strong work ethic and maintenance of a minimum 2.50 overall GPA and a 3.00 Theatre GPA. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.A. in Theatre - Design and Production | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | This program involves comprehensive academic and hands-on theatre study with an emphasis on design and production. Student artists and scholars gain a general appreciation of the principal fields of human knowledge while acquiring training in such areas as theatre and performance studies, performance and directing, design and production, new work development, theatre for youth and film. It provides an excellent broad based foundation for work in the profession or readies students for further training at graduate schools or conservatories. The program’s liberal arts emphasis prepares graduates for a variety of occupations. The design and production concentration offers students advanced study that can lead to careers in the performing arts and the entertainment industry as designers or technologists. | Admission to the program requires an interview with design and production faculty (conducted at the end of each semester); submission of a letter of intent, a portfolio and an unofficial transcript (a minimum GPA of 2.50 is required) and resume, which is optional. Retention in the program is based on satisfactory artistic growth (as evidenced in a mandatory portfolio reflecting work completed during each semester), production participation, and maintenance of a minimum 2.50 overall GPA and a 3.00 Theatre GPA. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Art Education | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program prepares students to teach and also offers a broad based curriculum providing substantial foundations in studio art, art history and art education. The program has an international reputation as a leading research center. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | In this program students learn a range of techniques and concepts that enable them to develop their own style and specialty. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Drawing | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program provides a comprehensive education that fosters innovation and sustains tradition. The diversity and plurality of contemporary painting and drawing are reflected in the media and content of the faculty’s work. This program prides itself on the depth and breadth of its curriculum. Students develop formal, conceptual and technical knowledge through studio work in traditional and non-traditional media. Each area of the program has a dedicated studio: painting, drawing, water media, life drawing and figure painting. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Fibers | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | The primary intent of the program is to educate students and engage the community about the technical, material and conceptual issues related to the field through classes, exhibitions, public lectures and studio tours. The strength of the program presents a broad range of fiber techniques to enable and encourage the creative exploration of traditional and innovative methods rooted in the rich history of textiles. Students obtain the knowledge and confidence to develop their professional portfolio with proficiency and distinctive character. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Intermedia | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program embraces creative practices including installation, performance, sound, video, animation, composting, Web art, and rapid prototyping. It builds on theories of social art practice and tactical media that carry the aims of social change and democratic engagement in a variety of contexts. The curriculum includes digital sculpture, time-based arts, animation, and performance. Students work with experimental studio practices, performance, and digital media to explore new avenues for self-expression, collaborative practice, and community action. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Metals | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program is a comprehensive program that combines art production, criticism, aesthetics, historic references and personal experiences, which promote the artist as an active participant in society. Students are urged to experiment with new technologies, materials and ideas. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Painting | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | The program provides a comprehensive education that fosters innovation and sustains tradition. The diversity and plurality of contemporary painting and drawing are reflected in the media and content of the faculty’s work. The program prides itself on the depth and breadth of its curriculum. Students develop formal, conceptual and technical knowledge through studio work in traditional and non-traditional media. Each area of the program has a dedicated studio: painting, drawing, water media, life drawing and figure painting. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Photography | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | In this program, students learn from faculty with diverse creative concerns and who cultivate technique in the service of ideas, parallel to the critical and cultural analysis of the medium. They have access to the widest range of photographic possibilities, including silver gelatin, chromogenic color, digital imaging, video, non-silver and mixed media. Students explore interdisciplinary options in their art through other disciplines, including printmaking, intermedia and sculpture. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Printmaking | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This fundamental program that provides a comprehensive studio experience and courses in intaglio, lithography, relief, screen printing, monotype, book arts, paper making and other graphic applications are offered regularly. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Art - Sculpture | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | In this program students have opportunities to work in neon, study electronics and kinetics in sculpture, and cast in iron, bronze and aluminum. Video installation, performance art and interactivity are combined with woodworking, metal fabrication and public art. The experimental systems component of the sculpture program is a notable highlight, being one of the few university sculpture curriculum offering courses exploring electronics, mechanical systems, kinetics, machining, video and computer systems as applied to the visual arts. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Dance | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | This program provides an interdisciplinary curriculum promoting innovative collaborations and a holistic approach to acquiring skills for successful career transitions. Creativity and research, the core program values are embedded in a broad range of academic experiences emphasizing movement and creative practices, artistic process, leadership and pedagogy. Studies in dance cultures, music, digital media, dance history, philosophy, criticism, movement science, somatics and stage and screen production enhance the rich educational setting. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance, PO Box 872102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1891 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.F.A. in Dance - Dance Education | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | This program prepares students to teach dance in elementary and secondary schools, private studio settings and in other community contexts. Creativity and research, the core program values are embedded in a broad range of academic experiences emphasizing movement and creative practices, artistic process, leadership and pedagogy. Studies in dance cultures, music, digital media, dance history, philosophy and criticism, movement science, somatics and stage and screen production enhance the rich educational setting. A comprehensive academic foundation prepares students to teach and design curriculum. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance, PO Box 872102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1891 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.M. in Jazz Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program combines jazz performance, composition and pedagogy into a program that allows students to express musically while also emphasizing the necessary skills for a professional career in music. The program has a curriculum based on active involvement in music. A thorough theoretical understanding of music is essential, but ultimately, there is no substitute for actually writing and playing music. The jazz ensembles perform frequently on campus, as well as making numerous off-campus appearances in clubs and resorts around the Valley. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.M. in Music Therapy | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program instructs students in the mental health/special education profession that uses carefully planned music activities to achieve desired changes in client behavior and functioning. Educating the potential music therapist requires both a wide range of skill and the ability to work with people in a therapeutic manner. Students have many opportunities to develop their clinical skills and also study musical improvisation, songwriting, world music and popular music styles. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.M. in Theory and Composition - Composition | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program focuses on the study of music from a compositional viewpoint and may be used as the first step toward a master’s or doctoral degree in music theory and composition. Students have the opportunity to study with theorists and composers who have established national and international reputations. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.M. in Theory and Composition - Theory | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program focuses on the theoretical study of music and may be used as the first step toward a master’s or doctoral degree in music theory and composition. Students have the opportunity to study with theorists and composers who have established national and international reputations. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Biological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This program is designed for students who desire a broad background in many areas of biology or who want to postpone selection of a concentration until graduate school. Biological Sciences encompasses the study of all living things (microbes, plants and animals), and includes the study of basic organization and function (molecular, cellular, tissues, organs), how organisms evolve, their roles in the natural environment, how hereditary information is transferred, and the development of biotechnology. Students graduating with this degree are broadly trained and well prepared for admission into graduate programs and professional schools (medical, dental, and veterinary). | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Biological Sciences - Animal Physiology and Behavior | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration is intended for students interested in a broad, integrated education in the principles and mechanisms governing animal function and behavior. It will prepare students for graduate level study in physiology, neuroscience and animal behavior, professional school in health professions, or careers in basic and biomedically-oriented research. The requirements include upper division courses in the related fields of behavior, physiology and neuroscience. Electives are designed to provide flexibility and ensure exposure to multiple levels of analysis. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Biological Sciences - Biology and Society | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration is designed to provide students with a working knowledge of life sciences and related sciences, and to gain the historical, philosophical, political, and bioethical perspectives needed to explore interactions between the life sciences and related complex human issues. The program seeks to cultivate better informed and more effective policy-makers, teachers, writers, and researchers in areas related to biology, medicine, and society. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Biological Sciences - Conservation Biology and Ecological Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration is designed to provide students with a broad background in conservation biology and ecological sustainability, while allowing them to specialize in certain area(s) of interest. It provides for training in population biology, behavioral ecology, climate change, urban ecology, conservation of endangered species and social and historical aspects of conservation. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Biological Sciences - Ecology and Evolution | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration provides training in the ecology, evolution and behavior of organisms, the diversity and systematic relationships among species and change in these relationships through time, and the responses of organisms and ecological systems to human activity and environmental change. Evolution forms the foundation for understanding everything in biological sciences, while ecology examines the interaction of organisms with their environment. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Biological Sciences - Genetics, Cell and Developmental Biology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration is intended for students interested in a flexible curriculum education focused on the related fields of genetics, cell biology, and developmental biology. It will prepare students for careers in basic and biomedically-oriented research or post-baccalaureate education in the health professions. The requirements include upper division courses in genetics, cell, and developmental biology and in the sub discipline of Comparative Genomics. Elective courses permit students to further focus their education in one or more of these areas. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Biological Sciences - Genomics and Bioinformatics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration is intended for students interested in a flexible curriculum education focused on modern genome science. It will prepare students for careers in basic and biomedically-oriented research or professional training in the health professions. The requirements include upper division courses in genetics, biochemistry, and computational biology. Elective courses permit students to further focus their education in one or more of these areas. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Biological Sciences - Plant Biology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration provides breadth for students interested in all aspects of plant biology, from traditional areas such as anatomy, morphology, systematic and evolution, ecology, physiology, to cellular, developmental and molecular plant biology. The elective courses permits students to further focus their education in these areas of specialization. One area is primarily for students interested in plant diversity, ecology and evolution, or other aspects of organismal biology; the other is appropriate for students interested in genetics and genomics, and cellular, molecular and development plant biology. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Clinical Laboratory Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This program is designed to prepare individuals for a health care profession that serves as a vital partner in medical decision making. The major scientific disciplines studied in clinical laboratory sciences include clinical chemistry, hematology, immunohematology, immunology, and microbiology. Clinical Laboratory Scientists perform laboratory analysis utilized by physicians to diagnose, treat, and monitor disease; and evaluate the maintenance of an individual’s health. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Microbiology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This program is a focused degree that seeks to (1) educate students in the basic background knowledge of microbiology with many courses related more specifically to medical microbiology, (2) teach students to critical think about microbiology, and (3) train students in some hands-on laboratory techniques. The curriculum has been designed to reach these goals. Students with this degree can go onto jobs in the biotechnology, pharmaceutical food and environmental sampling industries. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Molecular Biosciences and Biotechnology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This program is designed to prepare students interested in molecular and cellular biology for productive careers in rapidly expanding areas in the molecular life sciences. The program provides a strong foundation for molecular based research and education including medical research and practice, biotechnology, functional genomics research, and gene discovery. The courses includes chemistry, biochemistry, genetics, molecular and cell biology, genetic engineering and biotechnology, and bioinformatics, with emphasis on laboratory training. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S. in Supply Chain Management | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: SCM345 Logistics Management (3), SCM355 Supply Management (3), SCM432 Planning and Control Systems for Supply Chain Management (3), SCM440 Quality Management and Measurement (3), SCM455 Research and Negotiation (L2) (3), SCM479 Supply Chain Strategy (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management, P.O. Box 874706, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6044 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S./B.A.E. - Dual Degree in Physics and Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the Mary Lou Fulton College of Education collaborate to offer students a dual degree program in physics and secondary education (physics emphasis). This program of study provides students the flexibility to pursue a career teaching students in seventh through 12th grade while also preparing for graduate school in a technical field. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics, Arizona State University, P O Box 871504, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3561 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | B.S.E. in Materials Science and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | This degree is concerned with the fundamental relationships between the structure and processing of materials and their properties. The materials program at ASU provides students with the knowledge and training necessary to optimally use existing materials and develop and produce new materials. The responsibilities of a materials scientist or engineer include the research and development of materials for a specific application, devising new ways to produce materials for improved performance, reducing cost or creating new products. Materials scientists are often responsible for analyzing data on field-tested materials to determine the effects of the environment on materials performance. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials, PO Box 878706, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 9311 | The vision of the School of Materials is to evolve and leverage the Flexible Display Center’s world class flexible display capabilities, in concert with other ASU synergistic research, to achieve a leadership position in the emerging flexible electronics industry and establish ASU as a high value government and industry resource. The mission is to advance full color, video rate, flexible display technology and catalyze development of a vibrant flexible display and flexible electronics industry to produce integrated electronic systems with advanced functionality. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | BSE in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | The goal of the program is to prepare graduates for entry level positions as electrical engineers for the broad range of opportunities available in industrial, commercial, and governmental organizations, and to prepare graduates for continued learning experiences either in a formal graduate program or in continuing education applications. Students who earn a degree will be involved in a variety of electrical and electronic problems in the course of their careers. To ensure the necessary breadth of knowledge, the curriculum includes basic engineering courses and courses in circuits, electromagnetic fields and waves, microprocessors, communication and control systems, solid-state electronics, electrical power systems, and other specialty courses. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University, 650 East Tyler MallGoldwater Center Room 206, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3424 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 871804, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7195 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Applied Science in Internet and Web Development Concentration | Distance / Online | 2 Year(s) | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | The B.A.S. programs are a flexible, 60-credit-hour degree designed specifically for students who have earned an A.A.S. from a regionally accredited institution. The concentration in Internet and Web development provides the technology related to the development of Internet sites, to include security, usability, e-commerce, server and client side issues, and cross media graphic applications. The degree can be taken entirely through distance learning; however students must work with an advisor to schedule classes. An appropriate A.A.S. for this B.A.S. is in graphic design, graphic arts, fine arts, computer science or technical discipline with related work experience. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Applied Science in Operations Management Technology | Distance / Online | 60 Credit-hour(s) | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | The B.A.S. programs are a flexible, 60-credit-hour degree designed specifically for students who have earned an A.A.S. from a regionally accredited institution. The concentration in operations management technology provides the tools needed for success as a manager. An effective manager is someone who can organize work, understands the work environment and can create a safe and healthful work environment, hires qualified workers that can do the job or can be trained/educated to perform the job, motivates and develops the workforce, effectively utilizes the resources available to create quality products and/or services and accomplishes his/her unit goals. The B.A.S. in operations management technology prepares undergraduate students for supervisory and management functions in industry, manufacturing, public service and other service organizations. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). Students applying to this program must have completed an Associate of Applied Science (A.A.S.) degree from a regionally accredited institution. Students applying to this program must have completed an Associate of Applied Science (A.A.S.) degree from a regionally accredited institution. Not available for freshmen. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | This program introduces students to the concept of sustainability in the context of real-world problems, exploring the interaction of environmental, economic, and social systems. Students can pursue the following tracks: Society and Sustainability; Policy and Governance in Sustainable Systems; International Development and Sustainability; and Sustainable Urban Dynamics. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus, Arizona State University, PO Box 875502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 6963 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This program is intended to provide a strong background in chemistry and biochemistry but is designed for students who favor a biological emphasis compared to a biophysical chemistry emphasis, as in the Biochemistry BS degree. The reduced number of required major hours is well suited to students pursuing a double major. This degree provides a good foundation for individuals entering a graduate program in areas where a background in biochemistry is a strong asset and is particularly suited to students intending to pursue careers in law, medicine, pharmacy, dentistry or business. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This program emphasizes the core aspects of chemistry, from a more qualitative viewpoint than the degree and includes required courses in organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, physical chemistry, and analytical chemistry. The program provides a chemical experience for those intending to work in technical laboratory positions that do not involves intensive basic research. Recipients of the degree enter postgraduate professional programs where a technical background in chemistry is valued, including Law, Business, and Medicine. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in African and African American Studies - Africa Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies | This program offers an interdisciplinary examination of the many ways in which African and African-descended peoples have created robust lives for themselves and, in turn, contributed to the creation of the modern world. The program’s mission is advanced by its core undergraduate curriculum and certificate and minor programs that examine the culture, arts, history, politics, economics and current status of African Americans, Africans and the African Diaspora, especially in the Caribbean, Central America and South America. The curriculum combines a research based understanding of the humanities, social and behavioral sciences, and the arts with practical applications (internships, community/civic engagement and research projects) to prepare students for lifelong learning, advanced study in a variety of fields, successful careers and productive public service in an increasingly diverse society, especially in Arizona. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: AFH 300 Pre-colonial Africa (3), AFS 200 Introduction to African and African Diaspora Studies (3), AFS 301 Race and Racism in Africa/African Diaspora (3), AFS 318 African and African Diaspora Women Writers (3), AFS 484 Field Experience/Internship (3) or AFS 498 Pro-seminar (3), AFH 300 Pre-colonial Africa (3), AFH 305 The Global History of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (3), AFH 319 Black Experience in Latin America (3), AFH 465 Harlem Renaissance: A Cultural History: 1877-1945 (3), AFS 340 The Making of Modern Africa (3), AFS 345 The Making of the Caribbean Society (3), AFS 363 African American History to 1865, SB, C, H (3), AFS 364 African American History since 1865, SB, G, H (3), AFS 366 African Archaeology: Pre-colonial Urban Culture, SB, C, H (3), AFS 466 Peoples and Cultures of Africa, SB, G, H (3), AFS 355 Democracy and Civil Society in Africa (3), AFS 340 The Making of Modern Africa (3), Related Courses (9). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies, 140 Wilson Hall, P O Box 870903, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4399 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in African and African American Studies - African America Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies | This program offers an interdisciplinary examination of the many ways in which African and African-descended peoples have created robust lives for themselves and, in turn, contributed to the creation of the modern world. The program’s mission is advanced by its core undergraduate curriculum and certificate and minor programs that examine the culture, arts, history, politics, economics and current status of African Americans, Africans and the African Diaspora, especially in the Caribbean, Central America and South America. The curriculum combines a research based understanding of the humanities, social and behavioral sciences, and the arts with practical applications (internships, community/civic engagement and research projects) to prepare students for lifelong learning, advanced study in a variety of fields, successful careers and productive public service in an increasingly diverse society, especially in Arizona. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: AFH 300 Pre-colonial Africa (3), AFS 200 Introduction to African and African Diaspora Studies (3), AFS 301 Race and Racism in Africa/African Diaspora (3), AFS 318 African and African Diaspora Women Writers (3), AFS 484 Field Experience/Internship (3) or AFS 498 Pro-seminar (3), AFH 300 Pre-colonial Africa (3), AFH 305 The Global History of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (3), AFH 319 Black Experience in Latin America (3), AFH 465 Harlem Renaissance: A Cultural History: 1877-1945 (3), AFS 340 The Making of Modern Africa (3), AFS 345 The Making of the Caribbean Society (3), AFS 363 African American History to 1865, SB, C, H (3), AFS 364 African American History since 1865, SB, G, H (3), AFS 366 African Archaeology: Pre-colonial Urban Culture, SB, C, H (3), AFS 466 Peoples and Cultures of Africa, SB, G, H (3), AFR 210 Introduction to African American Studies, C (3), AFS 363 African American History to 1865, SB, C, H (3) or AFH 364 African American History Since 1865, SB, C, H (3), Related courses. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies, 140 Wilson Hall, P O Box 870903, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4399 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in African and African American Studies - Caribbean and Afro-Latin American Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies | This program offers an interdisciplinary examination of the many ways in which African and African-descended peoples have created robust lives for themselves and, in turn, contributed to the creation of the modern world. The program’s mission is advanced by its core undergraduate curriculum and certificate and minor programs that examine the culture, arts, history, politics, economics and current status of African Americans, Africans and the African Diaspora, especially in the Caribbean, Central America and South America. The curriculum combines a research based understanding of the humanities, social and behavioral sciences, and the arts with practical applications (internships, community/civic engagement and research projects) to prepare students for lifelong learning, advanced study in a variety of fields, successful careers and productive public service in an increasingly diverse society, especially in Arizona. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: AFH 300 Pre-colonial Africa (3), AFS 200 Introduction to African and African Diaspora Studies (3), AFS 301 Race and Racism in Africa/African Diaspora (3), AFS 318 African and African Diaspora Women Writers (3), AFS 484 Field Experience/Internship (3) or AFS 498 Pro-seminar (3), AFH 300 Pre-colonial Africa (3), AFH 305 The Global History of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (3), AFH 319 Black Experience in Latin America (3), AFH 465 Harlem Renaissance: A Cultural History: 1877-1945 (3), AFS 340 The Making of Modern Africa (3), AFS 345 The Making of the Caribbean Society (3), AFS 363 African American History to 1865, SB, C, H (3), AFS 364 African American History since 1865, SB, G, H (3), AFS 366 African Archaeology: Pre-colonial Urban Culture, SB, C, H (3), AFS 466 Peoples and Cultures of Africa, SB, G, H (3), AFS 304 Islands of Globalization (3) or AFH 319 Black Experience in Latin American (3), AFS 345 The Making of the Caribbean Society (3), Related courses (9). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, African and African American Studies, 140 Wilson Hall, P O Box 870903, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4399 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | This program gives students an opportunity to learn how and why humans evolved, and how evolutionary biological, social and cultural trajectories help us understand the meaning of being human in past, present and future environments. A special feature of the program is its relevance to other disciplines, including economics, sociology, biology, public health, psychology, medicine, law, community planning, architecture, religious studies, fine arts, area or cultural group studies, global studies and applied mathematics. It provides many exciting hands-on learning opportunities through laboratories and field-based courses that focus on finding ancient human fossils; unearthing buried cities, villages and hunter-gatherer camps; understanding health, disease and human biology; appreciating the languages and cultures of such diverse areas as Southeast Asia, the South Pacific, Latin America and the Mediterranean Basin; and many other topics that explore humans of the past and present. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Asian Languages - Chinese | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | Students in this program study about the language, literature and culture of China. They gain a respectable measure of competence in reading, writing and oral/aural skills in the Chinese language. Throughout the program, students take courses in either Japanese or Korean and related courses in Chinese and East Asian culture on topics such as Chinese history, art, religion, government, literary and cultural theory and linguistics. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Asian Languages - Japanese | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | Students in this program study about the language, literature and culture of Japan. They gain a respectable measure of competence in reading, writing and oral/aural skills in the Japanese language. They also gain linguistic and cultural competence through the required study of Classical Japanese. Throughout the program, students take courses in either Chinese or Korean and related courses in Japanese and East Asian culture on topics such as Japanese history, art, religion, government, literary and cultural theory and linguistics. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Business with Concentration in Communication | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | The B.A. in business with concentration in communication is an innovative, interdisciplinary program intended to prepare students for positions in a variety of professions where business and communication play an important role in ensuring success. Graduates of this program will have specific knowledge of business practices and the capacity to effectively communicate complex business information. Students in this program will complete rigorous courses within the communication concentration in addition to the skill and core courses required of all W. P. Carey School of Business majors. Business communication has exploded as a distinct professional field as companies require rapid and considered responses, from conveying ordinary information to crisis communications. Historically these positions have been staffed with people trained in communication, English, journalism or other fields who lack specific business knowledge. Graduates of this program will be qualified to enter these positions with knowledge that will be immediately useful to potential employers while advancing their careers. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies - Media, Literature and Arts | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | This concentration prepares students with critical, analytical and technical skills, and the theoretical underpinnings of the use of media for human communication within the context of transnational and trans-border processes. The media focus includes: cinematography, film production, video, electronic communication, performance art, cultural, literary studies, and long-distance learning and development. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5091 | The Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies is a center of research, learning, training and application that seeks to enhance the intellectual, educational and professional opportunities of Mexican-origin and other Latino populations. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies - Transborder Community Development and Health | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | In this program students will concentrate on: patterns of physical, mental and social health disparities closely associated with poverty; limited access to insurance; reliance on emergency measures and facilities; differential health care; and developing the appropriate mitigating applied programs. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5091 | The Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies is a center of research, learning, training and application that seeks to enhance the intellectual, educational and professional opportunities of Mexican-origin and other Latino populations. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies - U.S. and Mexican Regional Immigration Policy and Economy | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | This concentration has a strong applied orientation and focuses on the regional and transnational policies and practices that have led to enormous demographic changes in: the immediate U.S.-Mexico border region, where close to 12 million people live; and the United States, with 20.6 million people of Mexican origin, who were either born in or migrated to the country. The focus concerns the manner in which economic and political decisions between Mexico and the United States, and transnational policies concerning other countries, strongly influence the present state of: human migration; ecological conditions; economic policy towards trade; and demographic transitions. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5091 | The Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies is a center of research, learning, training and application that seeks to enhance the intellectual, educational and professional opportunities of Mexican-origin and other Latino populations. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Design Studies | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | College of Design, Tempe Campus, PO Box 871905, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies is a center of research, learning, training and application that seeks to enhance the intellectual, educational and professional opportunities of Mexican-origin and other Latino populations. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Design Studies - Design Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | This program of study is intended to inform students about the interdependency that exists among design, management, and human communication. Students focus on courses in design, economics, finance, management, marketing, and human communication. Such combination of courses can open doors for opportunities where design, management, and communication come together. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | College of Design, Tempe Campus, PO Box 871905, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Early Childhood Education | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach children in preschool through third grades. An early childhood teacher must know how young children develop and learn, have a broad knowledge of subjects taught in these grades, and be well versed in techniques for working effectively with children. Students completing a degree in Early Childhood education are eligible to receive K-8 teacher certification. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach children in kindergarten through eighth grade. Students work in three different elementary schools, one each semester, prior to student teaching. Each semester, or block, includes methods course taught on an elementary school campus through an internship of six hours each week. Students become an integral part of the life of the elementary school and assignments link the classroom observations and experiences to the content of the methods courses. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Art Education) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Biological Sciences) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Business) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Chemistry) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Earth and Space Sciences) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration, ASU, PO Box 871404, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5081 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Economics) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (English) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (French) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Geography) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (German) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (History) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Japanese) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Mathematics) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Political Science) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Social Studies) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Secondary Education (Spanish) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This program is for people who want to teach students in seventh through twelfth grade. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Education - Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for people who want to work with students in kindergarten through twelfth grade who have learning disabilities, mild mental retardation, or emotional/behavioral disorders. It provides preparation in each disability area; however, the certificate the student qualifies for will be determined by their student teaching placement. A school internship is required for each semester. The program is accredited by the Council for Exceptional Children. The Special Education major leads to eligibility for certification in K-12 special education. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in English with Concentration in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules are: ENG 200 Critical Reading and Writing about Literature (L/HU), ENG 210 Introduction to Creative Writing (fiction or poetry), ENG 221 Survey of English Literature to 1798 (HU) or 222 Survey of English Literature since 1798 (HU, H), ENG 241 Literatures of the United States to 1860 (HU), ENG 242 Literatures of the United States, 1860 to Present (HU), ENG 310 Intermediate Creative Writing (fiction or poetry), ENG 411 Advanced Creative Writing (fiction or poetry), ENG 495 Literary Forms: Theory and Practice (fiction or poetry), ENG 498 Pro-Seminar: Creative Writing (fiction and poetry) (prerequisite: ENG 495), ENG/ENH 400-level literature course. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in English with Concentration in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules are: ENG 200 Critical Reading and Writing about Literature (L/HU), ENG 213 Introduction to the Study of Language (or ASB 480 Principles of Linguistics), ENG 221 Survey of English Literature to 1798 (HU) or ENG 222 Survey of English Literature since 1798 (HU, H) or ENG 241 Literatures of the United States to 1860 (HU) or ENG 242 Literatures of the United States, 1860 to Present (HU), ENG 312 English in Its Social Setting (L/HU/SB), ENG 313 Phonology and Morphology (L) (Spring semester only), ENG 314 Modern Grammar, ENG 413 History of the English Language (HU), ENG 414 Studies in Linguistics (to be repeated for a total of 9 credit hours). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in English with Concentration in Literature | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules are: ENG 200 Critical Reading and Writing about Literature (L/HU), ENG/ENH Literature and Culture before 1800, ENG/ENH Literature and Culture after 1800, ENG/ENH Literary Theory and Interdisciplinary Studies, ENG/ENH Transnational, Post colonial, and Global Literatures. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Film and Media Studies | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program provides students with skills that can be applied in a number of fields: from the entertainment industry, including film, television and new media, to local media arts organizations, teaching and research. Based in a broad liberal arts education focused on the humanities, their students graduate with the ability to think analytically and speak and write clearly and persuasively - skills in demand across almost all sectors of the global economy. Their program develops these skills through a variety of discussion-based and writing intensive courses. Graduates with degrees in film and media studies have secured jobs in the entertainment industry as creative executives, producers, managers, and writers. They work in the media arts, story and production development, exhibition, distribution and film, television and video game production. They have completed graduate studies, and secured jobs in journalism as film and media critics. They offer a broad range of courses that reflect trends and rapid transformations in the film and media industries, and prepare their students for increasingly sophisticated forms of artistic expression and storytelling. The topics include introduction to film; screenwriting fundamentals; emerging digital media; films of Francis ford Coppola; introduction to new media; crime and violence in American film; baseball, film and American dream; los Angeles: movies and culture; television and cultural studies. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in French | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | Students in this program study about the language, literature, linguistics and culture of France and Francophone countries. They gain a respectable measure of competence in reading, writing and oral/aural skills in the French language. They are required to take a number of related courses on topics such as French history, art, religion, government, international business, literary and cultural theory and linguistics. Students gain proficiency in the language, the French section has an active French Club, conversation hours and film screenings. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Geography | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 875302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7533 | The school itself has only existed as such since July 2006 and grew out of the Department of Geography, which has a long and distinguished history. The school is evolving into a scholarly community that engages in interdisciplinary and trans-disciplinary education, research and outreach dealing with substantive and applied questions where the role of place, space and interaction is central. These themes are also important in the vision of the New American University, which emphasizes local and global engagement, suggesting a major role for geographical sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in German | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | Students in this program study about the language, literature and culture of Germany. They gain a respectable measure of competence in reading, writing and oral/aural skills in the German language. They are required to take a number of related courses on topics such as German history, art, religion, government and international business. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Global Health | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | This interdisciplinary degree is designed for students who seek a broad and flexible set of skills for understanding contemporary health challenges and thinking about how they might best be solved. Global is understood in the anthropological sense, meaning ways of understanding and addressing disease, health and well-being that can incorporate all cultures, places and time, and that can integrate knowledge of health's social, historical, biological and ecological dimensions. The curriculum emphasizes the development of core skills in critical thinking and problem solving and the importance of direct experience (research, study abroad, service learning and advocacy). The degree cultivates capacities to deal with any complex problem with social components: how to identify the critical issues, ask the right questions and create solutions that are meaningful and effective. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Global Studies - Economic Development | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | This track builds on behavioral economics and new institutional thinking, introduces students to basic economic concepts and principles, and applies economic reasoning to understand development and related policy debates around the globe. The global flow of goods, services, capital, population and ideas has opened up new opportunities to alleviate poverty and fight inequality; at the same time, intensified human interactions across boundaries also leads to increasing pressure on ecological and human environment. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies, P O Box 875102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 8286 | The School of Global Studies was founded in 2005. The school has an extraordinary group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty. Educators are composed of core global studies faculty and affiliated faculty from throughout the university, who are experts in their field and focus on key current research and teaching themes. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Global Studies - Environment | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | This track helps students understand global environmental issues and conflicts from an interdisciplinary perspective. It is designed to expose students to a broad array of approaches to understanding environmental problems, from science and technical approaches, to socio-economic studies, to historical analysis. The core premise of the track is that the global environment cannot be studied without careful examination of place specific political, cultural, historical and natural factors, combined with institutional analyses of global organizations, institutions and governance structures and global trends. Environmental problems vary with the places, peoples and periods within which they occur, and the advantage of the program, is in the combination of local and comparative analysis combined with global perspectives. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies, P O Box 875102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 8286 | The School of Global Studies was founded in 2005. The school has an extraordinary group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty. Educators are composed of core global studies faculty and affiliated faculty from throughout the university, who are experts in their field and focus on key current research and teaching themes. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Global Studies - Global Governance | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | In this track students will study about how institutions, forms of governance, and the conflicts surrounding them are interconnected across local, national, international, and global levels. Global Governance includes the study of government regimes, organizations, law, institutions, and popular participation at these various levels; and it considers issues such as development governance, corruption, state failure, and participation/protest. They also study about how democracy, civil society, human rights, legitimacy, authority, and identity shape and are shaped by global processes. The study of governance is useful preparation for work in various sectors (government, business, civil society) across a range of issues areas such as development, environment, health care, justice, law, urbanization, and violence. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies, P O Box 875102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 8286 | The School of Global Studies was founded in 2005. The school has an extraordinary group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty. Educators are composed of core global studies faculty and affiliated faculty from throughout the university, who are experts in their field and focus on key current research and teaching themes. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Global Studies - Urban Systems | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | This track focuses on urban places as the prime nexus of global and local forces, given that most of the world’s population is urban, and approximately 80% of world economic output occurs in urban regions. It also focuses on how urban regions mediate and articulate external (global) forces within local contexts. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies, P O Box 875102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 8286 | The School of Global Studies was founded in 2005. The school has an extraordinary group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty. Educators are composed of core global studies faculty and affiliated faculty from throughout the university, who are experts in their field and focus on key current research and teaching themes. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Global Studies - Violence, Conflict, and Human Rights | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | This track provides students with an opportunity to focus their coursework on the important and overlooked topics of violence, conflict, and human rights. The proposed core course and related courses in this track incorporate different disciplinary approaches and examine the promises and pitfalls of possible solutions to addressing problems of violence and conflict as well as exploring local understandings about the causes and consequences of conflict. It also provides students with the intellectual grounding necessary for advanced study or policy-oriented careers that focus on these increasingly important global issues. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, School of Global Studies, P O Box 875102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 8286 | The School of Global Studies was founded in 2005. The school has an extraordinary group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty. Educators are composed of core global studies faculty and affiliated faculty from throughout the university, who are experts in their field and focus on key current research and teaching themes. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | This program allows students to focus on a single geographic concentration. There are four geographic concentrations: Asia, Europe, Latin America and United States. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Human Communication | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication, Arizona State University, PO Box 871205, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5095 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in International Letters and Cultures | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This degree is grounded in the study of at least one foreign language. It is a more intercultural and interdisciplinary degree than a traditional languages and literature degree and is designed to encourage students to explore and even challenge the traditional boundaries of cultures, texts and disciplines. Students choose a program of study that requires study and research in a minimum of two cultures or disciplines (or both). This program will provide essential skills that employers in government, education and various business sectors are looking for, including proficiency in another language or languages, knowledge of other cultures, strong written and oral communication skills and valuable critical thinking and analytical skills. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Italian | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | Students in this program study about the language, literature and culture of Italy. They gain a respectable measure of competence in reading, writing and oral/aural skills in the Italian language. They are required to take a number of related courses on topics such as Italian history, art, religion and government. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Political Science | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program equips students with critical skills and knowledge to lead in a democratic system of government and flourish in the rapid globalization of political institutions, cultures and economies. The graduates routinely go onto successful careers in law, politics, education, journalism, communications, and public service. They work in important institutions like the Federal Reserve and the Arizona Governor’s Office. Others work in major corporations and newspapers. Many have attended the world’s most prestigious graduate, legal and doctoral schools, to include Columbia, Duke, Harvard, Oxford, University of Chicago, and University of California-Los Angeles. The students are trained to link theory with real world problems and ideas. They learn from renowned faculty. They benefit from a classic yet contemporary liberal arts education. They hone a keen ability to think analytically and communicate clearly and persuasively. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | The modules include POS 110 Government and Politics, POS 150 Comparative Government, POS 160 Global Politics, POS 210 Political Ideologies, POS 301 Empirical Political Inquiry and POS 310 American National Government. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Psychology | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program equips students with skills in critical thinking and reasoning, quantitative and qualitative research, and the ability to interact effectively with groups of people from diverse backgrounds. The graduates routinely go on to successful careers in social services, counseling, human resources, criminal justice, teaching, law, and public administration. Other graduates benefit from the remarkable experiential learning and collaborative research opportunities to pursue graduate and doctoral degrees. As part of the new college of interdisciplinary arts and sciences, the students are trained to be independent thinkers and active participants in a rapidly changing world. They learn from nationally renowned faculty, to include psychologists, sociologists, anthropologists, geographers, and political scientists. They establish sensitivity to the artistic dimension of human expression, scientific inquiry and the natural environment. They hone a unique ability to communicate clearly and persuasively. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | ||||||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | Students may pursue the degree with regional, national, hemispheric, global, and a variety of thematic emphases. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Russian | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | Students in this program study about the language, literature and culture of Russia. They gain a respectable measure of reading, writing and oral/aural skills in the Russian language, engaging in Russian literature, history, art, religion, government, international business, linguistics, and literary and cultural theory. The program also cooperates with other related units within the university (e.g., the Melikian Center for Russian, Eurasian and East European Studies) to offer a Russian and East European studies certificate. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | This program trains students in written communication, computer skills, statistics and research methods, and offers a wide variety of substantive courses on contemporary social issues ranging from crime to population trends, and courses on social institutions, such as the family, education and religion. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Spanish - Literature and Culture | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | In this program, students have the opportunity to gain oral, reading, speaking and written proficiency in the language. The literature and culture track provides an in-depth understanding of the themes of Spanish and Latin American culture and literature and the contemporary issues throughout the Spanish-speaking world. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Spanish - Spanish Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | In this program, students have the opportunity to gain oral, reading, speaking and written proficiency in the language. The Spanish linguistics track provides an in-depth understanding of the Spanish language (syntax, morphology) and may include courses in translation (English/Spanish). | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Arts in Women and Gender Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, Women and Gender Studies | This program offers a comprehensive program of study that empowers students to make a difference in the world. Through the study of history, culture, literature, politics, film, science and economics students, learn to challenge conventional wisdom about gender and learn new ways of viewing the world. Internship and leadership opportunities in business, government and nonprofit organizations, for example, allow students to pursue career goals. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, Women and Gender Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, Women and Gender Studies, P O Box 874902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2358 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This course develop the intellectual tools needed to build bridges across academic disciplines and apply their skills, innovations and knowledge in various academic and practical settings. In core classes, students develop a portfolio that showcases each individual's skills, interests and talents. This portfolio and the applied learning experience provide each student with valuable resources for flexible, individualized career planning and development. The B.I.S. program may be completed in-person or online. Working with an advisor, students choose from and combine two of more than 100 concentrations that represent academic interests they wish to integrate. Of these, the following concentrations are available to students attending in-person or online: Family and human development, Film and media studies, istory (U.S. or European track), Justice studies, Political science, Religious studies, Small business, Sociology, Technical writing, and Women and gender studies. Because of the flexibility of the B.I.S. degree, B.I.S. graduates leave ASU ready for their next steps in life, whether employment in an entry-level position, promotional opportunities, or for graduate studies in a variety of disciplines. Recent examples include a graduate with biology and chemistry concentrations who is pursuing a master of pharmacy degree, another graduate who combined business and communication and now owns a small business, and another who integrated sociology and family studies to further a career in law enforcement. |
Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). Students should have good academic standing who have achieved sophomore, junior or senior standing. Students must complete the online B.I.S. cyber workshop prior to meeting with an advisor to declare their major as interdisciplinary studies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in African and African American Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: AFH 300 Precolonial Africa, AFS 200 Introduction to African and African Diaspora Studies, AFH 319 Black Experience in Latin America or AFR 210 Introduction to African American Studies or AFS 340 The Making of Modern Africa or AFS 355 Democracy and Civil Society in Africa, AFH 303 African and African American Art, AFS 301 Race and Racism in Africa/African Diaspora, AFR 375 Race, Gender and Sport. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 874603, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3634 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in American Indian Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 874603, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3634 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Architectural Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | The courses are designed to provide an overview of architecture throughout history while focusing on architectural design with the intention to explore the process of design thinking. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: ALA 100 Introduction to Environmental Design, ALA 102 Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Society, APH 313 History of Architecture I, APH 314 History of Architecture II, APH 305 Contemporary Architecture, APH 300 World Architecture I/Western Cultures, APH 441 Ancient Arch, APH 394 Special Topics, APH 411 History of Landscape Architecture, APH 414 History of the City, APH 446 20th-Century Architecture I, APH 447 20th-Century Architecture II, APH 494 Special Topics, APH 499 Individualized Instruction, APH 511 Energy Environment Theory, APH 598 Special Topics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Art History | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: ARS 101 Art from Prehistory Through Middle Ages HU, H (3); ARS 102 Art from Renaissance to Present HU, H (3); ARS 201 Art of Asia HU, G, H (3); ARS 202 Art of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas HU, G, H (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: AST 113 Astronomy Laboratory I, AST 114 Astronomy Laboratory II, AST 321 Introduction to Planetary and Stellar Astrophysics, AST 322 Introduction to Galactic and Extragalactic Astrophysics, PHY 150 Physics I, PHY 151 Physics II, PHY 252 Physics III. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration, ASU, PO Box 871404, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5081 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: BCH 461 General Biochemistry, BCH 462 General Biochemistry, CHM 113 General Chemistry I, CHM 116 General Chemistry II, CHM 117 General Chemistry for Majors I, CHM 118 General Chemistry for Majors II, CHM 233 General Organic Chemistry I, CHM 237 General Organic Chemistry Lab I, CHM 234 Organic Chemistry II, CHM 238 Organic Chemistry Lab II, CHM 333 -Organic Chemistry for Majors I, CHM 237 General Organic Chemistry Lab I, CHM 234 Organic Chemistry II, CHM 238 Organic Chemistry Lab II. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Box 871604, Arizona State University, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3461 | The department has greatly benefited from University-wide initiatives, with students and faculty enjoying new major facilities in the Biodesign Institute and a new high-field NMR chemistry facility in the Interdisciplinary Science Building. This expansion parallels the growth of the faculty, with new members in areas such as sustainability sciences, inorganic and bio solar energy, battery and fuel cell technology, analytical and sensor chemistry, materials chemistry, medical chemistry, nanotechnology, bioorganic and biophysical chemistry, NMR spectroscopy and chemical education. Perhaps the most important factor enabling this growth, however, is a substantial increase in the number of outstanding undergraduate and graduate students over the past five years. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Biological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Business | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: CHM 113 General Chemistry I, CHM 116 General Chemistry II, CHM 325 Analytical Chemistry, CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry Laboratory, BCH 361 Principles of Biochemistry, BCH 367 Elem. Biochemistry Lab, CHM 231 Elem. Organic Chemistry, CHM 235 Elem. Organic Chemistry Lab. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Box 871604, Arizona State University, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3461 | The department has greatly benefited from University-wide initiatives, with students and faculty enjoying new major facilities in the Biodesign Institute and a new high-field NMR chemistry facility in the Interdisciplinary Science Building. This expansion parallels the growth of the faculty, with new members in areas such as sustainability sciences, inorganic and bio solar energy, battery and fuel cell technology, analytical and sensor chemistry, materials chemistry, medical chemistry, nanotechnology, bioorganic and biophysical chemistry, NMR spectroscopy and chemical education. Perhaps the most important factor enabling this growth, however, is a substantial increase in the number of outstanding undergraduate and graduate students over the past five years. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Chinese | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: CHI 201 Second-Year Chinese I G (5), CHI 202 Second-Year Chinese II G (5), CHI 205 Calligraphy (1), CHI 301 Third-Year Chinese I (Formerly CHI 313) G (5), CHI 302 Third-Year Chinese II (Formerly CHI 314) G (5), CHI 307 Introduction to Classical Chinese I (Formerly CHI 413) HU (3), CHI 308 Introduction to Classical Chinese II (Formerly CHI 414) HU (3), CHI 321 Chinese Literature HU (3), CHI 322 Chinese Literature HU, G (3), CHI 345 Chinese Film and Civilization (3), CHI 394/494 Special Topics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Communication | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Computational Mathematical Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | The curriculum strives to provide students with a background in computer science and the natural or physical sciences in addition to a core of course work in mathematics. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: MAT 271 Calculus with Analytic Geometry II MA (4) or MAT 266 Calculus for Engineers II (3), MAT 272 Calculus with Analytic Geometry III MA (4) or MAT 267 Calculus for Engineers III (3), MAT 342 Linear Algebra (3) or MAT 343 Applied Linear Algebra (3), MAT 420 Scientific Computing (3), MAT 421 Applied Computational Methods CS (3), MAT 423 Numerical Analysis I CS (3) or MAT 425 Numerical Analysis II CS (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Dance | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | The interdisciplinary curriculum promotes creative collaboration and a holistic approach to acquiring skills for successful career transitions. Contemporary technique, performance and choreography define the core of the program, and the rich educational experience is further enhanced by studies in dance cultures, music, digital media, dance history, philosophy and criticism, movement science, somatics, and stage and screen production. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance, PO Box 872102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1891 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Design Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: ALA 100 Introduction to Environmental Design, ALA 102 Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Society, APH 313 History of Architecture I, APH 314 History of Architecture II, APH 411 History of Landscape Architecture, APH 598 Special Topics, DSC 101 Design Awareness, GRA 111 Graphic Design History I, GRA 112 Graphic Design History II, GRA 225 Communication/Interaction Design Theory, GRA 345 Design Rhetoric, GRA 440 Finding Purpose, IND 242 Materials and Design, IND 243 Design -Ecology/Social Equity, IND 316 20th-Century Design I, IND 317 20th-Century Design II, IND 344 Human Factors in Design, IND 354 Principles of Product Design, IND 470 Prof Practice-Industrial Design, INT 111 Interior Design Issues and Theories, INT 121 Introduction to Computer Modeling for Interior Design, INT 238 Intro to CAD, INT 310 History of Interior Design I, INT 311 History of Interior Design II, INT 412 History of Decorative Arts in Interiors, INT 413 History of Textiles in Interior Design. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | The program of study is designed for students planning to seek employment upon completion of their undergraduate studies or for students intending to go on to graduate school or law school. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Education | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: EDP 310 Education Psychology for Non-Teachers or EDP 311 Education Psychology for Future Teachers, MCE 230 Understanding the Culturally Diverse Child, MCE 230 Understanding the Culturally Diverse Child or MCE 446 Understanding the Culturally Diverse Child, SPF 301 Culture and Schooling, at least 9 hours from: BLE 335 Language Diversity in Classrooms, BLE 400 Principles of language minority education, IED 401 Navajo Language and Culture I, IED 403 Navajo Language and Culture II, IED 410 History American Indian Education, IED 422 Methods/Teach Indian Students, IED 430 Lang/Literacy-India Peoples, IED 433 Counseling the Indian Student, IED 444 Govt Role-Native Ed Pol/Adm, IED 460 Yaqui History and Culture, IED 494 Special Topics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in English: Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: ENG 200 Critical Reading and Writing About Literature, ENG 210 Topic: (Fiction, Poetry, Mixed Genre, Playwriting, Intro to Creative Writing), ENG 411 Topic: (Poetry, and Fiction, ENG 310 Topic: (Poetry, and Fiction), ENG 412 Creative Nonfiction, ENG 494 Topic: (Magazine Writing, Satan, Arthurian Literature, Theorizing Restoration Drama, Story Analysis for Film and TV, Cultural Theories, Teaching the Novel Grades 6-12, Experimental Narrative, Romanticism, Society and Culture in Modern Europe, Information Matters: Media Teaching and Tools). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in English: Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: ENG 200 Critical Reading and Writing about Literature, ENG 213 Introduction to the Study of Language, ENG 221 Survey of English Literature to 1798 or ENG 222 Survey of English Literature since 1798 or ENG 241 Literatures of the United States to 1860 or ENG 242 Literatures of the United States, 1860 to Present, ENG 312 English in Its Social Setting, ENG 314 Modern Grammar, ENG 413 History of the English Language. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in English: Literature | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Family and Human Development | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: CDE 232 Human Development, FAS 331 Marriage and Family Relationships, FAS 370 Family Ethnic and Cultural Diversity, at least 9 credits from: CDE 337 Early Childhood Intervention, CDE 430 Infant/Toddler Development in the Family, CDE 444 Risk and Variation in Child Development, CDE 498 Topic: (Language Development and Psychology), FAS 431 Parent-Adolescent Relationships, FAS 440 Fundamentals of Marriage and Family Therapy, FAS 498 Topic: (Conflict Resolution, Work and Society, Deviant Behavior, and Popular Black Media/ Adolescence). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Film and Media Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Film and Media Studies, P O Box 870402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6747 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in French | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Geography | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Geography: Environmental Geography | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: GPH 111 Introduction to Physical Geography, M GPH 210 Society and Environment, M GPH 211 Landform Processes, GPH 212/214 Introduction to Meteorology and Lab, any 2 courses from: GPH 314 Global Change, GCU 350 The Geography of World Crises, GCU 364 Energy in the Global Arena, GPH 373 Geographic Information Science I, GPH 381 Geography of Natural Resources, and any 2 courses from: GPH 405 Energy and Environment, GPH 414 Climate Change, GPH 418 Landforms of the Western United States, GPH 422 Plant Geography, GPH 433 Alpine and Arctic Environments, GPH 481 Environmental Geography, GCU 474 Public Land Policy. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Geography: Geographic Information Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: CSE 100 Principles of Programming with C++ CS or CSE 110 Principles of Programming with Java, GCU 495 Quantitative Methods in Geography, CS GPH 370 Geographic Information Technologies, CS GPH 373 Geographic Information Science I, CS GPH 473 Geographic Information Science II CS, and at least 3 hours from: ABS 485 GIS in Natural Resources, CSE 181 Applied Problem Solving with Visual Basic, GCU 361 Urban Geography, SB GCU 442 Geographical Analysis of Transportation SB, GCU 474 Public Land Policy, GCU 484 – Internship, GPH 371 Introduction to Cartography and Georepresentation, CS GPH 372 Air Photo Interpretation, GPH 471 Geographics: Interactive and Animated Cartography and Geovisualization, CS GPH 481 Environmental Geography, GPH 483 Geographic Information Analysis, GPH 484 Internship: GIS-Based, PLB 434 Landscape Ecological Analysis and Modeling. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Geography: Geography for Business | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: GCU 141 Introduction to Economic Geography, GPH 373 Geographic Information Science I, any 2 courses from: GCU 361 Urban Geography, GCU 441 Economic Geography, GCU 442 Geographical Analysis of Transportation, GCU 444 Geographic Studies in Urban Transportation, any 1 course from: GCU 323 Geography of Latin America, GCU 325 Geography of Europe, MGCU 326 Geography of Asia, and 1 course from: GCU 351 Population Geography, GCU 364 Energy in the Global Arena, GPH 473 Geographic Information Science II. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Geography: International Geography | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: GCU 121 World Geography, GCU 141 Introduction to Economic Geography, any 3 courses from: GCU 325 Geography of Europe, GCU 326 Geography of Asia, GCU 328 Geography of Middle East and North Africa, GCU 332 Geography of Australia and Oceania, GCU 350 The Geography of World Crises, GCU 359 Cities of the World I, GCU 360 Cities of the World II, GCU 364 Energy in the Global Arena, and any 1 course from: GCU 423 Geography of South America, GCU 424 Geography of Mexico and Middle America, GCU 425 Geography of the Mexican American Borderland, GCU 433 Geography of Southeast Asia. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Geological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: GLG 101 Introduction to Geology I (Physical), GLG 102 Introduction to Geology II (Historical), GLG 103 Introduction to Geology I-Laboratory, GLG 104 Introduction to Geology II-Laboratory, GLG 310 Structural Geology, GLG 321 Mineralogy GLG 400 Geology Colloquium. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in German | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: GER 311 German Conversation or GER 312 German Conversation, GER 313 German Composition, GER 201 Intermediate German I, GER 202 Intermediate German II. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Global Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in History | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Interior Design History | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | This program is available to students interested in design and culture. The courses serve to inform the students about the importance of the global community, especially sociocultural groups, and the impact of the global community on the design of the interior environment. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: DSC 101(R) Introduction to Environmental Design, INT 310(R) History of Interior Design I, INT 311(R) History of Interior Design II, INT 111 Interior Design Issues and Theories or INT 223org Drafting for Interior Design, INT 412 History of Decorative Arts in Interiors, INT 413 History of Textiles in Interior Design. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in International Business | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: MGT 302 Principles of International Business, ECN 306 Survey of International Economics, ECN 306 Survey of International Economics, ECN 331 Economics of the European Economic Union, ECN 360 Economic Development, ECN 365 Economics of Russia and Eastern Europe, ECN 394 Special Topics, ECN 394 (GLOBAL) Special Topics, ECN 394 (Latin AM) Special Topics, ECN 436 International Trade Theory, ECN 438 International Monetary Economics, ECN 494 (Euro Union) Special Topics, ECN 494 (Global) Special Topics, ECN 494 (Latin AM) Special Topics, ECN 494 (Multi) Special Topics, FIN 456 International Financial Management, MGT 400 Cultural Factors in International Business, MGT 459 International Management, MGT 302 Principles of International Business. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in International Business Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: MGT 302 Principles of International Business, ECN 306 Survey of International Economics, at least 6 hours from: ECN 306 Survey of International Economics, ECN 331 Economics of the European Economic Union, ECN 360 Economic Development, ECN 365 Economics of Russia and Eastern Europe, ECN 394 (EURO UNION) Special Topics, ECN 394 (GLOBAL) Special Topics, ECN 394 (LATIN AM) Special Topics, ECN 436 International Trade Theory, ECN 438 International Monetary Economics, ECN 494 (EURO UNION) Special Topics, ECN 494 (GLOBAL) Special Topics, ECN 494 (LATIN AM) Special Topics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Italian | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: ITA 311 Italian Composition and Conversation or ITA 312 Italian Composition and Conversation, ITA 325 Introduction to Italian Literature, and at least 9 hours from: ITA 201 Intermediate Italian I, ITA 202 Intermediate Italian II, ITA 314 Advanced Italian, ITA 315 Italian for Professions, ITA 415 Italian Civilization, ITA 420 Italian Cinema, ITA 425 Italian American Culture, ITA 430 Italian Literature of the Middle Ages, ITA 441 Dante: Divina Comedia, ITA 443 Italian Literature of the Renaissance, ITA 446 Italian Literature of the 18th and 19th Centuries, ITA 449 20th Century Italian Literature, ITA 494 Special Topics, ITA 499 Independent Study. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Japanese | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: JPN 313 Third-Year Japanese I, JPN 314 Third-Year Japanese II, JPN 201 Second-Year Japanese I, JPN 202 Second-Year Japanese II, JPN 206 Japanese Calligraphy, SLC 421 Japanese Literature in Translation, JPN 309 Intermediate Conversation, JPN 310 Intermediate Conversation, JPN 311 Conversation and Composition, JPN 312 Conversation and Composition, JPN 321 Japanese Literature, JPN 394 Special Topics, JPN 435 Advanced Readings, JPN 485 Problems of Translation, JPN 494 Special Topics, JPN 499 Independent Study. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Justice Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Kinesiology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | This concentration acquaints students with the field of kinesiology and students interested in knowing how the body responds to exercise training as well as the affects of biomechanical, physiological, and psychological principals are encouraged to study this concentration. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: BIO 201 Human Anatomy and Physiology I, BIO 202 Human Anatomy and Physiology II, CHM 101 Introductory Chemistry or CHM 113 General Chemistry I, MAT 170 Precalculus, PGS 101 Introduction to Psychology, PHY 111 General Physics, KIN 200 Introduction to Kinesiology, KIN 335 Biomechanics, KIN 340 Physiology of Exercise, KIN 345 Motor and Developmental Learning, KIN 352 Psychosocial Aspects of Physical Activity. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Landscape Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | This program is designed for students who have an interest in landscape aesthetics. The course selection is intended to provide greater understanding of landscape issues that may be relevant in related professional disciplines and to broaden knowledge about the landscape in which they live. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: ALA 102 Architecture and Landscape Architecture and Society HU, G (3), LPH 310 History of Landscape Architecture H (3), LPH 311 Contemporary Landscape Architecture HU (3), APH 494 Special Topics, LAP 485 International Field Studies in Planning, LPH 394 Special Topics, LPH 410 Social Factors in Landscape and Urban Planning, LPH 411 Landscape Architecture Theory and Criticism, LPH 412 Landscape Ecology and Planning, LPH 413 Southwest Landscape Interpretation, LPH 494 Special Topics, LPH 499 Individualized Instruction. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Latin American Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | This program is designed to give students an understanding of culture, economies, political structures, and the history of Latin American nations. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: POR 313 Portuguese Composition and Conversation, POR 314 Portuguese Composition and Conversation, SPA 313 Spanish Conversation and Composition, SPA 314 Spanish Conversation and Composition, SPA 315 Spanish Conversation and Composition for Bilinguals, SPA 316 Spanish Conversation and Composition for Bilinguals, SPA 319 Business Correspondence and Communication, SPA 412 Advanced Conversation and Composition, SPA 413 Advanced Spanish Grammar, SPA 417 Spanish Phonetics and Phonology, SPA 420 Applied Spanish Linguistics, APH 494 Special Topics, ARS 394 Special Topics, ARS 430 Art of Spain and Its Colonies, ARS 494 Special Topics, ARS 498 Pro-Seminar, ASB 322 Peoples of Mesoamerica, ASB 337 Pre-Hispanic Civilization of Middle America. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: MAT 271 Calculus with Analytic Geometry II MA (4) or MAT 266 Calculus for Engineers II (3), MAT 272 Calculus with Analytic Geometry III MA (4) or MAT 267 Calculus for Engineers III (3), MAT 342 Linear Algebra (3) or MAT 343 Applied Linear Algebra (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Music | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | s concentration is designed for those students who are interested in a broad introduction to the study of music. The program allows for a diverse exposure to traditional through contemporary music practices, with numerous options to select courses based on student's interests. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: MHL 201 Mac Literacy for Musicians (3), MUP 100 Concert Attendance (four semesters) (0), MUS 100 Fundamentals of Music Notation (3), MUS 340 Survey of Music History (3), any 2 courses from: MUS 347 Jazz in America (3), MUS 355 Survey of American Music (3), MUS 356 Survey of Musical Theatre (3), MUS 410 History of Women in Music (3), and any 2 courses from: MUS 354 Rock and Roll (3), MUS 354 Rock and Roll since 1971 (3), MUS 354 Hip-Hop (3), MUS 354 Elvis Presley (3), MUS 354 The Beatles (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Organizational Studies | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program is an approach to answering questions, solving problems, and addressing contemporary social issues from multiple perspectives. Interdisciplinary students develop the intellectual tools needed to build bridges between academic disciplines and apply their skills, innovations and knowledge in various academic and practical settings. The B.I.S. in organizational studies is intended for students seeking an interdisciplinary degree and a desire to learn about the dynamics of contemporary organizations. Via the organizational studies curriculum, students gain valuable knowledge of management styles, communication strategies, technologies, diversity, ethics and politics. All course work for organizational studies is offered online, giving students freedom and flexibility in completing their requirements. By engaging a breadth of knowledge and experience, and by acquiring the skills to integrate various domains of knowledge, organizational studies students prepare themselves for careers in: Business, Government, Health-care administration, Nonprofit agencies and Service industry. Because of the flexibility of the B.I.S. program, graduates leave ASU ready for their next steps in life, whether employment in an entry-level position, promotional opportunities or for graduate studies in a variety of disciplines. Recent graduates have found opportunities in education, business, health-care administration, nonprofit administration, tourism and many other exciting fields. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). Students should have good academic standing who have achieved sophomore, junior or senior standing. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: PHY 150 Physics I or PHY 121 University Physics I: Mechanics, PHY 122 University Physics Laboratory I, PHY 151 Physics II (4 cr) or PHY 131 University Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism, PHY 132 University Physics Laboratory II, PHY 201 Mathematical Methods in Physics I, PHY 252 Physics III, PHY 302 Mathematical Methods in Physics II, PHY 310 Classical Particles, Fields, and Matter I, PHY 311 Classical Particles, Fields, and Matter II, PHY 314 Quantum Physics I. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: POS 210 Political Ideologies SB 3, POS 110 Government and Politics SB 3 or POS 310 American National Government SB (3), POS 150 Comparative Government SB, G 3, POS 160 Global Politics SB, G 3, any 2 courses from: POS 210 Political Ideologies, POS 110 Government and Politics or POS 310 American National Government, POS 150 Comparative Government, POS 160 Global Politics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Political Science: Civic Education | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: POS 210 Political Ideologies, POS 346 Problems of Democracy, POS 442 American Political Thought, any 1 course from: POS 340 History of Political Philosophy I, POS 341 History of Political Philosophy II, POS 443 Topics in Contemporary Political Theory, and two courses from: POS 310 American National Government, POS 150 Comparative Government, POS 160 Global Politics, POS 270 American Legal System, POS 300 Contemporary Controversies in Global Politics, POS 313 The Congress, POS 314 The American Presidency, POS 315 The Supreme Court, POS 330 Contemporary Controversies in Domestic Politics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Political Science: International Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: POS 150 Comparative Government, POS 160 Global Politics, POS 361 American Foreign Policy or POS 364 National Security, Intelligence, and Terrorism, any 2 courses from: POS 300 Contemporary Controversies in Global Politics, POS 465 International Organization and Law, POS 467 International Security, POS 486 International Political Economy, and any 2 courses from: POS 350 Comparative Politics, POS 355 Russia and Successor States, POS 356 European Union, POS 357 South Asia Politics, POS 358 Southeast Asia, POS 359 African Politics and Society, POS 360 World Politics, POS 451 China, Japan, and the Koreas, POS 452 China, POS 453 South America, POS 454 Mexico, POS 455 Central America and the Caribbean. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | This program focuses on appreciating and valuing the life of the mind and understanding the human condition from a scientific, psychological point of view. Students completing the program should possess breadth of knowledge pertaining to the major principles, theoretical approaches and findings in psychology. They should also understand and be able to use fundamental research and quantitative methods in psychology and be able to gather and synthesize psychological findings. Finally, they should be able to understand the relevance and applicability of psychological principles, approaches and findings to individual, group and social issues. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Romanian | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: ROM 313 Intermediate Composition and Conversation I, ROM 314 Intermediate Composition and Conversation II, ROM 411 Advanced Spoken and Written Romanian I, ROM 412 Advanced Spoken and Written Romanian II. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Russian | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Russian and East European Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Southeast Asian Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: REL 240 Introduction to Southeast Asia or HST 240 Introduction to Southeast Asia or ASB 240 Introduction to Southeast Asia or GCU 240 Introduction to Southeast Asia or POS 240 Introduction to Southeast Asia ASB 325 Peoples of Southeast Asia, HST 391 Modern Southeast Asia, and electives 9 hours (Upper Division) from: ASB 494 Special Topics, ARS 394 Special Topics, FLA 394 Special Topics, ARS 394 Special Topics, HUM 394 Special Topics, HST 456 The Vietnam War, ISB 394 Special Topics, ISB 494 Special Topics, IDN 394 Special Topics IDN 499, FLA 420 Foreign Literature in Translation, THA 394 Special Topics, VTN 394 Special Topics, GLB 302 Culture and Diversity Management, PUP 494 Special Topics, POS 358 Southeast Asia, REL 405 Problems in Religious Studies. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: SPA 325 Introduction to Hispanic Literature HU (3), SPA 412 Advanced Conversation/Composition G (3), SPA 425 Spanish Literature I (to 1700) or SPA 426 Spanish Literature II (from 1700) or SPA 427 Spanish-American Literature I (to 1880) or SPA 428 Spanish-American Literature II (from 1880) or SPA 464 Mexican-American Literature HU, SPA 471 Civilization of the Spanish Southwest or SPA 472 Spanish-American Civilization or SPA 473 Spanish Civilization HU, SPA 394 Special Topics (Titles Vary), SPA 413 Advanced Spanish Grammar G, SPA 429 Mexican Literature, SPA 434 Drama of the Golden Age, SPA 435 Cervantes-Don Quijote, SPA 454 19th Century Spanish American Narrative, SPA 456 20th Century Spanish American Fiction, SPA 474 Mexican Culture, SPA 485 Mexican American Short Story L, SPA 486 Mexican American Novel, SPA 487 Mexican American Drama, SPA 494 Special Topics (Titles Vary). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Speech and Hearing Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: SHS 105 Intro to Human Communication Disorders, SHS 250 Introduction to Phonetics, SHS 310 Anatomical and Physiological Bases of Speech, SHS 311 Physical and Physiological Bases of Hearing, SHS 367 Language Science, SHS 375 Speech Science, SHS 376 sychoacoustics, and electives 9 hours from: SHS 401 Introduction to Audiology, HS 402 Modifying Communicative Behavior, SHS 465 Speech and Language Acquisition, SHS 470 Developmental Language Disorders, SHS 485 Acquired Speech and Language Disorders, SHS 496 Aural Rehabilitation. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Speech and Hearing Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: SHS 105 Intro to Human Communication Disorders, SHS 250 Introduction to Phonetics, SHS 310 Anatomical and Physiological Bases of Speech, SHS 311 Physical and Physiological Bases of Hearing, SHS 367 Language Science, SHS 375 Speech Science, SHS 376 sychoacoustics, and electives 9 hours from: SHS 401 Introduction to Audiology, HS 402 Modifying Communicative Behavior, SHS 465 Speech and Language Acquisition, SHS 470 Developmental Language Disorders, SHS 485 Acquired Speech and Language Disorders, SHS 496 Aural Rehabilitation. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: MAT 271 Calculus with Analytic Geometry II MA (4) or AT 266 Calculus for Engineers II (3), MAT 272 Calculus with Analytic Geometry III MA (4) or MAT 267 Calculus for Engineers III (3), MAT 300 Mathematical Structures L (3), STP 420 Introductory Applied Statistics CS (3), STP 421 Probability (3), STP 427 Mathematical Statistics (3) or STP 429 Experimental Statistics CS (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: FMP 201 Film: The Creative Process I HU (3), THE 100 Introduction to Theatre HU (3), THE 322 Theatre History and Culture HU, H (3), THP 101 Acting: An Introduction (3), THP 201 Theatre Production Crew (1). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Translation (Spanish/English) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: SPA 400 Introduction to Spanish Linguistics or SLC 400 Linguistics or SLC 201 Introduction to Linguistics, SPA 412 Advanced Conversation and Composition, SLC 401 Translation Theory, SLC 481 Technical and Scientific Translation, SLC 482 Business and Financial Translation, SLC 483 Medical and Legal Translation, SLC 484 Internship. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Urban Planning | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | This program prepares students for careers in urban planning. They can select courses that include comprehensive planning, socioeconomic and environmental analysis, computer and analytical methods, planning law, site planning, urban design, and public-policy formulation and administration. Many students continue to specialize in planning at the graduate level. Students in planning are exposed to the theories, methods, and practices of the profession. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: PUP 301 Introduction to Urban Planning, PUP 100 Introduction to Environmental Design, PUP 190 Sustainable Cities, PUP 200 The Planned Environment, PUP 363 History of Planning, PUP 420 Theory of Urban Design, PUP 425 Urban Housing Analysis, PUP 430 Transportation Planning and the Environment, PUP 432 Planning and Development Control Law, PUP 433 Zoning Ordinances, Subdivision Regulations, and Building Codes, PUP 434 Urban Land Economics, PUP 442 Environmental Planning, PUP 444 Preservation Planning, PUP 445 Women and Environments. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Women and Gender Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | This program provides students with an intensive interdisciplinary liberal arts education that enables them to write well, think critically, and analyze problems effectively. Students take a variety of courses, including a capstone seminar requiring original research and writing, and an internship that helps them prepare for life after college. Original undergraduate research is encouraged, and some courses involve students in studying community problems and formulating policy solutions. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | University College, School of Letters and Sciences | University College, School of Letters and Sciences, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 363, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 480 965 1970 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program offers students the opportunity to take classes across various disciplines in the humanities and social sciences and benefit from multiple perspectives and ideas. Students are exposed to a mix of peers and faculty from diverse backgrounds that share the common interest of experiencing the world and learning from different points of view. This is an ideal degree program for students with a wide range of intellectual interests, or for students seeking to complete their degree. As part of the School of Letters and Sciences, this program equips students with the knowledge and skills to succeed in the 21st century. They are guided by the principles of strategic partnerships, academic inquiry, entrepreneurship, and service. They enjoy personalized degree advisement with educational, technical and career support. They have university-wide online resources and benefits at their disposal. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Letters and Sciences provides students across ASU with the knowledge and skills to both comprehend and effectively engage the changing world of the 21st century at local, national, and global levels. The school offers graduate and undergraduate degree programs that prepare students for a rapidly changing marketplace, as well as foundational instruction in humanities, social sciences, mathematics, sciences, and professional fields. The School is guided by the principles of student success, strategic partnerships within the university and the community, and interdisciplinary inquiry. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education (Choral - General) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program is designed for students interested in pursuing careers as teachers of general or choral music in elementary and secondary schools. It also prepares students for K-12 teaching certification. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education (Instrumental) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program is designed for students interested in pursuing careers as teachers of instrumental (band, winds) music in the public schools. It also prepares students for K-12 teaching certification. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education (Strings) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program is designed for students interested in pursuing careers as teachers of string and orchestra music in the public schools. It also prepares students for K-12 teaching certification. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Music in Music Theatre Performance | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program features workshops in music theatre performance techniques, and performances in various kinds of musical theatre. Students perform in up to five full productions every year, including every kind of music theatre. The program includes classes in techniques and skills specifically appropriate for music theatre, so students are not dependent upon classes in music and theatre as separate entities. The general education requirements include courses in dance and acting. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | This program introduces students to the concept of sustainability in the context of real-world problems, exploring the interaction of environmental, economic, and social systems. Students can pursue the following tracks: Sustainable Energy, Materials, and Technology; The Economics of Sustainability; and Sustainable Ecosystems. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus, Arizona State University, PO Box 875502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 6963 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This program provides students with a firm foundation in the principles of biologically-oriented Chemistry and introduces students to the broad range of topics that comprise the large and rapidly moving field of biochemistry. The program consists of 9 lecture hours and 5 hours of laboratory experience in biochemistry/biophysical chemistry (with 36 total hours of chemistry) and 31 hours of related courses in biology (including Genetics, Cell Biology) plus basic Mathematics and Physics courses. Students are strongly encouraged to undertake undergraduate research work as part of their education and training in biochemistry. This program will prepare students for a research career in a variety of biologically and medically - oriented fields, for graduate work in any of these fields as well as careers in medicine. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Biochemistry - Medicinal Chemistry Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This degree is a rigorous program emphasizing breadth and depth of chemical knowledge. Students in the program take courses and laboratories in all of the major chemical sub disciplines, which include organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, and biochemistry. Elective courses in interdisciplinary areas such as solid-state chemistry, medicinal chemistry, and nanoscience are available. Students are strongly encouraged to undertake substantive research work as part of their undergraduate education and training in chemistry. The degree prepares students for a variety of professional positions in chemical research, as well as in related technical fields such as forensics, quality assurance, environmental monitoring, laboratory management, and technical sales. It is also the best preparation for advanced postgraduate study and research in the chemical disciplines. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Chemistry - Environmental Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Arts in Education - Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $19,606 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | This program is designed to provide highest quality students selected with the opportunity to link advanced undergraduate coursework with graduate course work and degree completion. It allows accelerated students to obtain a bachelor’s and master’s degree within five years. This cuts the time to complete the M.A by at least one year. | Students must be admitted to the B.S. in mathematics or the B.S. in computational mathematical sciences, with at least four semesters of full-time enrollment, and must complete 60 credit hours of course work applicable to the B.S. in mathematics or the B.S. in computational mathematical sciences with a GPA of at least 3.25 for all courses and a GPA of at least 3.25 for mathematical courses, have obtained at least B (3.00) in MAT 342 (or 343) and MAT 371. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 871804, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7195 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science degree in American Indian Studies - Arts, Languages and Cultures | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies | This program provides students with unique opportunities to evaluate native peoples’ issues within a domestic and international context. Students gain a broad knowledge of American Indian nations and peoples, with particular emphasis on Southwestern American Indian nations. The courses provide intellectual and practical knowledge pertaining to American Indian culture, history, law, literature, language, art and government. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: AIS 180 Introduction to American Indian Studies, AIS 280 American Indian Sovereignty and the Courts, AIS 370 American Indian Languages and Cultures, AIS 380 Contemporary Issues of American Indian Nations, AIS 285 Federal Indian Policy, JUS 302 Statistics, AIS 420 Research Methods, AIS 498 Pro-Seminar in AIS, AIS 394 American Indian Philosophies/World Views, AIS 394 Traditional and Contemporary American Indian Arts, AIS 394 Continuity and Change in Kinship Systems, AIS 494 Media Studies: American Indians in Cinema, Arts, and Media, AIS 484 Internship, ARS 466 Native North American Art of the Southwest, ENG 359 American Indian Literature, ENG 461 Women and Literature, ENG 497 Literature of the Encounter, HST 337 American Indian History to 1900, HST 338 American Indian History since 1900, HST 426 Indian History of the Southwest, IED 401 Navajo Language and Culture I, IED 403 Navajo Language and Culture II, IED 498 Yaqui History and Culture, MHL 466 North American Indian Music, REL 330 Native American Religious Traditions. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 874603, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3634 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science degree in American Indian Studies - Legal, Policy and Community and Economic Development | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies | This program provides students with unique opportunities to evaluate native peoples’ issues within a domestic and international context. Students gain a broad knowledge of American Indian nations and peoples, with particular emphasis on Southwestern American Indian nations. The courses provide intellectual and practical knowledge pertaining to American Indian culture, history, law, literature, language, art and government. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: AIS 180 Introduction to American Indian Studies, AIS 280 American Indian Sovereignty and the Courts, AIS 370 American Indian Languages and Cultures, AIS 380 Contemporary Issues of American Indian Nations, AIS 285 Federal Indian Policy, JUS 302 Statistics, AIS 420 Research Methods, AIS 498 Pro-Seminar in AIS, AIS 394 Native Governmental Decision Making, AIS 394 American Indian Nations Community/Economic Development, AIS 394 Sovereignty, Tribal Government and Politics, AIS 394 American Indian Experience, AIS 494 Crime in “Indian Country”, AIS 494 Case Studies in Community and Economic Development, AIS 494 American Indians and Applications of Sovereignty, AIS 494 American Indian Youths in the Global Youth Culture, AIS 494 Law, Policy and American Indians, AIS 484 Internship. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, American Indian Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 874603, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3634 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Accountancy | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | This program provides students with technical expertise in the field and develops critical thinking, teaming, communication and information technology skills that are crucial for a successful career. The faculty includes leaders who excel in the classroom, and professional advisory board provides regular guidance on continuous improvement and strategic planning. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy, P.O. Box 873606, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3631 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics for the Life and Social Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | This program is challenging and fun curriculum that investigates and integrates complex areas of the physical, life and social sciences while preparing a new generation of students in mathematics. The primary objective of the program is to offer students the opportunities to develop critical thinking skills and purposeful competencies in mathematics, as well as an appreciation for the contributions of mathematics to the fields of sciences, engineering, business, government, economics. Students learn how to use theories and techniques such as mathematical modeling and computational methods to resolve practical real world problems. The coursework is directed towards an understanding of mathematical theory and its relation to other fields of studies. Emphasis is placed on precision of definition, reasoning to accurate conclusions, and analyzing and developing solutions to problems using mathematical principles. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Bioengineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Harrington Department of Bioengineering | This program provides students with a broad based education in engineering and the life and natural sciences, preparing them to apply their skills in an ethical, sustainable and environmentally responsible manner to make contributions that address societal and individual needs. The objective of the program is to prepare students: for productive employment, graduate study, or professional programs, especially in human and animal medicine, biotechnology and related biology-based engineering fields. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Harrington Department of Bioengineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Harrington Department of Bioengineering, ECG 334, P O Box 879709, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3028 | The Harrington Department of Bioengineering is well positioned to educate students for the large number of new jobs that will result from this expansion. The department is increasing the size of the faculty and facilities to ensure to deliver the highest quality educational experience for the students. The department has an active industrial internship program and continues to secure research funding from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, DARPA, and other national, regional and local funding agencies. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Informatics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | This program strives to produce a new kind of professional who understands information sciences and their application to biomedical sciences and health care. It focuses on advancing biomedical science and health care practice through design, development, application and evaluation of innovative information and technology based approaches. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | This program deals with the application of chemistry, physics and mathematics to the process of converting raw materials or chemicals into more useful or valuable forms. Chemical engineering also involves design of valuable new materials and chemical products. Chemical engineers are engaged in the development and production of a diverse range of products including high performance materials needed for aerospace, automotive, biomedical, electronic, environmental and military applications. The modern discipline of chemical engineering is intertwined with biology and biomedical engineering | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 876006, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3313 | The Department of Chemical Engineering is devoted to educating chemical engineers and conducting cutting edge research in chemical engineering and related fields. The department currently has 12 faculty, 10 post-doctoral researchers, 50 graduate students and 280 undergraduate students. Chemical engineering faculty members are committed to fully developing student’s potential by providing a unique and stimulating learning and research environment, exposing students to a diversity of viewpoints and teaching/learning styles, and preparing students to work in teams to solve real-world, multidisciplinary problems. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Computational Mathematical Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | This program is an interdisciplinary degree with components in mathematics, science and computer science, and a focus on computational and numerical aspects. It is designed for students interested in scientific computing and simulation of applied problems and is intended as a preparation for a career in industry. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 871804, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7195 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems | This program prepares students for successful careers and to serve the information systems and business communities. Computer Information Systems involves the design, development and maintenance of information systems that support both business operations and managerial decision-making. Students learn the fundamentals of software application development, database administration and network deployment. Special emphasis is placed on business process work flows, systems integration and project. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3252 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science/Master of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $19,606 a year | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The Master program is a research-oriented degree for students with undergraduate education in computer science or a related field. It provides advanced course work and emphasizes research by the students in areas such as embedded systems, information assurance and computer security, multimedia and the arts, database systems, algorithm design and analysis; computational biology, sensor and ad-hoc networks, data mining, information integration, optical networks and computer aided-geometric design. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Construction - Concrete Industry Management | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | This concentration provides the opportunity to gain knowledge of concrete technology and techniques essential to help you to become an invaluable member of this progressive and ever changing industry. It provides a foundation for students who wish to pursue careers as project managers, estimators, schedulers or a combination of all three at an executive level. CIM career opportunities include field sales, operations, project and production management; technical service; concrete production; cement, admix, or equipment manufacturing; concrete or general contracting; and development. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction, PO Box 870204, Urban Systems Engineering Building, 651 E. University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3615 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Construction - General Building | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | This concentration prepares students for careers in the construction of industrial, commercial, and institutional structures. It provides a foundation for students who wish to pursue careers as estimators, project managers, project engineers, and eventually become owners of firms engaged in the construction of industrial, commercial and institutional structures. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction, PO Box 870204, Urban Systems Engineering Building, 651 E. University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3615 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Construction - Heavy Construction | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | This concentration prepares students for careers related to the public works discipline. Typical projects of heavy construction include highways, airports, bridges, power plants, rapid transit systems, harbor and water facilities, pipelines, dams, tunnels, canals, sewerage and water works. It also prepares students for careers related to the public works discipline. Gradates become project managers, estimators, schedulers, or a combination of all three at an executive level. Heavy construction managers, through education and experience, are capable of implementing significant facets of construction on a timely and economical basis with proficiency and integrity. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction, PO Box 870204, Urban Systems Engineering Building, 651 E. University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3615 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Construction - Residential Construction | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | This concentration prepares students for careers in the residential sector of the industry. This concentration covers the specific methods and processes during the planning, production, marketing, and business related activities common to residential construction. Graduates become project managers, estimators, schedulers or a combination of all three at an executive level. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction, PO Box 870204, Urban Systems Engineering Building, 651 E. University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3615 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Construction - Specialty Construction | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | This concentration prepares students for careers with specialty contractors such as mechanical and electrical construction firms. This concentration emphasizes the construction process at the subcontractor level. The specialty construction concentration prepares students for careers with contractors, such as mechanical and electrical construction firms. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction, PO Box 870204, Urban Systems Engineering Building, 651 E. University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3615 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Criminology and Criminal Justice | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This course involves analysis of the theories, laws, policies and practices associated with understanding criminal and delinquent behavior, the law and the response to violations of law. The program provides an interdisciplinary social science perspective to the study crime and criminal justice. The focus is on the policies and practices of criminal justice system components, including law enforcement, corrections and the courts. Students receive a solid foundation of course work that provides the content, analytical and communication skills required for working in complex criminal justice occupations. Graduates of the criminal justice and criminology program find a strong job market in the public and private sectors. Employment opportunities exist in the areas of: orrections, Court personnel, Law enforcement, Legal offices, Parole, Private security, Probation, Victim witness advocate agencies. Graduates may also pursue advanced degrees in law, criminology and criminal justice and other social science disciplines. |
Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). Students should have good academic standing who have achieved sophomore, junior or senior standing. Students should have completed MAT 142 - College Mathematics. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | ||||||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Design - Architectural Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | This program offers an integrated curriculum of professional courses and focuses on the design laboratory. The program reflects an awareness of the complex factors affecting the quality of the built environment. It seeks through scholarship, teaching, research, design, and community service to develop the discipline and the knowledge necessary to address the important environmental and design issues faced by society. It is designed to create a deep awareness and knowledge of the discipline of architecture and the ideas and values that affect the creative practice of architecture. The program of study emphasizes the base of knowledge that is specialized and particular to architecture. This is the special understanding of the history, theories, and the technologies essential to architecture. The program seeks to enhance the depth of our understanding, the qualities of our experience, and the intimacy of our awareness of architecture. In addition to developing knowledge and skills in architectural design, building technology, and professional practice, students are encouraged to select electives from a broad range of approved courses both within the college and across the university. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Design - Housing and Community Development | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | This program prepares entry level real estate development professionals for positions of leadership and influence in market rate and affordable housing developments, in creatively designed and thoughtfully planned neighborhoods and communities, in the revitalization of blighted communities, and in the exemplification of inclusiveness, sustainability, and environmental sensitivity found within responsible real estate developments. Graduates may pursue careers in all facets of real estate development including private housing development, publicly sponsored housing and community redevelopment, nonprofit housing agencies, or in postgraduate housing and community development research and education. The program is offered in conjunction with the College of Design and the College of Extended Education. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | College of Design, Tempe Campus, PO Box 871905, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Design - Industrial Design | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial Design | This pre-professional curriculum balances a foundation in traditional academic subjects with design-related courses. Studio courses in drawing, design fundamentals, and human factors are typically accompanied by such courses as design history, materials and processes, and design for ecology and social equity. Upper-division curriculum includes studio and laboratory work in industrial design, graphics, project development, professional practice, and optional approved program electives. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial Design | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial Design, PO Box 872105, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1767 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Design - Interior Design | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Interior Design | The courses offer opportunities to explore creative expression as well as to develop critical thinking skills. The curriculum emphasizes design process, problem solving, technical skill development, and management. Computer technology is integrated into each level of the curriculum. It offers an excellent environment for experimenting with sophisticated software for presentation and simulation. Studio work examines human interaction with the built environment along with sustainable design issues allowing preservation of the natural environment for future generations. Assignments offer conceptual and practical problem-solving challenges. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Interior Design | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Interior Design, PO Box 872105, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3571 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Design - Visual Communication Design | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Visual Communication Design | This pre-professional curriculum balances a foundation in academic subjects such as English, numeric, and psychology with design courses that include history and theory, as well as studio courses in drawing and design fundamentals as they relate to conceptual design. The upper division curriculum includes studio work in graphic design and its relationship to problem solving at multiple scales. Projects are intended to educate students to think critically as individuals and as team participants in small and large corporate settings. Students pursue internships in a variety of areas, including in-house corporate design, publication design, and advertising design agencies. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Visual Communication Design | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Visual Communication Design, PO Box 872105, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 8947 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Earth and Space Exploration | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration, ASU, PO Box 871404, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5081 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | This program provides students with the analytical and quantitative skills needed to prepare them for careers in business, government or public policy. The program of study can also be tailored to prepare students for graduate programs in economics, business or law. Students interested in pursuing a Ph.D. in economics are strongly encouraged to minor or major in mathematics as well. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Aerospace Engineering - Aeronautics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | The curriculum provides students with an education in technological areas critical to the design and development of aerospace vehicles and systems. Topics in required courses cover aerodynamics, aerospace materials, aircraft structures, propulsion, flight mechanics, and stability and control. Required astronautics topics include orbital mechanics, attitude control and rocket propulsion. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Aerospace Engineering - Astronautics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | The curriculum provides students with an education in technological areas critical to the design and development of aerospace vehicles and systems. The astronautics concentration, under the B.S.E. in aerospace engineering, is offered in partnership with the School of Earth and Space Exploration. The curriculum covers orbital mechanics, space environment, attitude determination and control, telecommunications, space structures, rocket propulsion, and gas dynamics, as well as elective topics in aeronautics. Students in the astronautics concentration study alongside students majoring in exploration science, and design projects are carried out within trans-disciplinary student teams. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Civil Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Graduates will have the educational foundation required to be ethical and effective leaders in the application and development of sustainable engineering practices to improve the quality of life. They will provide engineering and program management services for civil infrastructure development that protect and enhance the environment while stewarding natural resources. They will be able to communicate effectively with the public on the trade offs associated with project alternatives with respect to life cycle costs, environmental impacts, and the social and economic implications of infrastructure development. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Civil Engineering - Construction Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Graduates will have the educational foundation required to be ethical and effective leaders in the application and development of sustainable engineering practices to improve the quality of life. They will provide engineering and program management services for civil infrastructure development that protect and enhance the environment while stewarding natural resources. They will be able to communicate effectively with the public on the trade offs associated with project alternatives with respect to life cycle costs, environmental impacts, and the social and economic implications of infrastructure development. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Civil Engineering - Environmental Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Graduates will have the educational foundation required to be ethical and effective leaders in the application and development of sustainable engineering practices to improve the quality of life. They will provide engineering and program management services for civil infrastructure development that protect and enhance the environment while stewarding natural resources. They will be able to communicate effectively with the public on the trade offs associated with project alternatives with respect to life cycle costs, environmental impacts, and the social and economic implications of infrastructure development. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Computer Systems Engineering/Master of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $19,606 a year | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The Master program is a research-oriented degree for students with undergraduate education in computer science or a related field. It provides advanced course work and emphasizes research by the students in areas such as embedded systems, information assurance and computer security, multimedia and the arts, database systems, algorithm design and analysis; computational biology, sensor and ad-hoc networks, data mining, information integration, optical networks and computer aided-geometric design. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | The objectives of the mechanical engineering program are for graduates to be employed in mechanical engineering or a related field or accepted to graduate school and graduates will have the technical skills for career success, including the ability to think in a critical and evaluative manner and to consider a broad perspective, in order to solve technical and non-technical problems. They will have the professional skills for career success, including an awareness of ethical responsibility, the ability to communicate well and to work successfully within diverse groups. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Mechanical Engineering - Computational and Mathematical Mechanics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | This concentration is designed to teach students the modern computational tools available for solving large scale and complex technical problems. The curriculum focuses on high performance computing and the accurate modeling of large and small scale systems. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering in Mechanical Engineering - Energy and Environment | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | This concentration seeks to prepare students to analyze technical problems in energy efficiency, renewable energy, environmental sustainability, air pollution, climate change and other timely issues facing the global community. Although the primary focus of this program is technical, the general education courses in the areas of the humanities and social and behavioral sciences introduce students to the global, political and societal issues relating to energy and environment. By focusing on issues such as air pollution, water scarcity and the lack of alternative transportation, this program becomes even more attractive for employers in the greater Phoenix area. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Family and Human Development | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | This program offers course work on the development of individuals and families as they relate to their social worlds. The required concentration in family studies and child development provides a focus on the development of children, adults and families. Students take a wide variety of courses on contemporary issues related to human development from infancy through the end of the life span, and the development, formation and dissolution of families and develop proficiency in written communication, computer skills, statistics and research methods. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Family and Human Development | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program equips students with specialized knowledge of human development from infancy through the end of the lifespan as well as the development, formation and dissolution of families. The graduates routinely go on to successful careers in social services, government and business. Others benefit from a highly dynamic and interactive learning experience and go on to pursue graduate and doctoral degrees in family and developmental sciences, counseling, social work, medicine, and law. As part of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the students develop strong research, analytical and critical thinking skills. They are trained to relate the unique development of individuals and families to their diverse social worlds. They hone a unique ability to communicate clearly and listen carefully. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Finance | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance, P.O. Box 873906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3131 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Geography | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 875302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7533 | The school itself has only existed as such since July 2006 and grew out of the Department of Geography, which has a long and distinguished history. The school is evolving into a scholarly community that engages in interdisciplinary and trans-disciplinary education, research and outreach dealing with substantive and applied questions where the role of place, space and interaction is central. These themes are also important in the vision of the New American University, which emphasizes local and global engagement, suggesting a major role for geographical sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Geography - Geographic Information Science Certificate | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 875302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7533 | The school itself has only existed as such since July 2006 and grew out of the Department of Geography, which has a long and distinguished history. The school is evolving into a scholarly community that engages in interdisciplinary and trans-disciplinary education, research and outreach dealing with substantive and applied questions where the role of place, space and interaction is central. These themes are also important in the vision of the New American University, which emphasizes local and global engagement, suggesting a major role for geographical sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Geography - Meteorology-Climatology Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 875302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7533 | The school itself has only existed as such since July 2006 and grew out of the Department of Geography, which has a long and distinguished history. The school is evolving into a scholarly community that engages in interdisciplinary and trans-disciplinary education, research and outreach dealing with substantive and applied questions where the role of place, space and interaction is central. These themes are also important in the vision of the New American University, which emphasizes local and global engagement, suggesting a major role for geographical sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Geography - Urban Studies Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 875302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7533 | The school itself has only existed as such since July 2006 and grew out of the Department of Geography, which has a long and distinguished history. The school is evolving into a scholarly community that engages in interdisciplinary and trans-disciplinary education, research and outreach dealing with substantive and applied questions where the role of place, space and interaction is central. These themes are also important in the vision of the New American University, which emphasizes local and global engagement, suggesting a major role for geographical sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Geological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration, ASU, PO Box 871404, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5081 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Human Communication | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication, Arizona State University, PO Box 871205, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5095 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Industrial Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 875906, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3185 | The Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering at Arizona State University is ranked among the top 20 in the nation for both undergraduate and graduate programs. The mission of the department is to provide high quality, innovative industrial engineering education and research opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students and to encourage them to individualize their education through entrepreneurial and multidisciplinary courses and growth experiences, to foster discovery by faculty and students; to support the economic growth and enhancement of quality of life in Arizona and beyond; to provide an academic environment conducive to the best development of students, faculty and staff; and to promote the growth and effectiveness of the industrial engineering profession. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Justice Studies | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program is designed for students interested in social inquiry in the areas of justice, law and social change. This interdisciplinary program celebrates 25 years of educating generations of social change agents and justice studies scholars. It program allows students the flexibility to pursue the broader subject of justice. Students pursue careers in the areas of law and society, civil and human rights, environmental protection, hunger and homelessness, immigration, peace and justice, public policy, law enforcement, probation, or victim advocacy. Other students pursue advance degrees in law or graduate school. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | The modules include General Studies - 6 hours ENG 101 and ENG 102, 8 hours Natural Sciences with lab (4 hours each Science), 3 hours Mathematics (MAT 142 or higher), 3 hours Statistics (JUS 302), 6 hours in Literacy and Critical Inquiry, 15 hours Social Behavioral/Humanities, 6 hours in one area, 9 hrs in the other and one course must be upper division, Awareness Areas (2 courses minimum and must fulfill all 3 areas) - Double counting is permissible between Awareness Areas, other courses that fulfill graduation requirements, and within the Awareness Areas, College - 6 hours Science and Society, Major - 30 hours in Justice Studies, 3 hours English Writing Course and 12 hours Related Area or Discipline Specific Focus. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering at Arizona State University is ranked among the top 20 in the nation for both undergraduate and graduate programs. The mission of the department is to provide high quality, innovative industrial engineering education and research opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students and to encourage them to individualize their education through entrepreneurial and multidisciplinary courses and growth experiences, to foster discovery by faculty and students; to support the economic growth and enhancement of quality of life in Arizona and beyond; to provide an academic environment conducive to the best development of students, faculty and staff; and to promote the growth and effectiveness of the industrial engineering profession. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Justice Studies - Citizenship, Migration and Human Rights | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | This program is designed for students interested in social inquiry in the areas of justice, law and social change. Students pursue careers in the areas of law and society, civil and human rights, environmental protection, hunger and homelessness, immigration, peace and justice, public policy, law enforcement, probation, or victim advocacy. Other students pursue advance degrees in law or graduate school. Students develop transferable skills including critical thinking, oral and written discourse, and problem solving. Students actively participate in their education through discussion, cooperative learning, field trips, and case-based classroom formats. They are encouraged to link their studies with real world problems by engaging in research projects with our faculty, internship placements, and volunteer work with community agencies. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: JUS 105Introduction to Justice Studies, JUS 294 LD Service Learning, JUS 301Research in Justice Studies, JUS 302Basic Statistical Analysis, JUS 303Justice Theory, JUS 305Principles of Justice Studies, JUS 394UD Service Learning, JUS 484Internship, JUS 492Honors Directed Study, JUS 493Honors Thesis, JUS 497Honors Colloquium, JUS 498Pro-Seminar, JUS 499Individualized Instruction, JUS 191First Year Seminar on Water Wars (1 credit), JUS 325Globalization and Socio-Economic Justice, JUS 350Immigration and Justice, JUS 394Issues in Immigration, JUS 394Holocaust and Genocide and Human Rights, JUS 394Citizenship and Economic Development, JUS 394Global Politics of Human Rights, JUS 408Comparative Justice and the Welfare State, JUS 415Gender and International Development, JUS 430Social Protect, Conflict and Change, JUS 467Terrorism, War and Justice, JUS 469Political Deviance and the Law, JUS 479Law and Disputing, JUS 494Justice in Times of Transition, JUS 494Justice Issues in Israel and Palestine, JUS 494Comparative Justice, JUS 494Religion, Violence and Conflict Resolution, JUS 494Terrorism, Propaganda and Society, JUS 494Racial Justice. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry, Arizona State University, PO Box 870403, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7682 | The School of Justice and Social Inquiry (SJSI) is an innovative social sciences program that places social justice at the center of its scholarship and teaching. The School celebrates 25 years as the intellectual hub for the study of justice at ASU and beyond by producing cross-disciplinary knowledge and educating generations of social change agents and justice studies scholars. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Justice Studies - Globalization, Sustainability and Economic Justice | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | This program is designed for students interested in social inquiry in the areas of justice, law and social change. Students pursue careers in the areas of law and society, civil and human rights, environmental protection, hunger and homelessness, immigration, peace and justice, public policy, law enforcement, probation, or victim advocacy. Other students pursue advance degrees in law or graduate school. Students develop transferable skills including critical thinking, oral and written discourse, and problem solving. Students actively participate in their education through discussion, cooperative learning, field trips, and case-based classroom formats. They are encouraged to link their studies with real world problems by engaging in research projects with our faculty, internship placements, and volunteer work with community agencies. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: JUS 105Introduction to Justice Studies, JUS 294 LD Service Learning, JUS 301Research in Justice Studies, JUS 302Basic Statistical Analysis, JUS 303Justice Theory, JUS 305Principles of Justice Studies, JUS 394UD Service Learning, JUS 484Internship, JUS 492Honors Directed Study, JUS 493Honors Thesis, JUS 497Honors Colloquium, JUS 498Pro-Seminar, JUS 499Individualized Instruction, JUS 191First Year Seminar on Water Wars (1 credit), JUS 321Wealth Distribution and Poverty, JUS 323Justice and Development of the Welfare State, JUS 325Globalization and Socio-Economic Justice, JUS 394Justice and the Future, JUS 394Globalization and Economic Justice, JUS 394The Just City, JUS 394Social Justice, JUS 394Energy Politics and Justice, JUS 394Employment Law, JUS 394Citizenship and Economic Development, JUS 405Economic Justice, JUS 408Comparative Development of the Welfare State, JUS 415Gender and International Development, JUS 420Women, Work and Justice, JUS 444Environment and Justice, JUS 467Terrorism, War and Justice, JUS 494Justice Issues in Israel and Palestine. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry, Arizona State University, PO Box 870403, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7682 | The School of Justice and Social Inquiry (SJSI) is an innovative social sciences program that places social justice at the center of its scholarship and teaching. The School celebrates 25 years as the intellectual hub for the study of justice at ASU and beyond by producing cross-disciplinary knowledge and educating generations of social change agents and justice studies scholars. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Justice Studies - Law, Policy and Social Change | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | This program is designed for students interested in social inquiry in the areas of justice, law and social change. Students pursue careers in the areas of law and society, civil and human rights, environmental protection, hunger and homelessness, immigration, peace and justice, public policy, law enforcement, probation, or victim advocacy. Other students pursue advance degrees in law or graduate school. Students develop transferable skills including critical thinking, oral and written discourse, and problem solving. Students actively participate in their education through discussion, cooperative learning, field trips, and case-based classroom formats. They are encouraged to link their studies with real world problems by engaging in research projects with our faculty, internship placements, and volunteer work with community agencies. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: JUS 105Introduction to Justice Studies, JUS 294 LD Service Learning, JUS 301Research in Justice Studies, JUS 302Basic Statistical Analysis, JUS 303Justice Theory, JUS 305Principles of Justice Studies, JUS 394UD Service Learning, JUS 484Internship, JUS 492Honors Directed Study, JUS 493Honors Thesis, JUS 497Honors Colloquium, JUS 498Pro-Seminar, JUS 499Individualized Instruction, JUS 200Drugs and Justice, JUS 200Serial Killers, JUS 200Justice Institutions, JUS 308Courts and Society, JUS 310Corrections and Justice, JUS 329Domestic Violence, JUS 350Immigration and Justice, JUS 360Law and Social Control, JUS 385Justice and Everyday Life, JUS 394Education and Justice, JUS 394The Just City, JUS 394U.S. Constitution, JUS 394Restorative Justice, JUS 394U.S. Constitutional History, JUS 394Employment Law, JUS 394Forensic Justice, JUS 408Comparative Development of the Welfare State, JUS 410Punishment: Logic and Approach, JUS 422Women, Law and Social Control, JUS 425Race, Gender and Crime, JUS 430Social Protest, Conflict and Change, JUS 445Surveillance and Society, JUS 465Death Penalty, JUS 467Terrorism, War and Justice, JUS 469Political Deviance and the Law, JUS 477Youth and Justice. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry, Arizona State University, PO Box 870403, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7682 | The School of Justice and Social Inquiry (SJSI) is an innovative social sciences program that places social justice at the center of its scholarship and teaching. The School celebrates 25 years as the intellectual hub for the study of justice at ASU and beyond by producing cross-disciplinary knowledge and educating generations of social change agents and justice studies scholars. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Justice Studies - Media, Technology and Culture | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | This program is designed for students interested in social inquiry in the areas of justice, law and social change. Students pursue careers in the areas of law and society, civil and human rights, environmental protection, hunger and homelessness, immigration, peace and justice, public policy, law enforcement, probation, or victim advocacy. Other students pursue advance degrees in law or graduate school. Students develop transferable skills including critical thinking, oral and written discourse, and problem solving. Students actively participate in their education through discussion, cooperative learning, field trips, and case-based classroom formats. They are encouraged to link their studies with real world problems by engaging in research projects with our faculty, internship placements, and volunteer work with community agencies. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: JUS 105Introduction to Justice Studies, JUS 294 LD Service Learning, JUS 301Research in Justice Studies, JUS 302Basic Statistical Analysis, JUS 303Justice Theory, JUS 305Principles of Justice Studies, JUS 394UD Service Learning, JUS 484Internship, JUS 492Honors Directed Study, JUS 493Honors Thesis, JUS 497Honors Colloquium, JUS 498Pro-Seminar, JUS 499Individualized Instruction, JUS 375Justice and Mass Media, JUS 385Justice and Everyday Life, JUS 394Justice and Future, JUS 394Technological Change, JUS 394The Just City, JUS 394Nuclear Technology, JUS 394Pop Culture and Justice, JUS 394Information Technology and Social Justice, JUS 394Technology, Gender and Social Change, JUS 435Cinema and Justice, JUS 445Surveillance and Society, JUS 494Politics of Design, JUS 494Terrorism, Propaganda and Society, JUS 494Science, Technology and Inequality. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry, Arizona State University, PO Box 870403, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7682 | The School of Justice and Social Inquiry (SJSI) is an innovative social sciences program that places social justice at the center of its scholarship and teaching. The School celebrates 25 years as the intellectual hub for the study of justice at ASU and beyond by producing cross-disciplinary knowledge and educating generations of social change agents and justice studies scholars. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Justice Studies - Social Identities and Communities | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | This program is designed for students interested in social inquiry in the areas of justice, law and social change. Students pursue careers in the areas of law and society, civil and human rights, environmental protection, hunger and homelessness, immigration, peace and justice, public policy, law enforcement, probation, or victim advocacy. Other students pursue advance degrees in law or graduate school. Students develop transferable skills including critical thinking, oral and written discourse, and problem solving. Students actively participate in their education through discussion, cooperative learning, field trips, and case-based classroom formats. They are encouraged to link their studies with real world problems by engaging in research projects with our faculty, internship placements, and volunteer work with community agencies. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: JUS 105Introduction to Justice Studies, JUS 294 LD Service Learning, JUS 301Research in Justice Studies, JUS 302Basic Statistical Analysis, JUS 303Justice Theory, JUS 305Principles of Justice Studies, JUS 394UD Service Learning, JUS 484Internship, JUS 492Honors Directed Study, JUS 493Honors Thesis, JUS 497Honors Colloquium, JUS 498Pro-Seminar, JUS 499Individualized Instruction, JUS 191First Year Seminar on Sexuality and Social Justice (1 credit), JUS 320Community and Social Justice, JUS 329Domestic Violence, JUS 350Immigration and Justice, JUS 385Justice and Everyday Life, JUS 394Education and Justice, JUS 394Race/Sex/Identity, JUS 394Multiculturalism and Justice, JUS 394Technology, Gender and Social Change, JUS 415Gender and International Development, JUS 420Women, Work and Justice, JUS 422Women, Law and Social Control, JUS 425Race, Gender and Crime, JUS 460Feminism and Justice, JUS 469Political Deviance and the Law, JUS 477Youth and Justice, JUS 494Justice Issues in Israel and Palestine, JUS 494Language, Culture and Justice, JUS 494Human Differences and Discrimination, JUS 494Identity and Justice, JUS 494Religion, Violence and Conflict Resolution. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Social Transformation, School of Justice and Social Inquiry, Arizona State University, PO Box 870403, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7682 | The School of Justice and Social Inquiry (SJSI) is an innovative social sciences program that places social justice at the center of its scholarship and teaching. The School celebrates 25 years as the intellectual hub for the study of justice at ASU and beyond by producing cross-disciplinary knowledge and educating generations of social change agents and justice studies scholars. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology - Biomechanics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | This program emphasizes the study of movement as it relates to physical activity, health and disease prevention, exercise and sport. Using both human and animal models and reflecting research ranging from basic to applied, it draws from an interdisciplinary body of knowledge grounded in the biological, psychological, physical and social sciences. Undergraduate students in the program gain disciplinary knowledge of anatomical, biomechanical, developmental, physiological, psychological and sociological aspects of human movement and physical activity. This concentration apply the laws of mechanics to the study of human movement, with special focus on kinematics and kinetic determinants of locomotion patterns in walking, running, cycling and swimming; neuromusculoskeletal modeling and computer simulation of locomotion in clinical and sport applications; ergonomics; and mechanisms underlying upper extremity repetitive strain injuries. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology - Exercise Physiology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | This program emphasizes the study of movement as it relates to physical activity, health and disease prevention, exercise and sport. Using both human and animal models and reflecting research ranging from basic to applied, it draws from an interdisciplinary body of knowledge grounded in the biological, psychological, physical and social sciences. Undergraduate students in the program gain disciplinary knowledge of anatomical, biomechanical, developmental, physiological, psychological and sociological aspects of human movement and physical activity. This concentration is the study of physiologic systems (cardiovascular, respiratory, muscular, endocrine and metabolic) under conditions of stress, particularly exercise stress, with special focus on how dietary nutrients influence resting and exercise metabolism; subcellular systems involved in the provision and regulation of energy transfer during exercise; and the interrelationships of exercise and training with stress, hormones, neurotransmitters and the immune system. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology - Motor Control | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | This program emphasizes the study of movement as it relates to physical activity, health and disease prevention, exercise and sport. Using both human and animal models and reflecting research ranging from basic to applied, it draws from an interdisciplinary body of knowledge grounded in the biological, psychological, physical and social sciences. Undergraduate students in the program gain disciplinary knowledge of anatomical, biomechanical, developmental, physiological, psychological and sociological aspects of human movement and physical activity. This concentration is the study of about how movement is regulated and controlled via the nervous system in normal and pathological populations, especially those with motor deficits attributed to basal ganglia dysfunction and upper extremity coordination, particularly finger and hand posture, in reaching and prehensile movements. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology - Motor Development Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | This program emphasizes the study of movement as it relates to physical activity, health and disease prevention, exercise and sport. Using both human and animal models and reflecting research ranging from basic to applied, it draws from an interdisciplinary body of knowledge grounded in the biological, psychological, physical and social sciences. Undergraduate students in the program gain disciplinary knowledge of anatomical, biomechanical, developmental, physiological, psychological and sociological aspects of human movement and physical activity. This concentration is the study of about how human movement is generated and evolves throughout the life span, with special focus on learning and developing children, persons with Down's syndrome and adults, to investigate cerebral asymmetries and specificity of learning. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology - Sport and Exercise Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | This program emphasizes the study of movement as it relates to physical activity, health and disease prevention, exercise and sport. Using both human and animal models and reflecting research ranging from basic to applied, it draws from an interdisciplinary body of knowledge grounded in the biological, psychological, physical and social sciences. Undergraduate students in the program gain disciplinary knowledge of anatomical, biomechanical, developmental, physiological, psychological and sociological aspects of human movement and physical activity. This concentration is the study of relationship between psychological constructs and physical activity and the influence of participation in physical activity on psychological phenomenon, with special focus on the influence of physical activity, fitness and particular sport practices on psychophysiological mechanisms and cognitive functioning; the effect of psychological skills for performance enhancement; motivational aspects of physical activity across the life span; and the effects of exercise on mental health. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Landscape Architecture | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | This program offers an integrated curriculum of professional courses and focuses on the design laboratory. Students explore the reasons for and the techniques involved in the analysis, planning, and design of the environment, both natural and built. The program seeks through scholarship, teaching, research, design, and community service to develop the discipline and the knowledge necessary to address the important environmental and design issues faced by society. It is designed to create a deep awareness and knowledge of the discipline of landscape architecture and the ideas and values that affect the creative practice of landscape architecture. The program of study emphasizes the base of knowledge that is specialized and particular to landscape architecture. This is the special understanding of the history, theories, and the technologies essential to landscape architecture. The program seeks to enhance the depth of our understanding, the qualities of our experience, and the intimacy of our awareness of landscape architecture. Landscape architecture employs knowledge from the arts and sciences to explore reasons for and the techniques involved in shaping the outdoor environment. Large scale work includes such areas of interest as urban design and landscape ecological design, while medium and smaller-scale work is undertaken in site planning, residential design, park and recreation design, and landscape reclamation. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Management | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | This program develops team skilled, collaborative leaders with the capability to think strategically, solve people and process problems, and communicate in a project oriented, digital environment. Graduates are prepared for leading change in a world characterized by speed, increasing demands for enhancing the value chain through continuous process improvements, growing technological sophistication, and racial, cultural, and gender diversity in the workforce. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3431 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Marketing | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing | This program is designed to provide students with a focused knowledge of marketing and its role in society, and the ability to engage in sophisticated marketing practice. The program of study is designed to balance fundamentals with innovative ideas and practices, and to build practical skills in market analysis, decision-making, and communication. The goals of the program are to: prepare students for first-level positions in marketing; provide the capabilities necessary to advance to higher-level marketing positions; and develop leadership skills critical for success in business and not-for-profit organizations. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing, Box 874106, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3621 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | This degree provides majors with the mathematical tools to work in any technical field, often in manufacturing/production positions. Graduates typically go on to research positions in industry, labs, graduate school (not necessarily in math). | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 871804, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7195 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics - Statistics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: MAT 270 Calculus with Analytic Geometry I (3), MAT 271 Calculus with Analytic Geometry II (3), MAT 272 Calculus with Analytic Geometry III (3), MAT 300 Mathematical Structures (3), MAT 342 Linear Algebra (3) or MAT 343 Modern Linear Algebra (3), MAT 371 Advanced Calculus I (3), CSE 200 Concepts of Computer Science (3), STP 420 Introductory Applied Statistics (3), STP 421 Probability (3), STP 427 Mathematical Statistics (3), STP 429 Experimental Statistics (3), any three courses from: STP 425 Stochastic Processes (3), MAT 274 Elementary Differential Equations (3) or MAT 275 Modern Differential Equations (3), MAT 372 Advanced Calculus II (3), MAT 423 Numerical Analysis I (3), MAT 442 Advanced Linear Algebra (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 871804, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7195 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing (RN to BSN) | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This course offers Associate Degree and Diploma Nurses the opportunity to complete upper-division degree requirements and earn a Bachelor of Science in Nursing. Our program prepares students as critical thinkers, innovative professionals and competent evidence-based providers. Our students develop specialized knowledge and skills to effectively deliver healthcare to culturally diverse populations. Graduates of our program enjoy increased opportunities for career advancement in nursing, healthcare and administration. As part of the College of Nursing and Health Innovation, our students are prepared to be change agents and solution identifiers to respond to a rapidly changing world. They learn from nationally-renowned faculty. The RN-BSN online program is designed for RN's who desire to: Earn a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), Take part in a unique program in a convenient format, Earn credit for prior nursing courses, Capitalize on prior education credits, Learn through a variety of instructional delivery methods, Move into advanced practice arenas, Advance into expanded nursing positions | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). Students should have good academic standing who have achieved sophomore, junior or senior standing. All applicants must meet university minimum admission requirements. Applicants who do not or will not have their RN license must meet the following admission criteria. Applicants who are admissible to ASU but do not meet these criteria will be admitted to Bachelor of Science in Health Sciences (Healthy Lifestyle Coaching) program in the College of Nursing and Health Innovation: Freshman resident: 3.00 ABOR GPA or 500 GED, and either a 1040 SAT or 22 ACT score, or in the top 25 percent of high school graduating class. Freshman non-resident: 3.00 ABOR GPA or 500 GED and either an 1110 SAT or 24 ACT score, or in the top 25 percent of high school graduating class. Transfer resident and non-resident: cumulative transfer GPA of 2.75. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences consists of 56 track faculty who are engaged in teaching and research in a wide variety of areas of the mathematical and statistical sciences, as well as 44 First Year Mathematics faculties whose primary focus is the instruction of undergraduates in lower division courses. The school is truly a vibrant community of scholars who are learning about and solving some of the most vexing theoretical and applied mathematical problems of our time. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Physics - Major Option 1 | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | The program and curriculum is designed to attract highly qualified students, to prepare them better for graduate studies in physics and other postgraduate pursuits, and to help ensure timely and successful completion of their degree. This traditional professional physics program is selected by a majority of the majors, and especially those who plan graduate work in physics. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics, Arizona State University, P O Box 871504, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3561 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Physics - Major Option 2 | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | This program provides a strong physics core but also includes courses in a second “area of concentration,” such as materials science, applied mathematics, physical chemistry, geophysics or astronomy. It is also possible to build a program which combines physics with business, journalism, law, pre-medical or other areas. There is considerable flexibility in this program; the student and advisor can custom design a curriculum to meet specific career goals. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics, Arizona State University, P O Box 871504, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3561 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Planning | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: PUP 412 History of the City, PUP 425 Urban Housing Analysis, PUP 430 Transportation Planning and the Environment, PUP 445 Women and the Environment, PUP 444 Preservation Planning, PUP 475 Environmental Impact Assessment, PUP 485 International Field Experience, PUP 494 Special Topics (course titles vary), ABS 364 Urban Forestry, ECN 382 Managerial Economics, ECN 404 History of Economic Thought, ECN 441 Public Finance, GCU 359 Cities of the World, GCU 361 Urban Geography, GCU 442 Geographical Analysis of Transportation, GPH 370 Geographic Information Technologies, GPH 373 Geographic Information Science, JUS 320 Community and Social Justice, JUS 444 Environment and Justice, PAF 340 Public Management and Policy, POS 346 Problems of Democracy, POS 410 Governing American Cities, REC 358 International Tourism, REC 370 Outdoor Recreation Systems, REC 372 Tourism. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning, PO Box 872005, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7167 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Sociology | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program trains students in written communication, computer skills, statistics and research methods, and offers a wide variety of substantive courses on contemporary social issues ranging from crime to population trends, and courses on social institutions, such as the family, education and religion. Sociology online classes are extremely dynamic and interactive and utilize Blackboard as a learning platform. An undergraduate degree in sociology not only provides excellent preparation for future graduate work in sociological research, social work, law, medicine, and counseling, it also prepares undergraduates for direct entry into positions in business, social service and government. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | The modules include: General Studies: 6 hours ENG 101 and ENG 102; 8 hours Natural Sciences with lab; 3 hours Mathematics (MAT 142 or higher); 3 hours Statistics (SOC 390); 6 hours in Literacy and Critical Inquiry; 15 hours Social Behavioral/Humanities. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Speech and Hearing Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: SHS 105 Introduction to Human Communication Disorders 3, SHS 250 Introduction to Phonetics 3, SHS 310 Anatomical and Physiological Bases of Speech 3, SHS 311 Physical and Physiological Bases of Hearing 3, SHS 367 Language Science SB 3, SHS 375 Speech Science 3, SHS 401 Introduction to Audiology, 3 SHS 402 Modifying Communicative Behavior 3, SHS 465 Speech and Language Acquisition 3, SHS 470 Developmental Language Disorders 3, SHS 485 Acquired Speech and Language Disorders 3, SHS 496 Aural Rehabilitation 3, BIO 201 Human Anatomy and Physiology I SG 4 , ENG 215 Strategies of Academic Writing L 3, MAT 170 Precalculus MA 3, PGS 101 Introduction to Psychology SB 3, PHY 101 Introduction to Physics SQ 4, PSY 230 Introduction to Statistics CS 3. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, P O Box 870102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2374 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor of Science in Technical Communication | Distance / Online | Variable | $5850 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | In this program, students will learn how to produce, to design, and to manage information, using both traditional and developing technologies. Software and electronics companies, media corporations, financial institutions, government agencies, non and for-profit organizations are some areas that employ technical communicators. The curriculum brings together information, writing, multimedia, and communications technology to prepare students for careers as technical writer/editors, web or intranet designers, graphics designers, publication managers, information designers, instructional and training developers, and more. | Applicants must be high school graduates. They should have obtained a GPA score of 3.0 in competency courses (2.5 - 2.99 considered), ACT score of 24, SAT reasoning score of 1110. In addition to this, international students should have obtained a TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based); minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS); and minimum score of 53 on Pearson Test of English (PTE). | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor's of Science in Computer Science - Information Assurance | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The program is designed for undergraduate students who want to pursue a thorough education in the area of information assurance. The goal of this concentration is to provide students the knowledge, skills and the advanced development capability in science and engineering for information assurance, including computer and network security, software security, data and information security, applied cryptography and computer forensics. Students will have a competitive advantage to pursue graduate study in related-research areas or to secure employment. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: CSE 465: Information Assurance (3) offered in Fall term, CSE 466: Computer Systems Security (3) offered in Fall term, CSE 467: Data and Information Security (3) offered in Spring term, CSE 468: Computer Network Security (3) offered in Fall term, and one of the following five courses: CSE 412: Database Management (3), CSE 434: Computer Networks (3), CSE 460: Software Analysis and Design (3), CSE 463: Introduction to Human Computer Interaction (3), CSE 471: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor's of Science in Computer Science - Software Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | This track offers specialized courses founded on the fundamentals and principles of software engineering. The program provides the knowledge and skills needed to work as a software engineer or software task leader on both large and small projects. Students will learn development of distributed software, service-oriented applications, modeling notations, software architectures and other tools and skills necessary to be successful in the workplace. They will gain a solid foundation for pursuing graduate study and carrying out research and development in emerging areas such as model based design, enterprise software engineering, service-oriented architecture, simulation-based software development and visual modeling system-of-systems engineering. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: CSE 445/598 Distributed Software Development (3), CSE 460/598 Software Analysis and Design (3), CSE 461 Software Engineering Capstone Project I (3), CSE 462 Software Engineering Capstone Project II (3), any three credit hours from: CSE 463: Introduction to Human Computer Interaction (3), CSE 465: Information Assurance (3), CSE 466: Computer Systems Security (3), CSE 467: Data and Information Security (3), CSE 468: Computer Network Security (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Bachelor’s of Science in Engineering in Computer Systems Engineering - Information Assurance | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The program is designed for undergraduate students who want to pursue a thorough education in the area of information assurance. The goal of this concentration is to provide students the knowledge, skills and the advanced development capability in science and engineering for information assurance, including computer and network security, software security, data and information security, applied cryptography and computer forensics. Students will have a competitive advantage to pursue graduate study in related-research areas or to secure employment. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Modules include: CSE 465: Information Assurance (3) offered in Fall term, CSE 466: Computer Systems Security (3) offered in Fall term, CSE 467: Data and Information Security (3) offered in Spring term, CSE 468: Computer Network Security (3) offered in Fall term, and one of the following five courses: CSE 412: Database Management (3), CSE 434: Computer Networks (3), CSE 460: Software Analysis and Design (3), CSE 463: Introduction to Human Computer Interaction (3), CSE 471: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (3). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA - Interdisciplinary Digital Media and Performance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The concentration in Interdisciplinary Digital Media & Performance trains students who have interests and skills in unique cross sections of the arts and sciences. The degree expands the School of Music's offerings to include areas, which hold great promise for individual student's professional aspirations. It also keeps the School of Music and its students actively involved in current developments in the ever-changing field of media. The state of the art media facilities of AME and its hybrid arts-engineering faculty and courses will be an invaluable asset to music students, with resources that complement existing or future courses in electronic music. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in AME 598 Signal Processing for Media Arts, AME 598 Multimedia Systems, AME 598 Multimodal Pattern Analysis, AME 598 Multimodal Interfaces and Interactive Technologies, AME 598 Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Perception and Cognition for Hybrid Environments, ME 598 History and Analysis of Media Arts/Arts & Technology, AME 598 Computational Models for Media and Arts, AME 598 Media Theory, AME 598 Sound Analysis for Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Physical Computing, AME 598 Multimodal Context Models, AME 598 Dynamic User-Centered Modeling and Design, AME 598 Adaptive Media, AME 598 Computer Music for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Media Performance Ensemble, AME 598 Active Learning in Mediated Environments. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Choral Conducting | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | The choral program strives for excellence and to promote the musical growth of each choir member. For the music student, singing in choir provides a unique opportunity to bring together the knowledge you are gaining throughout the music school knowledge of theory, music history, vocal technique and performance technique. These techniques all come into use each day as we seek performances that make a genuine emotional connection with the audience. The non-majors and community members, the choirs provide an opportunity to participate in music-making at the highest level. This is amateur singing in the true sense of the word one who loves the art. There is nothing casual or haphazard about our approach to some of the greatest creations of the human mind and spirit | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Choral | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program trains highly-qualified musicians to become conductors and scholars of choral music, combining a thorough knowledge of repertory, the historical and analytical issues underlying the music, vocal technique and pedagogy, an understanding of efficient, effective rehearsal technique and a clear, expressive conducting technique. Students receive considerable individual attention and have regular opportunities to rehearse and conduct ensembles. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Collaborative Piano | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program is designed to nurture the musical interests of each individual student, while developing a keen sense of style and skills needed to create performances at the highest level. The keyboard faculties has international reputations as pianists, recording artists and teachers, and are committed to helping students through weekly lessons, studio and repertoire classes, guest master classes and other performance and listening opportunities. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program develops the skills necessary to pursue a career in music composition. The faculties are recognized, active composers whose music represents a wide variety of genres - ranging from chamber to orchestral, acoustic to electronic. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Instrumental | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Interdiscplinary Digital Media and Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | The students must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university with a major of at least 45 semester hours in art, including 12 hours of art history and six hours of art education. You must have a GPA in undergraduate art education and course work during the junior/senior years of at least a 3.0. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Music Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program develops teaching skills in a supportive and challenging program. Students have opportunities to prove themselves as a teacher before going into the profession through internships, student teaching and observation, and mentoring arrangements. They learn through experience that research in music is a natural and important part of teaching music. This program fosters outstanding educators who are prepared to make a difference in the lives of their students. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Opera Music Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Piano | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program is designed to nurture the musical interests of each individual student, while developing a keen sense of style and skills needed to create performances at the highest level. The keyboard faculty have international reputations as pianists, recording artists and teachers, and are committed to helping students through weekly lessons, studio and repertoire classes, guest master classes and other performance and listening opportunities. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Piano Pedagogy | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program is designed to nurture the musical interests of each individual student, while developing a keen sense of style and skills needed to create performances at the highest level. The keyboard faculty have international reputations as pianists, recording artists and teachers, and are committed to helping students through weekly lessons, studio and repertoire classes, guest master classes and other performance and listening opportunities. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Voice | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music - Wind Band | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Music Education Performance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | The doctoral degree in music education is a research degree that attracts a national and international cohort of students each year. Graduates teach in leading colleges and universities in the United States and abroad, and follow career paths in school administration and arts education leadership.The doctoral program in music education qualifies graduates for faculty positions at colleges or universities in the United States or abroad, and for leadership and administrative positions in the arts and arts education. The doctoral program is a research degree that includes a dissertation. Coursework options include both highly specialized and cross-disciplinary study with scholars and artists in the School of Music, the Herberger College of the Arts and on the ASU campuses. Cognates allow program flexibility and individual interests, such as early childhood education, conducting, psychology, research methods, critical theory and public policy. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The performance studies are in instrumental, piano, piano pedagogy, collaborative piano, voice. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | DMA in Orchestra Conducting | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program trains highly-qualified musicians to become conductors and scholars, emphasizing a thorough knowledge of repertory, knowledge of historical and analytical issues, an understanding of efficient, effective rehearsal technique and a clear, expressive conducting technique. As a doctoral student, they receive considerable individual attention and have regular opportunities to rehearse and conduct ensembles. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Audiology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | The AuD program is designed for full-time students over a period of 45 months, including four fall and four spring semesters, and three summers. The four-year course of study includes both academic and clinical practicum components. The AuD program requires a minimum of 101 semester credit hours, of which 66 are required academic credits provided through the Department of Speech and Hearing Science, and 35 are required clinical credits. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Basic Audiometry, Amplification, Survival Sign Language, Pediatric Audiology, Amplification II, Auditory Perception by the Hearing Impaired, Neurophysiology of the auditory system, Instrumentation and Calibration, Auditory Evoked Potentials, Balance Assessment, Auditory Rehabilitation, Auditory Pathologies & Disorders, Otoneurologic Applications in Audiology, Auditory Aging, Hearing Conservation, Counseling for the Hearing Impaired, Audiology Practice Management, Audiology Practice Management, Audiology Practice Management, Communication Disorders and Multicultural Populations, Clinical Practicum, Internship, Audiology Grand Rounds, Audiology Clerkship. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, P O Box 870102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2374 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Higher and Postsecondary Education | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This program prepares intellectual leaders for the academy, with a unique emphasis on serving diverse communities at two- and four-year colleges and universities. Using a researcher/practitioner model, the program focuses on the application of concepts, techniques, and skills necessary to prepare professionals for leadership roles in the higher education community. | Applicant must have a master's degree in a higher and postsecondary education-related field; and candidates with degrees in outside areas may be considered. They should have at least three years' full-time experience in higher/postsecondary education leadership positions or similar roles in other types of organizations. They should have a GPA with a minimum 3.0 required in both undergraduate and graduate coursework. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Education - Educational Administration | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies | The D.E.L.T.A. Doctorate (Dynamic Educational Leadership for Teachers and Administrators) program is a direct response to the increased demand for enhanced educational leadership in Arizona. The delivery method and schedule format recognize the unique needs of the full-time employee.Critical areas of school instruction and administration are addressed: educational policy and law, evaluation and assessment of school change, state and local finance of schools, diversity in education for administrators, research techniques and organizational development. In addition, international and bi-national experiences to examine education are included. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, P.O. Box 872411, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7224 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Music | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Opera - Music Theater Conducting | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This is a professional degree in musical direction/conducting. During your study, you polish the specific skills required for a career as conductor/musical director of opera. To be accepted into this program, you MUST have good conducting skills and previous experience in orchestral conducting. You must be a qualified vocal coach with at least a diction-knowledge of French, German and Italian, and you must also have strong keyboard skills. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Philosophy in Biology and Society - Bioethics, Policy, and Law Track | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program is richly interdisciplinary, drawing from biology, history and philosophy of science, religious studies, history, philosophy, political science, justice studies, nursing, law, health administration of policy, anthropology and other disciplines to develop skills for analyzing and addressing the problems where biology intersects with society. The program tailors individual programs of study to individual needs and interests, with a solid grounding in the life and related sciences and with rigorous analytical and multi-disciplinary education. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Philosophy in Biology and Society - History and Philosophy of Science Track | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program is richly interdisciplinary, drawing from biology, history and philosophy of science, religious studies, history, philosophy, political science, justice studies, nursing, law, health administration of policy, anthropology and other disciplines to develop skills for analyzing and addressing the problems where biology intersects with society. The program tailors individual programs of study to individual needs and interests, with a solid grounding in the life and related sciences and with rigorous analytical and multi-disciplinary education. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Philosophy in Chinese | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | The primary purpose of the degree training is to prepare students to become scholars and teachers of Chinese literature and culture or to prepare them for the increasing number of other professional careers that utilize knowledge of Chinese languages and cultures. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Philosophy in English (Literature) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | This program promotes the study of the production, distribution and reception of texts, of their linguistic, rhetorical and literary structures and functions, and of internal and external forces that create literature. While catalog offerings reflect a chronological approach with emphasis on biography, history and aesthetic appreciation, content and methodology in these courses vary. Modes of inquiry include both traditional and recent critical approaches to literary studies; many courses explore issues relating to gender, class, race and ethnicity. This flexibility allows the juxtaposition of high cultural with low cultural texts and the traditional canon with neglected texts. The program prepares students for entrance into the profession as both teachers and scholars. | Applicant must have an undergraduate major in English or its equivalent with a minimum GPA of 3.00. The Graduate College requires a GPA of 3.00 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the department requires that applicants have at least a 3.50 GPA in all previous graduate work. The GRE general test is required and normally, applicants should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the verbal aptitude section. (institutional code = 4007). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Philosophy in English (Rhetoric/Composition and Linguistics) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | This concentration promotes the study of the production, distribution and interpretation of oral and written texts. It focuses on rhetorical and linguistic structures and functions within the texts and on the internal and external factors involved in the creation of these texts. Requirements are designed to encourage a full understanding of theoretical and applied aspects of both rhetoric/composition and linguistics and their intersection. Courses explore both historical and current theoretical approaches. The program prepares students for entrance into the field as teachers, scholars and professionals. | Applicant must have a bachelor's or master's degrees in fields such as anthropology, applied linguistics, cognitive science, communication, comparative languages and literatures, English literature, education, history, law, linguistics, modern languages, philosophy, political science, psychology, religion, rhetoric/composition, sociology and speech and hearing science. The Graduate College requires a GPA of 3.00 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the department requires that applicants have at least a 3.50 GPA in all previous graduate work. Applicants must submit scores on the GRE and normally, they should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Philosophy in Literature | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | The program at ASU promotes the study of the production, distribution, and reception of texts; of their linguistic, rhetorical, and literary structures and functions; and of internal and external forces that create literature. While catalog offerings reflect a chronological approach with emphasis on biography, history and aesthetic appreciation, content and methodology in these courses vary. Modes of inquiry include both traditional and recent critical approaches to literary studies; many courses explore issues relating to gender, class, race, and ethnicity. (This flexibility allows the juxtaposition of high cultural with low cultural texts and the traditional canon with neglected texts.) The program prepares students for entrance into the profe ssion as both teachers and scholars. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. The GRE General test is required. The GRE Subject test (literature) is optional. Normally, students should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the Verbal Aptitude section. (Institutional Code = 4007). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The Ph.D. is a total of 84 hours. In general, a student with an appropriate master's degree must complete a minimum of 54 semester hours of approved graduate work, which includes 12 hours of dissertation. Research hours may be used towards coursework in consultation with the advisor. A student without an appropriate master's degree usually must complete 84 hours of work at ASU. At the advisor’s discretion, students may include up to 12 hours of appropriate, graduate-level coursework undertaken at another university, and not previously counted towards any other degree. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Philosophy in Spanish - Cultural Studies Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | The intent of the program is to be as flexible as possible and recognizing the many demands put upon the scholar in the modern world and the wide variety of specialized interests, every attempt will be made to plan a program of study that will best prepare the candidate for a productive career in the discipline of Hispanic studies. | Applicant must demonstrate a near-native oral proficiency in Spanish and to show that they have developed a high order of expository prose in English and Spanish by presenting a term paper or a chapter of the M.A. thesis. They should have a 3.75 overall grade point average (4.00 = A). Admission to the program requires the student to present an M.A. in Spanish or equivalent from an accredited institution. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Doctor of Philosophy in Spanish - Literature Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | The intent of the program is to be as flexible as possible and recognizing the many demands put upon the scholar in the modern world and the wide variety of specialized interests, every attempt will be made to plan a program of study that will best prepare the candidate for a productive career in the discipline of Hispanic studies. | Applicant must demonstrate a near-native oral proficiency in Spanish and to show that they have developed a high order of expository prose in English and Spanish by presenting a term paper or a chapter of the M.A. thesis. They should have a 3.75 overall grade point average (4.00 = A). Admission to the program requires the student to present an M.A. in Spanish or equivalent from an accredited institution. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Dual Ph.D. in Tranborder Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | This program is designed to bring to bear the most important and timely theoretical, methodological, and technical approaches to the seamless study and policy development of the region and its political economy, culture, creative and media expression, and health ecology. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5091 | The Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies is a center of research, learning, training and application that seeks to enhance the intellectual, educational and professional opportunities of Mexican-origin and other Latino populations. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ed.D. in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The course is designed to provide students with interdisciplinary opportunities to deepen their knowledge and understanding of educational practice and encourages the pursuit of an intellectual study of education theories and practices, development of expertise in one of the C&I concentration areas, acquisition of tools needed to provide professional leadership in curriculum, teacher education and professional development in the schools, engagement in research/inquiry methods for addressing educational practices and issues. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The concentration areas are in Curriculum Studies, Mathematics Education, Early Childhood Education, Science Education, Language and Literacy, Secondary Education, Special Education. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies is a center of research, learning, training and application that seeks to enhance the intellectual, educational and professional opportunities of Mexican-origin and other Latino populations. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Honors Program in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering in the School of Computing and Informatics and the Barrett Honors College work together to provide their students academic advising, research and internship opportunities, scholarship information and access to distinguished lectures and other special events. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Honors in Civil Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering and the Barrett Honors College work together to provide their students academic advising, research and internship opportunities, scholarship information and access to distinguished lectures and other special events. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Honors in Family and Human Development | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Honors in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy, Lattie F Coor Hall 975 S Myrtle Avenue Room 3309, PO Box 874102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3394 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Honors in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Bachelor degree | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Integrated Bachelors/Master's Program in Biochemistry with Emphasis on Medicinal Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Medicinal Chemistry is an exciting research area that involves organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, and biochemistry. This research deals with chemical-biological relationships, mainly the relationship between molecular structure and biological activity or mode of action. | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | J.D. - Ph.D. in Justice Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $47,606 a year | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | The concurrent degree allows qualified students to earn the J.D./Ph.D. degrees in 120 semester hours of coursework. Specifically, candidates with concurrent degrees must complete 87 law hours, in addition to 15 semester hours of required Ph.D. core courses, 15 semester hours of doctoral committee approved electives (to develop substantive specialization and increase core areas of competency), and 24 semester hours for researching and writing the dissertation. The 87 law hours include 66 hours of law school courses, 60 of which must be earned in numerically graded courses. Upon recommendation of the candidate’s dissertation committee and approval by the Associate Dean of the College of Law, a candidate may apply additional hours earned in non-numerically graded law courses toward the concurrent degree. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus, McAllister & Orange Streets, P.O. Box 877906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1474 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | J.D. - Ph.D. in Law and Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $47,606 a year | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | The Program provides students with traditional and cutting-edge knowledge and skills in the interdisciplinary field of law and psychology through a teaching and research consortium of faculty in the College of Law and the Department of Psychology. Students study in substantial depth and breadth the law, one traditional area of psychology (social, clinical, or developmental), and the intersection of the two fields. Moreover, they do so in a condensed timeframe. Whereas the Ph.D. normally takes at least six years and the J.D. takes three years to complete, the Program is designed such that students may be expected to receive both degrees in approximately seven years, depending on their chosen pace and interests. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus, McAllister & Orange Streets, P.O. Box 877906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1474 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | J.D./Ph.D. Program in Law and Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | This program is a trans-disciplinary collaboration between the College of Law and the Department of Psychology founded on a recognition of psychology's potential to improve the legal system. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology, PO BOX 871104, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7598 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | No | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | JD - MD in Law | Full Time | Variable | US $47,606 a year | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | M.D.-J.D. students will be required to take the customary core law school curriculum, which includes the mandatory courses listed below during the first and second years. In the second year, students are required to take Professional Responsibility (3 credit hours) and Constitutional Law II (4 credit hours) or Criminal Procedure (3 credit hours). | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus, McAllister & Orange Streets, P.O. Box 877906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1474 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | JD in Law | Full Time | Variable | US $47,606 a year | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | The program is full-time and classes are offered during the day. The College enrolls about 170 students each fall. First year students are required to take a specific set of classes, including Contracts, Torts, Criminal Law, Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law I, Property, Law and the Regulatory State, and Legal Research and Writing. After the first year, the only required courses are Professional Responsibility and Criminal Procedure or Constitutional Law II. Students may also participate in the various clinics, simulation courses, or externships. Students must complete a total of 88 credit hours and write a substantial paper to complete the graduation requirements. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus, McAllister & Orange Streets, P.O. Box 877906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1474 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint B.S. - M.S. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This program allows students to pursue a joint M.S. degree and B.S. degree in Biology (including those students in the biology and society concentration). Students admitted to the program are concurrently enrolled in both the undergraduate and graduate classes and seminars. The students are not eligible for graduate perquisites, including teaching and research assistantships, related health insurance, financial aid, or graduate award programs until the B.S. degree is complete. The graduate program requires a minimum of 30 semester hours above the 120 required for the undergraduate degree. Consistent with Graduate College guidelines, no more than six semester hours of 400-level courses may be applied to the M.S. degree.Students follow the guidelines provided in the M.S. in Biology summary. A thesis and final oral examination are required at the same level as students in the regular M.S. program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint BA - MA Political Science | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | A student in her senior year, for example, can take nine (9) credit hours of approved coursework that will be shared between the bachelor's and master's degrees. Those courses will give the student nine credits toward her bachelor's and nine toward her master's. We imagine that a student might take the shared 400-level course and one shared 500-level seminar in the fall and two 500-level seminars, one of them shared, in the spring. Of course, the shared hours can be divided by the student in any way that is advantageous to him or her. | Any political science major, pursuing either the BA or BS degree, with a GPA of 3.4 or better, who has accumulated at least 90 hours toward the undergraduate degree, or who is on the verge of doing so, and who has taken at least one 400-level political science course at ASU can be considered for admission into the joint program. The Division of Graduate Studies has approved a plan whereby undergraduates can "share" credits for both their undergraduate and graduate degrees. Students can count one 400-level course and two 500-level courses as credit hours for both degrees. Using this system of shared credits, we fully expect undergraduates to be able to complete both degrees in five years. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint BSE - MS in Aerospace Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | This program is designed to provide selected high-achieving ASU MAE undergraduate students with the opportunity to combine advanced undergraduate coursework with graduate coursework and accelerate graduate degree completion. Students will be able to earn a B.S.E. and M.S. degree in five (5) years by enrolling in up to nine (9) credit hours of graduate-level coursework taken as technical electives during the junior and/or senior years. Those credits will apply toward both the undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Admission requires a higher secondary school education from an accredited institute. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint BSE - MS in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | This program is designed to provide selected high-achieving ASU MAE undergraduate students with the opportunity to combine advanced undergraduate coursework with graduate coursework and accelerate graduate degree completion. Students will be able to earn a B.S.E. and M.S. degree in five (5) years by enrolling in up to nine (9) credit hours of graduate-level coursework taken as technical electives during the junior and/or senior years. Those credits will apply toward both the undergraduate and graduate degrees. | Admission requires a higher secondary school education from an accredited institute. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint Bachelors - Masters in Journalism and Mass Communication | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus | The 15-month, full-time professional program is unique in scope, focus and intensity. It begins with immersion in the journalistic skills, values and principles embodied by Walter Cronkite, the school’s guiding light for the past three decades. But it also is designed with the future in mind. Students learn how to navigate a dramatically different 21st-century media environment through classes and a symposium specifically focused on the future of journalism. And they are able to apply that knowledge through an intensive, practical experience in one of the school’s signature professional programs. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus, Stauffer Hall A 231, P.O. Box 871305, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1796 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint JD - Ph.D. in Justice Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | The doctoral program is an interdisciplinary degree program operated under the auspices of the School of Justice & Social Inquiry (SJSI). Our interdisciplinary doctoral program in Justice Studies integrates philosophical, legal, and ethical approaches with social science and humanities perspectives to study inequalities and justice in social life. Our doctoral students gain interdisciplinary expertise by taking courses that cover issues within and across a range of disciplines. Interdisciplinary courses are offered within the School of Justice & Social Inquiry and students are also encouraged to take courses from other departments and Schools across the ASU campuses. Moreover, it is expected that at least one member of the student’s Advisory and Dissertation Committee will be from outside SJSI. Student Advisory and Dissertation Committees must also be comprised of faculty from more than one discipline. More than 45 faculty from across ASU are members of the Justice Studies PhD Graduate Faculty. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Citizenship, Migration and Human Rights, Globalization, Sustainability and Economic Justice, Law, Policy, and Social Change, Media, Technology and Culture, Social Identities and Communities. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry, Wilson Hall, PO Box 870403, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7682 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint M. Arch./MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 credit and over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus | A dual career program, Master of Architecture/Master of Business Administration, has been established in cooperation with the W. P. Carey School of Business. It is intended for students who wish to obtain comprehensive business knowledge to complement their design education. The dual degree is intended to be completed within three year | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, BA 160, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7579 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint MBA - Master of Business Administration/MHSM | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy | This revolutionary program provides the health and business sectors with highly-trained administrators who possess specialized skills for the rapidly changing pace of the health care industry. Students come from a variety of backgrounds, including working professionals who want to retool their skills for leadership positions in the health industry, and health providers who want training in business skills to move into upper-level managerial positions.Students who wish to get both the MBA and the MHSM degree at the W. P. Carey School of Business have the opportunity to share 18 hours of coursework. This coursework is completed during the first portion of both the MBA and MHSM degrees and is considered the "business core" for both degrees. Since the business core is integrated into both the MHSM and the MBA degrees, students are allowed to share the 6 courses on both programs of study. Students are permitted five years to share coursework, so it is recommended to apply for the second degree no more than 3 years after completing the first. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. Licensed physicians with an M.D. or D.O. degree from a medical school accredited by the U.S. are not required to provide a test score. | MBA | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy, Post Box 874506, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7778 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint MBA - Master of Business Administration/MS Information Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems | The Master of Science in Information Management educates business professionals in the strategic use of technology to create shareholder value. Graduates of the program are prepared to help shape organizations in a rapidly changing, globally competitive, technologically sophisticated environment. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | The courses include Business Database Concepts, Distributed Systems & Web Systems, Systems Integration, Intelligent Decision Systems, New IT Product Development, Computer Security. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3252 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint MBA - Master of Business Administration/MSE Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $50,000 for the entire course | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | The dual degree combines advanced courses in technical areas with a rigorous management curriculum to allow students to receive two degrees, the W. P. Carey MBA and the MSE in Electrical Engineering from the Fulton School of Engineering, in a shorter period of time and at lower cost than if the two degrees were pursued separately. This foundational grounding in two leading schools gives the employee and the organization the necessary tools for today's global marketplace. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.5 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | MBA | Arizona State University | The area of study are in control systems, electro magnetics, antennas and microwave circuits, electronic and mixed-signal circuit design, electric power and energy systems, signal processing and communications, solid-state electronics, arts, media and engineering. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University, 650 East Tyler MallGoldwater Center Room 206, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3424 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Joint MBA - Master of Business Administration/MSE Industrial Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $50,000 for the entire course | Graduate College | The dual degree is designed for working professionals who have an undergraduate engineering, science, or mathematics degree and one year of work experience, and who are beginning to take on management responsibilities. This degree is also for managers who want to stay current in their area of expertise and sense the need to develop enhanced business acumen. Students typically remain employed while they are in the program. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | MBA | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Graduate College | Graduate College, Arizona State University Interdisciplinary B-Wing, Room 170 PO Box 871003, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | LL.M. in Biotechnology and Genomics | Full Time | Variable | US $47,606 a year | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | The LL.M. program focuses study in the growing intersection of law and genetic applications, such as pharmacogenomics and personalized medicine, genetically modified organisms, forensic evidence, gene testing, gene therapy, cloning, stem cells, and behavioral genetics. These raise a plethora of legal issues relating to privacy, confidentiality, regulation, liability, international trade, evidentiary standards, intellectual property, licensing, and business planning. The LL.M. requires the completion of 24 credit hours and provides its students the legal mastery and the scientific understanding to keep pace. Students benefit from the Center’s established international reputation, regular conferences on Law & Genetics, and the Center’s 18-year collaboration with the American Bar Association to publish Jurimetrics: the Journal of Law, Science, and Technology. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus, McAllister & Orange Streets, P.O. Box 877906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1474 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | LL.M. in Tribal Policy Law and Government | Full Time | Variable | US $47,606 a year | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | The LL.M. program provides students with a detailed understanding of the nature of tribal government, law, and policy development within the domestic federal structure. Candidates will benefit from the extensive resources committed to the Indian Legal Program, including a full-time director and staff and an Indian Law Clinic with its own full-time director and staff. The core curricular offerings focus on domestic tribal law, federal Indian law, and American institutions of law and government. The program explores the expression of domestic law within contemporary administrative, governmental, and judicial institutions. ASU is located in the heart of the southwest United States, home to roughly one-third of the Native population in the United States and where many of the largest Indian nations in the country reside. It is the academic home for several nationally known scholars who do research on American Indian issues, and houses many unique resources for such scholarship, including the Labriola Collection at Hayden Library. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus, McAllister & Orange Streets, P.O. Box 877906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1474 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. A. in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The Curriculum and Instruction is a research degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding in the student's chosen concentration. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in Bilingual Education, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, English as a Second Language, Indian Education, Language & Literacy, Mathematics Education, Science Education, Secondary Education, Social Studies Education. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. A. in Curriculum and Instruction - Bilingual Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The Curriculum and Instruction is a research degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding in the student's chosen concentration. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in BLE 511 - Introduction to Language Minority Education, BLE 515 - Instructional Methods for Bilingual Students, BLE 520 - ESL for Children, BLE 522 - Literacy/Biliteracy Development, BLE 528 - Social Studies Methods for Bilingual Education, BLE 535 - Sociolinguistic Issues in Bilingual Education, BLE 541 - Principles of Bilingualism and L2 Acquisition, BLE 561 - Parent Involvement in Language Minority Education, BLE 598 - Mathematics for Spanish Speakers, RDG 598 - Gender, Culture and Literacy, RDG/BLE 533 - Literacy in Secondary BLE/ESL Settings, IED 540 – Issues in Language & Literacy of indigenous Peoples. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. A. in Curriculum and Instruction - Early Childhood | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The Curriculum and Instruction is a research degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding in the student's chosen concentration. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in ECD 522 - Developmental Social Experiences, ECD 525 - Communication Arts, ECD 527 - Math in Early Childhood, ECD 544 - Play Education, ECD 555 - Modern Practices in Early Childhood Education, ECD 580 - Early Childhood Practicum, ECD 594 - Interprofessional collaboration, RDG 598 - Gender, Culture and Literacy. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. A. in Learning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Learning is a concentration within the Educational Psychology program. The Educational Psychology program is housed within the Division of Psychology in Education, one of three divisions in the College of Education. The Learning concentration focuses on theoretical and empirical issues in the cognitive and learning sciences, and their educational applications and implications. Faculty interests include parent and teacher education, cognition, motivation and self-regulation, and literacy. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The Learning Core are in EDP 540 Theoretical Views of Learning, EDP 542 Research Methods, EDP 591 Motivation, EDP 591 Learning Science Lab, Interdisciplinary Core EDP 530 Human Development, EDP 502 Introduction to Statistics, EDP 503 Introduction to Qualitative Method, EDP 550 Intro to Measurement, One additional methodology, qualitative or quantitative course, Specialization EDP 690 Reading & Conference, EDP 691 Research Practicum. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. A. in Life-span Developmental Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Lifespan Developmental Psychology is a concentration within the Educational Psychology program. The LDP concentration offers a program of study that reflects the field’s increasingly interdisciplinary nature. The focus is on the application of scholarship in understanding real world challenges and the cultural nature of development. The target populations studied include children and adults within the contexts of families and schools. We follow an applied developmental science model, with the aim of using research to inform policies and programs that further the positive development of individuals. Faculty research interests include immigrant families' adaptations, family life and home-institution connections, aging and intergenerational relationships, family literacy, family-school relations, peer relations, and educational equity. Graduates of the program work in universities and community colleges, state and local departments of education, K-12 schools and community agencies. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in EDP 530 Theoretical Issues in Human Development, EDP 598 ST: Lifespan Human Development, EDP 540 Theoretical Views of Learning, EDP 599 Thesis, Elective courses. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. A. in Measurement Statistics and Methodological Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Students in MSMS focus their study on quantitative and qualitative research methodologies, educational statistics, psychometrics, and evaluation. Students specializing in MSMS will generally direct their professional efforts toward Development and evaluation of techniques for the assessment of educational or psychological phenomena, measurement of educational outcomes, design and interpretation of research studies, statistical methods for analyzing research data, or evaluation of educational programs. Graduates are employed in a variety of positions, such as professors in colleges or universities, data analysts in the public or private agencies, measurement specialists for government agencies or private companies, or researchers and evaluators for schools or other institutions. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. Ed. in Educational Technology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | The MEd in Educational Technology is a non-thesis degree program that requires completion of 30 credit hours beyond the bachelor’s degree. The program focuses on the design, development, and evaluation of instructional systems and educational technology applications to support learning. Graduates of the program typically are employed in the schools, community colleges, and universities or as training specialists in corporate settings. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. Ed. in INCITE | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | The INCITE program leads to An M.Ed. in Curriculum & Instruction with a concentration in Secondary Education. An Institutional Recommendation from ASU for Secondary (7-12) Certification. Coursework qualifies candidates for a middle grade endorsement if student teaching is completed in grades 5-9.INCITE ( INtegrated Certification In Teacher Education )is a Master’s program for individuals who want to teach in secondary school settings (7-12). | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. Ed. in TEACH - ME | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | This program is for interested in achieving elementary (K-8) teaching certification. Teacher candidates learn effective teaching strategies in a range of classroom experiences, and they are active participants in their development as teachers. Candidates also participate in teaching experiences with mentor teachers and students in designated urban schools. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M. Ed. in TEAMS | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | The Teacher Education for Arizona Math and Science (TEAMS) program leads to Secondary School Certification (grades 7-12), Middle School Endorsement (grades 5-9), and a Masters Degree in Secondary Education. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Curriculum and Instruction - Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are inEED 529 - Science in the Elementary School, EED 537 - Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School, EED 598 - Teaching Ratio Numbers, Ratio, Pro, EED 598 - Assessment in Science, EED 598 - Concept Chg & Science Teaching and Learning, EED 598 - Intro to Science Ed, EED 598 - Child Math Development, RDG 505 - Developmental Reading, RDG 507 - Content Area Literacy, RDG 525 - Emergent Literacy, RDG/BLE 522 – Literacy/Biliteracy Development. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Curriculum and Instruction - English as a Second Language Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in BLE 511 - Introduction to Language Minority Education, BLE 516 - Teaching Strategies for Native American ESL Programs, LE 520 - ESL for Children, BLE 528 - Social Studies Methods for Bilingual Education, BLE 535 - Sociolinguistic Issues in Bilingual Education, BLE 541 - Principles of Bilingualism and L2 Acquisition, BLE 580 - Practicum, BLE 598 – Language Structure and Acquisition , RDG/BLE 522 - Literacy/Biliteracy Development, RDG/BLE 533 - Literacy in Secondary BLE/ESL Settings, RDG 596 - Gender, Culture and Literacy. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Curriculum and Instruction - Language and Literacy | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in ECD/EED 562 - Communication Arts, BLE 535 - Socio-linguistic Issues in BLE, BLE 541 - Nature of Bilingual/Second Language Acquisition, RDG 507 - Content Area Literacy, RDG/BLE 522 - Literacy/Biliteracy Development, RDG/BLE 533 - Literacy in Secondary BLE/ESL Settings, RDG/ECD 525 - Emergent Literacy, RDG 530 - Research Issues in Litreacy, RDG 544 - Adolescent Literacy Programs for New Times, RDG 563 - Children’s Literature, RDG 564 - Library Materials for Adolescents, RDG 581 - Literature-Based Reading Program, RDG 582 - Practicum: Literature Studies, RDG 596 - Gender, Culture, and Literacy, RDG 598 - Writing, RDG 598 - ST: Literature for Hispanic Youth, RDG 598 - ST: Psychology of Reading. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Curriculum and Instruction - Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The list of concentration are in ECD 527 - Mathematics in Early Childhood, BLE 598 - Teaching Mathematics to Spanish Speaking, EED 791 - Seminar: Research in Mathematics Education, EED 791 - Seminar: Writing in Mathematics Education, EED 791 - Seminar: Publishing in Mathematics Education, ED 791 - Seminar: Issues in Mathematics Education, EED 791 - Seminar: Readings in Mathematics Education, EED 791 - Seminar: Instructional Design in Math Education, EED 791 - Seminar: Advanced Tech. in Math Education, EED 791 - Seminar: Res. in Personality & Math Learning, EED 791 - Seminar: Found. of Math for K-12 Curriculum. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Curriculum and Instruction - Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in EED/SED Equity in Science Education, EED/SED 598 Conceptual Change in Science Teaching and Learning, EED/SED 598 - Assessment in Science. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Curriculum and Instruction - Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding.This list is tentative and designed to give an idea of the kinds of courses which the student might take. For nstance, if a student wishes to more closely examine Bilingual Education in the Secondary School then s/he ould take courses in the concentration in that area. If s/he wished to examine Learning in the Secondary chool, she would take coursework in that area. Thus, the function of the Concentration section is to ndividualize the program for the particular student through choices made in the Concentration. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in SPF 544 - Philosophical Foundations of Education, RDG 598 - Gender, Culture and Literacy, MCE 598 - Multicultural Perspectives in Teach/Learn, BLE 535 - Sociolinguistic Issues in Bilingual Education, SPF 511 - School and Society, LNT 540 - Theoretical Views of Learning, ECD 555 - Modern Practices in Early Childhood Education, EMC 502 - Current Issues & Prob. in Media/Computer Educ., BLE 511 - Introduction to Language Minority Education. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Curriculum and Instruction - Social Studies Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding.This list is tentative and designed to give an idea of the kinds of courses which the student might take. For nstance, if a student wishes to more closely examine Bilingual Education in the Secondary School then s/he ould take courses in the concentration in that area. If s/he wished to examine Learning in the Secondary chool, she would take coursework in that area. Thus, the function of the Concentration section is to ndividualize the program for the particular student through choices made in the Concentration. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in EED 528 - Social Studies in the Elementary School, EED 598 - Teaching Social Studies in the Middle School, SED 598 - Advanced Social Studies Methods, ECD 522 - Dev. Social Experiences in Early Childhood Education, EED 598 - Teaching Social Studies with Literature, BLE 528 - Social Studies for Bilingual/ESL Teachers, EED 594 - Issues and Practices in Social Studies. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Geography | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | The Program of Study Master's students file a program of study (iPOS) with the School and the Graduate College. This document sets out coursework toward the MA degree and formalizes the composition of the supervisory committee. Thesis Proposal Review: MA students prepare a statement of their specialization in geography prior to scheduling a review meeting with their supervisory committee to present their thesis proposal. Thesis: Once the full advisory committee approves the written thesis, the advisor schedules an oral defense before the student's committee and guests. A copy of the thesis must be made available in the School at least two weeks prior to the event. All Graduate College deadlines for scheduling the defense and submitting the completed thesis must be adhered to. The student must complete the MA within six years. Completion of the MA: The culmination of the Master's program is a successful defense and revision MA thesis. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. Successful applicants at the PhD level generally post GRE scores (combined) of 1200 or higher and a writing score above 3.5.Successful applicants at the MA level score 1150 or higher (combined verbal and quantitative scores) and a writing score above 3.5.Students whose native language is not English should have scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) of at least 213 [computer based], 83 [iBT], or 600 [paper based]. | Masters | Arizona State University | The students must complete 30 semester hours, including 24 hours of combined coursework and research hours at ASU and 6 thesis hours. The Master's program includes two required courses (GCU 529 Geographic Thought, GCU 585 Advanced Research Methods), one seminar (GCU/GPH 591), and additional coursework or research hours as selected by the student in consultation with an advisory committee. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 875302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7533 | The school itself has only existed as such since July 2006 and grew out of the Department of Geography, which has a long and distinguished history. The school is evolving into a scholarly community that engages in interdisciplinary and trans-disciplinary education, research and outreach dealing with substantive and applied questions where the role of place, space and interaction is central. These themes are also important in the vision of the New American University, which emphasizes local and global engagement, suggesting a major role for geographical sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Human Communication | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication | Graduate study in the Hugh Downs School is directed toward advancing the understanding of message-related human behavior. The programs are research-oriented and are based on the principle that students' programs should be tailored to their individual needs, capabilities, and professional goals within the academic mission and scope of the School. Our programs provide students with training in communication theory, research methods, and specialization in one or more of our emphasis areas. Current areas of study within the major are intercultural communication and cultural studies, interpersonal communication, performance studies, organizational communication, and rhetorical studies and public communication. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. Successful applicants at the PhD level generally post GRE scores (combined) of 1200 or higher and a writing score above 3.5.Successful applicants at the MA level score 1150 or higher (combined verbal and quantitative scores) and a writing score above 3.5.Students whose native language is not English should have scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) of at least 213 [computer based], 83 [iBT], or 600 [paper based]. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Introduction to Human Communication, Elements of Interpersonal Communication, Introduction to Communication Inquiry, Argumentation, Public Speaking, Small Group Communication, Introduction to Oral Interpretation, Introduction to Organizational Communication, Communication in Business and the Professions, Elements of Inter cultural Communication. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication, Arizona State University, PO Box 871205, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5095 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Mathematics - Non Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The Master of Arts degree is designed to increase mathematical knowledge beyond the traditional Bachelor degree in order to prepare students for careers requiring sophisticated mathematical skills. Students may choose to specialize in core mathematics areas, applied mathematics, statistics or mathematics education. The program of study is a selection of graduate level courses usually totaling 30 semester hours that must be filed by the graduate student with the recommendation of the student's supervisory committee and the approval of the Graduate Director. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | A 30 hours of graduate course work with at least 18 hours at the 500 level. Two qualifying exams passed at the master's level. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Mathematics - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The Master of Arts degree is designed to increase mathematical knowledge beyond the traditional Bachelor degree in order to prepare students for careers requiring sophisticated mathematical skills. Students may choose to specialize in core mathematics areas, applied mathematics, statistics or mathematics education. The program of study is a selection of graduate level courses usually totaling 30 semester hours that must be filed by the graduate student with the recommendation of the student's supervisory committee and the approval of the Graduate Director. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | A 24 hours of graduate course work with at least 12 hours at the 500 level. 6 hours of thesis (MAT 599). One qualifying exam passed at the master's level or at least a 3.25 GPA in 4 courses of two qualifying sequences. A final oral examination in defense of the thesis. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Museum Studies in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The degree program offers a theoretical approach to the study of museums and is designed to involve students with the principles, practices, and critical analyses of museums. Courses in the Museum Studies in Anthropology program address topics that are prominent in contemporary anthropology – representation, materiality, cultural property, visual culture, public culture, globalization, and post-colonial encounters – in relation to past and present museum settings and activities. Additionally, the program promotes exploration into the ways that anthropologically informed perspectives, methods and insights can find expression in contemporary museum practice. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Philosophy - Non - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | The program in traditional and contemporary philosophy. General areas of research include ethics, political philosophy, metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of law, philosophy of science, philosophy of language, philosophy of religion, and the history of philosophy. Members of our faculty are involved in interdisciplinary work in a variety of fields, and the Department enjoys close ties with the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, the College of Law, and a number of other departments and programs at ASU. We sponsor an active colloquium series and regular philosophical conferences on diverse topics. The Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics also sponsors a wide range of activities, including large-scale conferences, distinguished visitors, and support for graduate study.The MA program in philosophy is designed to prepare students to teach philosophy at the community college level, to enter doctoral programs in philosophy at other institutions, or to work in any area that requires critical, analytical thinking (such as medicine, law, government, or publishing. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Each student shall be required to take at least 27 hours of approved graduate-level courses, not including PHI 592 Research. An additional three hours of PHI 592 Research is required to prepare the portfolio. Each student is required to take an approved graduate-level course of three semester hours or more in each of the following four major areas and to obtain at least a "B" (3.00) in each course: epistemology, history, metaphysics, and value theory. A portfolio is required. This written work must consist of two papers from one of the major areas and must demonstrate the ability to carry out independent research in philosophy. A final oral examination in defense of the portfolio is required. Each semester's program of study must be approved by the Director of Graduate Studies. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy, Lattie F Coor Hall 975 S Myrtle Avenue Room 3309, PO Box 874102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3394 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Philosophy - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | The program in traditional and contemporary philosophy. General areas of research include ethics, political philosophy, metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of law, philosophy of science, philosophy of language, philosophy of religion, and the history of philosophy. Members of our faculty are involved in interdisciplinary work in a variety of fields, and the Department enjoys close ties with the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, the College of Law, and a number of other departments and programs at ASU. We sponsor an active colloquium series and regular philosophical conferences on diverse topics. The Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics also sponsors a wide range of activities, including large-scale conferences, distinguished visitors, and support for graduate study.The MA program in philosophy is designed to prepare students to teach philosophy at the community college level, to enter doctoral programs in philosophy at other institutions, or to work in any area that requires critical, analytical thinking (such as medicine, law, government, or publishing. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Each student shall be required to take at least 24 hours of approved graduate-level courses, not including PHI 599 Thesis. An additional six hours of PHI 599 Thesis is required. Each student is required to take an approved graduate-level course of three semester hours or more in each of the following four major areas and to obtain at least a "B" (3.00) in each course Epistemology, History, Metaphysics, value theory, A thesis is required. This written work must demonstrate the ability to carry out independent research in philosophy, A final oral examination in defense of the thesis is required, Each semester's program of study must be approved by the Director of Graduate Studies. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy, Lattie F Coor Hall 975 S Myrtle Avenue Room 3309, PO Box 874102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3394 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The Master of Arts program consists of a minimum of 30 semester hours of coursework. The program includes both a thesis or non-thesis option. The MA degree provides advanced education for those students preparing for teaching, research, or applied careers in politics, state, local or national government, consulting, or in public relations. It may be taken as a terminal degree or a step toward eventual fulfillment of the requirements for the Ph.D. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Political Science - American Politics | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The emphasize political behavior and use survey research, experimental designs, and content analysis to collect data and conduct statistical analyses of mass voting patterns, campaign strategies, party politics, the role of the media in political communication, agenda setting and policy development in Congress, and elite-mass linkages. Other faculty study decision making on state and federal courts, judicial independence, and public perceptions of the Supreme Court using data from actual court decisions, longitudinal and comparative data on changes to the rules governing judicial selection and retention, and experiments and surveys to examine public reaction to court decisions and support for courts. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | All M.A. students for whom American politics is their major field are required to complete POS 530, POS 603 (or equivalent) and one additional American Politics course. All M.A. students for whom American politics is their minor field should complete POS 530. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Political Science - Comparative Politics | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The program in Comparative politics investigate a variety of topics in several world regions. Research interests include political and economic development, political parties, race and politics, women and politics, political participation, religion and politics, and ethnic-based movements. Faculty incorporate a variety of approaches and methodologies, including political behavior, political processes, institutions, and policies, as well as incorporating both qualitative and quantitative methodologies. Regions of particular emphasis include Western Europe, Latin America, and Africa. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | All M.A. students for whom Comparative politics is their major field are required to complete POS 550 and two additional Comparative politics courses. All M.A. students for whom Comparative politics is their minor field are required to complete POS 550 and one additional Comparative politics course. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Political Science - International Relations | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The IR subfield investigate a diverse set of issues in international security and international political economy, including comparative foreign policy; democracy and war; international order; insurgency and counter-insurgency; immigration; great power war; gender and race in international relations; terrorism; and sovereignty and the evolution of statecraft. The IR subfield is particularly strong in the area of IR methodology, and its faculty are leading contributors to the development and application of qualitative social inquiry. Faculty teaching and research interests include the Asia-Pacific region, South America, and the Middle East. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | All M.A. students for whom International politics is their major field are required to complete POS 560 and two additional International Relations courses. All M.A. students for whom International Relations is their minor field are required to complete POS 560 and one additional International Relations course. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Political Science - Political Theory | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The research interests cover a range of topics in the history of political thought and contemporary political theory. Historical topics include Rousseau, histories of concepts, and modern liberalism. Research in contemporary political theory includes: autonomy and freedom; rights and obligations; citizenship, civic virtues, and the idea of the common good; various issues in democratic political theory (with particular attention to education); aspects of political and legal theory regarding corporate personality; conceptions of self in various cultures; analysis of the myths in aboriginal societies (particularly Native Americans); punishment; justice; community; language and politics; social ecology; and peace and nonviolence. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | All M.A. graduate students for whom Political Theory is their major field are required to complete the Ancient and Modern Political Thought courses (POS 591 or 598) at the graduate level and at least two additional Political Theory courses. All M.A. students for whom Political Theory is their minor field should complete one of the two Political Thought courses. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Political Science - Public Policy | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The study of public policy involves understanding and analyzing the processes, institutions, and consequences of governmental decision-making, drawing on intellectual approaches from political science, economics, public affairs, sociology, and other disciplines. Faculty currently concentrate on issues of policy development and policy change, the role of experts and bureaucrats in the policy process, and intergovernmental relationships. Faculty pursue policy research in the United States, in comparative national contexts, and in international governance. Specific areas of focus include science, technology, and environmental policy, urban development, housing, transportation, and social and family policy. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | All M.A. graduate students for whom Political Theory is their major field are required to complete the Ancient and Modern Political Thought courses (POS 591 or 598) at the graduate level and at least two additional Political Theory courses. All M.A. students for whom Political Theory is their minor field should complete one of the two Political Thought courses. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Social and Philosophical Foundations | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies | The Master of Arts degree in Social and Philosophical Foundations of Education is designed for experienced practitioners as well as individuals preparing for doctoral level studies in areas such as the following Educational Reform and Policy, International and Comparative Education, Language Rights and Policy as Practice, Philosophy of Education, Ethnography and Anthropology of Education, Sociology of Education, American Indian Education Policy, Race, Class, Gender in Education.The program is individually tailored to suit the intellectual and research interests of each student with a set of core courses. Opportunities for graduate assistantships are available on a limited basis, usually in the form of teaching and research fellowships. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, P.O. Box 872411, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7224 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | This degree program provides advanced training for those preparing for teaching, research, or applied careers in sociology, and may be taken either as a terminal program or as a step toward eventual fulfillment of requirements for the Ph.D. The areas of focus are demography, family and health. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.A. in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The purpose of the Master of Arts (MA) in Special Education is to develop and extend research competencies in Special Education. Students graduating from this program will demonstrate the ability to conduct research related to Special Education. Students entering the program desire to gain in depth understanding of a specific area of interest, e.g. effect of specific approach on the performance of students with special needs, attitudes of teachers toward inclusion, etc. This degree permits students and advisors to tailor programs of study to meet specific interests. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.E. in Semiconductor Processing and Manufacturing | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | he Master of Engineering (M.E.) with the area of study in Semiconductor Processing and Manufacturing requires 30 credits of course work (10 courses) and students have the option to complete a capstone project. The GRE is not required for the M.E. degree option. culminating event is required and will be identified by the student’s advisory committee. It could be a final examination or the final report for a practice-oriented project (Applied Project XXX593). Additional requirements may exist for some academic units. |
Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | The core courses are in MSE 494/598 Intro to Microelectronics Packaging, MAE 591 Semiconductor packaging, EEE 436/591 Fundamentals of Solid State Devices, CHE 458/598 Semiconductor Material Processing, MSE 598 Materials Issues in Semiconductor Processing, IEE 591 DOE/SPC for Semiconductor Processing. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University, 650 East Tyler MallGoldwater Center Room 206, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3424 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Counselor Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | The Counselor Education Master of Education (MEd) is a program for teachers seeking a greater understanding of student behavior. The degree alone does not provide academic preparation for state certification as a school counselor. Students interested in becoming school counselors should apply to the Master of Counseling program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in CED 545 Analysis of the Individual, CED 522 Theories of Counseling, CED 523 Psychological Tests, CED 534 Occupations and Career, CED 567 Group Procedures, CED 583 Field Based Experience, CED 525 Evaluation in School Settings, CPY 671 Multicultural Counseling. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in Bilingual Education, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, English as Second Language, Indian Education Language & Literacy, Mathematics Education, Professional Studies, Science Education, Secondary Education, Social Studies Education, Teaching and Learning. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Bilingual Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in BLE 511 - Introduction to Language Minority Education, BLE 515 - Instructional Methods for Bilingual Students, LE 516 - Teaching Strategies for Native American ESL Programs, BLE 520 - ESL for Children, BLE 522 - Literacy/Biliteracy Development, BLE 526 - SEI for Elementary Schools, BLE 527 - SEI for Middle and Secondary Schools, BLE 528 - Social Studies Methods for Bilingual Education, BLE 535 - Sociolinguistic Issues in Bilingual Education, BLE 541 - Principles of Bilingualism and L2 Acquisition, BLE 561 - Parent Involvement in Language Minority Education, RDG/BLE 533 - Literacy in Secondary BLE/ESL Settings, IED 540 – Issues in Language & Literacy of indigenous Peoples. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Early Childhood Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The list of electives are in BLE 526 SEI (Structured English Immersion) for Children, ECD 522 Developmental Social Experiences in Early Childhood Education, ECD 527 Math in the ECD Classroom, ECD 598 Science in the ECD Classroom, RDG 525 Emergent Literacy, SPE 553 Developmental and Functional Assessment, ECD 555 Contemporary Practices in Early Childhood. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are inEED 529 - Science in the Elementary School, EED 537 - Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School, EED 598 - Teaching Ratio Numbers, Ratio, Pro, EED 598 - Assessment in Science, EED 598 - Concept Chg & Science Teaching and Learning, EED 598 - Intro to Science Ed, EED 598 - Child Math Development, RDG 505 - Developmental Reading, RDG 507 - Content Area Literacy, RDG 525 - Emergent Literacy, RDG/BLE 522 – Literacy/Biliteracy Development. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - English as Second Language | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in BLE 511 - Introduction to Language Minority Education, BLE 520 - ESL for Children, BLE 526 - SEI for Elementary Schools, LE 527 - SEI for Middle and Secondary Schools, BLE 535 - Sociolinguistic Issues in Bilingual Education, BLE 541 - Principles of Bilingualism and L2 Acquisition, BLE 580 - Practicum, BLE 598 – Language Structure and Acquisition, RDG/BLE 522 - Literacy/Biliteracy Development, RDG/BLE 533 - Literacy in Secondary BLE/ESL Settings. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Indian Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The list of electives are in DCI 593 – Applied Project, DCI 691 – Perspectives on Curriculum, DCI 701 – Critical Theory, SPF 520 – Cultural Diversity and Education, SPF 691 – Race, Class and Gender, SPF 691 – Power, Politics and Policy, BLE 598 – Language Socialization. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Language and Literacy | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The list of concentration are in BLE 535 - Sociolinguistic Issues in BLE, BLE 541 - Nature of Bilingual/Second Language Acquisition, RDG 507 - Content Area Literacy, RDG 521 - Assisting the Struggling Adolescent Reader, RDG/BLE 522 - Literacy/Biliteracy Development, RDG/BLE 533 - Literacy in Secondary BLE/ESL Settings, RDG/ECD 525 - Emergent Literacy, RDG 530 - Research Issues in Literacy, RDG 544 - Adolescent Literacy Programs for New Times, RDG 563 - Children’s Literature, RDG 564 - Library Materials for Adolescents, RDG 581 - Literature-Based Reading Program, RDG 596 - Gender, Culture, and Literacy, RDG 598/LIS565/BLE565 - ST: Literature for Hispanic Youth, RDG 510 – Teaching Writing. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in EED 537 – Mathematics in the Elementary School, SED 560 – Teaching Mathematics with Technology, SED 547 – Teaching Mathematics in the Middle School, EED/SED 598 – Teaching Geometry, EED/SED 598 – Rational Numbers and Proportional Reasoning, EED/SED 598 – Research & Methods of Instruction in Mathematics, SED 598 – Teaching Algebra, EED 598 – Algebraic & Numeric Thinking Elementary Grades, MTE 585 – Modern Geometry for Teachers, MTE 598 – Methods of Teaching Math in Secondary School. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Professional Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in EED 511 – Principles of Curriculum Development, SED 522 - Secondary School Curriculum Development, DCI 598 – Curriculum Design. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in EED/SED 598 Curriculum and Instruction in Science Education, EED/SED 598 Assessment in Science Education, EED/SED 598 Equity in Science Education, EED/SED 598 Conceptual Change in Science Teaching and Learning, EED/SED 598 History and Philosophy of Science for Science Teachers. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The list of electives available are in BUE 502 - Org & Management Coop Programs, SED 598 - Conceptual Change in Science Learning, SED 598 - Models of Teaching, SED 594 - Teaching Math with Technology, DCI 593 - Applied Project. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Secondary Education with a Teaching Area | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in COE 501 - Introduction to Research & Evaluation in Education, DCI 510 - Teacher as Researcher, DCI 598 - Approaches to Assessment, DCI 598 - Models of Teaching, MCE 598 - Multicultural Perspectives in Teach/Learn, SED 522 - Secondary School Curriculum Development. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Social Studies Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in SED 598 Effective Teaching in the Social Studies, SED 598 Inquiry in the Social Studies, BLE 598 Social Studies, Methods Materials and Assessment. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction - Teaching and Learning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This is a practitioner's degree program designed to facilitate development of advanced level professional knowledge, skills and understanding. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in DCI 512: Developing Strategies for Teaching Practice, DCI 530: Establishing a Mentoring Partnership, DCI 520: Teaching Standards Applied to Professional Practice, EDP 540: Theoretical Views of Learning, EDT 511: Technology Applications in Education, EDA 535: Learner Centered Leadership. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Educational Administration and Supervision | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The program is offered in a cohort format, allowing a class of students to proceed through the program of study as a unit. Cohorts are offered throughout the metropolitan area served by Arizona State University and start at various times throughout the academic year as demand dictates. Successful completion of the program of study provides the student with the academic requirements needed for certification as a Principal in the State of Arizona.The Master of Education degree in Educational Administration and Supervision is designed to develop instructional leaders for the 21st Century. Students in this program will learn how to create and sustain collaborative environments in pre-K-12 schools that support learning for all children. Central to the purpose of the program is the identification, development and articulation of organizational goals that enhance learning, curriculum, instruction, assessment and leadership. An emphasis on practical application will assure the identification and collection of those tools and techniques deemed essential for effective management. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | The degree in Educational Psychology is administered by faculty in the Division of Psychology in Education. This program is intended for persons who wish to further prepare themselves as classroom teachers or other positions related to instruction. A written evaluation is required as the culminating experience for the degree. Students completing this program are not expected to continue for a Ph.D. in Educational Psychology at Arizona State University. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The core studies are in COE 501 Introduction to Research and Evaluation, COE 504 Learning and Instruction, EDP 513 Child Development, EDP 514 Psychology of the Adolescent. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Higher and Postsecondary Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The MEd is a thirty (30) hour non-thesis program. Students fulfill a minimum of 30 hours of coursework, including two (2) hours earned for the MEd culminating Applied Project. Students have the opportunity to select one of the following program areas. Student Success for those focusing on direct student contact roles such as Advisor, Academic Specialist, Coach/Trainer or Program Coordinator. Leadership in Higher Education for those focusing on administrative roles such as Academic Program Coordinator, Executive Facilities Coordinator, or Assistant Athletic Director. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.Ed. in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The purpose of the Master of Arts (MA) in Special Education is to develop and extend research competencies in Special Education. Students graduating from this program will demonstrate the ability to conduct research related to Special Education. Students entering the program desire to gain in depth understanding of a specific area of interest, e.g. effect of specific approach on the performance of students with special needs, attitudes of teachers toward inclusion, etc. This degree permits students and advisors to tailor programs of study to meet specific interests. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. Computer Science and Engineering - Art Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The purpose of the AME concentration in Computer Science and Engineering is to train hybrid engineering-arts graduates who get their inspiration from the arts and their methodology from computer science and engineering. The students will specialize in transdisciplinary media development. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in AME 598 Signal Processing for Media Arts, AME 598 Multimedia Systems, AME 598 Motion Capture and Analysis , AME 598 Image Understanding, AME 598 Multimodal Pattern Analysis, AME 598 Multimodal Interfaces and Interactive Technologies, AME 598 Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Perception and Cognition for Hybrid Environments, AME 598 History and Analysis of Media Arts/Arts & Technology, AME 598 Computational Models for Media and Arts, AME 598 Movement as Language, AME 598 Media Theory, AME 598 Sound Analysis for Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Physical Computing, AME 598 Multisensor Models/Multimodal Data Fusion, AME 598 Multimodal Context Models, AME 598 Dynamic User-Centered Modeling and Design, AME 598 Adaptive Media, AME 598 Digital Graphics and Animation for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Computer Music for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Mediated Biosystems, AME 598 Media Performance Ensemble, AME 598 Kinesiology for Consciousness, AME 598 Consciousness in Movement, AME 598 Active Learning in Mediated Environments. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. Design - Arts Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The MSD degree requires 36 credit hours; 30 credit hours of coursework and 6 credit hours of thesis. The Design and Experimental Media concentration requires that one third of the course credits (i.e., a total of 12 course credits) be taken from the AME course menu (9 credit hours of coursework and 3 credit hours of thesis). The remaining course and thesis credit hours must be from the MSD Program or other courses as described in the Design and Experimental Media check sheet.The Concentration in Design and Experimental Media is meant for MSD students who wish to explore the otential of media and its associated technology as related to its application to design. The concentration is open to all MSD students but is especially suited to students with a background in industrial or visual communication design. Students in this concentration will undertake the research core required of all MSD students, the MSD Design and Experimental Core, and the AME Design and Experimental Core (see details below). |
Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in DSC 520 Contemporary Design Issues, DSC 524 Illumination and Acoustics, DSC 525 Design Methodologies, DSC 527 Modern Design Theory, DSC 529 Design Criticism, DSC 544 Human Factors Systems and Documentation, DSC 558 Daylighting. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Aerospace Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Aerospace engineers design and develop aircraft, spacecraft and other non-terrestrial vehicles and their systems. In the pursuit of optimally efficient vehicles, aerospace engineers utilize sophisticated computational tools to design and analyze state-of-the-art, aerodynamically efficient wings and surfaces. They invent and design light-weight composite materials and structures, highly efficient propulsion devices and autonomous, intelligent control systems. A degree in Aerospace Engineering prepares students for an exciting career in these and related fields. The Aerospace Engineering program has four educational objectives, which describe the expected capabilities and achievements of graduates during the first several years following completion of the program. The objectives of the program are to Provide graduates with the ability to think in a critical and evaluative manner and to consider a broad perspective, in order to solve technical and non technical problems.Prepare professionally successful graduates who provide effective leadership, who act in an ethical manner and whose skills include the ability to communicate well and to work successfully within diverse groups. Provide the depth and breadth of engineering education that prepares graduates for Employment in the Aerospace engineering profession, or Admission to graduate programs in Aerospace engineering or a related field, or The pursuit of advanced education in other professional areas, such as business, law, medicine, etc. Cultivate in our graduates a spirit of inventiveness, creativity and entrepreneurship. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Astrophysics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | The degree will consist of a minimum of 30 semester hours beyond the bachelor's degree, of which 20 semester hours are structured courses. The program will provide fundamental graduate training in astrophysics to prepare candidates for careers in astrophysics, such as scientific staff positions at government laboratories, teaching at the community college level, technical positions in industry, or further graduate study. The student, with the approval of the advisor and supervisory committee (formed upon enrollment), will select courses that comprise a coherent program of study. It is normally expected that coursework will consist of the existing AST 521/522/523 and AST 531/532/533 graduate sequences, which provide comprehensive graduate training in the major fields of astrophysics. These courses will be combined with additional work in core fields such as physics or mathematics. Students will be expected to exhibit mastery of topics in these core fields, and may be required by their advisor and committee to include such courses in their program of study. Specific course requirements may be waived by the advisor if the student has successfully completed equivalent courses at universities elsewhere. Individual programs of study that include work in related fields may also be designed with advisor approval, subject to the requirements of the ASU Division of Graduate Studies. M.S. programs of study will also include a minimum of six hours of research and thesis credit. ASU Division of Graduate Studies policies and procedures must also be met for admission to the program as well as for fulfilling the requirements of the degree. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Astrophysics, Astrobiology, Stars and Interstellar Medium, Stars and Interstellar Medium, Galaxies and Cosmology. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration, ASU, PO Box 871404, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5081 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Bioengineering - Non - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | US $21,000 a year | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | The program of study for the nonthesis option requires the same set of core courses and seminar in bioengineering that is required of students in the thesis option. Instead of research and thesis hours, the student must complete six additional semester hours of course work selected from the catalog list of BME courses. The Master of Science degree with thesis option requires 30 semester hours of graduate study plus 3 semesters of seminar enrollment. The Master of Science degree with non-thesis option requires 33 semester hours of graduate study plus 3 semesters of seminar enrollment.All candidates pursuing an MS degree in Bioengineering are required to complete an approved program of study consisting of the minimum required semester hours, including research and thesis, if applicable. Special course requirements for the different areas of study are established by the faculty and are available from the Harrington Department of Bioengineering. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | The Course Work are in Bioengineering course work, Mathematical electives, General electives1, Additional bioengineering course work, Bioengineering seminar, Applied Project, BME 593 Applied Project2. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Bioengineering - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | US $21,000 a year | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | The Master of Science degree with thesis option requires 30 semester hours of graduate study plus 3 semesters of seminar enrollment. The Master of Science degree with non-thesis option requires 33 semester hours of graduate study plus 3 semesters of seminar enrollment.All candidates pursuing an MS degree in Bioengineering are required to complete an approved program of study consisting of the minimum required semester hours, including research and thesis, if applicable. Special course requirements for the different areas of study are established by the faculty and are available from the Harrington Department of Bioengineering. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | The course Work are in Bioengineering course work, Mathematical electives, General electives1, Bioengineering seminar, Research and Thesis, BME 592 Research2, BME 599 Thesis3. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program of each student is prepared in consultation with the supervisory committee, consisting of a major professor and two additional faculty members. A minimum of 30 semester hours is required. The program of study must include exactly six hours of BIO 599 Thesis and one hour of seminar. The remainder of the program of study usually consists of (1) a mixture of course work, readings and conference, and seminars in the student's primary field and related fields and (2) research credits. Courses and research credits can be distributed in any combination appropriate to the student's individual educational goals. A typical program of study consists of six semester hours of thesis, one semester hour of seminar, nine to 15 hours of course work and additional seminars, and eight to 14 semester hours of research credit. A final oral examination covering the thesis and related subject matter is administered by the supervisory committee. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Chemical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $21,000 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | The Master of Science degree program combines coursework (on advanced topics in the student's field of specialization) with an introduction to research. The student is taught the scientific method through in-depth study of a specific research topic. Generally, the master’s student's program of study advances the knowledge obtained in his/her broader undergraduate program of study. Often included in the master's degree educational experience is an opportunity to teach undergraduates by serving as teaching assistants to undergraduate courses. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 876006, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3313 | The Department of Chemical Engineering is devoted to educating chemical engineers and conducting cutting edge research in chemical engineering and related fields. The department currently has 12 faculty, 10 post-doctoral researchers, 50 graduate students and 280 undergraduate students. Chemical engineering faculty members are committed to fully developing student’s potential by providing a unique and stimulating learning and research environment, exposing students to a diversity of viewpoints and teaching/learning styles, and preparing students to work in teams to solve real-world, multidisciplinary problems. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Geological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | The Master of Science degree consists of a minimum of 30 semester hours of work beyond the bachelor's degree; 20 or more semester hours consist of course work other than research and thesis. The program is designed to provide fundamental graduate training in geology and to prepare the student for certain careers in geology or for further graduate study. The student will complete at least thirty semester hours of graduate credit. Graduate courses are defined as courses numbered 400 or greater. Twenty hours or more will consist of coursework other than Research and Thesis. This coursework should be designed to serve the individual needs of the student, with due attention to breadth and depth of development. A cumulative average of "B" (GPA=3.0) or better must be maintained at all times in graduate coursework approved by the Supervisory Committee on the Departmental Program of Study form excluding Research, Reading and Conference, Thesis, and Dissertation credits. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration, ASU, PO Box 871404, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5081 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Justice Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | The master’s program embraces those aspects of social and behavioral sciences relevant to an understanding of the social arrangements and social processes that affect justice in society. The curriculum focuses on justice theory, research methods, policy, and data analysis in a variety of substantive areas. The program offers a Master of Science degree with a thesis or an applied project option. In fulfilling the requirements of this program, the student is prepared for professional positions in justice-related agencies and nonprofit organizations, for teaching in community colleges, and for further study and research in the justice field. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Justice Research Methods , Justice Theory, Statistical Problems in Justice Research , Qualitative Data Analysis. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry, Wilson Hall, PO Box 870403, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7682 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Kinesiology- Biomechanics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | Depending on previous graduate work, students select courses in biomechanics, other exercise science courses, engineering mechanics, bioengineering, statistics, and research seminar. Coursework and research projects are individually designed to accommodate the student's particular interests and talents. After completing coursework, the student takes oral and written comprehensive exams. Following successful completion of these exams, the doctoral student develops a research proposal outlining an original and independent research project reflecting his/her special interests in biomechanics. The remainder of the Ph.D. program is devoted almost exclusively to the preparation and presentation of the doctoral dissertation. The total program generally requires four years to complete. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Introduction to Biomechanics Research Methods, Biomechanics of the Skeletal System, Biomechanics of Exercise and Sport, Qualitative Analysis in Sport Biomechanics, BME 521 Neuromuscular Control Systems, BME 524 Fundamentals of Applied Neural Control, BME 551 Movement Biomechanics, EE 520 Ergonomics Design, IEE 547 Human Factors Engineering, PSY 529 Correlation and Psychometric Theory, PSY 530 Intermediate Statistics, IN 494 Human Motor Control, KIN 501 Research Statistics, KIN 521 Motor Development, Control, and Learning, KIN 535 Exercise Physiology, KIN 540 Factors Influencing Exercise Performance, KIN 598 Exercise Biochemistry, KIN 621 Motor Learning/Control, ASM 598 Comparative Primate Anatomy, BME 516 Topics in Biomechanics, BME 519 Topics in Biocontrol Systems. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Kinesiology- Exercise Health Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | A mentor approach to research is employed. Master’s students are encouraged to become involved in research while doctoral candidates participate in all aspects of the research program including project planning, preparation of grant proposals, data collection and analysis, computer processing, manuscript preparation, and presentation of papers at scientific meetings. In addition, doctoral students gain supervised experience in teaching undergraduate courses in their areas of specialization and in assisting with advising master’s degree students. Through a variety of such experiences, a close collaboration between the student and faculty member can be developed and maintained. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Introduction to Biomechanics Research Methods, Biomechanics of the Skeletal System, Biomechanics of Exercise and Sport, Qualitative Analysis in Sport Biomechanics, BME 521 Neuromuscular Control Systems, BME 524 Fundamentals of Applied Neural Control, BME 551 Movement Biomechanics, EE 520 Ergonomics Design, IEE 547 Human Factors Engineering, PSY 529 Correlation and Psychometric Theory, PSY 530 Intermediate Statistics, IN 494 Human Motor Control, KIN 501 Research Statistics, KIN 521 Motor Development, Control, and Learning, KIN 535 Exercise Physiology, KIN 540 Factors Influencing Exercise Performance, KIN 598 Exercise Biochemistry, KIN 621 Motor Learning/Control, ASM 598 Comparative Primate Anatomy, BME 516 Topics in Biomechanics, BME 519 Topics in Biocontrol Systems. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Kinesiology- Human Physiology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | The program offers a broad spectrum of courses and research areas in the physiology, endocrinology, and biochemistry of exercise.The doctoral program in Kinesiology is based on extensive training in laboratory research. This program of coursework and research training is geared toward preparing graduates, especially at the Ph.D. level, for a career as an independent scientist. Employment opportunities exist in both the university/government setting and the private sector. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Physiology of Women in Sport, Exercise Physiology, Exercise Biochemistry, Exercise Endocrinology, Techniques in Neuroendocrinology, Metabolic Adaptations to Training. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Kinesiology- Physiology of Exercise | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | The program offers a broad spectrum of courses and research areas in the physiology, endocrinology, and biochemistry of exercise.The doctoral program in Kinesiology is based on extensive training in laboratory research. This program of coursework and research training is geared toward preparing graduates, especially at the Ph.D. level, for a career as an independent scientist. Employment opportunities exist in both the university/government setting and the private sector. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Physiology of Women in Sport, Exercise Physiology, Exercise Biochemistry, Exercise Endocrinology, Techniques in Neuroendocrinology, Metabolic Adaptations to Training. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Mechanical engineering is a creative and diverse discipline. Mechanical Engineers draw upon the basic sciences to design, build and control the devices, machines, processes and systems that are the mainstay of modern society. Mechanical engineering encompasses a vast multitude of applications from the efficient conversion and transmission of energy and power to the design and implementation of nanoscale devices. A degree in Mechanical Engineering prepares students for an exciting career in these and related fields. The Mechanical Engineering program has four educational objectives, which describe the expected capabilities and achievements of graduates during the first several years following completion of the program. The objectives of the program are to Provide graduates with the ability to think in a critical and evaluative manner and to consider a broad perspective, in order to solve technical and non technical problems. Prepare professionally successful graduates who provide effective leadership, who act in an ethical manner and whose skills include the ability to communicate well and to work successfully within diverse groups. Provide the depth and breadth of engineering education that prepares graduates for Employment in the Mechanical engineering profession, or Admission to graduate programs in Mechanical engineering or a related field, or The pursuit of advanced education in other professional areas, such as business, law, medicine, etc. Cultivate in our graduates a spirit of inventiveness, creativity and entrepreneurship. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Microbiology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | A minimum of 30 semester hours of graduate credit approved by a student's supervisory committee and the Graduate College is required. The 30 hours on the program of study should include course work, research, and exactly six hours must be MIC 599 Thesis credit. The program is planned by the student in consultation with the supervisory committee. The supervisory committee is responsible for the guidance and direction of the student's graduate program. The committee is composed of a minimum of three members, including a chair. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Molecular and Cellular Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program consists of a minimum of 30 semester hours of graduate work approved by a student's supervisory committee and the Graduate College is required. The 30 hours on the program of study should include a minimum of 10 designated semester hours of MCB courses, MCB 592 Research credits, and exactly six MCB 599 Thesis hours. The remaining courses are selected by the student in consultation with the supervisory committee. The supervisory committee is responsible for the guidance and direction of the student's graduate program. The committee is composed of a minimum of three members, including a chair. A minimum of 2 committee members must be core MCB faculty members. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Physics | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | The Physics degree marks the transition from student of physics to independent physicist. The cadre of physics graduate students represents the heart and soul of the research enterprise in any physics department. Students working with our 35 faculty members and numerous affiliated faculty members. New students participate in research groups right from the start, and take a newly constructed core curriculum emphasizing the advanced understanding of the fundamental aspects of physics. We have replaced the traditional written comprehensive (or qualifying) exam, with a written and oral comprehensive exam based on research projects undertaken during the first year and first summer of the program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics, Arizona State University, P O Box 871504, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3561 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S. in Plant Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | A minimum of 30 semester hours of graduate credit is required. The program of study must include course work, PLB 592 Research credits, exactly six semester hours of PLB 599 Thesis, and one hour of participatory seminar (PLB 591). The program is planned by the student in consultation with the supervisory committee. The supervisory committee is responsible for the guidance and direction of the student's graduate program. The committee is composed of a minimum of three members, including a chair (at least 2 committee members should be School of Life Sciences faculty). | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | M.S.E. in Semiconductor Processing and Manufacturing | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | The Masters of Science in Engineering (MSE) is a non-thesis degree option, which requires 30 credits of course work (10 courses) and a capstone project or a written exam at the end of the program. Degrees available under this option include: The MSE in Electrical Engineering or MSE in Material Science Engineering. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | The core courses are in MSE 494/598 Intro to Microelectronics Packaging, MAE 591 Semiconductor packaging, EEE 436/591 Fundamentals of Solid State Devices, CHE 458/598 Semiconductor Material Processing, MSE 598 Materials Issues in Semiconductor Processing, IEE 591 DOE/SPC for Semiconductor Processing. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University, 650 East Tyler MallGoldwater Center Room 206, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3424 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Art - Art Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program prepares students to teach and also offers a broad-based curriculum providing substantial foundations in studio art, art history and art education. The program has an international reputation as a leading research center. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Art - Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Asian Languages and Civilizations Chinese | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | The Asian languages faculty in the School of International Letters and Cultures offers a graduate program leading to a master of arts degree in Asian Languages and Civilizations-Chinese. In addition to preparing some students for further academic training, the program also helps to prepare students for jobs dealing with China as well as for entrance to professional schools, in such fields as law, business, or journalism. It aims to enroll students who see a higher level of understanding of the language and culture of China as a valuable asset to a professional career, as well as students who want to eventually pursue doctoral studies in the same or a closely related field. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Asian Languages and Civilizations Japanese | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | The Asian languages faculty in the School of International Letters and Cultures offers a graduate program leading to a master of arts degree in Asian Languages and Civilizations--Japanese. In addition to preparing some students for further academic training, the program also helps to prepare students for jobs dealing with Japan as well as for entrance to professional schools, in such fields as law, business, or journalism. It aims to enroll students who see higher level of understanding of the language and culture Japan as a valuable asset to a professional career, as well as students who want to eventually pursue doctoral studies in the same or a closely related field. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in History- Public History | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | The Public History Program prepares historians for a wide range of public history careers and roles beyond academe. By combining specially designed courses and internships with more traditional academic training, the Public History program teaches and prepares students how to apply methods of historical inquiry to the problems encountered by decision makers in both the public and the private sectors. The program can also equip students with the skills needed to launch a career in scholarly publishing. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Scholarly Publishing, Historic Preservation, Community History, Historical Administration, The Public Sector, Museum Studies. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Linguistics - Applied Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | The program is intended to develop graduate-level skills related to the history, theory, and practice of the discipline. Fluency sufficient for graduate work in a foreign language is necessary; satisfactory proficiency in conversation and composition will be determined by the appropriate division of the Department of Languages and Literatures. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. The GRE General test is required. The GRE Subject test (literature) is optional. Normally, students should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the Verbal Aptitude section. (Institutional Code = 4007). | Masters | Arizona State University | The program must include the linguistics core, consisting of the following courses or their equivalent LIN 500 Research Methods, LIN 515 American English or LIN 516 Pragmatics, LIN 511 Phonetics & Phonology or LIN 514 Syntax, LIN 520 Theories Underlying the Acquisition of English as a Second Language, One course chosen from among: LIN 521, 522, 523, 524, 615, 616, 620, LIN 599 Thesis (6 hours), Three Electives (9) hours chosen in consultation with the advisor. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Linguistics - General Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | The program is intended to develop graduate-level skills related to the history, theory, and practice of the discipline. Fluency sufficient for graduate work in a foreign language is necessary; satisfactory proficiency in conversation and composition will be determined by the appropriate division of the Department of Languages and Literatures. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. The GRE General test is required. The GRE Subject test (literature) is optional. Normally, students should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the Verbal Aptitude section. (Institutional Code = 4007). | Masters | Arizona State University | The General Linguistics program must include the linguistics core, consisting of the following courses or their equivalent LIN 500 Research Methods, LIN 515 American English or LIN 516 Pragmatics, LIN 511 Phonetics and Phonology, LIN 514 Syntax, One Advanced Studies in Linguistics course (LIN 610, 614, 615, 616, 617), LIN 599 Thesis (6 hours), Three Electives (9 hours) chosen in consultation with the advisor. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Linguistics - Rhetoric and Composition | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | The program is intended to develop graduate-level skills related to the history, theory, and practice of the discipline. Fluency sufficient for graduate work in a foreign language is necessary; satisfactory proficiency in conversation and composition will be determined by the appropriate division of the Department of Languages and Literatures.concentration in rhetoric and composition, a candidate must complete at least 30 hours of graduate courses. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. The GRE General test is required. The GRE Subject test (literature) is optional. Normally, students should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the Verbal Aptitude section. (Institutional Code = 4007). | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in ENG 500 Research Methods, One course in rhetoric theory, ENG 551 Rhetorical Traditions, ENG 554 Rhetorics of Race, Class, and Gender, ENG 556 Theories of Literacy, One course in composition theory, ENG 552 Composition Studies, ENG 553 Technologies of Writing, Electives: at least two of the following rhetoric/composition courses at the 600-level: ENG 651 Advanced Studies in the History and Theories of Rhetoric, ENG 652 Advanced Composition Studies, ENG 654 Advanced Studies in Rhetoric, Writing, Technology, and Culture, ENG 655 Disciplinary Discourses, ENG 656 Studies in Cross-Cultural Discourse, Thesis (6 credit hours). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Music - Ethnomusicology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Performance in the Ethnomusicology ensembles in the ASU Herberger College School of Music is designed to balance academic studies of the music of various cultures. As a performer, you learn to play traditional instruments via the oral tradition of each culture. Local professional musicians from each cultural area are often hired as faculty associates to teach the ensembles. A formal concert is presented on campus each semester and most groups also perform within the community or tour Arizona and the Southwest area. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Music - Music History and Literature | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Music Theory | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | The theory program in the School of Music at Arizona State University helps students develop the skills necessary to pursue a successful career. The study of music theory is essential to the understanding of the grammar and syntax of musical language. The faculty are recognized internationally. We encourage you to explore our site and see all the amazing opportunities you have in the theory program at ASU. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Philosophy with a Concentration in the History and Philosophy of Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration combines solid training in the core areas of philosophy with an emphasis on interdisciplinary studies of the sciences, their history, epistemology, conceptual structure, and their impacts on society. This program is especially appropriate for students with a background in philosophy or those who wish to pursue a degree in Philosophy, and who seek to broaden their disciplinary studies with an historical perspective. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Religious Studies - Comparative and Historical Studies of Religion | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | Historical studies of religious traditions and comparative studies of related phenomena and issues in two or more traditions. Particular emphasis, beyond the Americas, in Buddhism, Christianity, including Eastern Orthodoxy, East and Southeast Asian religions, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and Russian religious history. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Religious Studies - Critical Studies of Religion | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | Theoretical and normative studies in religion, including theological and ethical inquiry, critical theory and cultural studies. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Religious Studies - Religion Society and Power | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The study of conflict and power in relation to religious movements and discourses, including issues of identity, gender, class, race, ethnicity and violence. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Religious Studies - Religion and Modernity | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The impact of the Enlightenment, science and technology, colonialism, and other developments in the modern period upon individuals and religious communities around the world. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Religious Studies - Religion and Science | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The historical and philosophical study of the relationship between science and religion during different historical periods and in different cultural settings. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Religious Studies - Religions in The Americas | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The religious history and experience of Native Americans and immigrant religions from Africa, Asia and Europe; their interrelationships in Central, Latin, and North America. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MA in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | The MA degree in theatre introduces students to graduate-level study in the history, theory and practice of theatre. It is designed for those who wish to enter a PhD program, for K-12 teachers seeking to expand their knowledge of theatre and for returning students interested in learning more about theatre scholarship and performance. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THE 500 Research Methods, THE 520 Theatre History and Literature, THE 598 ST: College Teaching, THE 791 Seminar, THE 504 Studies in Dramatic Theory and Criticism, THE 505 Critical Theory and Performance. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MAS in Infant-Family Practice | Full Time | Variable | $300 Per Semester Hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | This advanced degree will provide high quality coursework and supervised internship experiences designed to train professionals to work in prevention and intervention programs serving families with infants, toddlers, and preschool-age children. This degree program will target training for several key professional groups: child abuse prevention specialists, infant mental health specialists, early intervention child development specialists, family support specialists, and child care administrators and teachers. It is intended to help develop professionals who practice in ways that are developmentally appropriate and sensitive to the needs of very young children and their families with a particular emphasis on early childhood mental health. The program will prepare students for professional endorsement by the newly established Infant-Toddler Mental Health Coalition of Arizona’s Endorsement for Culturally Sensitive, Relationship-Based Practice Promoting Infant Mental Health. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MAS in Marriage and Family Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $475 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | The purpose of this self-contained accelerated program is to provide high quality coursework and supervised internship experiences that meet the degree requirements for licensure in the State of Arizona to practice marriage and family therapy - as determined and laid out by the Arizona Board of Behavioral Health Examiners. The degree requirements are specified by the Board and the program is designed to train practitioners who wish to practice marriage and family therapy. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. All students applying to the online M.B.A. program are required to take the GMAT. Students applying to the W. P. Carey M.B.A. - online program should have at least two years of full-time work experience from the date of enrollment. | MBA | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration / Master of Science Engineering - Electrical Engineering | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program combines advanced courses in technical areas with a rigorous management curriculum to allow students to receive two degrees, the W. P. Carey MBA and the MSE in Electrical Engineering from the Fulton School of Engineering, in a shorter period of time and at lower cost than if the two degrees were pursued separately. This foundational grounding in two leading schools gives the employee and the organization the necessary tools for today’s global marketplace. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | MBA | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration / Master of Science Engineering - Industrial Engineering | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This concurrent degree is designed for working professionals who have an undergraduate engineering, science, or mathematics degree and one year of work experience, and who are beginning to take on management responsibilities. This degree is also for managers who want to stay current in their area of expertise and sense the need to develop enhanced business acumen. Students typically remain employed while they are in the program. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | MBA | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Financial Management and Markets Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance | The W. P. Carey MBA specialization in financial management & markets is an integrated program of study that deals with various advanced topics in risk management of the corporation. The People graduating from the financial management & markets specialization can expect to find positions in Corporate financial management as treasury analysts, capital budgeting analysts, or financial planning and control analysts. Banking/financial institutions as credit analysts, lending officers, cash managers, trust department analysts, or international money management analysts.Investments as a securities analysts, stock brokers, securities traders, or investment advisors. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | The studies are in Financial management of risk, Globalization, Critical thinking, Teamwork, Communication. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance, P.O. Box 873906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3131 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Health Sector Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy | The specialization in Health Sector Management is designed to introduce students to the unique aspects of health care markets and the special challenges of managing in the health care sector. These challenges include an unusual concentration of: non-competitive markets; third-party payers; monopolistic providers; and government involvement as payer, provider, and regulator.The specialization in Health Sector Management requires nine hours of HSM coursework. All courses are part of the core requirements for the Master in Health Sector Management (MHSM) program, so students who take the specialization have the option of counting those credits toward a concurrent MBA/MHSM degree. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | The courses are in the field of Health Sector Organization, Principles of Epidemiology, Health Care Economics Economics, Health Care Law. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy, Post Box 874506, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7778 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | The management specialization is designed to supplement the full-time MBA student's primary specialization. The W. P. Carey MBA management curriculum will broaden your knowledge and skills as well as increase your opportunities to add value to your organization.Organizations are increasingly looking for management talent that complements functional and technical expertise with knowledge and skills regarding the effective management of people. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | The courses in the specialization are in Performance Management, Human Resource Management in Innovative Organizations, Entrepreneurship, Strategic Consulting & Change Management, Multinational Strategy, Negotiations. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3431 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Real Estate | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate | The Program is constructed from best practices in leading programs. World-class faculty with real-world experience. State-of-the-art material at the interface between finance and real estate. Depth in both real estate and business disciplines. National and international reach. Interaction with industry leaders in field study projects, case analyses and classroom seminars. Substantive internships in prominent real estate companies. Nationally ranked finance department. Located in one of the most important and fastest growing real estate markets in the world.This program’s curriculum, taught by leading real estate faculty, as well as Real Estate Industry Scholars selected from prominent members of the real estate community, prepares W. P. Carey MBA graduates for leadership. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Real Estate Process I and II, Real Estate Capital Markets – Debt, Real Estate Capital Markets – Equity, Real Estate Development I, Real Estate Development II, Case Studies in Real Estate Finance and Investment, Real Estate Market Analysis, Practicum in Real Estate. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3259 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Strategic Marketing and Services Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing | The program equips students with a strong, distinctive set of skills that are sought by a wide variety of firms spanning services, consulting, consumer products, and b-to-b industries. Recognizing that sales, profits, and employment in the services sector of advanced economies are growing faster than in manufacturing, the specialization provides students with a strong foundation of strategic marketing expertise plus what we call “the services edge” – distinctive expertise in services marketing and management that few other MBA programs can deliver. The W. P. Carey Strategic Marketing Specialization is closely allied with the W. P. Carey Center for Services Leadership, the world’s leading source of expertise and executive education concerning services marketing and management. From this partnership, Strategic Marketing and Services Leadership Specialization students gain several advantages. First, their classes are taught by faculty who have literally defined the field of services marketing and management. Second, our corporate partnerships provide students with the opportunity to work on applied projects with leading firms as part of their course work. Finally, many of our partner firms have hired our graduates. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing, Box 874106, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3621 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Supply Chain Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management | The Supply Chain Management Specialization consists of an integration of nine required courses (18 credit hours) and three electives (6 credit hours). In the fourth term of the first year, students take their first two required supply chain management classes. Integrated Supply Chain Management provides an intensive overview of Supply Chain Management issues and tools, and Decision Models for Supply Chain Management provides specific spreadsheet-oriented analysis tools that are immediately applicable to supply chain analysis and improvement. These two courses, combined with the MBA core courses, provide excellent background for the internship that W. P. Carey MBA students take during the summer between the first and second year of study. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | The studies are in the field of Globalization, E-business, Teamwork, Communication, Process orientation/integration of functions, The role of effective supply chain management in corporate success. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management, P.O. Box 874706, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6044 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MBA - Sports Business | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing | The program offers students a market advantage by delivering sophisticated business skills with practical industry knowledge and experience. Our Executive Director, Ray Artigue, is dedicated to maintaining our position as the nation’s top ranked sports business program offering an MBA…A universal language, sport is the common denominator that knits together diverse societies. As this industry becomes more complex and sophisticated, it will be the next generation of educated professionals that insures that we can move forward with integrity and success. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | The students can have their studies in the field of Accounting, Economics, Ethics, Finance, Information Systems, Marketing, Supply Chain Management, Statistics, Strategy. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Marketing, Box 874106, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3621 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA - Dance | Full Time | Variable | US $38,356 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | The MFA program in dance at ASU is a 60 credit hour program that is highly flexible while offering a solid foundation in studio and theory coursework. The department welcomes a diversity of applicants, including returning professionals, with experience and/or interest in choreography, dance science and somatics, dance and technology, educational and professional partnerships, and history/theory, whose approaches are interdisciplinary and/or cross-cultural in nature. The ASU Department of Dance seeks individuals who are self-motivated, able to have clear and demonstrated objectives, and are willing to explore new possibilities in the field of dance and beyond. | The students must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university with a major of at least 45 semester hours in art, including 12 hours of art history and six hours of art education. You must have a GPA in undergraduate art education and course work during the junior/senior years of at least a 3.0. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Masters | Arizona State University | The students can have their studies in the field of Dance Studio, Dance Theory. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance, PO Box 872102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1891 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA - Dance Interdisciplinary Digital Media and Performance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The current MFA in dance is a 60 credit hour degree program, normally accomplished during 3 years of residency in the department. Foundational coursework is offered in areas of technique, choreography, theory, education, professional development and technology. Ongoing showings of choreography, and/or other creative work, are required. Based on the individual student’s interest, he or she may specialize as they proceed through the program in one or more of these areas. The MFA Project, which may involve producing original choreography, or presenting a lecture demonstration on a body of research, or other form of original work, acts as the culminating experience of the program. A final written thesis, reflective in nature, as well as an oral defense, completes the process. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The electives available are in DAN 598 Dance Kinesiology, DAN 540 Advanced Problems in Dance Kinesiology, DAN 542 Ideokinesis, DAN 545 Laban Movement Analysis, DAN 550 Graduate Pedagogy, DAN 598 Dance in Higher Education, DAN 640 Paradigms for the Analysis of Dance Technique, DAN 584 Internship. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA - Dance Studio | Full Time | Variable | US $38,356 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | The MFA program in dance at ASU is a 60 credit hour program that is highly flexible while offering a solid foundation in studio and theory coursework. The department welcomes a diversity of applicants, including returning professionals, with experience and/or interest in choreography, dance science and somatics, dance and technology, educational and professional partnerships, and history/theory, whose approaches are interdisciplinary and/or cross-cultural in nature. The ASU Department of Dance seeks individuals who are self-motivated, able to have clear and demonstrated objectives, and are willing to explore new possibilities in the field of dance and beyond. | The students must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university with a major of at least 45 semester hours in art, including 12 hours of art history and six hours of art education. You must have a GPA in undergraduate art education and course work during the junior/senior years of at least a 3.0. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Masters | Arizona State University | The list of electives are in DAN 521 Sound Lab, DAN 522 Sound Design, DAN 534 Technique and Theory of Modern Dance, DAN 535 Technique and Theory of Ballet, DAN 537 Partnering, DAN 542 Ideokinesis, DAN 561 Choreographer/ Composer Workshop, DAN 564 Solo and Group Choreography I, AN 565 Solo and Group Choreography II, DAN 571 Dance Theatre (Repertory), DAN 591 Seminar, DAN 598 Special Topics: Dance Arizona Repertory Theatre, DAN 598 Special Topics: Pointe, Improvisation, Choreography and Accompaniment , Performance, Techniques for Dancers, Forum for New Arts, Advanced Choreography, Guest Artist Workshop, DAN 634 Technique and Theory of Modern Dance, DAN 664 Choreography Workshop, DAN 671 Dance Arizona Repertory Theatre (DART). |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance, PO Box 872102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1891 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA - Dance Theory | Full Time | Variable | US $38,356 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | The MFA program in dance at ASU is a 60 credit hour program that is highly flexible while offering a solid foundation in studio and theory coursework. The department welcomes a diversity of applicants, including returning professionals, with experience and/or interest in choreography, dance science and somatics, dance and technology, educational and professional partnerships, and history/theory, whose approaches are interdisciplinary and/or cross-cultural in nature. The ASU Department of Dance seeks individuals who are self-motivated, able to have clear and demonstrated objectives, and are willing to explore new possibilities in the field of dance and beyond. | The students must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university with a major of at least 45 semester hours in art, including 12 hours of art history and six hours of art education. You must have a GPA in undergraduate art education and course work during the junior/senior years of at least a 3.0. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Masters | Arizona State University | The list of electives are in DAN 500 Research Methods, DAN 510Dance Stagecraft and Production, DAN 523 Dance, Computers and Multimedia, DAN 540 Advanced Problems in Dance Kinesiology, DAN 545 Laban Movement Analysis, DAN 550 Graduate Pedagogy: Modern, DAN 551 Graduate Dance Pedagogy: Ballet, DAN 640 Paradigms for the Analysis of Dance Technique, DAN 598 Special Topics: Dance Management, Dance Movement Therapy, Video Dance, Capoeira, Artist in Residence, Pilates, Kinesiology, Dance History. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance, PO Box 872102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1891 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA - Interdiscplinary Digital Media and Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $38,356 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | The MFA in Dance with a concentration in Interdisciplinary Digital Media and erformance (IDMP) is designed to integrate as easily as possible with the existing MFA program in Dance and is offered in collaboration with the Arts, Media and Engineering Program (AME). The degree is 60 credit hours, and normally involves 3 years of residency. There will be an audition into the program, on-going showings of work, 18 credit hours of required coursework in the concentration taught AME, 19 required credit hours in the Department of Dance, 15 credits of electives, a final MFA Project (8 credits), written document, and oral defense. The current MFA in dance is a 60 credit hour degree program, normally accomplished during 3 years of residency in the department. Foundational coursework is offered in areas of technique, choreography, theory, education, professional development and technology. Ongoing showings of choreography, and/or other creative work, are required.The concentration in Interdisciplinary Digital Media and Performance (IDMP) xpands on the strength of the Department of Dance in the specific area of interactive arts, and provide a highly select group of graduate students with a more rigorous, in-depth, and fully supported opportunity to specialize in dance and interdisciplinary digital arts. Currently, access within the department to resources and coursework in this area is limited. |
The students must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university with a major of at least 45 semester hours in art, including 12 hours of art history and six hours of art education. You must have a GPA in undergraduate art education and course work during the junior/senior years of at least a 3.0. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Dance, PO Box 872102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1891 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA - Theatre Interdisciplinary Digital Media and Performance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | This graduate degree is offered through the Department of Theatre and the concentration is offered in collaboration with the Arts, Media and Engineering (AME) program. It focuses on the growing importance of digital media as a way of both making art and thinking about art. AME program courses and research activities prepare students to become sophisticated makers, evaluators and entrepreneurs of digital media, while at the same time completing a sequence of core courses in theatre. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | AME 598 Signal Processing for Media Arts, AME 598 Motion Capture and Analysis, AME 598 Image Understanding, AME 598 Multimodal Pattern Analysis, ME 598 Multimodal Interfaces and Interactive Technologies, AME 598 Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Perception and Cognition for Hybrid Environments, AME 598 History and Analysis of Media Arts/Arts & Technology, AME 598 Computational Models for Media and Arts, AME 598 Movement as Language, AME 598 Media Theory, AME 598 Sound Analysis for Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Physical Computing, AME 598 Multisensor Models/Multimodal Data Fusion, AME 598 Multimodal Context Models, AME 598 Dynamic User-Centered Modeling and Design, AME 598 Adaptive Media, ME 598 Digital Graphics and Animation for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Computer Music for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Mediated Biosystems, ME 598 Media Performance Ensemble, AME 598 Kinesiology for Consciousness, AME 598 Consciousness in Movement, AME 598 Active Learning in Mediated Environments, THEATRE. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA - Visual Arts | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The Digital Technology concentration prepares students to be collaborative developers of new digital technology for the creation of interdisciplinary visual and performance art. The concentration is collaboration-oriented, with team members from across the Herberger College of Fine Arts and other colleges. This concentration, its courses and research, complement existing programs which offer applications oriented digital art classes, are more discipline specific, and which do not typically emphasize interdisciplinary collaboration across the arts or other colleges. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | AME 598 Signal Processing for Media Arts, AME 598 Motion Capture and Analysis, AME 598 Image Understanding, AME 598 Multimodal Pattern Analysis, ME 598 Multimodal Interfaces and Interactive Technologies, AME 598 Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Perception and Cognition for Hybrid Environments, AME 598 History and Analysis of Media Arts/Arts & Technology, AME 598 Computational Models for Media and Arts, AME 598 Movement as Language, AME 598 Media Theory, AME 598 Sound Analysis for Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Physical Computing, AME 598 Multisensor Models/Multimodal Data Fusion, AME 598 Multimodal Context Models, AME 598 Dynamic User-Centered Modeling and Design, AME 598 Adaptive Media, ME 598 Digital Graphics and Animation for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Computer Music for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Mediated Biosystems, ME 598 Media Performance Ensemble, AME 598 Kinesiology for Consciousness, AME 598 Consciousness in Movement, AME 598 Active Learning in Mediated Environments, THEATRE. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | Herberger College Dance exists to foster a training ground for engaged and active artists, who use dance as their primary tool. The department’s aim is to produce artists who can thrive in diverse contexts, and make singular and unique contributions to the evolution of a vibrant dance culture around the globe. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA Art - Wood | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program teaches students the necessary skills associated with using wood as an expressive medium. Emphasis is placed on professional development leading to artistic expression and the achievement of the expertise essential to producing creative objects using wood materials. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Digital Technology | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program embraces creative practices including installation, performance, sound, video, animation, compositing, web art, and rapid prototyping. Intermedia build on theories of social art practice and tactical media that carry the aims of social change and democratic engagement in a variety of contexts. Students work with experimental studio practices, performance, and digital media to explore new avenues for self-expression, collaborative practice, and community action. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Drawing | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | The program provides a comprehensive education that fosters innovation and sustains tradition. The diversity and plurality of contemporary painting and drawing are reflected in the media and content of the faculty's work. The painting and drawing program prides itself on the depth and breadth of its curriculum. Students develop formal, conceptual and technical knowledge through studio work in traditional and non-traditional media. Each area of the program has a dedicated studio: painting, drawing, watermedia, life drawing and figure painting. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Fibers | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | The primary intent of the program is to educate students and engage the community about the technical, material and conceptual issues related to the field through classes, exhibitions, public lectures and studio tours. The strength of the program presents a broad range of fiber techniques to enable and encourage the creative exploration of traditional and innovative methods rooted in the rich history of textiles. Students obtain the knowledge and confidence to develop their professional portfolio with proficiency and distinctive character. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Intermedia | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program embraces creative practices including installation, performance, sound, video, animation, compositing, web art, and rapid prototyping. Intermedia builds on theories of social art practice and tactical media that carry the aims of social change and democratic engagement in a variety of contexts. Students work with experimental studio practices, performance, and digital media to explore new avenues for self-expression, collaborative practice, and community action. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Metals | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program combines art production, criticism, aesthetics, historic references and personal experiences, which promote the artist as an active participant in society. Students are urged to experiment with new technologies, materials and ideas. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Painting | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | The program provides a comprehensive education that fosters innovation and sustains tradition. The diversity and plurality of contemporary painting and drawing are reflected in the media and content of the faculty's work. The painting and drawing program prides itself on the depth and breadth of its curriculum. Students develop formal, conceptual and technical knowledge through studio work in traditional and non-traditional media. Each area of the program has a dedicated studio: painting, drawing, watermedia, life drawing and figure painting. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Students learn from faculty with diverse creative concerns and who cultivate technique in the service of ideas, parallel to the critical and cultural analysis of the medium. Students have access to the widest range of photographic possibilities, including silver gelatin, chromogenic color, digital imaging, video, non-silver and mixed media. Students explore interdisciplinary options in their art through other disciplines, including printmaking, intermedia and sculpture. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Printmaking | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | This program provides a comprehensive studio experience that leads to either a BFA or MFA degree. Courses in intaglio, lithography, relief, screen printing, monotype, book arts, papermaking and other graphic applications are offered regularly. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Art - Sculpture | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Students have opportunities to work in neon, study electronics and kinetics in sculpture, and cast in iron, bronze and aluminum. Video installation, performance art and interactivity are combined with woodworking, metal fabrication and public art. These media and the ideas surrounding them are explored in a lively discourse that extends beyond formal classes. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | The MFA in Creative Writing is offered jointly by the Department of English in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the Herberger College School of Theatre and Film. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.20 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THP 519 Directing: Works in Progress, THP 560 Playwright's Workshop, THP 561 Scripts in Progress, THP 598 Special Topics, HP 693 Applied Project. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Playwriting | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | This interdisciplinary program is that, because it utilizes faculty research, creative activity, and teaching interests of two academic units, you may tailor a course of study to fit your needs, talents and goals.The Department of English administers the program and reviews the applications for admission. In the School of Theatre and Film, the studio/academic program emphasizes the collaborative process of playwriting. Working with actors and directors, playwrights' workshops include informal readings, staged readings and workshop production of students plays. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.20 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THP 519 Directing: Works in Progress, THP 560 Playwright's Workshop, THP 561 Scripts in Progress, THP 598 Special Topics, HP 693 Applied Project. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | The MFA degree in theatre introduces students to graduate-level study in the history, theory and practice of theatre. It is designed for those who wish to enter a PhD program, for K-12 teachers seeking to expand their knowledge of theatre and for returning students interested in learning more about theatre scholarship and performance. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Masters | Arizona State University | The School of Theatre and Film offers an MFA concentration in Theatre for Youth; jointly offers the MFA concentration in Interdisciplinary Digital Media or Creative Writing: Playwriting; and MFA concentrations in theatre practice, which link directing, design and performance majors who work together. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Theatre Directing | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | The ability to inspire and lead a team of artists that combines their best talents in the creation of vivid theatrical life is the defining attribute of a successful director. The directing program emphasizes a hands-on, mentor-student approach to develop the skill, craft, attitude and artistry required to flourish. You explore new work in collaboration with playwrights, re-examine existing work and delve into the creative devising process. If you are seeking admission, you must demonstrate directing talent, scholastic achievement and, preferably, practical experience in the professional theatre. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.20 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required.In addition, the School of Theatre and Film requires a minimum of 30 semester hours of course work in theatre and a minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.20 for all course work in theatre. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THE 500 Research Methods, THE 504 Studies in Dramatic Theory and Criticism, THE 520 Theatre History and Literature, THP 401 Theatre Practicum, THP 418 Directing the Actor, THP 450 Theatre Organization and Management, THP 482 Theatre for Social Change, THE 500 Research Methods, THE 504 Studies in Dramatic Theory and Criticism, THE 520 Theatre History and Literature, THP 401 Theatre Practicum, THP 418 Directing the Actor, THP 450 Theatre Organization and Management, THP 482 Theatre for Social Change, THP 483 Acting: Viewpoints and Composition,THP 498 Pro-Seminar, THP 502 Graduate Acting, THP 503 Performance: the Ensemble, THP 506 Design Collaboration, THP 514 Projects in Community-Based Drama, THP 518 Advanced Directing Lab, THP 519 Directing: Works in Progress, THP 598 Special Topics, THP 684 Internship, THP 693 Applied Project, | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Theatre Integrated Digital Media | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | This graduate degree concentration in integrated digital media is offered through the School of Theatre and Film in collaboration with the Arts, Media and Engineering (AME) program. It focuses on the growing importance of digital media as a way of both making art and thinking about art. AME program courses and research activities prepare you to become a sophisticated maker, evaluator and entrepreneur of digital media, while providing a focused series of classes in one of the school's other MFA specialties: directing, performance, performance design or Theatre for Youth. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.20 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required.In addition, the School of Theatre and Film requires a minimum of 30 semester hours of course work in theatre and a minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.20 for all course work in theatre. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THE 500 Research Methods, THE 504 Studies in Dramatic Theory and Criticism, THE 520 Theatre History and Literature, THE 524 Advanced Studies in Theatre for Youth, THP 411 Methods of Teaching Drama, THP 498 Pro-Seminar, THP 503 Performance: the Ensemble, THP 611 Research in Drama Education, THP 618 Theatre for Youth Practicum. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Theatre Performance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | The performance concentration readies you for the evolving roles of theatre and the performing artist. The school offers an approach to training that includes - and goes beyond - traditional actor training by fusing traditional techniques with newer approaches such as Viewpoints and interaction with media in live performance. The program stresses skills for approaching and creating new work, developing artistic entrepreneurship, performance applications in multimedia, and interdisciplinary collaboration, informed by artistic integrity and social responsibility. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.20 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required.In addition, the School of Theatre and Film requires a minimum of 30 semester hours of course work in theatre and a minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.20 for all course work in theatre. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THE 500 Research Methods, THE 504 Studies in Dramatic Theory and Criticism, THE 520 Theatre History and Literature, HP 401 Theatre Practicum, THP 450 Theatre Organization and Management, THP 482 Theatre for Social Change, THP 483 Acting: Viewpoints and Composition, THP 498 Pro-Seminar, THP 501 Performance: Solo Performance, THP 502 Graduate Acting, THP 503 Performance: the Ensemble, HP 504 Acting: Styles, THP 507 Acting: Advanced Research and Performance, THP 514 Projects in Community-based Drama, THP 519 Directing: Works in Progress, THP 598 Special Topics, THP 684 Internship, THP 693 Applied Project. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Theatre Performance Design | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Performance design offers a rigorous and innovative inter-disciplinary program that focuses on a non-traditional approach to design training, which prepares you for the theatrical design challenges of the future. You are not asked to choose one sub-discipline of performance design, but rather work with an ensemble of designers, directors and performers to create projects that redefine the role of the traditional designer. Skills for approaching and creating new work include drafting and computer imaging, new work development, design applications in multimedia and the development of artistic entrepreneurship and integrity. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.20 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required.In addition, the School of Theatre and Film requires a minimum of 30 semester hours of course work in theatre and a minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.20 for all course work in theatre. | Masters | Arizona State University | The list of electives are in THE 430 History of Costume: Western Tradition, THP 431 Advanced Costume Construction, THP 435 Advanced Technical Theatre, THP 441 Scene Painting, THP 442 Drawing, THP 444 Drafting for the Stage, THP 445 Advanced Lighting Design, THP 494 Special Topics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MFA in Theatre for Youth | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | The MFA concentration in theatre for youth offers comprehensive course work in all areas of Theatre for Youth, renowned faculty, superb facilities, practical experience in working in drama and theatre with and for young people, and a challenging and supportive atmosphere ideal for educating future leaders in the field. The MFA degree in Theatre with a concentration in Theatre for Youth is a minimum 60-semester-hour professional program. The concentration trains artists for the future by providing you with the skills and experiences needed to achieve your full potential.The concentration in Theatre for Youth is designed to prepare you for work as drama specialists; for teaching in the field of Theatre for Youth; for professional careers in children's theatre; and for work in community theatres, recreational programs and social agencies. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.20 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required.In addition, the School of Theatre and Film requires a minimum of 30 semester hours of course work in theatre and a minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.20 for all course work in theatre. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THE 500 Research Methods, THE 504 Studies in Dramatic Theory and Criticism, THE 520 Theatre History and Literature, THE 524 Advanced Studies in Theatre for Youth, THP 411 Methods of Teaching Drama, THP 498 Pro-Seminar, THP 503 Performance: the Ensemble, THP 611 Research in Drama Education, THP 618 Theatre for Youth Practicum. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Theatre and Film, 232 Dixie Gammage Hall, PO Box 872002, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5337 | The School of Theatre and Film was established in 2005 after ABOR approved the reorganization of the Department of Theatre following the addition of the BA Film degree - a degree program offered jointly by the School of Theatre and Film in the Herberger College of the Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ASU Herberger's exciting new Film and Media Production Program is the only media production program that incorporates ideas of ethics into the creation of filmed entertainment and artistic products. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Composition - Interdisciplinary Digital Media and Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Music Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Music therapy is a special education/mental health profession where engagement in active music making helps a client achieve non-musical, therapeutic goals. Educating the potential music therapist requires developing both a wide range of musical skills and the ability to work with people in a therapeutic manner. The program provides a strong education in both areas. Students study their major instrument/voice with an internationally recognized performance faculty. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Performance - Collaborative Piano | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program is designed to nurture the musical interests of each individual student, while developing a keen sense of style and skills needed to create performances at the highest level. The keyboard faculty has international reputations as pianists, recording artists and teachers, and are committed to helping students through weekly lessons, studio and repertoire classes, guest master classes and other performance and listening opportunities. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Performance - Instrumental | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The students can have their Artist Diploma, Brass, Composition, Conducting, Jazz Studies, Keyboard, Music Education, Musicology, Music Theatre, Music Therapy, Organ, Percussion, Strings, Theory, Voice, Woodwind. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Performance - Keyboard | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program is designed to nurture the musical interests of each individual student, while developing a keen sense of style and skills needed to create performances at the highest level. The keyboard faculty has international reputations as pianists, recording artists and teachers, and are committed to helping students through weekly lessons, studio and repertoire classes, guest master classes and other performance and listening opportunities. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Performance - Music Theatre Musical Direction | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Performance - Music Theatre Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Performance - Music Theatre Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MM in Performance - Voice | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Biochemistry - Medicinal Chemistry | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $2,733 per semester | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This Master’s program is designed for students who have completed the Bachelor of Science degree in a medicinal chemistry related field or professional program and want to improve their background in chemistry and biochemistry before entering schools of medicine, pharmacy and other health sciences. Emphasis is on organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, and biochemistry with research encompassing chemical-biological relationships, mainly the relationship between molecular structure and biological activity or mode of action. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Building Design Program | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | The Energy Performance and Climate-Responsive Architecture concentration educates students to become experts in energy efficient design and technology. The program is concerned with the relationships between climate and site, thermal and visual comfort, and energy demand and consumption. Courses in this concentration establish a basic core of knowledge of the principles of the natural energies available at the building boundary due to climate and site; thermal and optic behavior of building materials and components; passive and low-energy architectural systems for heating , cooling, and lighting; and appropriate integration with mechanical systems. Additional courses are available to support advanced study and research in a variety of related specialties. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in ANP 500 Research Methods, ATE 521 Building Environmental Science, ATE 591 Seminar-Energy & Climate I, EET 598 Intro to Photovoltaic, ATE 560 Building Energy Analysis, ATE 562 Experimental Evaluation, ATE 582 Environmental Control Systems, ADE 621Advanced Architecture Studio, ATE 598 Energy Analysis II, ATE 691 Seminar- Energy and Climate III, ATE 550 Passive Heating and Cooling, ATE 599 Thesis. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Environmental Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program synthesizes knowledge from a wide range of subjects. The graduate curriculum is designed to provide a strong foundation in physical, chemical, and microbiological principles, but remains flexible to meet changing needs within the field. The program receives national funding for a wide range of educational and research endeavors, including sustainable engineering of urban systems, environmental biotechnology and environmental nanotechnology. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. They must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English; and a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK) is required. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Geotechnical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Students in this program use knowledge to analyze and design structures and foundations in finding solutions to environmental problems. Graduate curriculum studies the properties and engineering behavior of all types of soil and rock, using field sampling as well as laboratory and field testing to find and/or improve geotechnical applications for the benefit of society. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. They must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English; and a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK) is required. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Structural Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program encompasses areas such as structural analysis and design, steel and concrete structures, timber and masonry structures, matrix and computer methods, extreme weather analysis, composite materials and stress analysis. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. They must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English; and a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK) is required. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Transportation Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program focuses on traffic operations and simulation, intelligent transportation technologies, traveler safety and risk, travel behavior, transportation systems simulation, and transportation planning applications. The other focus addresses pavement analysis and design, pavement performance and management, material testing and characterization and consideration of developing new and more efficient construction materials, such as asphalt and concrete that are applicable to transportation needs. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. They must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English; and a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK) is required. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Water Resources Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program focuses on traffic operations and simulation, intelligent transportation technologies, traveler safety and risk, travel behavior, transportation systems simulation, and transportation planning applications. The other focus addresses pavement analysis and design, pavement performance and management, material testing and characterization and consideration of developing new and more efficient construction materials, such as asphalt and concrete that are applicable to transportation needs. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. They must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English; and a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK) is required. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Communication Disorders - Bilingual Training Program | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | The program is to offer training to future speech-language pathologists to work with bilingual children and provide the opportunity to get a Certificate of Bilingual Competency in Speech-Language Pathology. Students who speak Spanish fluently are eligible to apply for the Bilingual Certificate. The curriculum is designed to Provide bilingual students in the ASU M.S. degree in Speech-Language Pathology with a fourth track option, including specialized electives and practicum and internships with bilingual populations focused on children. Provide a bilingual SLP mentor that will help you problem solve, develop materials, practice your professional Spanish, and guide you as needed. Focus on relevant issues in speech-language pathology, practice in school settings, working with Spanish monolingual families, and learning about the cultures in our community. Upon successful completion of the Master of Science degree in Communication Disorders at ASU, bilingual emphasis coursework, and the Arizona Classroom Proficiency Examination, students will be awarded a certificate of completion of the Graduate Clinical Training Program in Bilingual Speech-Language Pathology. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in SHS 598 (250) Phonetics, SHS 598 (310) Anatomical/Physiological Bases of Speech, SHS 598 (311) Physical/Physiological Bases of Hearing, SHS 598 (367) Language Science, SHS 598 (384) Hearing Disorders, SHS 401/501 Introduction to Audiological Evaluation, SHS 598 (375) Speech Science, SHS 598 (376) Psychoacoustics, SHS 565 (465) Speech and Language Development, SHS 450 Observation, SHS 496/596 Aural Rehabilitation, SHS 401/501 Introduction to Audiological Evaluation, SHS 496/596 Aural Rehabilitation. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, P O Box 870102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2374 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Communication Disorders - Professional Enhancement | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | The program in speech-language pathology is to assist school districts in meeting the critical need for qualified personnel in speech-language pathology. The Department of Speech and Hearing Science at Arizona State University (ASU) is offering this program with funding support from the Arizona Department of Education. The PEP is a part-time master's degree program for speech-language professionals working in the public schools. The program is open to individuals with a bachelor's degree or equivalent in Speech and Hearing Science and who are employed by an Arizona public school district or are willing to make a commitment to work for an Arizona public school district. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in SHS 598 Phonetics, SHS 598 Anatomical/Physiological Bases of Speech, SHS 598 Physical/Physiological Bases of Hearing, SHS 598 Language Science, SHS 598 Hearing Disorders, SHS 401/501 Introduction to Audiological Evaluation , SHS 598 (375) Speech Science, SHS 598 (376) Psychoacoustics, SHS 565 (465) Speech and Language Development, SHS 450 Observation, SHS 496/596 Aural Rehabilitation, SHS 401/501 Introduction to Audiological Evaluation, SHS 496/596 Aural Rehabilitation. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, P O Box 870102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2374 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Computer Science - Arts Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The Arts, Media and Engineering program (AME) is a transdisciplinary network of faculty and students working under a common, use-inspired research and education agenda. AME emphasizes research on the integration of the human physical experience with computation and digital media. AME researchers produce experiential media systems and models that evolve human ability, facilitate learning, enhance scientific discovery, empower creativity, assist the disadvantaged and improve quality of life. Within these application areas, researchers explore sensing, perception and modeling, interaction and feedback, and experiential construction and knowledge creation.The purpose of the AME concentration in Computer Science and Engineering is to train hybrid engineering-arts graduates who get their inspiration from the arts and their methodology from computer science and engineering. The students will specialize in transdisciplinary media development. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Computer Science - Biomedical Informatics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | This program is designed for graduate students who wish to specialize in such topics as genomics and computational systems biology. The concentration is interdisciplinary in nature, providing preparation that integrates technological expertise in the information sciences, computer science, bioscience and statistics with an understanding of the clinical environment of the healthcare professional. It will expose computer science students to current issues in clinical practice as well as the use of information systems in health-care settings.All CSE MS students are required to complete 30 credit hours. Students will take 15 credit hours of BMI coursework, which includes the 9 credit hours of required coursework as well as 6 credit hours of research and thesis work in Biomedical Informatics. Students will also complete 9 credit hours of CSE area courses in Foundations, Systems and Applications as well as 6 credit hours of CSE classes. Students can review the M.S. Policies for more information. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in BMI 501 Introduction to Biomedical Informatics, BMI 540 Problem Solving in Biomedical Informatics, BMI 5XX Approved Elective in Biomedical Informatics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Computer Science - Information Assurance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The program is designed for graduate students who want to pursue a thorough education in the area of information assurance. The goal of this concentration is to provide students the knowledge, skills and the advanced development capability in science and engineering for information assurance, including computer and network security, software security, data and information security, applied cryptography and computer forensics. Students will have a competitive advantage to secure employment.According to the National Security Agency, information assurance is defined as the set of measures intended to protect and defend information and information systems by ensuring their availability, integrity, authentication, confidentiality and non-repudiation. This includes providing restoration of information systems by incorporating protection, detection and reaction capabilities. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in CSE 539: Applied Cryptography, CSE 543: Information Assurance and Security, CSE 545: Software Security, CSE 548: Advanced Computer Network Security, CSE 466/598: Computer Systems Security, CSE 467/598: Data and Information Security, CSE 531: Distributed and Multi-Processor Operating Systems, CSE 534: Advanced Computer Networks, CSE 565: Software Verification, Validation and Testing. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Construction | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | The Del E. Webb School of Construction at Arizona State University offers a graduate degree program leading to a Master of Science degree with a major in Construction.The Construction Management concentration allows students seeking upper level management positions in various sectors of the construction industry to improve their competency in project, program, and company management. The Construction Science concentration allows students with interest in field engineering or supervision of heavy and industrial construction projects to pursue a more technically oriented course of study. The Facility Management concentration supports the needs of the student desiring a career in the maintenance, operation, renovation, or decommissioning of existing facilities. | Students who hold a bachelor’s or a master’s degree in a related field from a regionally accredited university or equivalent are eligible to apply for admission to the program. Related fields include construction, civil engineering, architecture, and business. At the discretion of the admission committee, students from other disciplines may be eligible as well. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | The Areas of concentration for the Master of Science degree include Construction Management, Construction Science, Facility Management. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction, PO Box 870204, Urban Systems Engineering Building, 651 E. University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3615 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Construction Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The advisor, in consultation with the student, will establish a Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC). The GSC shall be composed of a minimum of three members from the CEE tenure-track faculty with at least two being from the Construction Engineering Group. Participation of individuals from institutions external to the ASU is encouraged but these shall be non-voting members. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. The POS must be in accordance with Graduate College and Civil Engineering Department requirements. The candidate must complete at least 30 semester hours of approved course and research work distributed as follows at least one core course designate from each of the three areas - structures, geotechnical and transportation, at least one but not more than two courses in a minor area, at least one but not more than two construction management courses, ot more than six hours of research. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Electrical Engineering - Arts Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The Master of Science is a research degree requiring 30 credits, including six hours of thesis, and at least six hours outside. Students applying to the master's program are initially admitted to the MSE degree. If they obtain a research advisor they can transfer to the MS degree. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in control systems, electro magnetics, antennas and microwave circuits, electronic and mixed-signal circuit design, electric power and energy systems, signal processing and communications, solid-state electronics, arts, media and engineering. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Environmental Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The advisor (must be a tenure-track CEE faculty) in consultation with the student, will establish a Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC). The GSC shall be composed of a minimum of three faculty with at least two being tenure-track CEE faculty. The participation of individuals from institutions external to the ASU is encouraged. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC, and must be a tenure-track faculty in the Environmental group. The Program of Study (POS) must be in accordance with Graduate College and Civil and Environmental Engineering Department requirements. This typically includes 24 credits of classwork, including at least four of the core graduate environmental classes, plus 6 credits of thesis. CEE 590 (Reading and Conference) may be taken for no more than 3 credits, unless otherwise approved by the GSC and approved by the Environmental SAC. CEE 591 may be taken three times for credit. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Family and Human Development in Child Development | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | The major objective of the terminal master's program in family and human development (with concentrations in child development or family studies) is to provide advanced training in applying scientific methods to investigate the development and well-being of family systems and individual family members throughout the lifespan and to apply scientific principles and theory to the development of programs to prevent or ameliorate problems that families and their members experience.Graduate students are expected to develop competencies in research methods and in theoretical orientations relevant to their area of study. The skills and knowledge acquired during the course of training should enable each student to develop professional competencies that can be applied to significant problems and issues affecting families. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Geotechnical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The advisor, in consultation with the student, will establish a Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC). The GSC shall be composed of a minimum of three members from the CEE tenure-track faculty with at least two being from the Geotechnical Group. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. The Program of Study (POS) must be in accordance with Graduate College and Civil Engineering Department requirements. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Industrial Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering | This program is designed for students interested in pursuing original research. The 30 credit hour program requires four core courses, three area courses, one elective and a 6-hour thesis with an oral defense. | Applicant must have completed a minimum of 12 credit hours of calculus mathematics with a grade of "C" (2.00) or higher. Additionally, the following prerequisite ASU courses will be evaluated in the student's transcripts to see if the student has met the minimum admission requirements: SE 110 Principles of Programming with Java; CSE 205 Concepts of Computer Science and Date Structures; IEE 380 Probability and Statistics for Engineering Problem Solving; IEE 385 Engineering Statistics with Probability; IEE 376 Operations Research Deterministic Techniques/Applications; and MAT 242 Linear Algebra. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 875906, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3185 | The Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering at Arizona State University is ranked among the top 20 in the nation for both undergraduate and graduate programs. The mission of the department is to provide high quality, innovative industrial engineering education and research opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students and to encourage them to individualize their education through entrepreneurial and multidisciplinary courses and growth experiences, to foster discovery by faculty and students; to support the economic growth and enhancement of quality of life in Arizona and beyond; to provide an academic environment conducive to the best development of students, faculty and staff; and to promote the growth and effectiveness of the industrial engineering profession. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Materials Science and Engineering - Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | A total of 32 credits are required for the Master of Science Degree (MS) in Materials Science and Engineering, as detailed below. Students must take 6 credits of core courses selected from the table below. Note that the choice 4bc requires both PHY511 and 512 but only the latter may be counted as a technical elective. This selection is most appropriate for students who have some background in modern physics. This degree includes a thesis. The School of Materials offers both thesis (MS) and non-thesis (MSE) Master’s degrees. Students pursuing these degrees are a vital part of the School of Materials and comprise approximately 25% of the graduate population. These students form a strong liaison between the School and local industrial companies who value their skills and training. These companies include Intel, Honeywell, Boeing, Motorola (Freescale) and many others. The academic program for the MS degree requires 2 core Materials courses plus seminar plus 6 elective courses, chosen to follow the student’s interests, which may span multiple academic departments. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Structure and Mechanical Properties, Advanced Thermodynamics, Kinetics and Phase Transformations in Solids, Physics of Materials, Materials Physics I and II. The Total Credits are 32, Core Credits 6, Electives 18-15, Seminar - 2, Thesis - 6, R/C - 0-3. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials, PO Box 878706, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 9311 | The vision of the School of Materials is to evolve and leverage the Flexible Display Center’s world class flexible display capabilities, in concert with other ASU synergistic research, to achieve a leadership position in the emerging flexible electronics industry and establish ASU as a high value government and industry resource. The mission is to advance full color, video rate, flexible display technology and catalyze development of a vibrant flexible display and flexible electronics industry to produce integrated electronic systems with advanced functionality. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Structural Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The advisor, in consultation with the student, will establish a Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC). The GSC shall be composed of a minimum of three members from the CEE tenure-track faculty with at least two being from the Structures Group. Participation of individuals from institutions external to the ASU is encouraged but these shall be non-voting members. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. The Program of Study (POS) must be in accordance with Graduate College and Civil Engineering Department requirements. The candidate must complete at least 30 semester hours of approved course and research work distributed as follows at least fifteen 15 hours of Graduate Structures courses, at least three but no more than six hours in a minor area, at least three but no more than six hours of mathematics, not more than three hours of CEE590, 6 hours of thesis (CEE599). | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Transportation Materials and Transportation Systems | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The advisor, in consultation with the student, will establish a Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC). The GSC shall be composed of a minimum of three members from the CEE tenure-track faculty with at least two being from the Transportation Faculty. Participation of individuals from institutions external to the ASU is encouraged but these shall be non-voting members. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MS in Water Resources Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This degree requires completion of 24 credit hours, 6 hours of thesis OR 3 hours of research and 3 hours of thesis. Students write and defend a thesis. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Construction | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program is a multidisciplinary program encompassing the areas of geotechnical engineering, structural engineering and transportation engineering in addition to construction management-related areas. The primary goal is to impart scientific and technical knowledge that is used to construct infrastructure projects commonly used in the architecture/engineering/construction (A/E/C) industry. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Environmental Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program synthesizes knowledge from a wide range of subjects. The graduate curriculum is designed to provide a strong foundation in physical, chemical, and microbiological principles, but remains flexible to meet changing needs within the field. The program receives national funding for a wide range of educational and research endeavors, including sustainable engineering of urban systems, environmental biotechnology and environmental nanotechnology. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Geotechnical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Students in this program use knowledge to analyze and design structures and foundations in finding solutions to environmental problems. Graduate curriculum studies the properties and engineering behavior of all types of soil and rock, using field sampling as well as laboratory and field testing to find and/or improve geotechnical applications for the benefit of society. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Structural Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program encompasses areas such as structural analysis and design, steel and concrete structures, timber and masonry structures, matrix and computer methods, extreme weather analysis, composite materials and stress analysis. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Transportation Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program focuses on traffic operations and simulation, intelligent transportation technologies, traveler safety and risk, travel behavior, transportation systems simulation, and transportation planning applications. The other focus addresses pavement analysis and design, pavement performance and management, material testing and characterization and consideration of developing new and more efficient construction materials, such as asphalt and concrete that are applicable to transportation needs. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Water Resources Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This curriculum presents challenging and interesting opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students, including the study of ancient water structures and finite element modeling of environmental fluid dynamics. Graduate students may have careers in fields of hydraulics, hydrology or storm water management. | Applicant should have a bachelor's degree with a major in engineering or in a closely related bachelor's degree program. A minimum requirement is an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00, on a 4.00 scale and applicants with a lower GPA may be provisionally admitted at the discretion of the admission committee. A student whose undergraduate degree is not in civil engineering is required to take appropriate undergraduate courses as deficiency courses to establish a base of knowledge in the discipline. They must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by meeting the Graduate College's English proficiency requirements. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Construction Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC) shall consist of all tenure-track Construction Engineering faculty. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. The Program of Study (POS) must be in accordance with Graduate College and Civil Engineering Department requirements. The candidate must complete at least 30 semester hours of approved course work distributed as follows, at least one core course designate from each of the three areas - structures, geotechnical and transportation, at least one but not more than two courses in a minor area, at least one but not more than two construction management courses, A final comprehensive exam will be administered by the Construction Engineering Group at least once a year. The GSC decision on whether to pass or fail the student will be based on the results from the comprehensive exam. A student who fails the comprehensive exam the first time may petition to retake the exam once more no earlier than the next semester when the exam is scheduled. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Environmental Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC) shall consist of all tenure-track Environmental faculty. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. he Program of Study (POS) must be in accordance with Graduate College and Civil Engineering Department requirements. This includes 30 credits of classwork, including at least four of the core graduate environmental classes. CEE 590 (Reading and Conference) may be taken for no more than 3 credits, unless otherwise approved by the GSC and approved by the Environmental SAC. CEE 591 may be taken three times for credit. final comprehensive exam will be administered by the Environmental Group twice per year, usually the last Friday of classes during the regular fall and spring semesters. The exam is intended to demonstrate proficiency in 4 of the 6 core class subjects. Students will be given four hours to complete the exam and are expected to spend roughly one hour per core subject area. Students will be able to select at the time of the test which 4 core class subject areas will be graded. Only 4 subject areas will be graded. The exam is closed book. The exam will be graded by the Environmental faculty and a pass/fail decision made as a collective group. A student who fails the comprehensive exam the first time may petition to retake the exam once more after completing an additional 6 hours of graduate CEE coursework that is approved by the SAC. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Geotechnical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC) shall consist of all tenure-track CEE faculty, including at least 2 from the Geotechnical Group. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. The Program of Study (POS) must be in accordance with Graduate College and Civil Engineering Department requirements. The candidate must complete at least 30 semester hours of approved course work, including at least eighteen (18) hours of Graduate Geotechnical courses. A final Comprehensive Exam will be administered by the Geotechnical Group twice per year, usually the last Friday of classes during the regular fall and spring semesters. The exam is intended to demonstrate proficiency in 6 of the 9 core class subjects. The core subject areas are Soil Behavior, Advanced Geotechnical Testing, Advanced Soil Mechanics, Shear Strength and Slope Stability, Advanced Foundations and Earth Structures, Seepage, Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering, Foundations and Unsaturated Soil Mechanics. Students will be given 8 hours to complete the exam and are expected to spend roughly one hour per core subject area. Students will be able to select at the time of the test which 6 core class subject areas will be graded. Students will be graded in a minimum of 6 core subject areas. The exam is open book. The exam will be graded by the Geotechnical faculty and a pass/fail decision made as a collective group. A student who fails the comprehensive exam the first time may petition to retake the exam once more during the following semester. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Industrial Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering | This program is designed to bridge the gap between knowledge of engineering sciences and creative engineering practice, while at the same time increasing the depth and breadth of knowledge in selected areas of emphasis. The program of course work applicable to the degree is potentially unique for each student, although it must conform to the general guidelines for subject matter content for the degree. | Applicant must have completed a minimum of 12 credit hours of calculus mathematics with a grade of "C" (2.00) or higher. Additionally, the following prerequisite ASU courses will be evaluated in the student's transcripts to see if the student has met the minimum admission requirements: SE 110 Principles of Programming with Java; CSE 205 Concepts of Computer Science and Date Structures; IEE 380 Probability and Statistics for Engineering Problem Solving; IEE 385 Engineering Statistics with Probability; IEE 376 Operations Research Deterministic Techniques/Applications; and MAT 242 Linear Algebra. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 875906, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3185 | The Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering at Arizona State University is ranked among the top 20 in the nation for both undergraduate and graduate programs. The mission of the department is to provide high quality, innovative industrial engineering education and research opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students and to encourage them to individualize their education through entrepreneurial and multidisciplinary courses and growth experiences, to foster discovery by faculty and students; to support the economic growth and enhancement of quality of life in Arizona and beyond; to provide an academic environment conducive to the best development of students, faculty and staff; and to promote the growth and effectiveness of the industrial engineering profession. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Materials Science and Engineering – General | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | A total of 32 credits are required for the Master of Science in Engineering Degree (MSE) in Materials Science and Engineering, as detailed below. Students in this program usually pursue the degree while working full-time off campus. Financial assistance is not available to students in this program. This degree has no thesis. Three options are available: General or Concentration in Semiconductor Processing and Packaging (SPP) with the Processing or the Packaging track. The requirements for this program (General track) follow those for the Master of Science Degree (see above), except: replace 6 credits of thesis with 6 credits of technical electives or reading/conference (advisor approval) or applied project (advisor approval). Students must also complete a report (15-20 pages with figures and references) on a topic of their choice, which must be approved by the advisory committee. At the conclusion of the report, the student will make an oral presentation on the topic to his/her committee. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials, PO Box 878706, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 9311 | The vision of the School of Materials is to evolve and leverage the Flexible Display Center’s world class flexible display capabilities, in concert with other ASU synergistic research, to achieve a leadership position in the emerging flexible electronics industry and establish ASU as a high value government and industry resource. The mission is to advance full color, video rate, flexible display technology and catalyze development of a vibrant flexible display and flexible electronics industry to produce integrated electronic systems with advanced functionality. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Semiconductor Processing and Packaging - Packaging Track | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | The Master of Science in Engineering Degree (MSE) with specialization in Semiconductor Processing and Packaging - Packaging Track follows the admission requirements of the MSE - General degree (with course requirements listed below), and features on-line courses in the specialty area. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in Intro. to Microelectronics Packaging, Electrical Considerations, Advanced Analysis Methods, Mechanical Considerations, Thermal Considerations, Material Considerations, Strongly recommended, DOE/SPC for Semiconductor Processing, Advanced Quality Control, Design of Engineering Experiments, Strategic Tech Planning. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials, PO Box 878706, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 9311 | The vision of the School of Materials is to evolve and leverage the Flexible Display Center’s world class flexible display capabilities, in concert with other ASU synergistic research, to achieve a leadership position in the emerging flexible electronics industry and establish ASU as a high value government and industry resource. The mission is to advance full color, video rate, flexible display technology and catalyze development of a vibrant flexible display and flexible electronics industry to produce integrated electronic systems with advanced functionality. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Semiconductor Processing and Packaging - Processing Track | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | The Master of Science in Engineering Degree (MSE) with specialization in Semiconductor Processing and Packaging - Processing Track follows the requirements of the MSE - General degree (with course requirements listed below), and features on-line courses in the specialty area. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in Intro. to Microelectronics Packaging, Electrical Considerations, Advanced Analysis Methods, Mechanical Considerations, Thermal Considerations, Material Considerations, Strongly recommended, DOE/SPC for Semiconductor Processing, Advanced Quality Control, Design of Engineering Experiments, Strategic Tech Planning. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials, PO Box 878706, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 9311 | The vision of the School of Materials is to evolve and leverage the Flexible Display Center’s world class flexible display capabilities, in concert with other ASU synergistic research, to achieve a leadership position in the emerging flexible electronics industry and establish ASU as a high value government and industry resource. The mission is to advance full color, video rate, flexible display technology and catalyze development of a vibrant flexible display and flexible electronics industry to produce integrated electronic systems with advanced functionality. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Structural Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC) shall consist of all tenure-track Structures faculty. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. The Program of Study (POS) must be in accordance with Graduate College and Civil Engineering Department requirements. The candidate must complete at least 30 semester hours of approved course work distributed as follows at least twenty one hours of Graduate Structures courses, at least three but no more than six hours in a minor area, at least three but no more than six hours of mathematics, a final comprehensive exam is administered by the Structures Group two weeks before the end of the Fall and Spring semesters. The final exam is a two-part exam. Part A consists of material from mathematics, structural analysis and stress analysis. Part B consists of material from steel and concrete design. Both Part A and Part B are 4-hour open book exams. The GSC decision on whether to pass or fail the student will be based on the results from the comprehensive exam. A student who fails the comprehensive exam the first time may petition to retake the exam once more no earlier than the next semester when the exam is scheduled. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Transportation Materials and Transportation Systems | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC) shall consist of all tenure-track Transportation faculty. The advisor shall serve as the chair of the GSC. The coursework must include 30 semester hours of approved courses. A final comprehensive exam will be administered by the Transportation Group twice per year, usually the last week of classes during the regular fall and spring semesters. The exam is intended to demonstrate proficiency in at least 4 of the 8 core class subjects depending on the courses covered by the student. The core subject areas are Pavement Analysis and Design, Highway Materials and Construction, Pavement Performance and Management, Highway Geometric Design, Transportation Systems Planning, Transportation Operations, Transportation System Design and Evaluation, and Mathematical and Statistical Analysis of Transportation. The exam will be 4 hours and students are expected to spend roughly one hour per core subject area. The exam is open book. The exam will be graded by the GSC and a pass/fail decision made as a collective group. A student who fails the comprehensive exam the first time may petition to retake the exam once more during the following semester. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in Water Resources Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The MSE POS must include 30 hours of coursework. Up to 3 hours of Reading and Conference (CEE 590) is permitted. While the POS may contain only 500 level graduate courses, one approved 400 level course (not offered by CEE) may be included in the POS. No 700-level graduate courses may be included in the POS for the M.S.E. degree. The student must take and pass the MSE Comprehensive Exam at the end of their coursework. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in in Aerospace Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Aerospace engineers design and develop aircraft, spacecraft and other non-terrestrial vehicles and their systems. In the pursuit of optimally efficient vehicles, aerospace engineers utilize sophisticated computational tools to design and analyze state-of-the-art, aerodynamically efficient wings and surfaces. They invent and design light-weight composite materials and structures, highly efficient propulsion devices and autonomous, intelligent control systems. A degree in Aerospace Engineering prepares students for an exciting career in these and related fields. The Aerospace Engineering program has four educational objectives, which describe the expected capabilities and achievements of graduates during the first several years following completion of the program. The objectives of the program are to Provide graduates with the ability to think in a critical and evaluative manner and to consider a broad perspective, in order to solve technical and non technical problems.Prepare professionally successful graduates who provide effective leadership, who act in an ethical manner and whose skills include the ability to communicate well and to work successfully within diverse groups. Provide the depth and breadth of engineering education that prepares graduates for Employment in the Aerospace engineering profession, or Admission to graduate programs in Aerospace engineering or a related field, or The pursuit of advanced education in other professional areas, such as business, law, medicine, etc. Cultivate in our graduates a spirit of inventiveness, creativity and entrepreneurship. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | MSE in in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Mechanical engineering is a creative and diverse discipline. Mechanical Engineers draw upon the basic sciences to design, build and control the devices, machines, processes and systems that are the mainstay of modern society. Mechanical engineering encompasses a vast multitude of applications from the efficient conversion and transmission of energy and power to the design and implementation of nanoscale devices. A degree in Mechanical Engineering prepares students for an exciting career in these and related fields. The Mechanical Engineering program has four educational objectives, which describe the expected capabilities and achievements of graduates during the first several years following completion of the program. The objectives of the program are to Provide graduates with the ability to think in a critical and evaluative manner and to consider a broad perspective, in order to solve technical and non technical problems. Prepare professionally successful graduates who provide effective leadership, who act in an ethical manner and whose skills include the ability to communicate well and to work successfully within diverse groups. Provide the depth and breadth of engineering education that prepares graduates for Employment in the Mechanical engineering profession, or Admission to graduate programs in Mechanical engineering or a related field, or The pursuit of advanced education in other professional areas, such as business, law, medicine, etc. Cultivate in our graduates a spirit of inventiveness, creativity and entrepreneurship. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Major in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring 2009 and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer 2009 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | Applicant should be a high school graduate and should have a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) (a B or better where A=4.0) from a secondary school. If the university requires a TOEFL score from the applicant, then admission to Engineering requires a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), 79 on iBT (internet-based) or a minimum IELTS score of 6.5. A minimum 1140 SAT combined math and verbal or minimum 24 ACT combined score; or 3.00 minimum ABOR GPA; or class ranking in top 25 percent of high school class is required , and no high school math or science competency deficiencies. | Major | Arizona State University | Modules include: PHI 300 Philosophical Argument and Exposition, PHI 301 History of Ancient Philosophy, PHI 302 History of Modern Philosophy, PHI 305 (or 335) Ethical Theory (or History of Ethics), PHI 312 (or 314) Theory of Knowledge (or Philosophy of Science), PHI 316 (or 317) Metaphysics (or Philosophy of Mind), PHI 333 Introduction to Symbolic Logic. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy, Lattie F Coor Hall 975 S Myrtle Avenue Room 3309, PO Box 874102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3394 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master in Science in Biochemistry | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $2,733 per semester | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The Master’s Degree can be completed in two years; however, more time may be needed depending on he research project. According to the Graduate College requirements, the Master’s degree must be ompleted within six consecutive years. This count begins from the first course listed on the Program of tudy and includes transfer courses and those taken as graduate non-degree. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master in Science in Chemistry | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $2,733 per semester | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The Master’s Degree can be completed in two years; however, more time may be needed depending on he research project. According to the Graduate College requirements, the Master’s degree must be ompleted within six consecutive years. This count begins from the first course listed on the Program of tudy and includes transfer courses and those taken as graduate non-degree. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Accountancy | Full Time | Variable | US $29,004 a year | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | The MACC is a lock-step, full time, day time program comprised of ten 3-credit hour courses spanning over 3 trimesters (9 months total). It aims to prepare students for careers in professional accounting or consulting. The MACC program is structured to provide students with an in-depth, working knowledge of advanced accounting topics that are most relevant in today’s business environment. The program prepares students for a wide range of professional careers in accounting and also aids significantly in the preparation for the CPA exam. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Advanced Auditing, Information Security, Advanced Financial Accounting, Forensic Accounting, Controls Analysis and Non Profit Accounting, Performance Measurement and Advanced Managerial Accounting, Shareholder Value Creation & Financial Statement Analysis, Taxes and Business Strategy, Professional Accounting Research. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy, P.O. Box 873606, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3631 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Advanced Study in American Media and Popular Culture | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program offers the working professionals and international students in the U.S., particularly secondary education teachers interested in film and media studies and media literacy education, an opportunity to earn a graduate-level degree in the aesthetics, history and culture of American media (film, television and the Internet). Arizona high schools are slowly but continually expanding their offerings in film, television and media literacy, and teachers need to continue their education and earn graduate-level degrees to advance in their profession. They also believe the program will attract non-traditional students interested in advancing their knowledge of moving image culture. The program will be offered through distance learning, thereby providing students from around the state and globe with a visually interactive yet flexible learning environment. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | The modules include: Core Courses - Hollywood Film Historiography, Film Analysis and Television and Cultural Studies. Elective Courses are: U.S. Media Now, American Directors and Genres, Race and Gender in American Film, Crime and Violence in American Film, Film and Media Censorship, Race, Sex, and Identity Online, Story Analysis, Fundamentals of Cinema and Television Narrative, Intermediate Cinema and Television Narrative, Advanced Screenwriting, Semiotics of Film and Popular Culture, LA Movies and Culture and Independent Study. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Advanced Study in Geographic Education | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program provides teachers with the opportunity to obtain a highly qualified status in geographic education. The degree program is intended for K-12 teachers and is appropriate for elementary and secondary school teachers. Although the courses are completed online, there are two in-person meetings, including an orientation and a graduation event, where capstone projects are presented. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Architecture | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | The professional architecture program, students must attain the college’s accredited Master of Architecture (MArch) degree. Completion of the combined undergraduate and graduate professional program is intended to take six years. The two years of graduate study that culminates with the professional MArch degree is accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB). Applicants who already hold a bachelor’s degree in another field should apply to the 3-plus-year MArch degree program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in ADE 521 Advanced Architectural Studio I, ATE 553Building Systems III, ATE 563 Building Structures III, ATE 598 Sustainability of the Built Environment, ADE 522 Advanced Architectural Studio II, L/APH 505 Foundation Theory Seminar, ATE 556 Building Development,College of Design Professional elective 1, ADE 621 Advanced Architectural Studio III, AAD 515 Current Issues and Topics, College of Design Professional elective 1, College of Design Professional elective 1, ADE 622 Advanced Architectural Studio IV, L/AAD 652 Architectural Management II, College of Design Professional elective 1, Approved Elective 2. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Architecture | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | The professional architecture program, students must attain the college’s accredited Master of Architecture (MArch) degree. Completion of the combined undergraduate and graduate professional program is intended to take six years. The two years of graduate study that culminates with the professional MArch degree is accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB). Applicants who already hold a bachelor’s degree in another field should apply to the 3-plus-year MArch degree program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in ADE 510 Foundation Architectural Studio, ALA 102 Architecture, Landscape Architecture and society, ALA 236 Computers in LA, PH 509 Foundation Seminar, ADE 511 Core Architectural Studio I, APH 313 History of Architecture I, ATE 361 Building Structures I, ATE 451 Building Systems I, ADE 512 Core Architectural Studio, APH 314 History of Architecture II, ATE 452 Building Systems II, ATE 362 Building Structures II, ARP 584 Clinical Internship 1, ADE 521 Advanced Architectural Studio I, ATE 553 Building Systems III, ATE 563 Building Structures III, ATE 598 Sustainability of the Built Environment, ADE 522 Advanced Architectural Studio II, APH L/505 Foundation Theory Seminar, ATE 556 Building Development, College of Design Professional elective, ADE 621 Advanced Architectural Studio III, AAD 515 Current Issues and Topics, College of Design Professional elective, ADE 622 Advanced Architectural Studio IV, AAD L/652 Architectural Management II, College of Design Professional elective, Elective 3. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Architecture/Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | Contact provider | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | This program is offered in cooperation with the W. P. Carey School of Business. It is intended for students who wish to obtain comprehensive business knowledge to complement their design education. | MBA | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | The Master of Arts in English with a concentration in comparative literature is intended to develop graduate-level skills related to the history, theory, and practice of the discipline. Fluency sufficient for graduate work in a foreign language is necessary; satisfactory proficiency in conversation and composition will be determined by the appropriate division of the Department of Languages and Literatures. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. The GRE General test is required. The GRE Subject test (literature) is optional. Normally, students should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the Verbal Aptitude section. (Institutional Code = 4007). | Masters | Arizona State University | The courses are in Ancillary courses, e.g., Linguistics (ENG 413, ENG 510, FRE 521, GER 521, SPA 540, FLA 400, FLA 530); Philosophy (e.g., PHI 403, PHI 406); Intellectual History (e.g., FRE 515, FRE 516, PHI 519, HIS 423, HIS 463).Bibliographical methods: Research Methods (ENG 500) or Research Methods (FLA 500), required. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This concentration includes a minimum of 30 semester hours of graduate level work as approved by the candidate's supervisory committee. I. Core courses I: Concepts and Methodology (9 hours) A. Bibliographical Methods (ENG 500 Research Methods or FLA 500/SPA 500/Research Methods) (required) B. ENG or FLA 501 (Introduction to Comparative Literature). (This course is required and will be departmentally crosslisted.) C. SPA 545 Concepts of Literary Criticism or appropriate substitute. II. Core Courses II: Topics (6 hours) A. Ancillary courses in linguistics, philosophy, intellectual history, etc. B. Period courses C. Topic courses in literature, humanities, etc. III. The program should include a minimum of 9 hours of 500 level courses in Spa¬nish. An independent reading list will be required and will include major figures in world literature. | All candidates for the M.A. degree in Spanish must fulfill the general requirements of the Graduate College concerning admission Applicants for the masters program are evaluated on the basis of their B.A. preparation. The overall nature of the student's undergraduate preparation is taken into account; however, the committee pays special attention to the grade point averages in all undergraduate work. The Spanish Graduate Program requires a 3.4 overall grade point average (4.0 = A), a junior-senior average of 3.4 would be considered competitive. Admission to the Spanish graduate program requires the candidate to present a B.A. in Spanish or equivalent from an accredited institution. Students who do not present these qualifications may be admitted provisionally (pending the completion of specified deficiencies to establish equivalency) or be denied admission to the program. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Criminal Justice | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program is designed to provide criminal justice agency professionals with course work in criminology and the operation of the criminal justice system, and training in research methods and statistics. The degree program also provides students with advanced training in program planning and management, policy analysis and program evaluation. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | The modules include CRJ 501 Seminar in Criminal Justice (3); CRJ 502 Seminar in Criminology (3); CRJ 503 Research Methods for Criminal Justice (3); CRJ 504 Statistical Tools for Criminal Justice (3); Capstone Course; CRJ 505 Theory and Practice in Criminal Justice (3). Electives - Choose six in consultation with the faculty program committee (18). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | |||||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Curriculum and Instruction - Bilingual Education (BLE) | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program offers students the opportunities to develop expertise in contemporary issues and pedagogical and research methods related to curriculum and instruction. Students also investigate applied and theoretical issues in their area of concentration. This degree may be designed as either a terminal degree or as preparation for doctoral work in curriculum and instruction. The concentration in bilingual education is designed to provide course work related to bilingual education in U.S. settings (second language acquisition theory, bilingual programs and methods, and bilingual assessment) along with course work in research methods that may be used in the design and implementation of the culminating project. The bilingual education concentration offers advanced course work in research methodology, theory and practice in the area of bilingual education. Candidates for the M.A. in bilingual education must be able to demonstrate proficiency in a language other than English. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | ||||||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Curriculum and Instruction - English as a Second Language (ESL) | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program offers students the opportunities to develop expertise in contemporary issues and pedagogical and research methods related to curriculum and instruction. Students also investigate applied and theoretical issues in their area of concentration. This degree may be designed as either a terminal degree or as preparation for doctoral work in curriculum and instruction. The M.A. in curriculum and instruction with a concentration in English as a second language is designed to provide course work related to teaching school-aged English learners in U.S. settings (second language acquisition theory, English learner programs and methods and language assessment) along with course work in research methods to be used in the design and implementation of the culminating project. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | ||||||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in English (Comparative Literature) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | This concentration introduces students to the study of literary and cultural phenomena beyond linguistic, national or academic boundaries. Students are asked to study cultural productions in English and at least one other language, and to explore approaches ranging from textual criticism, critical theory and translation to cultural studies and the social sciences. Comparative Literature invites students to investigate the interactions of literary and cultural productions with adjacent fields like film, theater, linguistics, history, philosophy, American Indian, ethnic, area, women and gender studies and with the social sciences. The field also encourages the exploration of cultural phenomena from a transnational and global perspective. | Applicant must have a grade point average of “B” (3.00) or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor’s degree, and the recommendation of the department or academic unit in which the student plans to study. They do not require ACT or SAT tests, but it is necessary to have English language proficiency either a minimum score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or minimum overall band of 6.0 with no band below 5.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). There are exceptions to TOEFL or IELTS scores for applicants who have completed their junior and senior years in a U.S. high school with SAT Verbal score of 550 or ACT English score of 23 and applicants who have completed a minimum of 48 transferable semester credits including 6 credits of freshman English composition at a U.S. college or university with a cumulative GPA of 2.5 or higher. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in English (Linguistics) - Applied Linguistics: Second Language Acquisition | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Modules include: LIN 500 Research Methods, LIN 515 American English or LIN 516 Pragmatics, LIN 511 Phonetics and Phonology, LIN 520 Theories Underlying the Acquisition of English as a Second Language, one course chosen from: LIN 521, 522, 523, 524, 615, 616, 620, LIN 599 Thesis (6). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in English (Linguistics) - General Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Modules include: LIN 500 Research Methods, LIN 515 American English or LIN 516 Pragmatics, LIN 511 Phonetics and Phonology, LIN 514 Syntax, one Advanced Studies in Linguistics course (LIN 610, 614, 615, 616, 617), LIN 599 Thesis (6). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in English (Literature) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in English (Rhetoric and Composition) | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Modules include: ENG 500 Research Methods, one course in rhetoric theory: ENG 551 Rhetorical Traditions, ENG 554 Rhetorics of Race, Class, and Gender, ENG 556 Theories of Literacy, one course in composition theory: ENG 552 Composition Studies, ENG 553 Technologies of Writing, and electives: at least two of the following rhetoric/composition courses at the 600 level: ENG 651 Advanced Studies in the History and Theories of Rhetoric, ENG 652 Advanced Composition Studies, ENG 654 Advanced Studies in Rhetoric, Writing, Technology, and Culture, ENG 655 Disciplinary Discourses, ENG 656 Studies in Cross-Cultural Discourse. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in French - Applied Project | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This guide is intended to provide new graduate students in the School of International Letters and Cultures with the information necessary for compliance with the degree requirements of the respective programs. It should be used in conjunction with the Graduate College Guide to Graduate College Procedures. In addition, graduate students are expected to consult regularly with the Graduate Director, and programs of study for each semester must be signed by the Graduate Director. Students are urged to discuss their studies with the Director of French Graduate Studies who is available to answer whatever questions or problems may arise during the pursuit of the M.A. degree. In lieu of a thesis, students who are planning to teach in the secondary school system may choose to do an applied project. The requirements for the Applied Project are Twenty-seven hours of course work in either the Literature or Linguistics tracks of French. A comprehensive examination. A portfolio comprising A document of approximately 25 pages describing the project, including a justification firmly grounded in a theoretical framework. Original pedagogical materials developed by the candidate to support the project. The portfolio will be evaluated and approved by the student’s supervisory committee and will be presented in a public defense. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in French - Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This guide is intended to provide new graduate students in the School of International Letters and Cultures with the information necessary for compliance with the degree requirements of the respective programs. It should be used in conjunction with the Graduate College Guide to Graduate College Procedures. In addition, graduate students are expected to consult regularly with the Graduate Director, and programs of study for each semester must be signed by the Graduate Director. Students are urged to discuss their studies with the Director of French Graduate Studies who is available to answer whatever questions or problems may arise during the pursuit of the M.A. degree. Students who plan to write a thesis should submit to their committee a written proposal of about five pages (including bibliography) of their idea. The student should meet with the committee to discuss the project, assign roles to committee members, anticipate problems and solutions, and settle on a tentative defense date. Once that is done, the student must give a copy of the proposal to the Graduate director. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The students can have their concentrations in the options of Linguistics Option, Literature Option. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in French Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This guide is intended to provide new graduate students in the School of International Letters and Cultures with the information necessary for compliance with the degree requirements of the respective programs. It should be used in conjunction with the Graduate College Guide to Graduate College Procedures. In addition, graduate students are expected to consult regularly with the Graduate Director, and programs of study for each semester must be signed by the Graduate Director. Students are urged to discuss their studies with the Director of French Graduate Studies who is available to answer whatever questions or problems may arise during the pursuit of the M.A. degree. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The Core Courses are in Concepts and Methodology. Bibliographical methods. A research methods course at the 500 level. ENG 501 or FLA 501. Introduction to Comparative Literature. Theory and History of Literary Criticism. (e.g. ENG 400, SPA 545, etc.), Textual Criticism (e.g. FRE 510, Explication de textes, Theory and Problems of Translation. (e.g. FLA 485) , Core Courses: II (Topics. Minimum of 6 hours), Ancillary Courses, e.g, Linguistics: FRE 521-History of the French Language FLA 400-Linguistics SPA 540-History of the Spanish Language ENG 510-The Structure of English, etc. Philosophy, e.g. PHI 406-Philosophical Figures and movements. 3. Intellectual History: FRE 515-Intellectual Currents in France, 16th-19 th c. FRE 516-Contemporary French Thought PHI 591-History of Philosophy HIS 423-Recent American Intellectual History, etc. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in French Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This guide is intended to provide new graduate students in the School of International Letters and Cultures with the information necessary for compliance with the degree requirements of the respective programs. It should be used in conjunction with the Graduate College Guide to Graduate College Procedures. In addition, graduate students are expected to consult regularly with the Graduate Director, and programs of study for each semester must be signed by the Graduate Director. Students are urged to discuss their studies with the Director of French Graduate Studies who is available to answer whatever questions or problems may arise during the pursuit of the M.A. degree. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in French Syntax, French Phonology, History of the French Language, French Applied Linguistics, Bilingualism and Languages in Contact, Trends & Issues in Foreign Language Teaching, Second Language Acquisition, All FRE (or FLA) 591 seminars in Linguistics, FLA 598-Intro to Linguistics (Literature students only), All FRE/FLA 598 linguistics courses as appropriate . | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in French Literature | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This guide is intended to provide new graduate students in the School of International Letters and Cultures with the information necessary for compliance with the degree requirements of the respective programs. It should be used in conjunction with the Graduate College Guide to Graduate College Procedures. In addition, graduate students are expected to consult regularly with the Graduate Director, and programs of study for each semester must be signed by the Graduate Director. Students are urged to discuss their studies with the Director of French Graduate Studies who is available to answer whatever questions or problems may arise during the pursuit of the M.A. degree. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Medieval French Literature, French Literature of the 16th Century, French Literature of the 17th Century, French Literature of the 18th Century, French Poetry of the 19th Century, French Novel of the 19th Century, Theater of the 19th Century, Modern Narrative, Modern Poetry, Literature of Francophone Africa and the Caribbean, Identity, Gender, and Society in Early Modern French Literature, All FRE 591 seminars in literature. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in German | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | The program of study for the M.A. degree includes a minimum of 30 semester hours of graduate-level work, as approved by the candidate's supervisory committee. The program must include a 500-level Bibliography and Research Methods course. When approved by the candidate's supervisory committee,up to nine hours in another language or in closely related courses may be included in the program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of Concentrations are available in the following areas literature, language and culture;comparative literature. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | The program’s strength is its flexibility. With the approval of the supervisory committee, students may include course work from other departments. The department offers a flexible menu of graduate courses in the various fields, in some cases team taught. Courses rotate annually and are listed on the department’s website. To complete the requirements for the degree, students write either a master's thesis or its equivalent as the capstone experience. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | The program is intended to develop graduate-level skills related to the history, theory, and practice of the discipline. Fluency sufficient for graduate work in a foreign language is necessary; satisfactory proficiency in conversation and composition will be determined by the appropriate division of the Department of Languages and Literatures. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. The GRE General test is required. The GRE Subject test (literature) is optional. Normally, students should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the Verbal Aptitude section. (Institutional Code = 4007). | Masters | Arizona State University | The Master of Arts in English with a concentration in Linguistics consists of 30 semester hours of graduate courses Two tracks are available in the program: Track 1 - General Linguistics and Track 2 - Applied Linguistics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Literature | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. The GRE General test is required. The GRE Subject test (literature) is optional. Normally, students should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the Verbal Aptitude section. (Institutional Code = 4007). | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Religious Studies - Portfolio Option | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The program of study leading to the Master of Arts degree in Religious Studies. Emphasizing the comparative study of religions, the department seeks to understand the phenomena of religion across a wide spectrum of cultural contexts and historical periods. Reflecting the different interests and areas of expertise of the faculty, the curriculum incorporates a variety of approaches to the subject, including the cultural, historical, literary, sociological, and theological. Primary areas of emphasis include religion in the Americas (African-American, Latin American, Native American, and North American religions), modern Western theological and ethical thought, Buddhism, Christianity, East and Southeast Asian religions, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism. Comparative themes and issues are central to the curriculum. These include: religion and gender; religion, nationalism and ethnicity; religion and science; religion and modernity; mysticism; popular religion; ritual studies and symbolism. Although students often concentrate upon a single religious tradition for their thesis work, the program seeks to provide a broadly comparative understanding of religions, not simply a specialist's training in a single tradition. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Thirty hours of graduate course work: a) two seminars in methods and theory of religion (REL 501, 502); b) six hours REL 591, Graduate Seminars on general topics in the comparative study of religion; c) four courses in a major area of concentration; and two courses in a minor area. A reading knowledge of German, French or another language relevant to the student's program. At the discretion of the student's advisory committee, the requirement may be waived for students who are not planning to enter a doctoral program that requires competency in a foreign language. The student will assemble, and orally defend, a portfolio of three papers in the following areas: theory and methods; the major area of concentration; and the minor area of study. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Religious Studies - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The program of study leading to the Master of Arts degree in Religious Studies. Emphasizing the comparative study of religions, the department seeks to understand the phenomena of religion across a wide spectrum of cultural contexts and historical periods. Reflecting the different interests and areas of expertise of the faculty, the curriculum incorporates a variety of approaches to the subject, including the cultural, historical, literary, sociological, and theological. Primary areas of emphasis include religion in the Americas (African-American, Latin American, Native American, and North American religions), modern Western theological and ethical thought, Buddhism, Christianity, East and Southeast Asian religions, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism. Comparative themes and issues are central to the curriculum. These include: religion and gender; religion, nationalism and ethnicity; religion and science; religion and modernity; mysticism; popular religion; ritual studies and symbolism. Although students often concentrate upon a single religious tradition for their thesis work, the program seeks to provide a broadly comparative understanding of religions, not simply a specialist's training in a single tradition. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Twenty-four hours of graduate course work: a) two seminars in methods and theory of religion (REL 501, 502); b) six credits of REL 591, Graduate Seminars on general topics in the comparative study of religion; c) REL 592: Research; d) nine hours of electives. A reading knowledge of French, German or another language relevant to the proposed thesis topic is normally required. At the discretion of the student's advisory committee, the requirement may be waived for students who are not planning to enter a doctoral program that requires competency in foreign languages. A thesis which earns six hours credit. Students must choose thesis topics that relate to the expertise of the faculty. Students are required to have three copies of their completed thesis bound; one copy for the Library, one for university archives and one for the department. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | The M.A. in Spanish consists of 30 semester hours of 500-level graduate work (24 hours of coursework, 3 hours of Research [SPA 592] and 3 hours of Thesis [SPA 599]) beyond the B.A. For specific course requirements, students should consult statements on their respective concentrations. 30 hours of graduate course work are considered the minimum for a masters program and must be taken at ASU. Depending on the student's educational experience, the Graduate Committee or Masters Supervisory Committee may request that s/he take more credits to correct deficiencies. | All candidates for the M.A. degree in Spanish must fulfill the general requirements of the Graduate College concerning admission Applicants for the masters program are evaluated on the basis of their B.A. preparation. The overall nature of the student's undergraduate preparation is taken into account; however, the committee pays special attention to the grade point averages in all undergraduate work. The Spanish Graduate Program requires a 3.4 overall grade point average (4.0 = A), a junior-senior average of 3.4 would be considered competitive. Admission to the Spanish graduate program requires the candidate to present a B.A. in Spanish or equivalent from an accredited institution. Students who do not present these qualifications may be admitted provisionally (pending the completion of specified deficiencies to establish equivalency) or be denied admission to the program. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of Concentrations are available in the following areas literature, language and culture;comparative literature, linguistics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Spanish Culture | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This concentration includes a minimum of 30 semester hours of graduate level work as approved by the candidate's supervisory committee. The program must include the SPA 500 Bibliography and Research Methods course (to be taken during the first year of study), SPA 598 Cultural Studies/Semiotics of Culture, SPA 592 Research and 599 Thesis. | All candidates for the M.A. degree in Spanish must fulfill the general requirements of the Graduate College concerning admission Applicants for the masters program are evaluated on the basis of their B.A. preparation. The overall nature of the student's undergraduate preparation is taken into account; however, the committee pays special attention to the grade point averages in all undergraduate work. The Spanish Graduate Program requires a 3.4 overall grade point average (4.0 = A), a junior-senior average of 3.4 would be considered competitive. Admission to the Spanish graduate program requires the candidate to present a B.A. in Spanish or equivalent from an accredited institution. Students who do not present these qualifications may be admitted provisionally (pending the completion of specified deficiencies to establish equivalency) or be denied admission to the program. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Spanish Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | This concentration includes a minimum of 30 semester hours of graduate level work as approved by the candidate's supervisory committee. The program must include the SPA 500 Bibliography and Research Methods course (to be taken during the first year of study), SPA 598 Cultural Studies/Semiotics of Culture, SPA 592 Research and 599 Thesis. | All candidates for the M.A. degree in Spanish must fulfill the general requirements of the Graduate College concerning admission Applicants for the masters program are evaluated on the basis of their B.A. preparation. The overall nature of the student's undergraduate preparation is taken into account; however, the committee pays special attention to the grade point averages in all undergraduate work. The Spanish Graduate Program requires a 3.4 overall grade point average (4.0 = A), a junior-senior average of 3.4 would be considered competitive. Admission to the Spanish graduate program requires the candidate to present a B.A. in Spanish or equivalent from an accredited institution. Students who do not present these qualifications may be admitted provisionally (pending the completion of specified deficiencies to establish equivalency) or be denied admission to the program. | Masters | Arizona State University | The masters' degree program in Spanish with a concentration in Linguistics consists of two subconcentrations: sociolinguistics and second language acquisition/applied linguistics.Sociolinguistics Subconcentration Second Language Acquisition / Applied Linguistics Subconcentration | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Spanish Literature | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | All candidates for the M.A. degree in Spanish must fulfill the general requirements of the Graduate College concerning admission Applicants for the masters program are evaluated on the basis of their B.A. preparation. The overall nature of the student's undergraduate preparation is taken into account; however, the committee pays special attention to the grade point averages in all undergraduate work. The Spanish Graduate Program requires a 3.4 overall grade point average (4.0 = A), a junior-senior average of 3.4 would be considered competitive. Admission to the Spanish graduate program requires the candidate to present a B.A. in Spanish or equivalent from an accredited institution. Students who do not present these qualifications may be admitted provisionally (pending the completion of specified deficiencies to establish equivalency) or be denied admission to the program. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of Concentrations are available in the following areas literature, language and culture;comparative literature, linguistics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of International Letters and Cultures, Arizona State University - Tempe Campus, P O Box 870202, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6281 | The School of International Letters and Cultures developed out of the former Department of Languages and Literatures in response to changing educational needs. In addition to its very extensive traditional strengths in languages, literatures and cultures, the school also emphasizes making interesting new trans-disciplinary opportunities available to undergraduate and graduate students alike. It also encourages trans-disciplinary cooperation among faculty members across ASU. The school is organized into five faculties: Classics and Middle Eastern Letters and Cultures; East and Southeast Asian Letters and Cultures; French and Italian Letters and Cultures; German, Romanian and Slavic Letters and Cultures; and Spanish and Portuguese Letters and Cultures. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Arts in Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | The graduates will be able to think in a holistic way about different types of sustainability problems using a dynamic systems framework. They will have the technical skills to formulate and solve problems at the appropriate scale, and the breadth of vision to recognize the interconnectedness of coupled social and environmental systems. They will also be able to produce policy-relevant results. In addition to the common learning outcomes, M.A. students will be able to understand the concepts and methods of environmental economics, sociology, anthropology, environmental politics, ethics, design, and human geography relevant to the sustainability of environmental resources and social institutions.Lead others in applying these concepts and methods to developing sustainable institutions for water, land, air, and urban management at the local and global level.Evaluate the sustainability of environmental institutions, legal frameworks, property rights, and culture.Research particular problems in the sustainability of social institutions. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus, Arizona State University, PO Box 875502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 6963 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | MBA | Arizona State University | The area of specialization are in Financial Management and Markets, Information Management, Real Estate, Sports Business, Strategic Marketing and Services Leadership, Supply Chain Financial Management, Supply Chain Management, Secondary Specializations, Health Sector Management, International Business, Management. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, BA 160, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7579 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | This is an advanced degree targeted at students with an undergraduate education in computing and related disciplines who can best profit from further breadth and background in computer science. The M.C.S. also affords an opportunity for students employed in industry to seek a breadth of advanced education in computer science. The Master of Computer Science provides a professionally oriented, graduate level education in computer science. The program reflects the dual nature of computer science as both a scientific and engineering discipline by allowing emphasis on theory as well as practical applications. Students seeking the M.C.S. degree submit a Project Portfolio, compiling projects completed in three courses during their studies. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Computer Science - Information Assurance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The program is designed for graduate students who want to pursue a thorough education in the area of information assurance. The goal of this concentration is to provide students the knowledge, skills and the advanced development capability in science and engineering for information assurance, including computer and network security, software security, data and information security, applied cryptography and computer forensics. Students will have a competitive advantage to secure employment.According to the National Security Agency, information assurance is defined as the set of measures intended to protect and defend information and information systems by ensuring their availability, integrity, authentication, confidentiality and non-repudiation. This includes providing restoration of information systems by incorporating protection, detection and reaction capabilities. | Admission to all MasterAdmission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in CSE 539: Applied Cryptography, CSE 543: Information Assurance and Security, CSE 545: Software Security, CSE 548: Advanced Computer Network Security, CSE 466/598: Computer Systems Security, CSE 467/598: Data and Information Security, CSE 531: Distributed and Multi-Processor Operating Systems, CSE 534: Advanced Computer Networks, CSE 565: Software Verification, Validation and Testing. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | A 60 semester hour program which prepares students to become professional counselors, culturally competent to work with diverse clientele in a variety of community settings in Arizona and other states. Graduates are license-eligible in the state of Arizona. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The professional core are in CED 522 Theories of Counseling and Psychotherapy, CED 523 Psychological Tests, CED 527 Community Counseling, CED 534 Occupations and Careers, CED 545 Analysis of the Individual, CED 567 Group Dynamics and Counseling, CED 577 Counseling Pre-practicum, EDP 598 Lifespan Human Development, CPY 645 Professional Issues and Ethics, ,CPY 671 Multicultural Counseling, CED 680 Practicum, CED 684 Internship in Community Counseling, COE 501 Introduction to Research and Evaluation in Education, COE 502/EDP 502 Introduction to Data Analysis. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Counseling Practitioner | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | A 60 semester hour program which prepares students to become professional counselors, culturally competent to work with diverse clientele in a variety of community settings in Arizona and other states. Graduates are license-eligible in the state of Arizona. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in CED 694 Substance Abuse Counseling, CED 672 Marriage and Family Counseling, CPY 674 Counseling Women, CPY 613 Child Counseling, CPY 644 Psychology of Careers, FAS 530 Introduction to Marriage & Family Therapy, FAS 538 Advanced Techniques in Marriage and Family therapy, NUR 578 Gestalt Therapy I, PSY 578 Developmental Psychopathology, CPY 623 Counseling At-Risk Youth, CED 525 Introduction to Evaluation PY 650 Counseling Latinos, CPY 634 Organizational Development. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Education in Curriculum and Instruction - Concentration in Early Childhood Education | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program equips students with specialized skills and advanced knowledge for their continued career growth working with infants and children in grades K-3. They produce high-quality teachers who are deeply committed to their profession, and are extremely well versed in early childhood pedagogy, community connectedness, technology, administration, policy analysis, and advocacy. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | The modules include M.Ed. with Certification (46 credit hours); M.Ed. with Endorsement (35 credit hours); M.Ed. (30 credit hours); Master’s Degree Requirements: ECD 503 Introduction to Research and Evaluation in Education, ECD 504 Learning and Instruction, ECD 505 Foundations of Early Childhood Education, ECD 520 Child Guidance and Management: Child, Family, Community and Culture, ECD 525 Emergent Literacy, ECD 527 Mathematics in Early Childhood Education, ECD 541 Assessment of Young Children, ECD 549 Foundations of Diversity, Human Development and Young Children, ECD 565 Appropriate Instructional Methodologies for Young Children, ECD 593 Applied Project, Courses for Endorsement: Students will complete Master’s Degree Requirements in addition to the following: ECD 570 Pre-K Internship, ECD 571 Pre-K Student Teaching, Courses for Certification: Students will complete Master’s Degree Requirements in addition to the following: ECD 570 Pre-K Internship, ECD 571 Pre-K Student Teaching, ECD 578 Student Teaching in Early Childhood (K-3), ECD 580 K-3 Internship, ELL 515 Structured English Immersion (SEI) Methods, ELL 516 Advanced SEI Methods for ELLs. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Education in Special Education Consultation and Collaboration: Autism Emphasis | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program is designed to assist practicing teachers to acquire the knowledge base and skills necessary to develop and provide the most current instructional methods and materials for their students. The program currently is delivered only in online format with a focus on autism spectrum disorders. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | The modules include (SPE 521) Foundations of Autism Spectrum Disorders, (SPE 531) Methods of Applied Behavior Analysis for Exceptional Populations, (SPE 520) Reading and Communication Strategies for Individuals with Autism, (SPE 566) Applied Behavior Analysis in Inclusive Settings, (SPE 580) Practicum, (TEL 501) Introduction to Research and Evaluation in Education, (SPE 540) Family Centered Practices, (SPE 541) Consultation Frameworks and Issues, (SPE 593) Applied Project, (SPE 536) Characteristics of Children with Behavioral Disorders, (SPE 561) Characteristics/ Diagnosis of Learning Disabilities, (SPE 512) Individuals with Mental Retardation, (SPE 548) Cross Categorical Foundations, (SPE 598) Research Methods Applied Behavioral Analysis. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Education, Educational Administration (Principal, Grades PreK-12) | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | The M.Ed. in educational administration and supervision with a concentration in principalship is designed to lead towards the Arizona Principal Certificate Pre-kindergarten to grade 12. The program is based on the Interstate School Leaders Licensure Consortium standards. Students completing the program (including the internship) and providing evidence of three years of K-12 teaching experience may obtain an Institutional Recommendation to expedite their certification as principals. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Engineering - Quality and Reliability | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program offers specialized courses founded on basic engineering and statistics principles that are central to improving quality, reliability, and achieving meaningful business results in today's modern business organizations. The program is designed to prepare graduates for a wide spectrum of opportunities in product and service realization, including engineering design, product and process development, manufacturing, distribution, logistics, and supply chain operations. Students will learn about how modern statistical and engineering techniques are deployed in a wide range of industrial and business settings. They will also learn the basic underlying methodology so that they can develop novel solutions to problems that are unique to their own environment. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Engineering - Systems Engineering | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This interdisciplinary online degree program provides students the ability to engineer complex products, processes, services leveraging a systems engineering approach. Systems engineering focuses on defining needs and customer requirements early in the development cycle. Systems engineering appears to be all things to all people. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Engineering in Embedded Systems | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program is designed to provide the opportunity for students to obtain a master's degree in engineering through distance learning online. The master of engineering is a practice-oriented degree that requires 30 credits of course work, including three credits of applied mathematics and three credits of engineering management. Most embedded systems require a high degree of predictability and reliability, and involve tight interactions with their physical environment. They differ from computation-intensive applications as a result of their concurrent threads of control and time-dependent behavior, as well as a variety of system requirements that include size, power, cost, safety, security, and regulation. However, the task of developing such systems is much more challenging than general computer applications as multiple concurrent subsystems interact with real-time signals and produce a sequence of interdependent and timed control actions. Consequently, system design and software development of embedded systems have become significant obstacle in meeting the market demands for functionality, reliability, and ease of use while achieving rapid product release cycles. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Engineering in Modeling and Simulation Degree | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This course is designed to provide the opportunity for students to obtain a master's degree in engineering through distance learning online. The master of engineering is a practice-oriented degree that requires 30 credits of course work, including three credits of Applied Mathematics and three credits of engineering management. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | The program offers an exceptional program in creative activity and a curricular model that guides talented individuals in writing original poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Equally, this model informs service projects that reach out to Arizona, the nation, and an international community of writers. Program innovation and vitality together with exemplary mentorship from a superior teaching faculty combine to shape and define pragmatic, successful outcomes for students of the Master of Fine Arts program new century graduates we distinguish as artist-citizens. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of "B" or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree, and the recommendation of the department or the academic unit in which the student pla ns to study. International students must submit a TOEFL score of at least 600, 250 cbt, 100 ibt, or IELTS of 6.5 or above before admission is considered. | Masters | Arizona State University | The requirements are in LIN 500 Research Methods, LIN 510 English Linguistics, LIN 520 Theories Underlying the Acquisition of English as a Second Language, LIN 521 Methods of Teaching English as a Second Language, LIN 593 Applied Project, Electives 6 additional semester hours of graduate credit in the English Department (either LIN or ENG courses), Electives 9 semester hours of graduate credit approved by the Director of Linguistics and MTESOL. These may be taken in any department. Typically, students choose courses in Anthropology, Education, English, Languages and Literature, Speech and Hearing. The total of credits taken outside the English Department (including substitutions of core courses) shall not exceed 9 credits. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Health Sector Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy | Students in the Managerial Epidemiology track learn how to organize and lead epidemiological research efforts. They learn how to use evidence, gathered in the course of clinical and epidemiological research, to make managerial decisions that enhance delivery of health care, improve system performance, and maximize safety and clinical outcomes. Graduates of this program can pursue careers in biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and contract research organizations in which clinical trial design and execution are critical components. They may work in the public sector in leadership roles, or for large employers where outcomes measurement and population health improvement are a priority. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. Licensed physicians with an M.D. or D.O. degree from a medical school accredited by the U.S. are not required to provide a test score. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Health Care Organization, Biostatistics, Financial Accounting, Organizational Theory and Behavior, Marketing Management, Managerial Finance, Managerial Economics, Health Care Law, Principles of Epidemiology, Health Care Informatics, Health Economics and Policy, Health Care Finance, Health Care Strategic Management, Internship. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Health Management and Policy, Post Box 874506, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7778 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Landscape Architecture | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | he Master of Landscape Architecture at Arizona State University prepares individuals for the independent professional practice of landscape architecture and research in various aspects of the field including: geology and hydrology; project and site planning; landscape design, history, and theory; environmental design; application law and regulations; and professional responsibilities and standards. The program leverages the arid urban context and rapidly urbanizing landscape of the Phoenix metropolitan region. In response to the global depletion of natural resources, global warming, and other population-impacted ecological conditions the curriculum is focused on issues of sustainable landscape urbanism. Students are encouraged to pursue a joint degree with the School’s Master of Science in Building Design, and/or the Master of Urban Design degree program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Advanced Architectural Studio I, Building Systems III, Building Structures III, Sustainability of the Built Environment, Advanced Landscape Architectural Studio, LA Alternative technologies and Materials, Landscape Architecture Research Methods, Foundation Theory Seminar, Advanced Landscape Architectural Studio, ST: Urban Ecological Design. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Landscape Architecture | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | he Master of Landscape Architecture at Arizona State University prepares individuals for the independent professional practice of landscape architecture and research in various aspects of the field including: geology and hydrology; project and site planning; landscape design, history, and theory; environmental design; application law and regulations; and professional responsibilities and standards. The program leverages the arid urban context and rapidly urbanizing landscape of the Phoenix metropolitan region. In response to the global depletion of natural resources, global warming, and other population-impacted ecological conditions the curriculum is focused on issues of sustainable landscape urbanism. Students are encouraged to pursue a joint degree with the School’s Master of Science in Building Design, and/or the Master of Urban Design degree program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Advanced Architectural Studio I, Building Systems III, Building Structures III, Sustainability of the Built Environment, Advanced Landscape Architectural Studio, LA Alternative technologies and Materials, Landscape Architecture Research Methods, Foundation Theory Seminar, Advanced Landscape Architectural Studio, ST: Urban Ecological Design. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Legal Studies M.L.S. Program | Full Time | Variable | US $47,606 a year | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | The program consists of 30 semester hours of approved study. The degree can be completed in two semesters of full-time study or spread out over two or more years in part-time study. Each student is assigned a faculty advisor to help develop a curriculum that best meets the student's goals. M.L.S. students are required to choose at least two of the following basic first year law courses—Contracts, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Property, and Torts. Other courses can be chosen from Legal Process, Legislation, or Jurisprudence in order to include a broad perspectives course in their curriculum. These core courses will provide 10 to 12 of the requisite 30 credit hours. The remainder of the credit hours are electives. Course selection will be flexible to accommodate the diversity of intellectual interests the program is intended to serve. Students will earn the remainder of their credits through whatever combination of elective law school courses—and in some instances courses offered elsewhere in the University—best complements and advances the student’s goals. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus | Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Tempe Campus, McAllister & Orange Streets, P.O. Box 877906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1474 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Liberal Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Film and Media Studies | The program is intended for students seeking a graduate degree that explores the integration of the humanities with political, religious, social and scientific questions within their cultural contexts. The program connects students to the entire College of Liberal Arts & Sciences and integrates the disciplines. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of "B" or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree, and the recommendation of the department or the academic unit in which the student pla ns to study. International students must submit a TOEFL score of at least 600, 250 cbt, 100 ibt, or IELTS of 6.5 or above before admission is considered. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Film and Media Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Film and Media Studies, P.O. Box 870402, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6747 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Music - Interdisciplinary Digital Media and Performance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The Masters of Music in Composition with a concentration in Interdisciplinary Digital Media & Performance is directed toward students who wish to pursue creative careers in music utilizing digital media and work in association with other artistic and scientific disciplines. The concentration allows students the opportunity to craft a program of study attuned to the multifaceted character of interdisciplinary arts research. Substantial depth in a major area of concentration such as Music Composition, Music Education, Musicology, Music Technology, or Music Theory provides the foundation of each student's research focus. Flexible, individually designed courses of study allow for students to select courses from a variety of areas such as Computer Models for Multimodal Systems, Media Theory, Media Performance Ensemble, and Adaptive Media. Because the degree program is directed toward creation, experimentation and collaboration, the admissions application must demonstrate achievement in these areas. The program is not oriented toward the vocational training of recording engineers, or related technicians. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in AME 598 Signal Processing for Media Arts, AME 598 Multimedia Systems, AME 598 Multimodal Pattern Analysis, AME 598 Multimodal Interfaces and Interactive Technologies, AME 598 Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Perception and Cognition for Hybrid Environments, ME 598 History and Analysis of Media Arts/Arts & Technology, AME 598 Computational Models for Media and Arts, AME 598 Media Theory, AME 598 Sound Analysis for Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Physical Computing, AME 598 Multimodal Context Models, AME 598 Dynamic User-Centered Modeling and Design, AME 598 Adaptive Media, AME 598 Computer Music for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Media Performance Ensemble, AME 598 Active Learning in Mediated Environments. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Music in Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program helps students develop the skills necessary to pursue a career in music composition. The faculty are recognized, active composers whose music represents a wide variety of genres - ranging from chamber to orchestral, acoustic to electronic. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Music in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | This program develops teaching skills in a supportive and challenging program. Students have opportunities to prove them as a teacher before going into the profession through internships, student teaching and observation, and mentoring arrangements. This program fosters outstanding educators who are prepared to make a difference in the lives of their students. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Music in Music Theater Musical Direction : Broadway Musicals | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Music in Music Theatre Performance: Opera | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | The Master of Music degree with opera emphasis is designed to prepare you for career-entry level opportunities in the opera world including Young Artist and Studio Artist programs, DMA programs and other advanced-study/emerging professional endeavors. In addition to studio voice instruction and advanced work in operatic acting and performance techniques, you study opera repertory. You must perform at least two principal roles in LOT productions. | Admission to all MasterApplicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Music in Performance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | The composition program helps students develop the skills necessary to pursue a career in music composition. The faculty are recognized, active composers whose music represents a wide variety of genres - ranging from chamber to orchestral, acoustic to electronic. We encourage you to explore our site and see all the amazing opportunities you have in the composition program at ASU. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The Concentrations are in solo performance (instrumental, keyboard, voice), collaborative piano, music theatre performance (Broadway musicals, opera), music theatre musical direction (Broadway musicals, opera), performance pedagogy (instrumental, keyboard, voice) | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Natural Science | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The Master of Natural Science degree offers the opportunity for interdisciplinary graduate training in the natural sciences (biological sciences, mathematics, and physical sciences) and cognate areas. The degree program is especially suited for individuals who desire professional training rather than research training. Because of designed flexibility, the degree also offers the opportunity for individualized professional graduate programs depending upon the backgrounds and goals of the students. The major is Natural Science. Students are expected to emphasize course work in two or more areas of concentration. The program must be interdisciplinary.A program of study is recommended by the supervisory committee after conferring with the student. The minimum number of semester hours required for the degree is 30. More may be required by the supervisory committee depending upon the background of the student and the nature of the proposed program. In some cases undergraduate courses may be required to remove deficiencies. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Natural Science | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | This set of courses is open to high school teachers who have completed two semesters of college physics and an introductory calculus course. If necessary, teachers can make up deficiencies in regularly scheduled courses.A total of 30 graduate credit hours are required – 15 credit hours from Teaching Methods courses and 15 credit hours from Integrated Science courses. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in Methods of Teaching Physics I, Methods of Teaching Physics II, Methods of Physical Science Teaching I, Applied Project: Action Research in Physical Science, Workshops in Physical Science, Electricity for Middle/Secondary Teachers, Advanced Modeling Workshop , Advanced Modeling Workshop , Leadership Workshop. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics, Arizona State University, P O Box 871504, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3561 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Natural Science Non - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The disciplines of the life sciences are rapidly requiring more mathematical and computational analyses than have typically been employed. While some mathematical approaches have been applied to biological questions for many years, the advance in computational capability has increased the pace of bioscience research to unprecedented levels of speed, precision and detail, and thus dramatically transformed the kinds of problems tackled. This degree will serve to produce students capable of meeting the demands of today's Biotechnical/biomedical industries. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Master's pass on qualifier sequence or complete four courses in two qualifying sequences with at least a 3.25 GPA by the end of semester. Finish thesis and all coursework by semester 4. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Natural Science Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The disciplines of the life sciences are rapidly requiring more mathematical and computational analyses than have typically been employed. While some mathematical approaches have been applied to biological questions for many years, the advance in computational capability has increased the pace of bioscience research to unprecedented levels of speed, precision and detail, and thus dramatically transformed the kinds of problems tackled. This degree will serve to produce students capable of meeting the demands of today's Biotechnical/biomedical industries. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Master's pass on qualifier sequence or complete four courses in two qualifying sequences with at least a 3.25 GPA by the end of semester. Finish thesis and all coursework by semester 4. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Real Estate Development | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus | This is an accelerated, 30 week full immersion program focused on educating students and mid-career professionals in the practices and transactions of-and-in real estate development. MRED's transdisciplinary teaching team is centered on a four member faculty core representing disciplines from the schools of design, law, construction and business. A significant element of instruction will be provided in the form of case studies presented by local and regional real estate development professionals. The curriculum is presented in a fast paced topic sequence reflective of the real estate development process, revealing specific core knowledge segments and strategic decision making tools during each program segment | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | College of Design, Tempe Campus, PO Box 871905, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Real Estate Development | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate | This is an accelerated, 30 week full immersion program focused on educating students and mid-career professionals in the practices and transactions of-and-in real estate development. MRED's transdisciplinary teaching team is centered on a four member faculty core representing disciplines from the schools of design, law, construction and business. A significant element of instruction will be provided in the form of case studies presented by local and regional real estate development professionals. The curriculum is presented in a fast paced topic sequence reflective of the real estate development process, revealing specific core knowledge segments and strategic decision making tools during each program segment | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3259 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of School Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | A 60 semester hour program which prepares students to become professional counselors, culturally competent to work with diverse clientele in a variety of community settings in Arizona and other states. Graduates are license-eligible in the state of Arizona. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The courses are in the field of CED 672 Marriage and Family Counseling, CED 691 Seminar: (specific counseling approaches, e.g., Brief Psychotherapy), CPY 613 Child Counseling, CPY 644 Psychology of Careers, FAS 530 Introduction to Marriage and Family Therapy, FAS 538 Advanced Techniques in Marriage and Family Therapy, CPY 694 Substance Abuse Counseling, CPY 623 Counseling At-Risk Youth, CPY 650 Counseling Latinos, PSY 578 Developmental Psychopathology, CPY 634 Organizational Development. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science - Clinical Research Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | Graduate College | The M.S. in clinical research management attracts nurses and health care professionals throughout the nation and internationally for advanced education as clinical research professionals in the diversified and complex clinical research industry. The roles of clinical research managers are rapidly growing. The career field is particularly suited for nurses, physicians and other healthcare professionals. Health care professionals from fields outside of nursing may complete the curriculum to obtain an M.S. in clinical research management, with completion of stated prerequisites. he clinical research management specialty takes a transdisciplinary approach in providing an education strong in the commercial and fiscal practices of conducting clinical research, ethical and regulatory aspects of research, and overall operational leadership of clinical drug, biological and medical device trials. The program is designed to be flexible and conducive to the adult learner. |
All applicants must submit a Graduate College online application and be admitted to the ASU Graduate College. To be considered for this program, the applicant must have either of the following: A bachelor's degree in nursing or related field, A bachelor's degree with health care-related experience and completion of all prerequisite courses. The following undergraduate three-credit prerequisite courses, or the equivalent, must be completed with a grade of "C" (2.00) or better: Anatomy and physiology, Health policy, Health care system overview and Medical terminology. Program requires the following: 33 credit hours including a Capstone (HCR 566). The clinical research management M.S. program is offered online with an initial three- or four-day immersion/practicum program. A six credit hour, capstone clinical research project is required, and part-time study is available. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Graduate College | Graduate College, Arizona State University Interdisciplinary B-Wing, Room 170 PO Box 871003, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science Engineering ES - Enterprise Systems Innovation and Management | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program allows professionals the opportunity to enhance their leadership abilities, analytical thinking, and bring value to their organization and professional advancement. In today's global environment, business execution is becoming increasingly competitive. Managing resources, products, and customers across the globe magnifies the organizational challenges and requires more sophisticated systems, tactical thinking, and advanced methods of measuring, analyzing, and controlling performance. Managers must understand the underlying issues across the enterprise to impact and create business value. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science Engineering ES - Software Engineering | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program offers specialized courses founded on the fundamentals and principles of software engineering. The program provides the knowledge and skills needed to work as a software engineer or software task leader on both large and small projects using either agile methodologies or formal Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) approaches. The program addresses major software development methodologies, techniques, tools and processes for both developing and managing software projects. The curriculum is based on the software engineering body of knowledge (SWEBOK) under the leadership of the IEEE Computer Society. Each course will place an emphasis on applied assignments and projects that are relative to the student's workplace. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science Engineering in Electrical Engineering | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program will connect the students to the challenges of global integration and help prepare them and their virtual global peers for the many exciting career possibilities the 21st century promises. The online M.S.E. in electrical engineering offers area of studies in solid-state electronics, mixed-signal integrated circuit design, signal processing and communications and power electronics. Graduate courses and programs are offered in the following six areas of specialization: control systems; electromagnetics, antennas and microwave circuits; electronic and mixed-signal circuit design; electric power and energy systems; signal processing and communications systems; solid-state electronics. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science Engineering in Material Science and Engineering - Semiconductor Processing and Packaging | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program is an interdisciplinary program, also offered by other engineering disciplines at Ira A. Fulton School of engineering. Students interested in the MSE in semiconductor processing and packaging can further select to focus their degree program in either Semiconductor "Processing" or "Packaging". The two available tracks help in specializing in one of the two areas per industry demand. The semiconductor processing area emphasizes on the processing of semiconductor device/system, while the Packaging track accentuates the packaging that bridges the device/system to the external world and enables the functionality. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Arizona State University is one of the premier metropolitan research universities in the nation, an institution of international scope, committed to excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The university was established in Tempe in 1885 by an act of the Thirteenth Territorial Legislature, ASU was initially formed as a teachers college. The name of the institution changed three times during its first fifteen years, becoming the Normal School of Arizona in 1901. Subsequent changes were associated with expansions of the curriculum and degrees offered. In rapid succession Tempe State Teachers College became Arizona State Teachers College, and in 1945, Arizona State College. By 1958 the college performed all the functions of a university, and received authorization by an act of the governor to become Arizona State University. The university is a creating a new model for American higher education, an unprecedented combination of academic excellence, entrepreneurial energy and broad access. This New American University is a single, unified institution comprising four differentiated campuses positively impacting the economic, social, cultural and environmental health of the communities it serves. Its research is inspired by real world application, blurring the boundaries that traditionally separate academic disciplines. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science Engineering in Materials Science and Engineering | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | The objective of the Master of Science degree program in engineering science with a specialization in materials science and engineering is to provide an in-depth study of materials science and engineering topics through advanced course work and an introduction to research. Three concentration options are available: general; semiconductor processing and packaging (SPP) processing track; semiconductor processing and packaging (SPP) packaging track. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | ||||||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science degree in Communication Disorders | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | The degree in Communication Disorders (with an emphasis in speech-language pathology). The program is accredited by the Council on Academic Accreditation (CAA) of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The students can have their option to study Professional Enhancement Program (PEP) within the MS, Bilingual Training Program (BTP) within the MS. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, P O Box 870102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2374 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Healthcare and Healing Environments | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus | The concentration in Healthcare and Healing Environments is focused on factors that impact the design and planning of healthcare facilities and healing environments, especially the integration of evidence based design, sustainable science, and best practices benchmarks with planning healthcare facilities. This multidisciplinary program integrates the principles of medical and clinical innovations, business administration, interior architecture, human health services, communication studies, architecture, and behavioral and engineering sciences. Students in this program will be mentored by local healthcare design consultants, teaming with nursing students, working directly with real clients, and corresponding with forward-thinking healthcare research centers. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The electives are in DSC 580 Practicum: Teaching Methods in Design, MHI 538 The Individual and Innovation, MHI 540 Understanding and Applying Principles of Evidence-Based Practice, MHI 542 Systems Thinking in a Complex Environment, MHI 546 Communication for Innovation, MHI 550 Health Policy and Innovation, MHI 543 Disseminating Evidence to Advance Best Practice in Healthcare, ADE 661 Bioclimatic Design Studies, ANP 494 Special Topics, ANP 530 Computer Graphics in Architecture, ANP 561 Architectural Information Processing Systems, ANP 563 Methods in Architectural Design Computation, APH 511 Energy Environmental Theory, APH 683 Critical Regionalism, ATE 521 Building Environmental Science, ATE 550 Passive Heating and Cooling, ATE 557 Construction Documents, ATE 560 Building Energy Analysis, ATE 562 Experimental Evaluation, ATE 582 Environmental Control System SC 440 Finding Purpose, DSC 525 Design Methodologies, DSC 529 Design Criticism , DSC 544 Human Factors Systems and Documentation, HHE Electives, DSC 561 Methods in Visual Communication, DSC 598 Facility Planning and Management. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | College of Design, Tempe Campus, PO Box 871905, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Arts, Media, Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus | The MSD with a concentration in Arts/Media/Engineering is meant for individuals who wish to be at the forefront of design and development in those overlapping areas among arts, media, and engineering. The concentration provides the opportunity to span the breath of experimental media, from the more creative aspects to that part which is more quantitative, and everything in between. The concentration prepares a student for work with companies at the leading edge of media development. Area of concentration available: Design and Experimental Media. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The core studies are in AME 598 Signal Processing for the Arts, AME 598 History & Analysis of Media/Arts and Technology, AME 598 Computational Models for Media & Arts, AME 598 Media Theory, AME 598 Motion Capture and Analysis, AME 598 Sound Analysis for Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Image understanding, AME 598 Physical Computing, AME 598 Multimodal Pattern Analysis, AME 598 Multisensor Models/Multimodal Data Environments, AME 598 Cognition and Perception of Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Multimodal Context Models, AME 598 Multimodal Interfaces & Interactive Technologies, AME 598 Dynamic Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Mediated Biosystems, AME 598 Media Performance Ensemble, AME 598 Theory & Application of Interactive Technologies in the Arts, AME 598 Digital Graphics & Animation for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Movement as Language, AME Core, ME 592 Research. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | College of Design, Tempe Campus, PO Box 871905, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Bioinformatics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Bioinformatics focuses on the development and application of computational tools for the analysis of biomedical data (such as genomic and proteomic information) as well as the study of biological systems. Bioinformatics applications include algorithms, databases and modeling of biological phenomena. | An applicant to the M.S. program in Biomedical Informatics should have earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, Biology, Physiology, Psychology, Nursing, Statistics, Engineering, or a related field. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Biomedical Informatics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | The program will feature a sequence of courses specifically designed to bring together clinicians and researchers in teams, applying new developments in informatics theory to clinical practice. This new program is supported by our collaborators including: the University of Arizona College of Medicine, Phoenix Program; Mayo Clinic; Barrow Neurological Institute; and Banner Health. This approach will make the M.S. program in Biomedical Informatics at ASU distinctive, if not unique, among biomedical informatics programs in the United States. | An applicant to the M.S. program in Biomedical Informatics should have earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, Biology, Physiology, Psychology, Nursing, Statistics, Engineering, or a related field. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Clinical Informatics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Clinical informaticians work to develop novel information technology, computer science and knowledge management methodologies for disease prevention, treatment, more efficient and safer patient care delivery, and knowledge access. This area of specialization requires close collaboration among clinicians, biomedical and computational scientists, knowledge management professionals, educators and healthcare consumers. | An applicant to the M.S. program in Biomedical Informatics should have earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, Biology, Physiology, Psychology, Nursing, Statistics, Engineering, or a related field. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Clinical Research Management | Distance / Online | 33 Semester(s) | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | The Master of Science in clinical research management (CRM) attracts nurses and health care professionals nationally and internationally for advanced education as clinical research professionals in the diverse and complex clinical research industry. The role of clinical research managers (CRM) is rapidly expanding. The career field is particularly suited for nurses, physicians, and other health care professionals. Health care professionals from fields outside of nursing may complete the curriculum to obtain the MS in CRM, with completion of stated prerequisites. The CRM specialty takes a trans-disciplinary approach in providing an education strong in commercial and fiscal practices of conducting clinical research, ethical and regulatory aspects of research, and overall management of clinical drug, biological, and medical device trials. This program is unique in that it integrates principles of innovation and entrepreneurship for adoption into clinical research. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Cognitive Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Cognitive Science is a multidisciplinary field that borrows theories and methods from computer science, cognitive psychology, linguistics, philosophy and cognitive anthropology. Research in medical cognition is devoted to the study of medical decision-making, cognitive foundations of health behaviors, and the effective use of computer-based information technologies. The research has particular focus on the analysis of medical error, models of naturalistic problem solving and decision-making, development and use of clinical guidelines, and evaluation of human-computer interactions. The research is guided by a concern for improving performance of individuals and teams in the healthcare system. Towards this end, the focus will be on the cognitive characteristics involved in learning, instruction, and in the design of decision-support and other health information technologies for safe use in clinical environments. | An applicant to the M.S. program in Biomedical Informatics should have earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, Biology, Physiology, Psychology, Nursing, Statistics, Engineering, or a related field. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The Master of Science (M.S.) in Computer Science is a research-oriented degree targeted toward students with undergraduate education in the science of computation. It provides instruction in advanced course work and emphasizes research by the student.Students complete thirty hours of coursework, including six hours of Thesis to graduate with the degree. Students will complete one course in three areas to cover a wide range of knowledge. The three areas consist of Foundations, Systems, and Applications. Foundations courses focus on algorithms, theory, programming languages, and mathematical logic. Systems courses cover topics in architecture, networks, operating systems and software engineering. Applications courses are in the areas of artificial intelligence, multimedia, databases, and graphics. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | The students can concentrate their studies in Arts, Media and Engineering, Biomedical Informatics, and Information Assurance. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Construction | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program aims to allow students with a bachelor's degree in construction or a related field such as architecture, business, or engineering to broaden and improve their professional capabilities in construction. The program is designed to meet the growing need for professionals with advanced technical, management and applied research skills in the construction industry. The facilities management specialty area supports the needs of the student desiring a career in the maintenance, operation, renovation or decommissioning of existing facilities. The construction management specialty area allows students seeking upper-level management positions in various sectors of the construction industry to improve their competency in project, program and company management areas. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | The Master of Science is a research degree requiring 30 credits, including six hours of thesis, and at least six hours outside. Students applying to the master's program are initially admitted to the MSE degree. If they obtain a research advisor they can transfer to the MS degree. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in control systems, electro magnetics, antennas and microwave circuits, electronic and mixed-signal circuit design, electric power and energy systems, signal processing and communications, solid-state electronics, arts, media and engineering. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University, 650 East Tyler MallGoldwater Center Room 206, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3424 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Engineering Chemical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $21,000 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | This is a professional master's degree offered by the Chemical Engineering Program. It is designed to bridge the gap between knowledge of the engineering sciences and creative engineering practice. At the same time, it increases the depth and breadth of knowledge in selected areas of emphasis. As offered by the Department of Chemical Engineering, the professional master’s program is designed primarily for students who hold full-time jobs and attend university classes on a part-time basis. Although M.S.E. students are required to complete a research paper at the conclusion of their coursework, the research done for this paper is not at the same level as that required for a thesis via the Master of Science program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 876006, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3313 | The Department of Chemical Engineering is devoted to educating chemical engineers and conducting cutting edge research in chemical engineering and related fields. The department currently has 12 faculty, 10 post-doctoral researchers, 50 graduate students and 280 undergraduate students. Chemical engineering faculty members are committed to fully developing student’s potential by providing a unique and stimulating learning and research environment, exposing students to a diversity of viewpoints and teaching/learning styles, and preparing students to work in teams to solve real-world, multidisciplinary problems. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Engineering - Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | he MSE is a professional degree that requires 10 classes of course work (30 hours minimum), without a thesis, but with a final comprehensive exam. Courses are available in both on-campusMost master's students will be admitted as MSE candidates, and only those candidates who receive financial support or who show research potential will be admitted to the MS program. However, students who want to pursue the MS may seek out a faculty member in their areas of interest to act as their advisor. With the advisor's approval, the student may then switch from the MSE to the MS program. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University, 650 East Tyler MallGoldwater Center Room 206, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3424 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Engineering Degree in Chemical Engineering with a specialization in Semiconductor Processing and Manufacturing | Full Time | Variable | US $21,000 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 876006, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3313 | The Department of Chemical Engineering is devoted to educating chemical engineers and conducting cutting edge research in chemical engineering and related fields. The department currently has 12 faculty, 10 post-doctoral researchers, 50 graduate students and 280 undergraduate students. Chemical engineering faculty members are committed to fully developing student’s potential by providing a unique and stimulating learning and research environment, exposing students to a diversity of viewpoints and teaching/learning styles, and preparing students to work in teams to solve real-world, multidisciplinary problems. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Imaging Informatics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Imaging informatics (application of biomedical informatics methods to problems related to tissues and organ systems) focuses on the development of information technology and computational tools to manage and analyze biomedical images (such as radiological films, CAT scans, pathology/microscopy or surgical simulation environments) to support decision-making processes for patient care as well as knowledge discovery in biomedicine. | An applicant to the M.S. program in Biomedical Informatics should have earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, Biology, Physiology, Psychology, Nursing, Statistics, Engineering, or a related field. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Industrial Design | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial Design | The underpinning mission of the Master of Science in Design (MSD) is focused on what you want to do rather than what you want to be. This makes the MSD significantly different from most other graduate degrees in design, which may prepare you for the challenges today’s professional world but perhaps not those of tomorrow. The MSD achieves its mission in two significant ways. First, it is a research degree and not a practice degree. Like most research degrees, it is centered on the systematic and methodological investigation of issues important to design. Second, the MSD is interdisciplinary. It provides an educational environment that works across the many disciplines that exist in a setting such as the College of Design and Arizona State University. The MSD Program has four goals is to provide graduate education for students who have a baccalaureate degree in Industrial Design, Interior Design, Visual Communication Design, or a related design discipline. To provide the opportunity for the development of specialized research skills to support the professions of Industrial Design, Interior Design, and Visual Communication Design. To provide the opportunity for design professionals to gain the necessary research skills for academic and professional careers. To develop critical skills that enable the graduates of the program to contribute to the literature of design through articles, essays, and books or to participate in conferences related to their concentration. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial Design | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial Design, PO Box 872105, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1767 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Industrial Engineering | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program is designed to bridge the gap between knowledge of engineering sciences and creative engineering practice, while at the same time increasing the depth and breadth of knowledge in selected areas of emphasis. The program of course work applicable to the degree is potentially unique for each student, although it must conform to the general guidelines for subject matter content for the degree. Industrial engineering combines knowledge from the physical, mathematical and social sciences to design efficient manufacturing and service systems that integrate people, equipment and information. Improvements made by industrial engineering in automation, information control and process quality revolutionized manufacturing in the past century and greatly increased our quality of life. Trends towards globalization, increased complexity and rapid technological innovation create an even greater need for industrial engineering in the 21st century. Successful industrial engineering concepts are also spreading to the financial, logistics and health care service industries, affording new areas of opportunity. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Interaction Design | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus | Interaction design is about people: how people connect through products and services. And the Interaction Design concentration focuses on the study of principles, tools, complexities, and change that prepare students for endeavors such as creating effective physical and virtual shopping, creating effective information retrieval systems, and numerous such human-spatial interactions. Design principles would instruct students about the means of creating dynamic, expressive, and communicative forms. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in DSC 500 Research Methods, DSC 501 Qualitative Analysis, DSC 525 Design Methodologies, DSC 561 Methods in Visual Communication I, DSC 562 Methods in Visual Communication II, DSC 563 Document Design, GRA 421 Exhibit Design, Motion Graphic Interactive Design, Advanced Interactive Design, Media Analysis, Policy Informatics Using the Decision Theater, Globalization and Economic Justice, Architecture of Environmentally-Responsible Building. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | College of Design, Tempe Campus, PO Box 871905, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Interior Design | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Interior Design | The underpinning mission of the Master of Science in Design (MSD) is focused on what you want to do rather than what you want to be. This makes the MSD significantly different from most other graduate degrees in design, which may prepare you for the challenges today’s professional world but perhaps not those of tomorrow. The MSD achieves its mission in two significant ways. First, it is a research degree and not a practice degree. Like most research degrees, it is centered on the systematic and methodological investigation of issues important to design. Second, the MSD is interdisciplinary. It provides an educational environment that works across the many disciplines that exist in a setting such as the College of Design and Arizona State University. The MSD Program has four goals is to provide graduate education for students who have a baccalaureate degree in Industrial Design, Interior Design, Visual Communication Design, or a related design discipline. To provide the opportunity for the development of specialized research skills to support the professions of Industrial Design, Interior Design, and Visual Communication Design. To provide the opportunity for design professionals to gain the necessary research skills for academic and professional careers. To develop critical skills that enable the graduates of the program to contribute to the literature of design through articles, essays, and books or to participate in conferences related to their concentration. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Interior Design | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Interior Design, PO Box 872105, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3571 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Public Health Informatics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | This specialization integrates public health with information technology for the systematic application of information and computer sciences to public health practice, research, and learning. The development of this field and dissemination of informatics knowledge and expertise to public health professionals is the key to unlocking the potential of information systems to improve the health of the nation. | An applicant to the M.S. program in Biomedical Informatics should have earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, Biology, Physiology, Psychology, Nursing, Statistics, Engineering, or a related field. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | M.S. graduates will be able to think in a holistic way about different types of sustainability problems using a dynamic systems framework. They will have the technical skills to formulate and solve problems at the appropriate scale, and the breadth of vision to recognize the interconnectedness of coupled social and environmental systems. They will also be able to produce policy-relevant results. In addition to the common learning outcomes (cross-link), M.S. students will be able to Understand the concepts and methods of environmental economics, ecology, environmental biology, hydrology, environmental chemistry, engineering, earth systems management, and other disciplines relevant to the sustainable use of environmental resources.Lead others in applying these concepts and methods to developing sustainable strategies for water, land, air, and urban management at the local and global level.Evaluate the sustainability of technology, the built environment, and their environmental regulations, and policy.Research particular problems in the sustainability of the economic and natural environment. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus, Arizona State University, PO Box 875502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 6963 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Technology in Environmental Technology Management | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | The Master of Science in technology with a concentration in environmental technology management provides three areas of study: environmental management; emergency management; and international environmental management. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Technology in Graphic Information Technology | Distance / Online | Variable | $6390 for 18 enrolled hours | Graduate College | This program provides students with the opportunity to study within the various areas of graphics. The areas include traditional and digital printing and publishing, multimedia, 3-D modeling, Web development, digital photography and animation. The courses offered in this degree program provide students with a working knowledge of the different facets of the graphic information industry with a focus on graphic communication. This is not a traditional information technology, computer science, computer information systems or information systems management program. The degree program is offered either as an on-campus or Web-based distance learning format. | Students should have obtained a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) in education, geography or related area with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale) or demonstrate a minimum of one year of related professional experience and successful completion of a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution (or equivalent) with a minimum GPA of 3.00 (4.00 scale). Applicants with a GPA below 3.00 can apply and may be accepted if they show substantial promise of success based on the candidate's statement and letters of recommendation. Translations must be literal, complete versions of original records, and the documents must be translated by a university, a government official, or an official translation service. If students are from a country whose native language is not English, they must provide evidence of English proficiency as indicated by acceptable scores on the TOEFL or IELTS as follows: the minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 80 (IBT); minimum IELTS requirement is an overall band score of 6.5; and minimum Pearson Test of English (PTE) requirement is 60. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Science in Visual Communication Design | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Visual Communication Design | The MSD with a concentration in Visual Communication Design is meant for individuals interested in advanced studies in visual language, history, theory, criticism and methodology, design processes, and technology. This concentration develops an understanding of contemporary graphic design issues through specialized research and design skills. It also prepares the graduate student for a career in graphic design education. Area of concentration available: Methodology, Theory, and Criticism. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The core studies are in DSC 520 Contemporary Design Issues, DSC 526 Visiting Designers, DSC 562 Methods in Visual Communication II, DSC 561 Methods in Visual Communication I, DSC 598 Internship in Teaching Design. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Visual Communication Design | College of Design, Tempe Campus, Department of Visual Communication Design, PO Box 872105, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 8947 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Taxation | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $29,004 a year | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | The MTax degree is designed to equip students with the highly technical and demanding skills required to provide tax and business advice in the private sector and to administer the tax laws in the public sector of the economy. The program prepares students for positions in taxation and provides graduate-level education for tax professionals who desire to enhance their skills.The 1-year program is a full-time program, which offers courses four evenings a week, with a day class, “Special Topics in Accounting” on selected Fridays. This is a lockstep program that is comprised of ten 3-credit hour courses spanning over three 10 week trimesters (9 months total). | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Multi Jurisdictional Tax 2, Family Tax Planning and Wealth Transfer Taxation, Multi Jurisdictional Tax 1, Tax Research and Property Transactions, Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders, Taxation of Pass-Through Entities, Taxes & Business Strategy, Shareholder Value Creation & Financial Statement Analysis, Performance Measurements and Advanced Managerial Accounting. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy, P.O. Box 873606, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3631 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Taxation | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,004 a year | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | The MTax degree is designed to equip students with the highly technical and demanding skills required to provide tax and business advice in the private sector and to administer the tax laws in the public sector of the economy. The program prepares students for positions in taxation and provides graduate-level education for tax professionals who desire to enhance their skills.The 1-year program is a full-time program, which offers courses four evenings a week, with a day class, “Special Topics in Accounting” on selected Fridays. This is a lockstep program that is comprised of ten 3-credit hour courses spanning over three 10 week trimesters (9 months total). | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Multi Jurisdictional Tax 2, Family Tax Planning and Wealth Transfer Taxation, Multi Jurisdictional Tax 1, Tax Research and Property Transactions, Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders, Taxation of Pass-Through Entities, Taxes & Business Strategy, Shareholder Value Creation & Financial Statement Analysis, Performance Measurements and Advanced Managerial Accounting. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy, P.O. Box 873606, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3631 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | Applicant must have a grade point average of "B" (3.00) or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree, and the recommendation of the department or the academic unit in which the student plans to study. International students must submit a TOEFL score of at least 600, 250 computer-based, 100 Internet-based, or an IELTS score of 6.5 or above before admission is considered. | Masters | Arizona State University | Modules include: LIN 500 Research Methods, LIN 510 English Linguistics, LIN 520 Theories Underlying the Acquisition of English as a Second Language, LIN 521 Methods of Teaching English as a Second Language, LIN 593 Applied Project. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Urban Design | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | The Master of Urban Design is a multidisciplinary program in the College of Design. The curriculum draws from the disciplines of architecture, landscape architecture, law, civil engineering, planning, public programs, real estate development, and the first School of Sustainability in the United States. The program leverages its local conditions (rapidly urbanizing metropolis, arid climate, New American University) toward the development of responsible global initiatives and innovative design strategies for urban environments. The curriculum is built around the analysis and understanding of contemporary urban conditions specific to rapidly urbanizing and arid regions of the world. Students are encouraged to pursue a joint degree with the school’s Master of Science in Building Design | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, PO Box 871605, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Urban and Environmental Planning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | The Master of Urban and Environmental Planning (MUEP) is accredited by the Planning Accreditation Board . It is an interdisciplinary, professional degree designed to prepare students for leadership roles in planning in the public and private sectors. The curriculum includes a common core of required courses which provide linkage between knowledge and practice and fundamental theories and skills. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of specialization are in Community and Urban Development, Environmental Planning, International Planning,Transportation Planning. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning, PO Box 872005, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7167 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Urban and Environmental Planning - Community and Urban Development | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | This specialization provides students with knowledge and skills in areas such as housing, historic preservation, economic and community development, urban design, public policy analysis, transportation, and land use planning. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning, PO Box 872005, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7167 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Urban and Environmental Planning - Environmental Planning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | This specialization provides students with knowledge and skills in such areas as sustainable design, environmental resources, planning growth management, environmental policy analysis, open space design, and conservation.This specialization prepares students to become effective professionals who practice an integrated approach to addressing environmental issues affecting cities and regions in the US and other countries. The set of courses include a survey course on Environmental Planning, Water Law for Planners, International Environmental and Conservation Policy, Planning for Sustainable Communities, Environmental Impact Assessment and Sustainable Transportation, among others. Studies in this area focus on recognizing the confl icts that characterize the interaction between growth and environmental protection. The focus is on acquiring the knowledge to employ planning approaches and tools in decision making and plans. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning, PO Box 872005, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7167 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Urban and Environmental Planning - International Planning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | This specialization focuses on how to incorporate an understanding of distinct cultural, socioeconomic, and political environments into plans and policies and how to achieve social equity and efficiency through planning. Study in this area focuses on comparative planning issues and practices in developing countries (particularly in Asia and Latin America) and on their implications for regional development, urban growth, environmental protection, and social and economic justice. Students learn to recognize the global forces shaping the development patterns of these countries and their interface with immigration, multiculturalism, and internationalization of cities of industrialized nations, particularly in the US Southwest. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning, PO Box 872005, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7167 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Urban and Environmental Planning - International Planning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | This specialization focuses on how to incorporate an understanding of distinct cultural, socioeconomic, and political environments into plans and policies and how to achieve social equity and efficiency through planning. Study in this area focuses on comparative planning issues and practices in developing countries (particularly in Asia and Latin America) and on their implications for regional development, urban growth, environmental protection, and social and economic justice. Students learn to recognize the global forces shaping the development patterns of these countries and their interface with immigration, multiculturalism, and internationalization of cities of industrialized nations, particularly in the US Southwest. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning, PO Box 872005, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7167 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master of Urban and Environmental Planning - International Planning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | Transportation has emerged as one of the highest priority issues for policy makers, employers, and residents of all large metropolitan areas in the US. The challenges of transportation planning in metropolitan Phoenix are especially unique given the high rate of urban expansion together with relatively few transportation options and a robust population and job growth. The Phoenix climate also poses another set of challenges to transportation planning in the region. The transportation specialization offered in the School of Planning refl ects pressing issues in the Phoenix area and the strengths of the current faculty. These issues include Transportation and the environment: relating to environmental sensitivity, environmental justice, NEPA requirements, air and water quality, and shipment of hazardous waste. Nonmotorized transportation in a safe, livable environment: involving pedestrian and bicycle transportation, responsive urban design, walking and public health, and pedestrian and bicycle safety. Public transportation: public transit innovations for low-density regions, advanced transit vehicle technologies and system planning approaches, transit-oriented development. Transportation, economic development, and border issues: involving transportation interface and sustainable development, potential for economic development, transitoriented development, and issues with travel over the US-Mexican border. International perspectives on transportation innovations in public transit, road pricing, and transit-oriented development; issues and innovations from developing countries; transportation within the development process. Transportation and special population groups: involving transportation and safety issues associated with older drivers and pedestrians, human factors and driver training, transportation impacts on social equity, and the distribution of benefi ts and costs of transportation. imulation and modeling of transportation investments and travel behavior: understanding possible impacts of transportation investments such as light rail on household location choices, simulating traffic movements with travel models, and exploring transportation and land-use connections at local and regional levels. |
Admission to all MasterAdmission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning | College of Design, Tempe Campus, School of Planning, PO Box 872005, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7167 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master's of Science in Biology and Society - Bioethics, Policy, and Law Track | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program is richly interdisciplinary, drawing from biology, history and philosophy of science, religious studies, history, philosophy, political science, justice studies, nursing, law, health administration of policy, anthropology and other disciplines to develop skills for analyzing and addressing the problems where biology intersects with society. The program tailors individual programs of study to individual needs and interests, with a solid grounding in the life and related sciences and with rigorous analytical and multi-disciplinary education. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master's of Science in Biology and Society - History and Philosophy of Science Track | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program is richly interdisciplinary, drawing from biology, history and philosophy of science, religious studies, history, philosophy, political science, justice studies, nursing, law, health administration of policy, anthropology and other disciplines to develop skills for analyzing and addressing the problems where biology intersects with society. The program tailors individual programs of study to individual needs and interests, with a solid grounding in the life and related sciences and with rigorous analytical and multi-disciplinary education. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Masters in Journalism and Mass Communication | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus | The 15-month, full-time professional program is unique in scope, focus and intensity. It begins with immersion in the journalistic skills, values and principles embodied by Walter Cronkite, the school’s guiding light for the past three decades. But it also is designed with the future in mind. Students learn how to navigate a dramatically different 21st-century media environment through classes and a symposium specifically focused on the future of journalism. And they are able to apply that knowledge through an intensive, practical experience in one of the school’s signature professional programs. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus, Stauffer Hall A 231, P.O. Box 871305, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1796 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Masters in Liberal Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | The Master of Liberal Studies offers students interested in a multidisciplinary approach to human ideas and values an opportunity to expand their liberal arts background. The program is intended for students seeking a graduate degree that explores the integration of the humanities with political, religious, social, and scientific questions within their cultural contexts. The program connects students to the entire College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and integrates the disciplines. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Masters in Passing | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Students who are enrolled in the MAE PhD program and who do not have a previously earned MS degree may apply for a Masters in Passing (MIP) upon completion of 30 hours of appropriate graduate coursework. Contact the Department’s graduate programs personnel for additional information. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Masters of Advanced Study in Transborder Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | This program is designed for the post-baccalaureate professional who seeks training in the areas of 1) Transborder Media and Expressive Culture (TMEC) which provides students with an interdisciplinary understanding of how representation, interpretation and language shape, and are shaped by, Chicana/o, Mexican, and Latina/o culture in a transborder context; and 2) Transborder Migration, Health and Applied Social Policy (TMHASP) which provides students with theoretical and applied frameworks for understanding border communities in the areas of migration, health, education, environment, and other areas affecting social development. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5091 | The Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies is a center of research, learning, training and application that seeks to enhance the intellectual, educational and professional opportunities of Mexican-origin and other Latino populations. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Master’s in Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | The program is administered through the College of Education and students interested in pursuing this degree should contact its admissions office. Students in the M.Ed. program have opportunities to take an organized program of study within History and should work closely with the Department’s History-Education coordinator, Professor Linda Sargent-Wood, to select courses and identify a specific faculty advisor in History. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | PH.D. in Industrial Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering | The overall educational objective of the program is to improve each student's ability to understand, analyze, resolve problems and perform original research. Industrial engineers must develop qualitative and quantitative abilities to guide the design and operation of complete organizations. | Applicant must have completed a minimum of 12 credit hours of calculus mathematics with a grade of "C" (2.00) or higher. Additionally, the following prerequisite ASU courses will be evaluated in the student's transcripts to see if the student has met the minimum admission requirements: SE 110 Principles of Programming with Java; CSE 205 Concepts of Computer Science and Date Structures; IEE 380 Probability and Statistics for Engineering Problem Solving; IEE 385 Engineering Statistics with Probability; IEE 376 Operations Research Deterministic Techniques/Applications; and MAT 242 Linear Algebra. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 875906, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3185 | The Department of Industrial, Systems and Operations Engineering at Arizona State University is ranked among the top 20 in the nation for both undergraduate and graduate programs. The mission of the department is to provide high quality, innovative industrial engineering education and research opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students and to encourage them to individualize their education through entrepreneurial and multidisciplinary courses and growth experiences, to foster discovery by faculty and students; to support the economic growth and enhancement of quality of life in Arizona and beyond; to provide an academic environment conducive to the best development of students, faculty and staff; and to promote the growth and effectiveness of the industrial engineering profession. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. In Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | The PhD degree is designed to give you a broad knowledge of theatre as well as special research, production, and teaching skills in theatre and performance of the Americas | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in Theatre and Performance of the Americas, Theatre for Youth. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. In Theatre and Performance of the Americas | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Through course work, seminars, and research and study opportunities, you work from diverse critical perspectives that mobilize thought across geographical and disciplinary borders. In the process, you develop skills to re-examine and interrogate the canon of theatre as text and as performance, expanding the traditional boundaries of theatre studies in two ways: a perspective that considers the shared histories and practices of theatre and performance in the Americas as central to an intervention in traditionally narrated histories and theories of theatre; and the methodologies of cultural and performance studies that accommodate other forms of embodied expression related to but distinct from formal theatrical expression. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THE 500 Research Methods, THE 505 Critical Theory and Performance, THE 591 Seminar, THE 691 Seminar, THE 700 Research Methods, THE 791 Seminar, THP 783 Fieldwork. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. In Theatre for Youth | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | The PhD concentration in Theatre for Youth is designed to give you a broad knowledge of theatre, as well as special research, production and teaching skills in Theatre for Youth. Studies include theatre history, theory and literature; the teaching of theatre to grades K-12 and university students; and the theories and principles governing how young people learn to create and respond to theatre and performance. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in THE 505 Critical Theory and Performance, THE 524 Advanced Studies in Theatre for Youth, THE 700 Research Methods, THE 791 Seminar, THP 411 Methods of Teaching Drama, THP 611 Research and Drama Education. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Music, Arizona State University, Box 870405, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5069 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Applied Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The program requires a total of 84 semester hours. There must be a minimum of 54 credit hours beyond the master’s level, including a minimum of 12 units of dissertation credit. All students in the program must satisfy 21 units of Foundations coursework.Applied Linguistics is interdisciplinary in nature, applicants may differ from one another with regard to their prior experience and preparation. For instance, while some applicants may have substantial prior training in core theoretical linguistics (Foundations), others may have considerable preparation in an area related to a supported concentration. A student’s academic advisor, in consultation with the Program Director and Program Oversight Committee, may address potential redundancies in a tudent’s program requirements with prior academic preparation by (1) allocating a maximum of 30 credit hours from previously completed graduate work (a master’s program, for instance) toward Applied Linguistics program requirements and/or (2) permitting the student to take additional elective courses in lieu of introductory courses covered in an undergraduate program. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in Foundations, Teaching Internship, Colloquia, Research Methods, Concentration/Research.Educational Linguistics, Breadth, Dissertation. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Applied Linguistics - Bilingualism | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The program requires a total of 84 semester hours. There must be a minimum of 54 credit hours beyond the master’s level, including a minimum of 12 units of dissertation credit. All students in the program must satisfy 21 units of Foundations coursework.Applied Linguistics is interdisciplinary in nature, applicants may differ from one another with regard to their prior experience and preparation. For instance, while some applicants may have substantial prior training in core theoretical linguistics (Foundations), others may have considerable preparation in an area related to a supported concentration. A student’s academic advisor, in consultation with the Program Director and Program Oversight Committee, may address potential redundancies in a tudent’s program requirements with prior academic preparation by (1) allocating a maximum of 30 credit hours from previously completed graduate work (a master’s program, for instance) toward Applied Linguistics program requirements and/or (2) permitting the student to take additional elective courses in lieu of introductory courses covered in an undergraduate program. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The students can have their electives in the field of Codes switching and grammatical Theory, Bilingual language acquisition, Bilingual educational models. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Applied Linguistics - Educational Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office | The program requires a total of 84 semester hours. There must be a minimum of 54 credit hours beyond the master’s level, including a minimum of 12 units of dissertation credit. All students in the program must satisfy 21 units of Foundations coursework.Applied Linguistics is interdisciplinary in nature, applicants may differ from one another with regard to their prior experience and preparation. For instance, while some applicants may have substantial prior training in core theoretical linguistics (Foundations), others may have considerable preparation in an area related to a supported concentration. A student’s academic advisor, in consultation with the Program Director and Program Oversight Committee, may address potential redundancies in a tudent’s program requirements with prior academic preparation by (1) allocating a maximum of 30 credit hours from previously completed graduate work (a master’s program, for instance) toward Applied Linguistics program requirements and/or (2) permitting the student to take additional elective courses in lieu of introductory courses covered in an undergraduate program. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The students can have their introduction to linguistics, language structure and acquisition, Phonology. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office, Arizona State University, Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Applied Linguistics - English as an International Language | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office | The program requires a total of 84 semester hours. There must be a minimum of 54 credit hours beyond the master’s level, including a minimum of 12 units of dissertation credit. All students in the program must satisfy 21 units of Foundations coursework.Applied Linguistics is interdisciplinary in nature, applicants may differ from one another with regard to their prior experience and preparation. For instance, while some applicants may have substantial prior training in core theoretical linguistics (Foundations), others may have considerable preparation in an area related to a supported concentration. A student’s academic advisor, in consultation with the Program Director and Program Oversight Committee, may address potential redundancies in a tudent’s program requirements with prior academic preparation by (1) allocating a maximum of 30 credit hours from previously completed graduate work (a master’s program, for instance) toward Applied Linguistics program requirements and/or (2) permitting the student to take additional elective courses in lieu of introductory courses covered in an undergraduate program. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The students can have their introduction to linguistics, language structure and acquisition, Phonology. Teaching internship, Research methods in Linguistics, Introduction to Quantitative methods, Multiple regression and correlation methods, methods and practices of Qualitative research. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office, Arizona State University, Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Applied Linguistics - Indigenous Language Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office | The program requires a total of 84 semester hours. There must be a minimum of 54 credit hours beyond the master’s level, including a minimum of 12 units of dissertation credit. All students in the program must satisfy 21 units of Foundations coursework.Applied Linguistics is interdisciplinary in nature, applicants may differ from one another with regard to their prior experience and preparation. For instance, while some applicants may have substantial prior training in core theoretical linguistics (Foundations), others may have considerable preparation in an area related to a supported concentration. A student’s academic advisor, in consultation with the Program Director and Program Oversight Committee, may address potential redundancies in a tudent’s program requirements with prior academic preparation by (1) allocating a maximum of 30 credit hours from previously completed graduate work (a master’s program, for instance) toward Applied Linguistics program requirements and/or (2) permitting the student to take additional elective courses in lieu of introductory courses covered in an undergraduate program. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The students can have their introduction to linguistics, language structure and acquisition, Phonology. Teaching internship, Research methods in Linguistics, Introduction to Quantitative methods, Multiple regression and correlation methods, methods and practices of Qualitative research, Sociolinguistics, Linear Modelling, Meta Analysis. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office, Arizona State University, Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Applied Linguistics - Language Planning and Policy | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office | The program requires a total of 84 semester hours. There must be a minimum of 54 credit hours beyond the master’s level, including a minimum of 12 units of dissertation credit. All students in the program must satisfy 21 units of Foundations coursework.Applied Linguistics is interdisciplinary in nature, applicants may differ from one another with regard to their prior experience and preparation. For instance, while some applicants may have substantial prior training in core theoretical linguistics (Foundations), others may have considerable preparation in an area related to a supported concentration. A student’s academic advisor, in consultation with the Program Director and Program Oversight Committee, may address potential redundancies in a tudent’s program requirements with prior academic preparation by (1) allocating a maximum of 30 credit hours from previously completed graduate work (a master’s program, for instance) toward Applied Linguistics program requirements and/or (2) permitting the student to take additional elective courses in lieu of introductory courses covered in an undergraduate program. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The students can have their introduction to linguistics, language structure and acquisition, Phonology. Teaching internship, Research methods in Linguistics, Introduction to Quantitative methods, Multiple regression and correlation methods, methods and practices of Qualitative research, Sociolinguistics, Linear Modelling, Meta Analysis. The Concentration are in Ethnography and Language Policy, Educational language policies. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, C&I Graduate Programs Office, Arizona State University, Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The School of Music in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University is one of the top music schools in the nation. Internationally recognized faculty, varied and technologically driven curricula and five outstanding performance facilities all contribute to its stature. The quality and comprehensiveness of the program is demonstrated by many graduates who are successful performers, composers, music therapists, conductors and teachers regionally, nationally and internationally. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Art Education | Full Time | Variable | US $38,356 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | The program has three full time faculty members and several faculty associates who mentor students in teaching, research and service areas of art. The program has an international reputation as a leading research center. In a survey of U.S. and Canadian graduate art education programs, the ASU program was among the top ten. | The students must have a Masterr's degree from an accredited college or university with a major of at least 45 semester hours in art, including 12 hours of art history and six hours of art education. You must have a GPA in undergraduate art education and course work during the junior/senior years of at least a 3.0. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $38,356 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | The PhD program, PhD in the History and Theory of Art, is a joint program offered through Arizona State University and the University of Arizona. Both programs require intense commitment to coursework. The art history faculty are dedicated to your success and are experts in the field. Take time to explore your options. | The students must have a Masterr's degree from an accredited college or university with a major of at least 45 semester hours in art, including 12 hours of art history and six hours of art education. You must have a GPA in undergraduate art education and course work during the junior/senior years of at least a 3.0. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $38,356 a year | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | The students must have a Masterr's degree from an accredited college or university with a major of at least 45 semester hours in art, including 12 hours of art history and six hours of art education. You must have a GPA in undergraduate art education and course work during the junior/senior years of at least a 3.0. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.In addition, scores from the Graduate Record Examination (minimum score of 1080 Verbal and Quantitative combined) or Miller Analogies Test (minimum score 45) are required. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art | Katherine K Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, School of Art, PO Box 871505, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3468 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment-style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Counseling Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | The doctoral program in Counseling Psychology closely adheres to the scientist-practitioner training model in preparing graduates for employment in academic and/or service delivery settings. Although faculty interests are diverse, there is a common emphasis on empirical data as the basis for professional practice. The program faculty has endorsed the Multicultural Counseling Competencies of the American Counseling Association and the Guidelines on Multicultural Education, Training, Research, Practice, and Organizational Change for Psychologists and Guidelines for Psychotherapy with Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Clients of the American Psychological Association. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in CPY 677 Advanced Counseling, CPY 678 Supervision Seminar, CPY 651 Personality Assessment, CPY 691 Prevention & Consultation, CPY 691 Professional Development. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The Doctor of Philosophy degree is the highest University award, conferred on candidates who demonstrate ability as scholars and original researchers. It is granted upon evidence of excellence in research and the demonstration of independent, creative scholarship culminating in a dissertation.The Ph.D. program in Curriculum and Instruction enables highly select students of demonstrated ability, industry, and motivation to serve as apprentices to mentors who are established scholars in their fields of study. Under the supervision of a faculty mentor, the students engage in a period of extensive study and investigation that culminates in the demonstrations of expertise, creativity and originality through independent research. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in Art Education, Curriculum Studies, Early Childhood, English Education, Exercise & Wellness, Language & Literacy, Math Education, Physical Education, Science Education, Special Education. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Art Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The concentration in art education in the Interdisciplinary Ph.D. Program in Curriculum and Instruction at Arizona State University provides opportunities for research and study in one or more of the following areas: Transfer in thematic inquiry-based instruction in art education, qualitative research, multiple methodologies in research, the understanding of art, on-line based instruction, visual culture studies, international issues in art education, multicultural issues, developmental graphic stages of children’s art, diversity and equality issues in art education, and other art education issues. The resources in the Herberger College of Fine Arts, and the ASU Art Museum further enrich our doctoral students. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in DCI 701 Curriculum Theory and Practice, DCI 702 Interdisciplinary Research Seminar in Curriculum and Instruction Professional, COE 502 Introduction to Quantitative Methods, COE 503 Introduction to Qualitative Methods, DCI 691 Narrative Research in Education, DCI 791 Discourse Analysis. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Curriculum Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The Interdisciplinary Curriculum Studies Ph.D. Program in the Division of Curriculum and Instruction of the College of Education at Arizona State University is designed to be highly experiential in endeavor that addresses distinct and important educational issues. The issues on which Curriculum Studies focuses transcend the various areas of educational inquiry as they impact upon the design, implementation, and evaluation of education programs. These issues tend to be holistic and transdisciplinary, concerned with interrelationships of various established areas. Specific questions considered include: What should be taught in schools? Why should it be taught? To whom should it be taught? What does it mean to be an educated person? Curriculum inquirers also investigate the relationship between curriculum theory and educational practice and the relationship between school programs and the contours of the society and cultures in which schools are located. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in DCI 701 Curriculum Theory and Practice, DCI 702 Interdisciplinary Research Seminar in Curriculum and Instruction Professional nquiry and Analysis, COE 502 Introduction to Quantitative Methods, COE 503 Introduction to Qualitative Methods, DCI 691 Narrative Research in Education, DCI 791 Discourse Analysis,DCI 691 Perspectives on Curriculum, DCI 691 Critical Theory and Curriculum, DCI 691 Curriculum Change: Implementation and Evaluation, SPF 691 Cultural Studies in Education, SPF 691 Social and Historical Foundations of American Education, DCI 691 Special Topics in Curriculum. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of Art in the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University provides an environment where students can develop and hone their artistic skills, have the freedom to grow aesthetically and opportunities to stretch their limits. The School of Art is one of the largest and most respected public art schools in the country, offering degrees in fine arts, art education and art history. Course structures encourage students to develop programs of study that explore a range of artistic specialties. This provides the opportunity to grow more freely as an artist, exploring creativity fully while developing artistic identity. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Early Childhood | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The field includes the ability to communicate and work with parents and other adults and agencies that serve young children. The field requires professionals who can (1) prepare educators and researchers to provide programs and services that are appropriate for young children from diverse backgrounds, and (2) conduct research on the range of issues influencing young children’s education and well-being. The Early Childhood Education program is a part of the Division of Curriculum and Instruction within the Mary Lou Fulton College of Education. The PhD Concentration in Early Childhood Education is an integral part of the Interdisciplinary PhD Degree in Curriculum and Instruction, and is a major area of concentration (30 semester hours minimum) within the professional focus component of the Program of Study. The goals of the doctoral program in Early Childhood Education are to mentor scholars who Generate research that will influence policy and practice regarding the care and education of young, Children in multiple contexts.Plan and implement teacher education and professional development programs and related research. Serve as leaders in the field of Early Childhood Education. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in Early Childhood Education Concentration, Curriculum and Instruction, Inquiry and Analysis, Internships, Cognate Study, Dissertation and Independent Research. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - English Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The Interdisciplinary English Education Ph.D. Program is administered through the Division of Curriculum and Instruction with classes in both the College of Education and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Arizona State University. The program produces teacher trainers and researchers in English education. Students receive training and mentoring in five related disciplines: linguistics, second language teaching, rhetoric and composition, research techniques, and the nature of learning. In addition to core requirements, students are involved in seminars and internships. The program produces teacher trainers and researchers in English Education through coursework and mentoring in such areas as Philosophy and sociology of American education including such current issues as national and state standards and high stakes testing. English linguistics and issues concerning usage and the teaching of grammar. Subject matter of special interest to secondary level teachers, e.g. literature that appeals to adolescents and will help them develop into lifelong readers, and the development of young people’s writing and reading skills for a variety of purposes. he development of critical skills in relation to the Internet and other mass media. Techniques of teaching and political and education issues related to multi-cultural ism and the teaching of English as a second language. Skills and techniques needed to conduct and report on research as well as to understand other people’s research. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in English Department, Cognate Study, College of Education, Dissertation. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Exercise and Wellness | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The Exercise and Wellness Concentration in the Interdisciplinary Curriculum and Instruction Ph.D. Program at Arizona State University prepares scholars and teachers for careers in academia and other appropriate settings. The focus of the program is on promoting healthy living among people of all ages and abilities. Now more than ever, evidence shows that healthy lifestyles are effective in reducing risks of chronic disease and improving quality of life. Good health, including wellness and sound physical fitness, are goals that are attainable by most people if they adhere to a healthy lifestyle.The philosophy of the Exercise and Wellness program is that doctoral students should be offered a graduate experience that integrates formal course work, independent and varied research, teaching internships, and service opportunities. The program goal is preparing independent and effective scholars and professionals who can translate research into practice. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The Curriculum In Instruction Core are in DCI 701 Curriculum Theory and Practice, DCI 702 Interdisciplinary Research Seminar in Curriculum and Instruction, EXW 542 Health Promotion, EXW 544 Fitness/Wellness Management, EXW 575 Teaching Lifetime Fitness, EXW 791 Exercise and Wellness Seminar, EXW 799 Research, EXW 591 S: Research Seminar, EXW 598 Stress Management, Health Psychology, EXW 536 Physiology of Physical Activity and Chronic Disease, COE 502 Introduction to Quantitative Methods, COE 503 Introduction to Qualitative Methods, EXW 640 ANOVA, EXW 643 Correlation, Regression, Multivariate Analyses, EXW 700 Research Methods, EXW 642 Exercise Epidemiology, EXW 784 Research Internship, EXW 784 College Teaching Internship. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Language and Literacy | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The concentration in Language and Literacy in the Interdisciplinary Ph.D. Program in Curriculum and Instruction at Arizona State University provides opportunities for research and study in one or more of the following: Language and literacy education, educational linguistics, bilingualism, second language acquisition, language diversity, language and literacy education, children's literature, classroom discourse analysis, gender and literacy, emergent literacy, adolescent literacy, biliteracy, language policy, and other language education topics.The Language and Literacy Ph.D. Program is designed to develop scholars in language education. The goals of the program are to develop students' ability to critically analyze and conduct research in their area of specialization; an prepare students to carry out research, teaching, and service activities associated with faculty positions at institutions of higher education and other professional positions. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in Thirty (30) semester hours are required pertaining to language and literacy education, children's literature, gender and literacy, emergent literacy, adolescent literature, classroom discourse analysis, educational linguistics, bilingualism and bilingual education, second language learning, language policy, biliteracy, or other language education topics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The concentration in Mathematics Education provides opportunities for research in the teaching and learning of mathematics K-16. The program focuses on research on students' mathematical thinking, the design and assessment of learning and teaching environments, teacher professional development, the design and evaluation of technologies for mathematics learning, and social, political, and equity concerns for mathematics learning. Program mentors come from the Mary Lou Fulton College of Education and the Mathematics & Statistics Department in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The goals of this interdisciplinary Ph.D. program in Mathematics Education are to prepare students to critically analyze and conduct research in the field of mathematics education, prepare students to understand the international, national, state, and local contexts for the teaching and learning of mathematics; and prepare students to teach and take on leadership roles in institutions of higher education related to mathematics education. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of concentration are in Mathematics Education Concentration, Inquiry and Analysis, Curriculum and Instruction Core Requirements, Cognate Study, Internships, Dissertation and Independent Research. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Physical Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The purpose of this program is to produce scholars who: (a) can enhance the knowledge base underlying curriculum and instruction in a variety of specializations, including areas of content as well as target populations; (b) have expertise in all levels of instruction, in the design, implementation, and valuation of teacher preparation programs; and (c) can provide leadership to the study of curriculum &instruction by conducting research in physical ducation.The curriculum provides students with a core set of courses, seminars, internships, and research experiences. Each student's program of study builds upon core requirements and is uniquely designed around individual interests, in consultation with the student's advisor. An important feature of the program in Physical Education is that students are encouraged to draw on the scholarly resources of the entire university and develop a cross-disciplinary program of study that includes courses from several departments. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The Area of Concentration are in Thirty (30) semester hours pertaining to physical education. While the majority of these hours must be spent in physical education, a sizable proportion may include coursework in closely related fields such as education, exercise and wellness, and kinesiology. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The concentration in Science Education in the Interdisciplinary Ph.D. Program in Curriculum and Instruction at Arizona State University provides opportunities for research and study in the teaching and learning of science in the middle school, high school and higher education. Candidates may concentrate in the study of students' science thinking, the design of learning and teaching environments, and the development and application of technologies for science learning.The Science Education Ph.D. Program is designed to develop students expertise in research on the teaching and learning of science. The goals of the program are to prepare students to critically analyze and conduct research in their area of specialization; prepare students to work in collaborative, interdisciplinary work; and prepare students to carry out research, teaching, and service activities associated with faculty positions at institutions of higher education and other professional positions. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The Area of Concentration are in Thirty (30) semester hours pertaining to science education. While the majority of these hours must be spent in science education, a sizable proportion may include coursework in closely related fields such as science education, human development, educational technology, and graduate science. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Curriculum and Instruction - Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | This Special Education Program description is intended to provide detailed information about doctoral study in Special Education at Arizona State University so that potential applicants can learn about the admission process and program requirements. To improve the quality of our program, we regularly update the information and degree requirements contained herein. Consequently, one might find occasional incongruities between this and other published materials. In such cases one should assume that the latest version of the program description provides the most accurate information. Doctoral students are given the option of adhering to the degree requirements contained in the program description current at the time of their acceptance into our program or following the guidelines depicted in a later edition. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Material Science | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | This field draws upon a fundamental base of knowledge, with underpinnings in Physics, Chemistry and Engineering, and extends that knowledge to address a broad range of materials-driven challenges, such as energy-efficiency, sustainability, functional nano structures, electronic materials, bio-materials, polymers, etc. In this sense, Materials Science is intrinsically interdisciplinary in nature. Our curriculum reflects this nature, with a set of 4 required courses in core subjects: Structure and Properties of Materials; Advanced Thermodynamics; Kinetics and Phase Transformations and Physics of Materials. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.50 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Materials, PO Box 878706, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 9311 | The vision of the School of Materials is to evolve and leverage the Flexible Display Center’s world class flexible display capabilities, in concert with other ASU synergistic research, to achieve a leadership position in the emerging flexible electronics industry and establish ASU as a high value government and industry resource. The mission is to advance full color, video rate, flexible display technology and catalyze development of a vibrant flexible display and flexible electronics industry to produce integrated electronic systems with advanced functionality. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph. D. in Rhetoric Composition and Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | The. Ph.D. concentration in Rhetoric/Composition and Linguistics promotes the study of the production, distribution and interpretation of oral and written texts. It focuses on rhetorical and linguistic structures and functions within the texts and on the internal and external factors involved in the creation of these texts. Requirements are designed to encourage a full understanding of theoretical and applied aspects of both rhetoric/composition and linguistics and their intersection. Flexibility in requirements makes it possible for students to pursue those aspects of the disciplines which interest them the most. Courses explore both historical and current theoretical approaches. The program prepares students for entrance into the field as teachers, scholars and professionals. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The Graduate College requires a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last two years of work leading to the bachelor's degree and the recommendation of the academic unit in which the applicant plans to study. In addition, the Department of English requires that applicants have at least a 3.5 grade point average in all previous graduate work. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. The GRE General test is required. The GRE Subject test (literature) is optional. Normally, students should achieve a score in the 85th percentile or higher on the Verbal Aptitude section. (Institutional Code = 4007). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The Ph.D. is a total of 84 hours. In general, a student with an appropriate master's degree must complete a minimum of 54 semester hours of approved graduate work, which includes 12 hours of dissertation. Research hours may be used towards coursework in consultation with the advisor. A student without an appropriate master's degree usually must complete 84 hours of work at ASU. At the advisor’s discretion, students may include up to 12 hours of appropriate, graduate-level coursework undertaken at another university, and not previously counted towards any other degree. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of English, Arizona State University, P O Box 870302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3168 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D in Computer Science and Engineering - Art Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The purpose of the Computer Science/AME concentration is to train hybrid engineering-arts graduates ho get their inspiration from the arts and their methodology from computer science and engineering. he students will specialize in transdisciplinary media development. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in AME 598 Signal Processing for Media Arts, AME 598 Multimedia Systems, AME 598 Motion Capture and Analysis , AME 598 Image Understanding, AME 598 Multimodal Pattern Analysis, AME 598 Multimodal Interfaces and Interactive Technologies, AME 598 Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Perception and Cognition for Hybrid Environments, AME 598 History and Analysis of Media Arts/Arts & Technology, AME 598 Computational Models for Media and Arts, AME 598 Movement as Language, AME 598 Media Theory, AME 598 Sound Analysis for Multimodal Environments, AME 598 Physical Computing, AME 598 Multisensor Models/Multimodal Data Fusion, AME 598 Multimodal Context Models, AME 598 Dynamic User-Centered Modeling and Design, AME 598 Adaptive Media, AME 598 Digital Graphics and Animation for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Computer Music for Multimodal Systems, AME 598 Mediated Biosystems, AME 598 Media Performance Ensemble, AME 598 Kinesiology for Consciousness, AME 598 Consciousness in Movement, AME 598 Active Learning in Mediated Environments. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The English department at Arizona State University is robust and unique precisely because we bring together every part of English studies in one space. Our interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary scholarship and teaching allow us to make valuable contributions to multidisciplinary initiatives in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. This department’s expressed mission is to study, create and teach spoken, written, visual and digital communication practices and texts ranging from the imaginative to the functional in civic, social, personal, academic and professional communities and to mentor others to do likewise. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D in Geological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | The Doctor of Philosophy in Geology degree is granted upon evidence of excellence in research and the demonstration of independent, creative scholarship culminating in a dissertation. The student will complete at least eighty-four (84) semester hours of graduate credit (including work performed in meeting the requirements of the M.S. degree). Graduate courses are defined as courses numbered 400 or greater. At least 25 hours of this total will consist of formal course work other than Research and Dissertation. The course of study should be designed to serve the individual needs of the student, with due attention to breadth and depth of development. A cumulative average of "B+" (GPA=3.33) or better must be maintained at all times in graduate coursework approved by the Supervisory Committee on the Departmental Program of Study form, excluding Research, Reading and Conference, Thesis, and Dissertation credits. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration, ASU, PO Box 871404, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5081 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D in Transborder Studies | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | This program is designed to develop superior students in the scholarship and/or application of Transborder Studies. Students will begin with formal course work and move toward the development of independent research. Depending on their academic focus, they will study the central concepts, issues, and processes of transborder economy, polity, ecology, literature, artistic media, and social organization. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5091 | The Department of Transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies is a center of research, learning, training and application that seeks to enhance the intellectual, educational and professional opportunities of Mexican-origin and other Latino populations. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $21,000 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | This is a professional master's degree offered by the Chemical Engineering Program. It is designed to bridge the gap between knowledge of the engineering sciences and creative engineering practice. At the same time, it increases the depth and breadth of knowledge in selected areas of emphasis. As offered by the Department of Chemical Engineering, the professional master’s program is designed primarily for students who hold full-time jobs and attend university classes on a part-time basis. Although M.S.E. students are required to complete a research paper at the conclusion of their coursework, the research done for this paper is not at the same level as that required for a thesis via the Master of Science program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemical Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 876006, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3313 | The Department of Chemical Engineering is devoted to educating chemical engineers and conducting cutting edge research in chemical engineering and related fields. The department currently has 12 faculty, 10 post-doctoral researchers, 50 graduate students and 280 undergraduate students. Chemical engineering faculty members are committed to fully developing student’s potential by providing a unique and stimulating learning and research environment, exposing students to a diversity of viewpoints and teaching/learning styles, and preparing students to work in teams to solve real-world, multidisciplinary problems. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Human Communication | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication | Graduate study in the Hugh Downs School is directed toward advancing the understanding of message-related human behavior. Our programs provide students with training in communication theory, research methods, and specialization in one or more of our emphasis areas. Current areas of study within the major are intercultural communication and cultural studies, interpersonal communication, performance studies, organizational communication, and rhetorical studies and public communication. Dr. Sarah Tracy is the director of the PhD program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. Successful applicants at the PhD level generally post GRE scores (combined) of 1200 or higher and a writing score above 3.5.Successful applicants at the MA level score 1150 or higher (combined verbal and quantitative scores) and a writing score above 3.5.Students whose native language is not English should have scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) of at least 213 [computer based], 83 [iBT], or 600 [paper based]. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Introduction to Human Communication, Elements of Interpersonal Communication, Introduction to Communication Inquiry, Argumentation, Public Speaking, Small Group Communication, Introduction to Oral Interpretation, Introduction to Organizational Communication, Communication in Business and the Professions, Elements of Inter cultural Communication. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Hugh Downs School of Human Communication, Arizona State University, PO Box 871205, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5095 | The liberal arts and sciences are the foundational core of any higher education institution, and the Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is no exception. The college comprises more than 50 schools, departments, centers and institutes; it is not only the largest and most diverse college at ASU but also the intellectual heart of the university. Along with such traditional core departments as chemistry, English, physics, psychology and political science, the college has created a number of trans-disciplinary schools that facilitate the creation of new knowledge across disciplinary boundaries. Among these are the schools of Earth and Space Exploration, Human Evolution and Social Change, International Letters and Cultures, and Social and Family Dynamics. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Political Science - International Relations | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The IR subfield investigate a diverse set of issues in international security and international political economy, including comparative foreign policy; democracy and war; international order; insurgency and counter-insurgency; immigration; great power war; gender and race in international relations; terrorism; and sovereignty and the evolution of statecraft. The IR subfield is particularly strong in the area of IR methodology, and its faculty are leading contributors to the development and application of qualitative social inquiry. Faculty teaching and research interests include the Asia-Pacific region, South America, and the Middle East. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. Program in Biological Design | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This program is offered jointly with Ira A Fulton School of Engineering. The program seeks to develop a new type of scientist by training students in core disciplines related to biology while simultaneously preparing them to participate successfully in the interdisciplinary research teams of the future. The research emphasis is on projects that are use-inspired, contributing directly to solutions for important societal challenges. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Family and Human Development | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | The School of Social and Family Dynamics offers a degree program leading to the Doctor of Philosophy degree with a major in Family and Human Development . The Ph.D. in Family and Human Development degree prepares researchers with a focus on family processes, family relationships, and infant, child, and adolescent development. The Ph.D. program is designed for graduates to assume leadership roles as researchers and academicians in universities, or as directors in public or privately funded mental health agencies, industry, or government. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Marketing | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | The PhD program is for those students who want to become full-time professors at research-oriented universities. It is not intended for people who want to work in industry positions.All students complete a core curriculum, yet tailor their work to achieve personal goals. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3431 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Media Arts and Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | MAS Ph.D. students train in translating, transporting and combining knowledge across disciplines for the development of innovative experiential media systems and accompanying theoretical models. The degree structure includes transdisciplinary media courses through AME, elective-course credits relating to the student’s research interests and substantial research and dissertation hours devoted to collaborative research within the AME network. Active participation in the AME interdisciplinary research teams allows MAS Ph.D. students to gain and contribute expertise in knowledge fusion. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | School Psychology is a doctoral level program in the Division of Psychology in Education. Students earn the Doctor of Philosophy degree (PhD) in Educational Psychology with a concentration in School Psychology. The goal of the program is the development of doctoral level scientist-practitioners who have strong research and applied skills and who bring an empirical problem solving perspective to their work. Students are prepared for careers as psychologists in schools, other educationally related settings, and universities. Because all program students complete core courses in several areas of psychology and education along with supervised training, they are eligible for certification by state education agencies and are academically eligible to take the national examinations for independent practice in psychology and national certification as school psychologists. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Accountancy | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | The doctoral program of study consists of a minimum of 84 semester hours of graduate-level course work beyond the bachelor's degree. Approved master-degree-level course work up to 30 hours beyond deficiency and prerequisite courses may be included. A minimum of 30 hours of doctoral course work and 24 hours of dissertation and/or research are required to be taken at Arizona State University, Tempe campus. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Advanced Auditing, Information Security, Advanced Financial Accounting, Forensic Accounting, Controls Analysis and Non Profit Accounting, Performance Measurement and Advanced Managerial Accounting, Shareholder Value Creation & Financial Statement Analysis, Taxes and Business Strategy, Professional Accounting Research. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, School of Accountancy, P.O. Box 873606, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3631 | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Aerospace Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | The PhD degree is directed toward original research; writing and defending a dissertation that describes an original contribution within the chosen discipline is required. Candidates for the PhD degree must complete a minimum of 84 semester hours of course and dissertation work distributed below. Thirty (30) credit hours of appropriate coursework from a previously earned master’s degree may be applied toward the total credit hours; at least fifty-four (54) hours must be taken at Arizona State University. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change is an excellent choice for students wanting to pursue a Ph.D. in the traditional fields of anthropology (socio-cultural anthropology, linguistics, physical anthropology, or archaeology). It is also an ideal environment for students who want to combine these approaches and other disciplines to explore specific issues or research questions. Our flexible graduate curricula are designed to encourage students to design innovative programs of study to pursue their interests, while receiving broad training in key areas. ASU's anthropology faculty actively engage with faculty in other disciplines, including environmental economics, formal modeling, urban planning, science and technology studies, and sociology. The school offers many exciting hands-on learning opportunities through laboratories and field-based research that focus on finding ancient human fossils; unearthing buried cities, villages, and hunter-gatherer camps; understanding the development of language; appreciating the cultures of such diverse areas as Southeast Asia, Latin America, and the Mediterranean Basin; disease and medicine; human-environmental interactions; and many other topics that explore humans of the past and present. Students without a master’s degree apply to Phase I of the program, where they will receive a master’s degree in passing. During this phase, students develop a Research Skills Portfolio and present one of their papers in a school-wide research symposium. A formal evaluation is then completed to determine the student’s readiness to enter Phase II of the program. Students with an M.A. in anthropology or related field begin in Phase II of the Ph.D. program where they receive training to become expert scholars able to contribute not only to their chosen field, but to finding solutions to humankind’s greatest challenges. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics for the Life and Social Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The Applied Mathematics for the Life and Social Sciences doctoral degree is designed especially for students who want to make innovative and far reaching scientific contributions to the global challenges of our time.Students learn a way of thinking that builds upon foundations established in mathematical epidemiology, population dynamics, ecology, genomics, bioinformatics, mathematical analysis, computational sciences and the social science fields. They experience real interdisciplinary learning that interweaves theory, applications, and analytical approaches with cross-disciplinary and international collaboration. Students with strong and potentially diverse scientific and cultural backgrounds will find a natural home in this field. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The story of our ancestors—how they lived, formed societies, and interacted with each other and their environment—is one of the greatest mysteries of our existence. By uncovering, documenting, and analyzing their remains, archaeologists help fill in the earliest pages of our history, not only to better understand our past and who we are today, but to help us understand the long-term consequences of our actions for future generations. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Astrophysics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | The Ph.D. degree will consist of a minimum of 84 semester hours of work beyond the bachelor’s level. The program is designed to develop creative scholarship and prepare students for professional careers in astrophysics, astronomy or related fields. Students may be admitted into the program with a bachelors or master degree in a related field. Up to 30 credit hours of master level work in a related field can be accepted towards the fulfillment of the Ph.D. requirements. The program of study for the Ph.D. will be selected with the recommendation of the student's supervisory committee, and should include sufficient coursework to assure mastery of fields such as classical mechanics, quantum mechanics, statistical physics, electrodynamics, and/or other core subjects in addition to those covered in the six-course core AST sequence. Each program of study must include 24 semester hours of a combination of Research and Dissertation. ASU, Division of Graduate Studies policies and procedures must also be met for admission to the program as well as for fulfilling the requirements of the degree. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Astrophysics, Astrobiology, Stars and Interstellar Medium, Stars and Interstellar Medium, Galaxies and Cosmology. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Earth and Space Exploration, ASU, PO Box 871404, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5081 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Behavioral Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | This program provides a wide and extensive range of instruction and guidance in the domain of behavioral neuroscience. Graduate students are trained in: theoretical and applied bases of empirical questions; appropriate approaches to take in their research; important factors in research design; techniques for successful execution of experiments; applications of various types of data analyses. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology, PO BOX 871104, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7598 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | No | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Bio - Chemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $2,733 per semester | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The Ph.D. degree can be completed in four years; however, more time may be needed depending on the esearch project. According to the Graduate College requirements, the Ph.D. degree must be completed ithin five years after passing the Comprehensive Examination. The total number of years from the eginning the program to the completion of the degree can not exceed ten consecutive years. This count egins from the first course listed on the Program of Study and includes transfer courses and those taken s graduate non-degree. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Bio Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The School of Earth and Space Exploration was launched in July, 2006 and it is a bold initiative to combine science and engineering research and education in order to achieve a better understanding of the universe. At present, the School unites earth and planetary scientists with astronomers, and has strong collaborative ties with several other academic units at ASU, especially the Fulton School of Engineering. Through an aggressive program of expansion, the faculty will grow dramatically over the next few years. While maintaining core strengths and developing new trans-disciplinary linkages among the sciences, the school will broaden the scope to include engineering faculty with research interests in the development and deployment of scientific instrumentation on Earth and in space. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Bioarchaeology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The center is housed in newly renovated, state-of-the-art facilities within the School of Human Evolution and Social Change and is home to an impressive number of outstanding bioarchaeologists, including Brenda Baker, Jane Buikstra, Chris Carr, Kelly Knudson, Gary Schwartz, Rachel Scott, Katherine Spielmann, Christopher Stojanowski, and Anne Stone, who work with numerous faculty from other units whose research intersects with those of the center's anthropology scholars. Our goal is to focus students' attention on important questions and problems early in their graduate career, and to provide them with the best tools to develop effective research designs. By bringing anthropological understanding of the past to contemporary problems, the center provides important insights to efforts that promote global health and seek to preserve cultural heritages, endangered species and threatened environments. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Bioengineering | Full Time | Variable | US $21,000 a year | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Candidacy to the Ph.D. program is earned by passing the comprehensive examination and presenting a prospectus after obtaining regular or provisional admission. The Master of Science degree may be bypassed. The degree requires 84 semester hours beyond the Bachelor's degree including research and dissertation. An oral defense of the dissertation is required following the completion of the student's research. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Masters | Arizona State University | The Core Courses are in BME 598 ST Advanced Biomaterials: Principles and Applications, BME 598 ST Advanced Physiology for Engineers, BME 598 ST Analytical and Diagnostic Instrumentation in Bioengineering, BME 598 ST Modeling and Simulation of Physiological Systems, BME 598 ST Molecular and Cellular Biology for Engineers, the Electives are in Mathematical electives, General electives1, Bioengineering electives2, Bioengineering seminar, Research and Dissertation, BME 792 Research3, BME 799 Dissertation. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program of study is planned by the student and the supervisory committee, consisting of a major professor and four additional faculty members. The program is tailored to the needs of the individual student, but must reflect breadth in coursework in 3 areas one major and 2 minor subdisciplines behavior, biology education, cellular and molecular biology, developmental biology, ecology, genetics, evolution, and physiology. In general, Ph.D. degree students should expect to devote to the program of study the equivalent of at least three academic years 84 semester hours beyond the bachelor's degree. A minimum of 84 semester hours is required; exactly 12 hours of BIO 799 Dissertation should be listed on the formal program of study. Of the 84 semester hours, at least 54 hours of the approved Ph.D. program must be completed after admission to a Ph.D. program at ASU. Students may not apply credit hours earned for a doctoral degree previously awarded at ASU or another institution toward their current ASU doctoral degree. However, at the individual academic units discretion, the student may apply up to 30 semester hours from a previously awarded master's degree toward their doctoral program of study. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.80th Percentile if applicant has MS. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Biomedical Informatics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | The Ph.D. program subsumes the requirements of the M.S. core curriculum but also requires the students to select an area of concentration of study in order to prepare graduates to assume advanced informatics research-and-development and leadership roles. The core program features five courses specifically designed to bring together clinicians, biological scientists, and informatics researchers to apply new developments in informatics theory to clinical or biological practice. While foundational coursework for Ph.D. students does not differ significantly from that of M.S. students, the added concentration courses in an area of focus and emphasis on independent research are intended to place these students at the leading edge of the field. We expect applicants to the Ph.D. program to have similar backgrounds to applicants for the M.S. degree, but they must also show evidence of a strong commitment to and potential for research. | An applicant to the Ph.D. program in Biomedical Informatics should have earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, Biology, Physiology, Psychology, Nursing, Statistics, Engineering, a clinical discipline (ie. medicine), or a related field. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in BMI 501 Introduction to Biomedical Informatics, BMI 502 Foundations of Biomedical Informatics Methods I, BMI 505 Foundations of Biomedical Informatics Methods II, BMI 515 Advanced Biostatistical Methods, BMI 540 Problem Solving in Biomedical Informatics, BMI 792 Research, BMI 799 Thesis. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona Biomedical Collaborative Building, Arizona State University425 N 5th Street, PHOENIX, Arizona, 85004, +1 602 827 2500 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Business Administration - Finance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance | The Program provides a challenging course of study in the most recent developments in both the theoretical and empirical aspects of financial economics. This course of study, along with work in economics and statistics, serves as preparation for understanding and critical analysis of current issues in finance. The program is relatively small, so that faculty-student mentoring relationships are promoted and Ph.D. students receive personal attention. The program seeks highly-capable students with a strong academic background and preferably with work experience. We are always interested in strong applicants. | Admission to the Ph.D. in Business Administration with a concentration in Finance is granted to applicants who present convincing evidence of high-order analytical skills, intellectual curiosity, and the ability to work independently in pursuing scholarly research. Applicants should possess the intellectual curiosity and discipline required for original inquiry. In addition to the general requirements of the Graduate College, applicants must submit three letters of recommendation, scores from the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT), and a brief statement of their career objectives. While many of our accepted students have an MBA or MS in a business-related field, others have a background in another area, such as engineering, economics, mathematics, physics, or political science. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Finance, P.O. Box 873906, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3131 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Business Administration - Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems | The objective of the Ph.D. in Business Administration with a concentration in Information Systems is to prepare scholars for careers at leading educational institutions. This program allows students to develop the capability to review, analyze, conduct, and publish research through a series of research seminars and additional supporting course work. In addition, Ph.D. students participate in ongoing research projects in conjunction with faculty members in the Department of Information Systems, and with other faculty in the W. P. Carey School of Business and other colleges at Arizona State University. | Admission to the Ph.D. in Business Administration with a concentration in Finance is granted to applicants who present convincing evidence of high-order analytical skills, intellectual curiosity, and the ability to work independently in pursuing scholarly research. Applicants should possess the intellectual curiosity and discipline required for original inquiry. In addition to the general requirements of the Graduate College, applicants must submit three letters of recommendation, scores from the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT), and a brief statement of their career objectives. While many of our accepted students have an MBA or MS in a business-related field, others have a background in another area, such as engineering, economics, mathematics, physics, or political science. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of concentration includes four required IS doctoral seminars Foundational Readings in IS research, Theory Building and Testing for Technology and E-Commerce Research, Information Systems Theories, Special Topics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Information Systems, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3252 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Business Administration - Real Estate Finance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate | The Real Estate specialization at the doctoral level is offered through the Finance department. Students are required to fulfill all of the Finance requirements in addition to the Real Estate doctoral course and research seminar. All real estate students are also expected to serve as a research assistant to one of the real estate faculty as part of the faculty-student mentoring process. Part of this process may involve doing reviews for the top real estate journals and co-authoring papers with senior real estate faculty. Students are expected to attend not only the finance department seminar series but also the real estate seminar series. Students in this specialty must take qualifying exams in real estate as well as in finance. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Real Estate Process I and II, Real Estate Capital Markets – Debt, Real Estate Capital Markets – Equity, Real Estate Development I, Real Estate Development II, Case Studies in Real Estate Finance and Investment, Real Estate Market Analysis, Practicum in Real Estate. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate | W. P. Carey School of Business, Division of Real Estate, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3259 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Business Administration - Supply Chain Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management | The objective of the Ph.D. in Business Administration with a concentration in Supply Chain Management is to prepare scholars to conduct high-quality research and to teach in the field of supply chain management. It is a full-time residential program.Students will develop the capability to review, analyze, conduct, and publish research through a series of research seminars and courses that supplement and complement each student’s background, abilities, and aspirations. In addition, doctoral students may work on ongoing research projects in conjunction with faculty members in the Supply Chain Management Program, with CAPS: Center for Strategic Supply Research (formerly CAPS Research) - an affiliation between the College of Business and the Institute for Supply Management® (ISM) and/or with the Institute for Manufacturing Enterprise Systems. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Supply Chain Management, P.O. Box 874706, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6044 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Chemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $2,733 per semester | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The Ph.D. degree can be completed in four years; however, more time may be needed depending on the esearch project. According to the Graduate College requirements, the Ph.D. degree must be completed ithin five years after passing the Comprehensive Examination. The total number of years from the eginning the program to the completion of the degree can not exceed ten consecutive years. This count egins from the first course listed on the Program of Study and includes transfer courses and those taken s graduate non-degree. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Physical Sciences BuildingRoom D-103, P.O. Box 871604, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4664 | The Department of Biomedical Informatics in partnership with the University of Arizona supports a partnership between academic researchers, clinical practitioners and regional healthcare providers to advance research and education in the science and practice of biomedical informatics. The mission of the department is to prepare individuals to make major contributions to the creation and evaluation of computational and informatics tools and their application to biomedical or clinical research, health care practice and administration, public health and the education of health professionals and patients. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Environmental Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program synthesizes knowledge from a wide range of subjects. The graduate curriculum is designed to provide a strong foundation in physical, chemical, and microbiological principles, but remains flexible to meet changing needs within the field. The program receives national funding for a wide range of educational and research endeavors, including sustainable engineering of urban systems, environmental biotechnology and environmental nanotechnology. | Applicant should have a master's degree in engineering or in a closely related master's degree program. Exceptionally qualified students with a bachelor's degree may be admitted to the doctoral program. They should have an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and a minimum GPA of 3.20 in graduate course work. Applicants must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by demonstrating proficiency in spoken English; a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Geotechnical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | In this program, student uses knowledge to analyze and design structures and foundations in finding solutions to environmental problems. Graduate curriculum studies the properties and engineering behavior of all types of soil and rock, using field sampling as well as laboratory and field testing to find and/or improve geotechnical applications for the benefit of society. | Applicant should have a master's degree in engineering or in a closely related master's degree program. Exceptionally qualified students with a bachelor's degree may be admitted to the doctoral program. They should have an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and a minimum GPA of 3.20 in graduate course work. Applicants must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by demonstrating proficiency in spoken English; a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Structural Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program encompasses areas such as structural analysis and design, steel and concrete structures, timber and masonry structures, matrix and computer methods, extreme weather analysis, composite materials and stress analysis. | Applicant should have a master's degree in engineering or in a closely related master's degree program. Exceptionally qualified students with a bachelor's degree may be admitted to the doctoral program. They should have an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and a minimum GPA of 3.20 in graduate course work. Applicants must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by demonstrating proficiency in spoken English; a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Transportation Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This program focuses on traffic operations and simulation, intelligent transportation technologies, traveler safety and risk, travel behavior, transportation systems simulation, and transportation planning applications. The other focus addresses pavement analysis and design, pavement performance and management, material testing and characterization and consideration of developing new and more efficient construction materials, such as asphalt and concrete that are applicable to transportation needs. | Applicant should have a master's degree in engineering or in a closely related master's degree program. Exceptionally qualified students with a bachelor's degree may be admitted to the doctoral program. They should have an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and a minimum GPA of 3.20 in graduate course work. Applicants must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by demonstrating proficiency in spoken English; a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering - Water Resources Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $19,606 a year | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | This curriculum presents challenging and interesting opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students, including the study of ancient water structures and finite element modeling of environmental fluid dynamics. Graduate students may have careers in fields of hydraulics, hydrology or storm water management. | Applicant should have a master's degree in engineering or in a closely related master's degree program. Exceptionally qualified students with a bachelor's degree may be admitted to the doctoral program. They should have an overall undergraduate GPA of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale) and a minimum GPA of 3.20 in graduate course work. Applicants must take the GRE and have their scores sent to the Graduate College. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by demonstrating proficiency in spoken English; a score of 55 or better on the Speaking Proficiency English Assessment Kit (SPEAK). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | This program is grounded in a scientist-practitioner model of training. Students can develop expertise on research with ethnic minorities, substance abuse and quantitative methods. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology, PO BOX 871104, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7598 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | No | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Cognition, Action and Perception | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | This program is committed to training the next generation of experimental psychologists in the areas of cognition, perception, action, cognitive development, and dynamical systems. Graduates are prepared for faculty positions in departments of psychology, cognitive science, and kinesiology at major research institutions, in government laboratories, and in industry. Students are trained in: theoretical and applied bases of empirical questions; research design; ethical treatment of human participants; statistical and dynamical analysis of data; preparation of manuscripts for publication and conference presentations; supervision of undergraduate research assistants. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology, PO BOX 871104, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7598 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | No | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Computational Biosciences | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | A standard doctoral degree program at ASU comprises 84 hours of study, of which at least 24 hours are for research study and dissertation, and of which 30 hours may be transferred from an appropriate masters degree. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree in computer science prepares students to undertake fundamental and applied research in computer science in academia, government, and/or industry. The Ph.D. degree in Computer Science is available for students of high ability who show promise for original research. The matured as a discipline in its own right, computer science is now developing deep interactions with other fields, not just in engineering and science, but throughout the arts and humanities, education, the fine arts, law, medicine and business. While computers have become essential tools in these areas, the depth of interaction of fundamental computer science with each is rapidly evolving. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The interdisciplinary strength of the program is enhanced by the opportunity for students to concentrate their studies in Arts, Media and Engineering, Biomedical Informatics and Information Assurance. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Computer Science - Arts, Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree in computer science prepares students to undertake fundamental and applied research in computer science in academia, government, and/or industry. The Ph.D. degree in Computer Science is available for students of high ability who show promise for original research. The matured as a discipline in its own right, computer science is now developing deep interactions with other fields, not just in engineering and science, but throughout the arts and humanities, education, the fine arts, law, medicine and business. While computers have become essential tools in these areas, the depth of interaction of fundamental computer science with each is rapidly evolving. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The PhD program requires 84 credit hours in which 36 hours focus on Arts, Media & Engineering. The 84 total credit hours of the program are comprised of the following components Concentration Core 54 credit hours, Computer Science and Engineering Courses, Arts, Media and Engineering Courses. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Computer Science - Information Assurance | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | The program is designed for graduate students who want to pursue a thorough education in the area of information assurance. The goal of this concentration is to provide students the knowledge, skills and the advanced development capability in science and engineering for information assurance, including computer and network security, software security, data and information security, applied cryptography and computer forensics. Students will have a competitive advantage to secure employment.According to the National Security Agency, information assurance is defined as the set of measures intended to protect and defend information and information systems by ensuring their availability, integrity, authentication, confidentiality and non-repudiation. This includes providing restoration of information systems by incorporating protection, detection and reaction capabilities. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in CSE 539: Applied Cryptography, CSE 543: Information Assurance and Security, CSE 545: Software Security, CSE 548: Advanced Computer Network Security, CSE 412/598: Database Management, CSE 460/598: Software Analysis and Design, CSE 466/598: Computer Systems Security, CSE 467/598: Data and Information Security, CSE 468/598: Computer Network Security, CSE 512: Distributed Database Systems, CSE 531: Distributed and Multi-Processor Operating Systems, CSE 534: Advanced Computer Networks, CSE 565: Software Verification, Validation and Testing, CSE 561: Modeling and Simulation: Theory and Applications, CSE 571: Artificial Intelligence, CSE 572: Data Mining. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, School of Computing and Informatics, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Arizona State University, P O Box 878809, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3190 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Construction | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | The PhD degree in Construction will require three to four years of full-time study and research beyond the master’s degree. Students can be admitted post bachelor’s degree or post master’s degree. The program requires 84 credit hours post bachelor’s degree or 54 credit hours post master’s degree. Students who hold a bachelor’s or a master’s degree in a related field from a regionally accredited university or equivalent are eligible to apply for admission to the program. Related fields include construction, civil engineering, architecture, and business. At the discretion of the admission committee, students from other disciplines may be eligible as well. | Students who hold a bachelor’s or a master’s degree in a related field from a regionally accredited university or equivalent are eligible to apply for admission to the program. Related fields include construction, civil engineering, architecture, and business. At the discretion of the admission committee, students from other disciplines may be eligible as well. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Del E. Webb School of Construction, PO Box 870204, Urban Systems Engineering Building, 651 E. University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3615 | The Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) at ASU is a community of faculty, staff and students focused in the disciplines of computer science, computer systems engineering and information management. The mission is to achieve excellence in scholarship through outstanding teaching, cutting edge research and active service to the community. The department seeks to provide a flexible and proactive environment that promotes innovative thinking, diversity and ethical behavior in order to capitalize on the dynamic growth of computer and information technology and its applications to the welfare of the society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Construction Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) program is directed towards original research. The student must write and defend a dissertation which described an original contribution within the chosen discipline. Construction Engineering doctoral students must first complete the MS degree requirements for Construction Engineering. Once they have successfully completed the MS requirements, they automatically are transferred to the primary specialty area of the dissertation advisor (structures, geotechnical or transportation). | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Cross-cutting Health Theme | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The cross-cutting advisory track embraces the holistic—rather than sub-disciplinary—anthropological approach to the study of health. It draws on theoretical and methodological tools from a broad range of areas in anthropology and allied fields, and integrates them to understand why health varies across and within populations, and across space and time. The advisory track is designed to ‘think across’ anthropological problems relevant to contemporary human health in new ways. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Design - Arts Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The PhD program requires a total of 84 semester hours of graduate study, including 24 hours of research and dissertation, beyond the bachelor's degree. A minimum of 18 semester hours of PhD class work must be completed. A departmental qualifying examination is required near the beginning of the program and an individualized comprehensive examination is administered after all course work is completed. The program culminates with an oral defense of a scholarly dissertation that contributes to scientific knowledge. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | This program places approximately equal emphasis on coursework and research experience. It provides training in the core areas of cognitive and social development, as well as in fundamental methodological, statistical and design skills. Students are offered flexibility to develop expertise within specific content areas or particular age groups in coordination with active faculty interests, and are encouraged to work with several research faculties during their training. The major ongoing developmental research programs are focused on such topics as children's pro-social and emotional development, the development of spatial reasoning and knowledge, the development of logical reasoning and representational styles, memory, problem-solving, meta cognition and theory of mind, adolescent health and self-concepts, as well as elder health beliefs and social ties. Opportunities to develop teaching and communication skills are offered both through formal coursework and through participation in departmental teaching and seminar activities. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology, PO BOX 871104, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7598 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | No | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Econometrics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | The intent of this field to provide the student with tools needed to apply, assess, and critique sophisticated research in econometrics. Coursework will emphasize applications as well as building a solid foundation in econometric theory. As a result, students will have the training appropriate for academic, governmental agency, and private business openings in the area of econometrics. The Ph.D. program is relatively small in size with about 40 doctoral students in residence at any time. The low student-faculty ratio allows us to provide greater faculty attention and mentoring compared to larger programs. Students are involved in teaching, research, and seminar activities, becoming valued members of the department. Most of our Ph.D. students are supported through teaching and research assistantships for four years. Stipends are highly competitive with any graduate program in the country. We are currently accepting. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | The Ph.D. program is relatively small in size with about 40 doctoral students in residence at any time. The low student-faculty ratio allows us to provide greater faculty attention and mentoring compared to larger programs. Students are involved in teaching, research, and seminar activities, becoming valued members of the department. Most of our Ph.D. students are supported through teaching and research assistantships for four years. Stipends are highly competitive with any graduate program in the country. We are currently accepting | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The current fields of specialization in economics Macroeconomics, Theory, Econometrics, Industrial Organization, Financial Economics, International Economics, Labor Economics, Environmental and Resource Economics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Educational Leadership and Policy Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies | The Division of Educational Leadership & Policy Studies offers a Ph.D. in Educational Leadership and Policy Studies that emphasizes methods of policy analysis and provides for specializations in particular disciplines. Education policy studies deal with the entire process by which society derives, institutes, evaluates and modifies the rules, both stated and unspoken, by which the educational system runs. Doctoral students receive course work and practical experiences in a variety of special contexts, including higher education, elementary and secondary schools, and education governing bodies. The faculty seeks to train persons who will teach or pursue policy studies in school districts, government agencies and universities. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Students will complete at least 12 semester hours (approved by the student's Program Committee) in an area of special interest: 1) Higher Education, 2) Social & Philosophical Foundations, 3) Language Policy, 4) International & Comparative Education, 5) Policy Analysis, and 6) American Indian Education Policy. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division Of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, P.O. Box 872411, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7224 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Educational Technology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | The Educational Technology PhD program focuses on the design, development, and evaluation of instructional systems and on educational technology applications to support learning. The doctoral program emphasizes research using educational technology in applied settings and prepares students for a variety of professional positions. Graduates are typically employed as university faculty, educational technologists in universities, community colleges, and schools or as training managers in corporate settings. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Educational Technology - Arts Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The CAP-AME program requires that in addition to the required core, statistics, and research course units through the Psychology department, students must take three graduate level courses with an AME prefix and satisfy an AME related set of electives and research units. This program culminates in a Students will complete 15 hours of required Psychology courses, 15 hours of AME core and AME-related Psychology courses and 50 hours of research and research seminars. This will result in students taking 1/3 of their credit hours through AME. Listed below are the required Psychology core courses, the currently available AME core courses, the AME-related Psychology electives, and the research course requirements.capstone that has been approved by both CAP and AME. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The list of electives are in EDT 702 Research in Technology-Based Education, EDT 703 Research in Distance Education, EDT 704 Emerging Technologies in Education, EDT 531 Hypermedia, EDT 511 Technology Applications in Education, EDT 520 Educational Technology and Training, EDT 523 Distance Education Theory and Practice. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | The PhD program requires a total of 84 semester hours of graduate study, including 24 hours of research and dissertation, beyond the bachelor's degree. A minimum of 18 semester hours of PhD class work must be completed. A departmental qualifying examination is required near the beginning of the program and an individualized comprehensive examination is administered after all course work is completed. The program culminates with an oral defense of a scholarly dissertation that contributes to scientific knowledge. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in control systems, electro magnetics, antennas and microwave circuits, electronic and mixed-signal circuit design, electric power and energy systems, signal processing and communications, solid-state electronics, arts, media and engineering. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University, 650 East Tyler MallGoldwater Center Room 206, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3424 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering - Arts Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The PhD program requires a total of 84 semester hours of graduate study, including 24 hours of research and dissertation, beyond the bachelor's degree. A minimum of 18 semester hours of PhD class work must be completed. A departmental qualifying examination is required near the beginning of the program and an individualized comprehensive examination is administered after all course work is completed. The program culminates with an oral defense of a scholarly dissertation that contributes to scientific knowledge. | Students from undergraduate programs that are not accredited by ABET must have a minimum GPA of 3.5 (on a four-point scale) in the last two years of electrical engineering undergraduate course work or have graduated first class with distinction and must score 90 percent (720) or higher on the quantitative section of the GRE General Test. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in the English language by scoring at least 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or 83 on the Internet based TOEFL (iBT). International students seeking teaching assistantships must demonstrate proficiency in spoken English by scoring at least 50 on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or 24 on the speaking portion of the iBT. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in control systems, electro magnetics, antennas and microwave circuits, electronic and mixed-signal circuit design, electric power and energy systems, signal processing and communications, solid-state electronics, arts, media and engineering. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Environmental Design and Planning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Design, Tempe Campus | The program is at the cutting edge of creating new knowledge in environmental design and planning. Broad in scope, the program involves multidisciplinary research interests at both micro- and macro-scale levels of design and planning. The program provides research experience for students wishing to pursue careers in industry as members of interdisciplinary design and planning teams on environmental and energy issues, as well as for those wishing to teach in the architecture, design, or planning fields.The Doctor of Philosophy degree in Environmental Design and Planning is an individualized collegewide interdisciplinary degree that integrates graduate courses and faculty research expertise. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The program offers concentrations in Design, Planning, History, Theory, and Criticism. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Design, Tempe Campus | College of Design, Tempe Campus, PO Box 871905, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3536 | The administrative offices of the Department of Electrical Engineering moved (Summer 2008) from the Engineering Research Center (ERC) and other locations to the 2nd floor of the Goldwater Center (GWC). The department was ranked 31st by U.S. News and World Report in the 2008 rankings. EE’s ranking is tied with Harvard and Duke Universities, illustrating that the department’s graduate program is one of the top in the nation. ASU’s EE department offers graduate, undergraduate, and online programs focusing on seven different research areas. EE also partners with major industry players to produce cutting edge research and technology. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Environmental Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The GSC shall consist of at least one other tenure-track member from the Environmental Group. Additional suitably qualified members from outside of ASU may be included in the committee at the discretion of the GSC. A change in the GSC requires the change be in writing with both the current and the new advisor formally informed of the change. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Environmental Life Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This program is a research degree, culminating in a dissertation, which must draw on multiple disciplinary perspectives. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Environmental Social Science | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The Ph.D. program in Environmental Social Science at ASU is one of the few programs nationally that focuses on the social dynamics of environmental issues. The program combines the insights, methods and theories of various disciplines, including planning, geography, anthropology, sociology and political economy, while focusing on a series of environmental-related topics.Students prepare to contribute professionally to environmental social science through positions in research, policy leadership and education. Admission requirements include a bachelor's degree and training that combines some depth of understanding in the social sciences and awareness of and interest in a relevant scientific field. While the program is housed within the School of Human Evolution and Social Change, it involves more than 30 faculty from numerous schools, centers and departments across the university. Students work closely with their committee to develop a curriculum appropriate to their chosen interests and career goals. Coursework for the degree is focused on developing real-world skills and a solid grasp of complex concepts. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Geography | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | The School of Geographical Sciences admits students to its PhD program with either a Master's or Bachelor's degree in Geography or a related field. We welcome applicants without Geography degrees. Incoming students must demonstrate or attain competence in cartography and quantitative methods, and complete other basic coursework that will enable them to pursue graduate studies in their area of specialization.PhD students file a program of study (iPOS) with the School and the Graduate College. This document sets out coursework toward the PhD degree and formalizes the composition of the supervisory committee. PhD students prepare a statement of their specialization in geography and complete an intensive two-week research project culminating in a written paper, administered by the Graduate Research Examination Committee and the student's advisor. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. Successful applicants at the PhD level generally post GRE scores (combined) of 1200 or higher and a writing score above 3.5.Successful applicants at the MA level score 1150 or higher (combined verbal and quantitative scores) and a writing score above 3.5.Students whose native language is not English should have scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) of at least 213 [computer based], 83 [iBT], or 600 [paper based].PhD students entering with a Bachelor's degree must complete 84 semester hours. These hours include 72 hours of coursework and research at ASU and 12 dissertation hours. PhD students entering with a Master's degree must complete 54 semester hours. These include 42 hours of combined coursework and research hours at ASU and 12 dissertation hours. The program for all PhD students includes two required core courses (GCU 529 Geographic Thought, GCU 585 Advanced Research Methods) and two seminars (GCU/GPH 591). | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Geographical Sciences, Arizona State University, P O Box 875302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7533 | The school itself has only existed as such since July 2006 and grew out of the Department of Geography, which has a long and distinguished history. The school is evolving into a scholarly community that engages in interdisciplinary and trans-disciplinary education, research and outreach dealing with substantive and applied questions where the role of place, space and interaction is central. These themes are also important in the vision of the New American University, which emphasizes local and global engagement, suggesting a major role for geographical sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Geotechnical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC) shall consist of at least three tenure track ASU faculty as follows Advisor (GSC Chair), At least one additional member from the Geotechnical Group, Additional suitably qualified members from outside of ASU may be included in the committee at the discretion of the GSC. A change in the GSC requires the change be in writing with both the current and the new advisor formally informed of the change, comprehensive Exam The comprehensive exam is not necessarily the same as the qualifying exam, although the qualifying exam may count as the competency component of the comprehensive exam. The comprehensive exam shall consist of two parts An examination of the student's competency in his/her area of research. A written and oral report on the student's proposed research. The format of the comprehensive exam is established by the GSC and will include both written and oral components. At a minimum, the student will be required to present to the GSC a brief written description of the proposed research, anticipated approaches, expected results and projected research contributions. The candidate will also be required to give an oral presentation of the proposed research and to defend the research proposal to the GSC. If the student fails the exam, he/she may petition to retake the exam one more time. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Health Economics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | The intent of this field to provide the student with tools needed to assess and critique the concepts, structures, functions and values that characterize contemporary health care systems. Coursework will focus on the economics of production and distribution of health care services, with special emphasis on the impact of regulation, competition, and economic incentives. As a result, students will have the training appropriate for academic, governmental agency, and private business openings in the area of health economics. The Ph.D. program is relatively small in size with about 40 doctoral students in residence at any time. The low student-faculty ratio allows us to provide greater faculty attention and mentoring compared to larger programs. Students are involved in teaching, research, and seminar activities, becoming valued members of the department. Most of our Ph.D. students are supported through teaching and research assistantships for four years. Stipends are highly competitive with any graduate program in the country. We are currently accepting. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in History | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | The Ph.D. program provides sufficient mastery of a given body of historical knowledge to enable the degree recipient to seek professional employment as a faculty member in the professoriate, as a researcher, as a teacher, or as a public historian. Students may enter the Ph.D. program either directly from a B.A. program or from a master’s degree program. Students follow a program of study that concentrates on the history of one of four broad geographic regions (North America, Europe, East/Southeast Asia, or Latin America). Public history students have additional requirements (see VII). Graduate level courses focus on themes (gender, environment, migration, etc.) or “fields” of inquiry (Modern France, American West, Native Peoples, etc.) or chronological periods within or across these broad areas. Preparation in the broad geographic area comes through courses offered by the faculty to acquaint students with the interpretive trends and important monographs in that area and through readings drawn from bibliographies prepared by the faculty in the area. This preparation includes “core courses” as well as other courses in the department including independent studies and may include courses from other disciplines as approved by the committee chair and Director of Graduate Studies. Parallel to this geographic area preparation, the student selects a narrower research field in which the dissertation will be written and prepares a prospectus for the dissertation. The dissertation itself is a major research project that advances the general historical understanding of a chosen topic. Public history majors have a specific set of coursework for their program plus coursework in one of the broad geographic areas, e.g., U.S. history. The dissertation emerges from the work in either or both fields. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in History- Public History | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | The requirements for the doctoral degree with a concentration in Public History are similar to the other requirements for the doctoral degree. The primary difference is that the students selecting Public History must select a second broad field drawn from the fields of East Asia, Europe, Latin America, or U.S. history. Most of the areas in Public History will use U.S. history as the other broad field. Exceptions occur with the area of Scholarly Publishing and for Public History with an emphasis on policy applications in the public sector, for example. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | During the first year, students enroll in HST 500, in 502 in the fall and the 598 public history course on Cultural Institutions in the spring. Public History students must enroll in at least one 1-hour 598 short course each spring. Students also will develop and complete a 320-hour internship(s) and receive credit in 584 (internship) for 1-6 hours. Students have the option of including the Public History seminar HST 591 within their program of study as well. In the area of Scholarly Publishing, a defined program must be followed in the first 2 years of study. Scholarly Publishing students will follow the curriculum model set out above. In the other areas, the program is determined based on the career goals, work experience, and expertise that the candidate brings to the program. However, with the supervisory committee a defined program is established for each student in public history that leads to the qualifying examination. Course work for the secondary broad field will automatically include that field’s basic core course sequence as well as additional courses from the 598 and 591 sequence offered in the area as determined by the committee. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of History, Coor Hall - 4th FloorArizona State University, 975 S Myrtle AveP O Box 874302, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 5778 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | Human resource management is concerned with understanding and improving the effectiveness of individuals' work experiences, and also the effectiveness of HR practices (both in the U.S. and in other countries). The emphasis is on studying the employment relationship at individual, group, and organizational levels of analysis, and the impact this relationship has on outcomes critical to the organization and its employees. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Employee selection and testing, Fairness of personnel systems, Performance evaluation and measurement, Employee training and development, Compensation, Union-management relations, Employee health, safety, and well-being. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3431 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Industrial Organization | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | The field of Industrial Organization is concerned with the theory and empirical evidence concerning the organization of firms and industries. This field traditionally has focused on industry structure, conduct, and performance; however, the focus here includes more recent advances based on microeconomic theory including transactions cost economics, game theory, strategic behavior, contestability, and information theory. The Industrial Organization field provides excellent background for careers in university teaching and research, private research organizations, consulting firms specializing in litigation support, and public agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission, the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice, and the International Trade Commission. The Ph.D. program is relatively small in size with about 40 doctoral students in residence at any time. The low student-faculty ratio allows us to provide greater faculty attention and mentoring compared to larger programs. Students are involved in teaching, research, and seminar activities, becoming valued members of the department. Most of our Ph.D. students are supported through teaching and research assistantships for four years. Stipends are highly competitive with any graduate program in the country. We are currently accepting. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in International Economics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | The field of concentration in international economics requires coursework in international trade and international finance. Successful students are expected to acquire knowledge in the theoretical and empirical literature associated with the determinants of comparative advantage and trade patterns and commercial policy effects on such patterns, the determinants of exchange rates and international financial flows, and effects of international linkages on the domestic economy. Department strength and commitment to this area is evidenced by the editorship of two scholarly journals related to the area: The Journal of Comparative Economics and the Journal of International Money and Finance. The job market in international economics has been one of the stronger specialties in the profession in recent years and this is expected to continue as multinational organizations such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund maintain a strong demand for new Ph.D.s, along with the traditional opportunities provided by universities, private business like commercial banks and consulting firms, and government agencies including central banks. The Ph.D. program is relatively small in size with about 40 doctoral students in residence at any time. The low student-faculty ratio allows us to provide greater faculty attention and mentoring compared to larger programs. Students are involved in teaching, research, and seminar activities, becoming valued members of the department. Most of our Ph.D. students are supported through teaching and research assistantships for four years. Stipends are highly competitive with any graduate program in the country. We are currently accepting. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Journalism and Mass Communication | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus | The 15-month, full-time professional program is unique in scope, focus and intensity. It begins with immersion in the journalistic skills, values and principles embodied by Walter Cronkite, the school’s guiding light for the past three decades. But it also is designed with the future in mind. Students learn how to navigate a dramatically different 21st-century media environment through classes and a symposium specifically focused on the future of journalism. And they are able to apply that knowledge through an intensive, practical experience in one of the school’s signature professional programs. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus | Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Tempe Campus, Stauffer Hall A 231, P.O. Box 871305, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1796 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Justice Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | The doctoral program is an interdisciplinary degree program operated under the auspices of the School of Justice & Social Inquiry (SJSI). Our interdisciplinary doctoral program in Justice Studies integrates philosophical, legal, and ethical approaches with social science and humanities perspectives to study inequalities and justice in social life. Our doctoral students gain interdisciplinary expertise by taking courses that cover issues within and across a range of disciplines. Interdisciplinary courses are offered within the School of Justice & Social Inquiry and students are also encouraged to take courses from other departments and Schools across the ASU campuses. Moreover, it is expected that at least one member of the student’s Advisory and Dissertation Committee will be from outside SJSI. Student Advisory and Dissertation Committees must also be comprised of faculty from more than one discipline. More than 45 faculty from across ASU are members of the Justice Studies PhD Graduate Faculty. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Citizenship, Migration and Human Rights, Globalization, Sustainability and Economic Justice, Law, Policy, and Social Change, Media, Technology and Culture, Social Identities and Communities. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Justice and Social Inquiry, Wilson Hall, PO Box 870403, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7682 | The Department of History has over 40 faculty members teaching about every era and area of human history. With over 1,000 undergraduate history majors, and serving large numbers of non-majors in both upper and lower-division courses, the history department is one of the largest departments in the humanities or social sciences at Arizona State University. The history department houses H-AmIndian, an edited online discussion list devoted to the history and culture of indigenous peoples from the North Pole to Mexico, as well as “Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies,” one of the oldest and most respected academic feminist journals in the United States. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Kinesiology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | The purpose of the program is to prepare scholars for careers in Kinesiology research. Career opportunities are concentrated most heavily in academia, but also exist in medical, industrial, and military settings. The doctoral program enables select students of demonstrated intelligence, diligence and motivation to serve as apprentices to mentors who are established scholars. A period of extensive study and research under the supervision of the mentor culminates with the demonstration of creativity and originality provided by independent research. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area emphases are available in Bio - mechanics, Exercise/Health Psychology, Human Physiology, Motor Behavior and Physiology of Exercise. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Kinesiology- Motor Behavior | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | The graduate program consists of a balance of formal course work and research primarily designed to prepare students for academic careers. Non-university careers, such as work in government, medical research laboratories or industry are also possible. All faculty members are qualified to mentor students seeking a Ph.D. in Kinesiology.An experimental approach is used to examine the control of movement in (a) normal and special populations; (b) the influence of sensory information on movement; (c) the effect of task constraints (accuracy, speed, etc) on movement performance and/or learning. Theories and experimental techniques are frequently drawn from basic, clinical and cognitive neurophysiology for application to movement control and learning. Examples are the use of surface and intramuscular electromyography (EMG) to record muscle activity, movement kinematics and kinetics. Emphasis is on the study of information processing, sensorimotor transformation, coordination of complex movements, as well as characterizing the effect of neurological diseases on specific aspects of motor learning and performance. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Kinesiology- Physiology of Exercise | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | The program offers a broad spectrum of courses and research areas in the physiology, endocrinology, and biochemistry of exercise.The doctoral program in Kinesiology is based on extensive training in laboratory research. This program of coursework and research training is geared toward preparing graduates, especially at the Ph.D. level, for a career as an independent scientist. Employment opportunities exist in both the university/government setting and the private sector. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Physiology of Women in Sport, Exercise Physiology, Exercise Biochemistry, Exercise Endocrinology, Techniques in Neuroendocrinology, Metabolic Adaptations to Training. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Kinesiology- Biomechanics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | Depending on previous graduate work, students select courses in biomechanics, other exercise science courses, engineering mechanics, bioengineering, statistics, and research seminar. Coursework and research projects are individually designed to accommodate the student's particular interests and talents. After completing coursework, the student takes oral and written comprehensive exams. Following successful completion of these exams, the doctoral student develops a research proposal outlining an original and independent research project reflecting his/her special interests in biomechanics. The remainder of the Ph.D. program is devoted almost exclusively to the preparation and presentation of the doctoral dissertation. The total program generally requires four years to complete. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Introduction to Biomechanics Research Methods, Biomechanics of the Skeletal System, Biomechanics of Exercise and Sport, Qualitative Analysis in Sport Biomechanics, BME 521 Neuromuscular Control Systems, BME 524 Fundamentals of Applied Neural Control, BME 551 Movement Biomechanics, EE 520 Ergonomics Design, IEE 547 Human Factors Engineering, PSY 529 Correlation and Psychometric Theory, PSY 530 Intermediate Statistics, IN 494 Human Motor Control, KIN 501 Research Statistics, KIN 521 Motor Development, Control, and Learning, KIN 535 Exercise Physiology, KIN 540 Factors Influencing Exercise Performance, KIN 598 Exercise Biochemistry, KIN 621 Motor Learning/Control, ASM 598 Comparative Primate Anatomy, BME 516 Topics in Biomechanics, BME 519 Topics in Biocontrol Systems. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Kinesiology- Exercise Health Psychology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | A mentor approach to research is employed. Master’s students are encouraged to become involved in research while doctoral candidates participate in all aspects of the research program including project planning, preparation of grant proposals, data collection and analysis, computer processing, manuscript preparation, and presentation of papers at scientific meetings. In addition, doctoral students gain supervised experience in teaching undergraduate courses in their areas of specialization and in assisting with advising master’s degree students. Through a variety of such experiences, a close collaboration between the student and faculty member can be developed and maintained. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Introduction to Biomechanics Research Methods, Biomechanics of the Skeletal System, Biomechanics of Exercise and Sport, Qualitative Analysis in Sport Biomechanics, BME 521 Neuromuscular Control Systems, BME 524 Fundamentals of Applied Neural Control, BME 551 Movement Biomechanics, EE 520 Ergonomics Design, IEE 547 Human Factors Engineering, PSY 529 Correlation and Psychometric Theory, PSY 530 Intermediate Statistics, IN 494 Human Motor Control, KIN 501 Research Statistics, KIN 521 Motor Development, Control, and Learning, KIN 535 Exercise Physiology, KIN 540 Factors Influencing Exercise Performance, KIN 598 Exercise Biochemistry, KIN 621 Motor Learning/Control, ASM 598 Comparative Primate Anatomy, BME 516 Topics in Biomechanics, BME 519 Topics in Biocontrol Systems. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Kinesiology- Human Physiology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $9804 per 12 Credits and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | The program offers a broad spectrum of courses and research areas in the physiology, endocrinology, and biochemistry of exercise.The doctoral program in Kinesiology is based on extensive training in laboratory research. This program of coursework and research training is geared toward preparing graduates, especially at the Ph.D. level, for a career as an independent scientist. Employment opportunities exist in both the university/government setting and the private sector. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Physiology of Women in Sport, Exercise Physiology, Exercise Biochemistry, Exercise Endocrinology, Techniques in Neuroendocrinology, Metabolic Adaptations to Training. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Kinesiology, Physical Education Building West, 451 E Orange StreetP O Box 870701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3875 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Labor Economics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | Labor economics is an applied economics field involving the theoretical and empirical analysis of the workings of labor markets both at the micro and macro levels. The field includes the study of labor force participation, unemployment, the role and effect of education and other personal variables on earnings, geographical and inter-firm earning differentials, the demand for labor, discrimination, the role and economic effects of unions, personnel practices and policies, and similar topics. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Learning | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Learning is a concentration within the Educational Psychology program. The Educational Psychology program is housed within the Division of Psychology in Education, one of three divisions in the College of Education. The Learning concentration focuses on theoretical and empirical issues in the cognitive and learning sciences, and their educational applications and implications. Faculty interests include parent and teacher education, cognition, motivation and self-regulation, and literacy. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The Learning Core are in EDP 544 Psychology of Reading, EDP 545/EDP 591 Higher-Order Cognition, EDP 591 Self-regulation, EDP 591 Learning Science Lab, EDP 680 Internship in Undergraduate Teaching, Interdisciplinary Core EDP 552 Data Analysis I, EDP 554 Data Analysis II, Specialization DP 690 Reading & Conference, EDP 692 Research Practicum, EDP 799 Dissertation. |
Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Life-span Developmental Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Lifespan Developmental Psychology is a concentration within the Educational Psychology program. The LDP concentration offers a program of study that reflects the field’s increasingly interdisciplinary nature. The focus is on the application of scholarship in understanding real world challenges and the cultural nature of development. The target populations studied include children and adults within the contexts of families and schools. We follow an applied developmental science model, with the aim of using research to inform policies and programs that further the positive development of individuals. Faculty research interests include immigrant families' adaptations, family life and home-institution connections, aging and intergenerational relationships, family literacy, family-school relations, peer relations, and educational equity. Graduates of the program work in universities and community colleges, state and local departments of education, K-12 schools and community agencies. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of study are in EDP 530 Theoretical Issues in Human Development, EDP 598 ST: Lifespan Human Development, EDP 540 Theoretical Views of Learning, EDP 599 Thesis, Elective courses. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Macroeconomics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | The intent of this field is to provide the student with tools needed to conduct independent research in modern applied macro/monetary economics. As a result, students will have the training appropriate for academic and governmental agency openings in the areas of macroeconomics, open-economy macroeconomics, monetary economics, and time-series econometrics. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | The mission of the Ph.D. program in Management is to develop scholars who are prepared to assume the diverse responsibilities of positions at leading research universities. Towards that end, the program places primary emphasis on the development of research competence and also emphasizes teaching as a vehicle to academic professionalism. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The studies are in the field of Leadership/influence, Groups/teams/group dynamics, Organizational change and development, Motivation models/theories, Organizational culture, Organization design and structure, Innovation, Power, politics, and decision making, Basic HRM functions, Strategic management processes, Strategic management content (e.g., economic theory of the firm; agency theory), Individual and organizational cognition, Individual differences (ability, personality, etc.), Individual and organizational outcomes (job satisfaction, extra-role behaviors, performance, withdrawal, attitudes and behavior, commitment, stress). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3431 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Measurement Statistics and Methodological Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Students in MSMS focus their study on quantitative and qualitative research methodologies, educational statistics, psychometrics, and evaluation. Students specializing in MSMS will generally direct their professional efforts toward Development and evaluation of techniques for the assessment of educational or psychological phenomena, measurement of educational outcomes, design and interpretation of research studies, statistical methods for analyzing research data, or evaluation of educational programs. Graduates are employed in a variety of positions, such as professors in colleges or universities, data analysts in the public or private agencies, measurement specialists for government agencies or private companies, or researchers and evaluators for schools or other institutions. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Division of Psychology in Education, Arizona State University, PO Box 871911, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 4602 | The Department of Kinesiology has undergone many changes since it joined the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This transformation involves a significant realignment of our mission. This realignment is consistent with the transformation of Arizona State University into a research institution with important components of both graduate and undergraduate education. The mission of the Department of Kinesiology is: to promote the creation of new knowledge of how all of the organ systems of the human body respond to movement, exercise or muscle contraction, or exercise training; to use this new knowledge to create an invigorating learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students; and to provide a thorough education and research to better the health of society. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $10204 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | The PhD degree is directed toward original research; writing and defending a dissertation that describes an original contribution within the chosen discipline is required. Candidates for the PhD degree must complete a minimum of 84 semester hours of course and dissertation work distributed below. Thirty (30) credit hours of appropriate coursework from a previously earned master’s degree may be applied toward the total credit hours; at least fifty-four (54) hours must be taken at Arizona State University. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering | Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Tempe Campus, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, P O Box 876106, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3291 | The vision of the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering is to be recognized as a leader in new discoveries and innovative solutions that will advance research and education in aerospace and mechanical engineering. The department is committed to its mission of providing the highest quality educational experience for its undergraduate and graduate students, and to enhance and promote through the research activities of its faculty the state of the art of the aerospace and mechanical engineering sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Medical and Health-Related Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | Arizona State University is an exceptional place to pursue advanced training in medical anthropology. Students who desire careers in the traditional fields of medical anthropology can choose to follow a track in sociocultural anthropology, in physical anthropology, or a cross-cutting integrative health-focused track. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Microbiology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program of study is planned by the student and the supervisory committee, consisting of a major professor and three or four additional faculty members (at least 3 committee members should be School of Life Sciences faculty). The program is tailored to the needs of the individual student. In general, Ph.D. degree students should expect to devote to the program of study the equivalent of at least three academic years (84 semester hours) beyond the bachelor's degree. A minimum of 84 semester hours is required with a minimum of 18 semester hours of this total in formal course work. Exactly 12 hours of MIC 799 Dissertation should be listed on the formal program of study. Of the 84 semester hours, at least 54 hours (which may include research credit) of the approved Ph.D. program must be completed after admission to a Ph.D. program at ASU. Students may not apply credit hours earned for a doctoral degree previously awarded at ASU or another institution toward their current ASU doctoral degree. However, at the individual academic units discretion, the student may apply up to 30 semester hours from a previously awarded master's degree toward their doctoral program of study. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.80th Percentile if applicant has MS. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program of study is planned by the student and the supervisory committee, consisting of at least four faculty members, including the student's advisor. A minimum of 2 members of the supervisory committee must be core MCB faculty members. The program is tailored to the needs of the individual student. In general, Ph.D. degree students should expect to devote to the program of study the equivalent of at least three academic years (84 semester hours) beyond the bachelor's degree. A minimum of 84 semester hours is required. A minimum of 12 designated semester hours of MCB courses and six semester hours of elective course work are required. Exactly 12 hours of MCB 799 Dissertation should be listed on the formal program of study. The remaining courses are selected by the student in consultation with the supervisory committee. Of the 84 semester hours, at least 54 hours (which may include research credit) of the approved Ph.D. program must be completed after admission to a Ph.D. program at ASU. Students may not apply credit hours earned for a doctoral degree previously awarded at ASU or another institution toward their current ASU doctoral degree. However, at the individual academic units discretion, the student may apply up to 30 semester hours from a previously awarded master's degree toward their doctoral program of study. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.80th Percentile if applicant has MS. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Organizational Behavior | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | Organizational Behavior is concerned with the study of individuals and groups within organizational contexts. Examples of major topics studied in this area include Individual characteristics such as values, personality, attitudes, and beliefs, Individual processes such as motivation, decision making, attitude formation, Group characteristics such as size, composition, Group processes and practices such as feedback and appraisal systems, task design, reward systems, goal setting and the influence of these processes on individual outcomes such as turnover, performance, and job attitudes. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3431 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Organizational Theory | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | Organizational Theory is concerned with building and testing multilevel theory about organizations, their members, their management, and organizing processes. Examples of major topics studied in this area include Organizational design and new organizational forms, Institutionalization processes, Organizational change, governance, and control, Innovation and new product development processes, Explanatory theories such as strategic choice, resource dependence theory, organizational ecology, and institutional theory. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3431 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | The program in traditional and contemporary philosophy. General areas of research include ethics, political philosophy, metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of law, philosophy of science, philosophy of language, philosophy of religion, and the history of philosophy. Members of our faculty are involved in interdisciplinary work in a variety of fields, and the Department enjoys close ties with the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, the College of Law, and a number of other departments and programs at ASU. We sponsor an active colloquium series and regular philosophical conferences on diverse topics. The Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics also sponsors a wide range of activities, including large-scale conferences, distinguished visitors, and support for graduate study. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Philosophy, Lattie F Coor Hall 975 S Myrtle Avenue Room 3309, PO Box 874102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3394 | The Department of Philosophy at Arizona State University is committed to maintaining excellence in the major fields of philosophy as well as to participating in innovative programs that connect philosophy to other areas of inquiry and that emphasize the social relevance of philosophy. In addition to an undergraduate major and minor, the department offers a certificate in Ethics and participates in an interdisciplinary certificate in Symbolic Systems that explores cognition, computation and meaning. At the masters and doctoral level, the department is distinguished by a focus on human values and public practices. This focus provides a unique opportunity for graduate students interested in ethical, political, feminist, and legal theory to connect these theoretical interests with the normative assessment of public practices and institutions, global and local. The Department of Philosophy enjoys close ties with the School of Life Sciences program in history and philosophy of science, the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, and the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Physical Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The physical anthropology advisory track is concerned with issues of human biology within the structure of evolution and the interface between biology and culture. Intellectual drivers of students in this track might be such questions as: How have various diseases coevolved with humans and other primates? How do cultural changes and biological relationships among people affect patterns of disease transmission? What are the genetic and environmental susceptibility factors of various diseases? Particular faculty expertise in this area includes host-pathogen co-evolution; life history and behavioral ecological approaches to health and population; health and nutrition in the deep and recent human past; mathematical epidemiology and bio-cultural approaches to human disease; and nutritional anthropology. Training options in genetics, bioarchaeology, anthropometry, epidemiology, agent-based modeling, chemistry, growth and nutrition and paleo-diet reflect some of the strengths of faculty. Students in this track are expected to develop a sophisticated handle on evolutionary theory and its application. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Physics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | The Physics Ph.D. degree marks the transition from student of physics to independent physicist. The cadre of physics graduate students represents the heart and soul of the research enterprise in any physics department. Our graduate program has over 100 Ph.D. students working with our 35 faculty members and numerous affiliated faculty members. Our Ph.D. program reflects the modern and interdisciplinary face of physics. We aim to provide a flexible program customized to the individual needs and goals of our students. New students participate in research groups right from the start, and take a newly constructed core curriculum emphasizing the advanced understanding of the fundamental aspects of physics. We have replaced the traditional written comprehensive (or qualifying) exam, with a written and oral comprehensive exam based on research projects undertaken during the first year and first summer of the program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics, Arizona State University, P O Box 871504, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3561 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Plant Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $747 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The program of study is planned by the student and the supervisory committee, consisting of a major professor and three or four additional faculty members (at least 3 committee members should be School of Life Sciences faculty). A minimum of 84 semester hours of graduate credit is required. The program must include excatly 12 hours of PLB 799 Dissertation credit and at least 30 hours of formal graduate course work. Two hours of participatory seminar (PLB 591) are included in the required course work. Courses numbered 590 or 790 (Reading and Conference) are not considered formal courses. Of the 84 semester hours, at least 54 hours (which may include research credit) of the approved Ph.D. program must be completed after admission to a Ph.D. program at ASU. Students may not apply credit hours earned for a doctoral degree previously awarded at ASU or another institution toward their current ASU doctoral degree. However, at the individual academic units discretion, the student may apply up to 30 semester hours from a previously awarded master's degree toward their doctoral program of study. The program is planned by the student in consultation with a program committee that also administers and evaluates the comprehensive examinations. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0.80th Percentile if applicant has MS. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The Ph.D. program consists of a minimum of 60 hours of graduate course work beyond the baccalaureate degree followed by a minimum of 24 semester hours of research and dissertation work. The program offers a Master’s in Passing for students who enter the program without a Masters Degree. Ph.D. graduates for Arizona State University have taken assistant professorships in political science departments as diverse as the University of Arizona, Louisiana State University, Purdue University, the University of Missouri, the University of Connecticut, Queens University Belfast, Middlebury College, Carleton College, Mesa Community College, Utah State University. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Political Science - American Politics | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The emphasize political behavior and use survey research, experimental designs, and content analysis to collect data and conduct statistical analyses of mass voting patterns, campaign strategies, party politics, the role of the media in political communication, agenda setting and policy development in Congress, and elite-mass linkages. Other faculty study decision making on state and federal courts, judicial independence, and public perceptions of the Supreme Court using data from actual court decisions, longitudinal and comparative data on changes to the rules governing judicial selection and retention, and experiments and surveys to examine public reaction to court decisions and support for courts. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Political Science - Comparative Politics | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The program in Comparative politics investigate a variety of topics in several world regions. Research interests include political and economic development, political parties, race and politics, women and politics, political participation, religion and politics, and ethnic-based movements. Faculty incorporate a variety of approaches and methodologies, including political behavior, political processes, institutions, and policies, as well as incorporating both qualitative and quantitative methodologies. Regions of particular emphasis include Western Europe, Latin America, and Africa. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | All M.A. students for whom Comparative politics is their major field are required to complete POS 550 and two additional Comparative politics courses. All M.A. students for whom Comparative politics is their minor field are required to complete POS 550 and one additional Comparative politics course. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Political Science - Political Theory | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The research interests cover a range of topics in the history of political thought and contemporary political theory. Historical topics include Rousseau, histories of concepts, and modern liberalism. Research in contemporary political theory includes: autonomy and freedom; rights and obligations; citizenship, civic virtues, and the idea of the common good; various issues in democratic political theory (with particular attention to education); aspects of political and legal theory regarding corporate personality; conceptions of self in various cultures; analysis of the myths in aboriginal societies (particularly Native Americans); punishment; justice; community; language and politics; social ecology; and peace and nonviolence. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Political Science - Public Policy | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | The study of public policy involves understanding and analyzing the processes, institutions, and consequences of governmental decision-making, drawing on intellectual approaches from political science, economics, public affairs, sociology, and other disciplines. Faculty currently concentrate on issues of policy development and policy change, the role of experts and bureaucrats in the policy process, and intergovernmental relationships. Faculty pursue policy research in the United States, in comparative national contexts, and in international governance. Specific areas of focus include science, technology, and environmental policy, urban development, housing, transportation, and social and family policy. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies, Department of Political Science, Coor Hall 6th Floor, P O Box 873902, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6551 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | The overarching objective of all degree-granting program areas is to provide thorough and highly individualized training (via strong mentoring relationships) that will prepare graduates for careers in Research 1 universities, in applied settings (such as hospitals and medical schools), in business, governmental, and industrial settings, and in smaller, liberal-arts colleges. By bringing together a select and diverse group of graduate students and allowing them to work closely with our equally select and diverse faculty, we expect to contribute significantly to both science and education. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The Department of Psychology grants Ph.D. degrees in the areas of Behavioral Neuroscience, Clinical Psychology, Cognition and Behavior, Developmental Psychology, Quantitative Psychology, Social Psychology, Law and Psychology (J.D./Ph.D. Program). | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology, PO BOX 871104, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7598 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | No | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Psychology Arts Media and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | The CAP-AME program requires that in addition to the required core, statistics, and research course units through the Psychology department, students must take three graduate level courses with an AME prefix and satisfy an AME related set of electives and research units. This program culminates in a Students will complete 15 hours of required Psychology courses, 15 hours of AME core and AME-related Psychology courses and 50 hours of research and research seminars. This will result in students taking 1/3 of their credit hours through AME. Listed below are the required Psychology core courses, the currently available AME core courses, the AME-related Psychology electives, and the research course requirements.capstone that has been approved by both CAP and AME. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of studies are in PSY 591 Perception in Art and Music, PSY 591 Child Cognition: Language and Drawing, PSY 591 Perception and Action, PSY 591 Ecological Psychology, PSY 591 Introduction to Dynamics, PSY 591 Coordination Dynamics, PSY 591 Dynamics and Complexity, PSY 591 Cognitive Processes, PSY 591 Multidimensional Scaling and Similarity, PSY 591 Categorization and Concepts, PSY 591 Robotic Modeling in Psychology. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering | Katherine K. Herberger College of Arts, Tempe Campus, Department of Arts Media and Engineering, PO Box 878709, Tempe, Arizona, 878709, +1 480 965 9438 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Public Economics | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credits and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | Public economics is the positive and normative study of government's effect on the economy. The central questions are why government behaves as it does, how does its behavior influence the behavior of private firms and households, and what are the allocative, distributional and welfare effects of these changes in behavior. Included in the traditionally-defined field of public economics are the study of public goods, externalities, cost-benefit analysis, taxation, and intergovernmental relations. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Economics, P.O. Box 873806, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3531 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Quantitative Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | This concentration focuses on the broad class of quantitative and methodological issues that arise in the conduct of both basic and applied psychological research. This dual affiliation supports the training of students of quantitative methods against a backdrop of methodological issues associated with the development of the substance of psychological science. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology, PO BOX 871104, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7598 | The department provides internship opportunities for students to participate in state and local government, voluntary organizations, and a summer internship program in Washington, D.C. The department sponsors several scholarships for outstanding undergraduate achievement in political science. ASU political science graduates regularly receive graduate scholarships and fellowships, and have achieved success in a variety of careers, including the federal government, state and local government, law, journalism, education, and the business world. | No | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The program investigates religion from a core perspective in the Humanities that also engages the social and behavioral sciences. The faculty, consisting of over 24 full-time professors, leads a PhD program that explores religious ideas and values, as expressed in texts, practices, and institutions throughout history and across the globe. Religious Studies professors have a special strength in teaching and research regarding Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and Native American Traditions. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The research Tracks available are in Religions in the Americas, Religions in Asia, Islam in Global Context. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Religious Studies - Islam in Global Context, | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The program with concentration on historical and contemporary expressions in Southeast Asia, West Africa, and South Asia. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Religious Studies - Religions in Asia | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The program including the transnational and indigenous traditions of China, Japan, Korea, India, and the nations of Southeast Asia. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Religious Studies - Religions in the Americas | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | The program including both indigenous and immigrant religions and their expressions in Canada, the United States, Mexico, and the nations of South and Central America. Resources for the study of religion in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands are particularly strong. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, P O Box 873104, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7145 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Social Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | This program is designed to train researchers to use rigorous scientific methods to uncover the fundamental principles underlying social behavior, and to address practical questions about everyday relations among people. The goal of the program is to provide a setting in which students can grow toward mature roles as researchers, teachers, and consultants in basic and applied areas of social psychology. Students combine continuous involvement in research with a series of courses designed to provide broad substantive knowledge, as well as methodological and quantitative expertise. The program’s intent is to advance basic knowledge in psychology and apply that knowledge to society. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Psychology, PO BOX 871104, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 7598 | The Department of Religious Studies pursues the investigation of religious ideas, values and practices from a core perspective in the Humanities that engages the social and behavioral sciences and other disciplines at ASU. The department offers over 90 classes per semester, and almost 20% of all ASU students enroll in at least one Religious Studies course during a typical academic year. The faculty consists of twenty full time professors who oversee an undergraduate major program, an MA program with over 40 students, and a Ph.D. program that began in Fall 2004. Their teaching and research interests explore “religion” defined in the broadest of terms and expressed in texts and contexts from throughout history and across the globe. | No | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Social Science and Health | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | There is a growing recognition that the solution to any global health problem—whether environmental pollutants, HIV, reproductive cancers, childhood diarrhea, malaria, depression, substance abuse, domestic violence, under-nutrition, obesity, or diabetes—requires a sophisticated understanding of the social roots of disease. Identifying social, cultural, economic and behavioral factors associated with diseases and their transmission is an essential component of effective health care policy and delivery. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Sociocultural Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | The sociocultural track is interested in using theories of social difference to understand health disparities and vulnerability, with an emphasis on health in low-resource settings. Faculty area strengths include the Southwest and Arizona borderlands; Mexico and central America; tropical South America; and South East Asia. There is an emphasis on methodological rigor in training, and program faculty offer a wide range of opportunities to gain technical skills (ethnographic methods, GIS, epidemiology, research design, demography, agent-based modeling, institutional analysis, survey, social network analysis). Social justice concerns are common in this track, and there is plenty of opportunity to intersect concerns of social bases of health with other sociocultural and school strengths in the environment, migration and urban life. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, PO Box 872402, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6215 | The School of Human Evolution and Social Change goes beyond the scope that traditionally defines the study of anthropology. By building upon the discipline’s chief strength - its holistic, long term perspective, the school recognizes a vast range of interests, academic fields and research methods. The school integrates advanced tools and knowledge from across the sciences and social sciences. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | This degree provides advanced training in theory, research methodology, and substantive fields to prepare sociologists for leadership positions in teaching and research Our interdisciplinary-based degree in Sociology features sociological training in an interdisciplinary environment. We offer research-intensive training in the study of individuals, families, social institutions, and societies, with special emphasis on demography, family, and health.The Ph.D. requires 54 semester hours beyond the master’s degree. Three hours each of theory, methods, statistics, and research are required, and 12 hours are earned through dissertation and research. The remaining 30 hours are in substantive courses reflecting the student’s specialization. First-year Ph.D. students are required to take Sociology as a Profession (503). A minimum of 30 semester hours of the approved Ph.D. program, exclusive of dissertation and research hours, must be completed after admission to the Ph.D. at ASU. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, PO Box 873701, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6978 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | The PhD concentration in Special Education, which is designed to produce teacher educators and researchers in special education, is an integral part of the Interdisciplinary PhD program in Curriculum and Instruction. The corresponding goals of the PhD program in Special Education are to produce research scholars who can add to the knowledge base underlying special education, provide experts in the design, implementation, and evaluation of special education personnel preparation programs at the preservice and inservice levels, provide students comprehensive training that meets professionally recognized standards for the preparation of leadership personnel in special education and a related discipline, provide students the skills necessary to meet their research, teaching, and service activities associated with faculty positions at a full range of institutions of higher education or other professional roles. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction | Mary Lou Fulton College of Education, Tempe Campus, Division of Curriculum and Instruction, Payne 104, PO Box 870211, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3306 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Strategic Management | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | Strategic Management is concerned with the roles and problems of general managers - those who manage businesses or multi functional business units. Examples of major topics studied in this area include Strategy formulation and implementation, Strategic planning and decision making, Competitive strategy, Composition and processes of top management teams, Executive compensation, Diversification, Industry analysis, Mergers and alliances. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management | W. P. Carey School of Business, Tempe Campus, Department of Management, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3431 | The School of Social and Family Dynamics is dedicated to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families and social institutions through innovative trans-disciplinary research, instructional excellence and active community involvement. The school strives to be a leader in transformative discovery, fusing basic and applied research, and translating scientific knowledge into solutions for pressing problems related to children, youth, families and their social worlds. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Structural Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC) shall consist of at least four tenure track ASU faculty as follows Advisor, At least one additional member from the Structures Group, At least one faculty outside the student's general area of research, Additional suitably qualified members from outside of ASU may be included in the committee at the discretion of the GSC. A change in the GSC requires the change be in writing with both the current and the new advisor formally informed of the change. The comprehensive exam shall consist of two parts, An examination of the student's competency in his/her major and minor areas of study and mathematics. A written and oral report on the student's proposed research, the format of the exam is established by the GSC and includes both written and oral components. The student will be required to present to the GSC a brief written description of the proposed research, anticipated approaches, expected results and projected research contributions. The candidate will also be required to give an oral presentation of the proposed research and to defend the research topic to the GSC. If the student fails the exam, he/she may petition to retake the exam one more time no earlier than 4 months following the exam. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | $9804 Per 12 Credit and Over | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | Ph.D. graduates will have an advanced understanding of the dynamics of coupled socioecological systems and will be able to lead others in research and providing adaptive solutions to specific sustainability challenges. In addition to the common learning outcomes (cross-link), Ph.D. students will be able to Understand the concepts and methods of a number of critical disciplines bearing on the sustainability of systems at different spatio-temporal scales. Lead others in applying these concepts and methods to developing sustainable strategies for water, land, air, and urban management at the local and global level. Lead others in the analysis and design of the built environment and institutions' policies, regulations, and technologies to support sustainable development. In addition, they will be able to research particular sustainability challenges and develop standard (transferable) skills, including the capacity to Identify problems, Formulate and test hypotheses, Use statistical, econometric, and geographical-information-system techniques to construct and analyze datasets, Build and apply models. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 550 (PBT) or 213 (CBT) or 83 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus | School of Sustainability, Tempe Campus, Arizona State University, PO Box 875502, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 727 6963 | The School of Sustainability was established in 2007 and it is a part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, embodies the design aspirations of the New American University. The mission is to bring together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to some of the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability, especially as they relate to urban areas. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Transportation Materials and Transportation Systems | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Graduate Supervisory Committee (GSC) shall consist of at least four tenure track ASU faculty as follows Advisor, At least one additional member from the Transportation Group. Additional suitably qualified members from outside of ASU may be included in the committee at the discretion of the GSC. A change in the GSC requires the change be in writing with both the current and the new advisor formally informed of the change. Comprehensive Exam he comprehensive exam shall consist of two parts An examination of the student's competency in his/her major and minor areas of study and mathematics. A written and oral report on the student's proposed research. The format of the exam is established by the GSC and includes both written and oral components. The student will be required to present to the GSC a brief written description of the proposed research, anticipated approaches, expected results and projected research contributions. The candidate will also be required to give an oral presentation of the proposed research and to defend the research topic to the GSC. If the student fails the exam, he/she may petition to retake the exam one more time no earlier than 4 months following the exam. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Water Resources Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $8707 Per 12 Credit and Over | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) program is directed towards original research. The student must write and defend a dissertation which described an original contribution within the chosen discipline. Applicants are generally not admitted to the Ph.D. program without an M.S. degree or equivalent. If an applicant has an exceptional record, the student may be admitted directly to the doctoral program. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The Department may elect to utilize a more stringent GPA requirement for some or all of its degree programs. The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) is required for all applicants. A minimum TOEFL score of 580 (paper-based exam) or 237 (computer-based exam) is required of all international students. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering | Ira A Fulton School of Engineering, Tempe Campus, Department of Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering, ECG 252, P O Box 875306, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3589 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Women and Gender Studies | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies | The Women and Gender Studies Program at ASU is one of the largest and most vibrant in the United States. Located in the Phoenix Metropolitan area, one of the fastest growing urban centers in the United States, it offers students the opportunity to study in the geographically diverse and culturally rich landscape of the Southwest. The curriculum is designed to provide students with the interdisciplinary training in theory and methods needed to create original research and scholarship about gender. At the core of the program are four required courses: Critical Concepts of Gender; Mapping the Intersections of Gender. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The area of specialization are in Health, Science and Technology, Justice, Social Change, and Sustainability, Visual and Narrative Culture. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies, West Hall Room 205, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2358 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Women and Gender Studies - Health Science and Technology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies | Courses in this area explore the impact of gender on health care, health occupations, science, and technology. We have faculty expertise in health and exuality, bioethics, women’s roles as healers and care-givers, HIV/AIDS prevention, gender and technology, and the participation of women in math and science in the developing world. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies, West Hall Room 205, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2358 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Women and Gender Studies - Justice, Social Change and Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies | Courses in this area explore the gender dimension of the social structure and the social division of labor, the processes of social change, institutions nd organizations, community development and sustainability and analyze how policies and laws can improve or hinder the quality of life for everyone. We have faculty expertise in gender and globalization, immigration, work, social policy, domestic violence, child welfare, gender and development in Latin America, and gender and the environment. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies, West Hall Room 205, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2358 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. in Women and Gender Studies - Visual and Narrative Culture | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies | Courses in this area explore historical and contemporary representations of gender in all genres, including popular culture, literature, theater, art, and cientific, medical, historical, and legal discourse. Our faculty focus especially on the intersections of gender representations with representations of race, sexuality, and class, as well as on the ways in which representations produce rather than simply mimic gender inequality and polarized identities. |
Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Women and Gender Studies, West Hall Room 205, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2358 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Ph.D. program in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | This degree is intended for students with superior mathematical ability. It emphasizes a solid mathematical foundation and promotes creative scholarship in mathematics and its many related disciplines.A minimum of 84 credit hours is required after admission to the Doctoral Program 12(and only 12) credit hours of dissertation (799). 72 credit hours of coursework and/or research(792). | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Civil Environmental and Sustainable Engineering (CESE) is a broad-based program that offers ABET accredited undergraduate degrees in general civil engineering or civil engineering with an emphasis in either environmental engineering or construction engineering. CESE faculties are actively engaged in many local, national and international level research efforts that have great impact on economic development and environmental quality. These research efforts are concentrated in the area of sustainable urban engineering, with a particular emphasis on arid regions. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | PhD in Human and Social Dimensions of Science and Technology | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The curriculum is flexible, combining a strong, integrated, first-year experience, with substantial freedom for students, in conjunction with their advisors, to design carefully crafted programs of study relevant to their own areas of specialization and expertise. The curriculum trains researchers with the necessary skills and preparation to analyze three key aspects of the study of the human and social dimensions of science and technology: 1) the historical, philosophical, and conceptual foundations of science and technology; 2) the social and institutional foundations of scientific research and technological systems; and 3) the political, ethical, and policy foundations of science and technology. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | PhD in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | The core courses are designed for students who already have a background in basic Neuroscience. The course sequence that has two major goals: one is to expose students to advanced, cutting-edge research from all levels of analysis in Neuroscience - that is, from molecular through systems-level processes, including how those processes affect behavioral and cognitive processes. A second goal will be to introduce students to application of basic and practical knowledge in biomedical settings. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | PhD in Philosophy with a Concentration in the History and Philosophy of Science | Full Time | Variable | $8849 for 12 hours or more for Spring and $6633 for 9 hours for Summer | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | This concentration combines solid training in the core areas of philosophy with an emphasis on interdisciplinary studies of the sciences, their history, epistemology, conceptual structure, and their impacts on society. This program is especially appropriate for students with a background in philosophy or those who wish to pursue a degree in Philosophy, and who seek to broaden their disciplinary studies with an historical perspective. | Applicant should have a U.S. bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or the equivalent of a U.S. bachelor's degree from an international institution that is officially recognized by that country. They should have equivalent to a B average in the last 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of undergraduate coursework. They should have a minimum TOEFL requirement of 550 (PBT) or 80 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 1711 South Rural Road, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 1768 | The School of Life Sciences was established July 1, 2003 and incorporated three existing academic departments; Biology, Plant Biology and Microbiology. As a result of the reorganization, new goals were developed for the School: expand opportunities for faculty and students to pursue and respond to new interdisciplinary initiatives; create a learning environment that promotes the development of knowledge and skills in the life sciences that will enable graduates to function as effective citizens and scientists in the 21st century; and raise public awareness of the life sciences at ASU and serve the public as a source of information regarding key life science issues. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | |||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | PhD in Speech and Hearing Science | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | The program is a mentor based program, in which admission is contingent upon a faculty member agreeing to serve as a mentor for the study. Thus, it is highly recommended that applicants identify and contact possible mentors (faculty currently conducting research that match their research interests) prior to submitting application materials. In contacting possible mentors, applicants should be prepared to discuss their specific research interests and professional goals. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Doctoral | Arizona State University | The students can have their field in the study of Hearing Psychoacoustics in normal and impaired hearing; speech perception in the normal and impaired hearing; speech and auditory processing in persons with cochlear implants; auditory electrophysiology; pediatric amplification and speech perception; auditory aging. Speech Phonetics and phonological theory; speech motor control; neuromotor disorders of speech; voice disorders; voice and speech characteristics associated with craniofacial anomalies; phonological development and disorders. Language Science First language acquisition; pragmatics; discourse analysis; psycholinguistics; semantics; lexical ambiguity; word and sentence processing; working memory and language interactions. Language Disorders Language assessment and intervention in early childhood; characteristics of language in children with specific language impairment; language disorders in school-age children; prelinguistic interventions; social consequences of language disorders; aphasia and related neurogenic communication disorders; language and memory in dementia; language disorders in bilingual children. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, P O Box 870102, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 2374 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Professional Science Masters in Computational Biosciences | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The disciplines of the life sciences are rapidly requiring more mathematical and computational analyses than have typically been employed. While some mathematical approaches have been applied to biological questions for many years, the advance in computational capability has increased the pace of bioscience research to unprecedented levels of speed, precision and detail, and thus dramatically transformed the kinds of problems tackled. This degree will serve to produce students capable of meeting the demands of today's Biotechnical/biomedical industries. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Introduction to Structural and Molecular Biology. Multivariate Statistical Analysis. Modeling and Computational Biology. CBS 520. Applications and Complex Problem Solving in Computational Biology. CBS 521. Experimental Design. Business Issues and Ethics. Internship. CBS 584. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Professional Science Masters in Computational Biosciences - Bioinformatics | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The disciplines of the life sciences are rapidly requiring more mathematical and computational analyses than have typically been employed. While some mathematical approaches have been applied to biological questions for many years, the advance in computational capability has increased the pace of bioscience research to unprecedented levels of speed, precision and detail, and thus dramatically transformed the kinds of problems tackled. This degree will serve to produce students capable of meeting the demands of today's Biotechnical/biomedical industries. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Data Warehousing and Data Mining, Computational Genomics, Molecular Genetics, Advanced Statistical Genomics, Statistical Methods in Molecular Evolutionary Genetics, Functional Genomics. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Professional Science Masters in Computational Biosciences - Computational Molecular Biology Track | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The disciplines of the life sciences are rapidly requiring more mathematical and computational analyses than have typically been employed. While some mathematical approaches have been applied to biological questions for many years, the advance in computational capability has increased the pace of bioscience research to unprecedented levels of speed, precision and detail, and thus dramatically transformed the kinds of problems tackled. This degree will serve to produce students capable of meeting the demands of today's Biotechnical/biomedical industries. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Biophysical Chemistry, Mathematical Aspects of Biotechnology, Advanced Cellular Biology, Biomembranes, Cell Biotechnology Laboratory. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Professional Science Masters in Computational Biosciences - Physiological Modelling | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The disciplines of the life sciences are rapidly requiring more mathematical and computational analyses than have typically been employed. While some mathematical approaches have been applied to biological questions for many years, the advance in computational capability has increased the pace of bioscience research to unprecedented levels of speed, precision and detail, and thus dramatically transformed the kinds of problems tackled. This degree will serve to produce students capable of meeting the demands of today's Biotechnical/biomedical industries. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Neural Modeling, Mathematical Cell Physiology, Neurophysiology, Cellular Physiology, Bioelectric Phenomena. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Professional Science Masters in Computational Biosciences - Quantitative Ecology | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | The disciplines of the life sciences are rapidly requiring more mathematical and computational analyses than have typically been employed. While some mathematical approaches have been applied to biological questions for many years, the advance in computational capability has increased the pace of bioscience research to unprecedented levels of speed, precision and detail, and thus dramatically transformed the kinds of problems tackled. This degree will serve to produce students capable of meeting the demands of today's Biotechnical/biomedical industries. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The area of study are in Mathematical Models in Ecology, Mathematical Modeling, Population and Community Ecology, Ecosystems, Evolutionary Ecology. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Mathematics, Room 216, Physical Sciences Building A-Wing, Tempe, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3951 | The Department of Speech and Hearing Science is a vibrant and stimulating place to learn and work. The department has a group of nationally and internationally recognized faculty who are committed to providing outstanding educational opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, forging community partnerships and advancing clinical and theoretical knowledge through innovative research in speech, language and hearing. The majority of the department is housed in the Lattie F. Coor Hall, a state-of-the-art facility named after the 15th president of ASU. It was officially dedicated in January of 2004. The department is housed on the second and third floors, occupying over 30,000 square feet of office, clinic and laboratory space. The building also houses 25 highly mediated classrooms and an open computing site with 150 computers dedicated for student use. | Yes | The Apartment Village is reserved for upper class students and provides a more independent living environment. The two complexes consist of Cholla Apartments and University Towers. These complexes offer studio style up to 2 bedroom apartments with fully equipped kitchens. Both complexes have a swimming pool for relaxing on those hot Arizona days. The Apartments Village offers amenities such as volleyball courts, TV lounges and computer labs for our resident’s convenience. On campus resources and services are easily accessible from both facilities. University Towers is located at the foot of “A” mountain while Cholla Apartments is located across Rural Rd. Both complexes are minutes away from classes and local entertainments. | ||
| 104151 | Arizona State University | Professional Science Master’s in Nanoscience | Full Time | Variable | $9408 Per 12 Credit and Over | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | The program consists of 30 credit hours completed on either an accelerated 12-month track or a part-time 24-month track. This intensive learning experience does not require a traditional thesis and takes place in an immersive, professional atmosphere.Core courses (15 credit hours), which include an applied project are designed to help PSM participants improve their background knowledge in a range of subjects. The remaining 15 credits are selected by the participant from a list of elective courses spanning multiple disciplines. | Admission to all Master’s programs requires a bachelor’s degree and for Doctoral programs requires Master’s Degree from an accredited college or university. The student must complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of graduate level study with a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.00 or higher. The minimum TOEFL requirement is 600 (PBT) or 250 (CBT) or 100 (iBT). The minimum IELTS is an overall band score of 6.5 with no individual band below a 6.0. | Masters | Arizona State University | The students can have their courses in the field of Quantum Physics for Nanoscience, Professional Seminar, Nanoscience and Society, Innovation and IP Management, Materials Physics I, Topics in Biophysics, Electron Microscopy I, Materials Physics II, Introduction to Nanoscience,Surfaces and Thin Films. | Arizona State University | University Drive and Mill Avenue, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 6113 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tempe Campus, Department of Physics, Arizona State University, P O Box 871504, TEMPE, Arizona, 85287, +1 480 965 3561 | The Department of Physics is committed to develop the highest quality programs and research opportunities for students engaged in the study of physics. The physics faculties here at ASU are among the finest researchers, teachers and mentors in the field today. They include faculty who are fellows of prestigious science organizations such as the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Physical Society, Regents’ Professors, noted authors and nationally recognized for research in science education. In addition to outstanding faculty, the department has dedicated staffs that work to support research and teaching at every level. The business, administrative, instructional, and information technology teams are a vital component of the overall success. | Yes | The university provides on-campus housing for upper-division students on the Tempe campus and it is comprised of the Apartment Village, which includes Cholla Apartments and University Towers and the Vista del Sol housing community. The University Towers provides double occupancy apartments with single bedroom accommodations along with a private balcony. This coed apartment-style community provides 24-hour campus security and a complex office with regular business hours, a computer lab, community laundry, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. There is a reserved parking structure next to the apartment complex for residents. Cholla Apartments provide studio, single occupancy; one bedroom, double occupancy; and two bedrooms, quadruple occupancy accommodations. This coed apartment style community provides 24 hour campus security and front desk services, a computer lab, free tutoring, community laundry, kitchen facilities, vending machines, air conditioning, Ethernet port for each student, swimming pool, volleyball court and basic cable. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Church-State Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies | This Program is designed for qualified students to do graduate work at the highest level of interdisciplinary studies. All graduate work to be transferred from other universities must be approved by the Dean of the Graduate School and the Graduate Council, upon the recommendation of the Director of the J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies, and only after the student has been admitted to candidacy. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include Church-State Studies Core (9 semester hours), CHS 5361 Seminar on Religion and Politics in America, CHS 5342 Seminar on Religion, Law, and Politics, CHS 5339 Seminar on Church and State in the United States, Church-State Studies Electives (9 semester hours), CHS 4360 Religion and the Body Politic, CHS 4370 Politics and Religion, CHS 4376 Eastern Perspectives on Church and State, CHS 4379 Islam and Democracy CHS 4385 Religious Ethics in a Liberal Democracy CHS 5338 Seminar on the History of Church and State in the West CHS 5341 Seminar on Church and State in the Modern World CHS 5369 American Civil Religion CHS 5372 Church and State during the Reformation Era CHS 5385 Religion and Education in America CHS 6333 Seminar on Religion, Politics, and Society Methodology (3 sememester hours) SOC 5312 Social Science Data Analysis PSC 5323 Research Design and Research Methods HIS 5370 Historical Research and Writing PHI 4310 Philosophy of Science REL 5300 Research, Writing, and Teaching in Religion Electives from Affiliated Departments (15 sem. hrs.) Dissertation (12 sememester hours) 72 total semester hours equirements for the Ph.D. in Religion, Politics, and Society, Religion, State, and Society Core (9 sememester hours) CHS 6333 Seminar on Religion, Politics, and Society, CHS 5341 Seminar on Church and State in the Modern World, CHS 5339 Seminar on Church and State in the United States, Religion, State, and Society Electives (9 semester hours) CHS 4304 International Human Rights CHS 4350 Paradox of Power and Justice CHS 4360 Religion and the Body Politic CHS 4370 Politics and Religion CHS 4376 Eastern Perspectives on Church and State CHS 4379 Islam and Democracy CHS 4385 Religious Ethics in a Liberal Democracy CHS 5338 Seminar on the History of Church and State in the West CHS 5342 Seminar on Religion, Law, and Politics CHS 5361 Seminar on Religion and Politics in America CHS 5369 American Civil Religion CHS 5372 Church and State during the Reformation Era CHS 5385 Religion and Education in America, SOC 5341 Introduction to the Sociology of Religion, SOC 6314 Advanced Quantitative Methods Methodology (3 sememester hours) SOC 5312 Social Science Data Analysis, PSC 5323 Research Design and Research Methods HIS 5370 Historical Research and Writing, PHI 4310 Philosophy of Science, REL 5300 Research, Writing, and Teaching in Religion Electives from Affiliated Departments (15 semester hours) Dissertation (12 semester hours), 72 total semester hours. |
Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies, One Bear Place # 97308, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1510 | Baylor University established the J. M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies in 1957, so named in honor of an outstanding alumnus, an ardent advocate of religious liberty, and a distinguished author of publications on church and state. The Institute is the oldest and most well established facility of its kind located in a university setting. It is exclusively devoted to research in the broad field of church and state and the advancement of religious liberty around the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Ph.D. student must take a prescribed number of core courses selected from among the following areas: analytical, biochemical, inorganic, organic, and physical as set forth below. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Baylor University Sciences Building, One Bear Place #97348, WACO, Texas, 76706, +1 254 710 3311 | The Department is housed in the modern, Baylor University Sciences Building, the Department is well-equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation to support the research efforts of its faculty, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate researchers. Modern, well-equipped individual research labs are supported by excellent departmental facilities, including a Bruker 360 MHz NMR, a Varian 500 MHz NMR, a VG/Fisons ProSpec high-resolution GC/mass spectrometer, and an Enraf-Nonius CAD4-F single-crystal and Bruker-Nonius X8 Apex X-ray diffractometer. Major Departmental equipment is supervised and maintained by a full-time Director of Instrumentation, Dr. James Karban, who also provides training and instruction in instrumental operation. The Department has a fully supported chemical and biochemical stockroom. In addition, a fully equipped machine shop, staffed by a full-time machinist, is available for the fabrication of specialized research equipment. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | The Doctor of Philosophy program specializes in aquatic biology, terrestrial ecology, and genetics. In the doctoral program, the intent is to develop in the student an extensive working knowledge in a sub discipline of biology. This program involves an in-depth, independent, original research experience culminating in an approved dissertation. The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Biology requires completion of a dissertation. The Department offers broad coverage of biology, with opportunities to specialize at the Ph.D. research level in ecology, population biology, aquatic biology, limnology, and genetics. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Ministry Degree | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | This program is designed as a path toward excellence and maximum effectiveness in ministry. The D.Min. journey offers learning and mentoring opportunities for each participant to move toward the full development of ministry gifts and skills. The learning events and environments at Truett are designed and shaped by a faculty and guest practitioners prepared to guide Students into significant growth. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | George W. Truett Theological Seminary, 1100 S 3rd Street, One Bear Place #97126, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3755 | As a professional school of Baylor University, George W. Truett Theological Seminary subscribes to the university’s mission statement “to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. The seminary’s purpose is to provide theological education leading to the Master of Divinity or the Doctor of Ministry degrees that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Education Degree (EdD) | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | The EdD is a 60 semester hour program including a minor of 15 hours in instructional technology, language and literacy, mathematics education, education foundations or another approved area. The program is designed for classroom teachers, school curriculum supervisors, university instructors of curriculum and instruction, or university instructors of specialized content areas. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6122 | The School of Education enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students and 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, commitment to faith based learning and desire to see students become successful individuals and professionals distinguish the Baylor School of Education as a special place to pursue bachelor, master, and doctoral studies. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Management - Aviation Maintenance Operations | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include AV 102 Introduction to the Aerospace Industry, AV 202 Aerospace Safety, AV 244 Aerospace Regulatory Process, AV 316 Aerospace Transportation, AV 401 Airport Management. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Management - Aviation Business | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include AV 216, National Airspace System,AV 265, Aerospace Accident Investigation, AV 275, General Aviation Management, AV 285, Aviation Security Operations, AV 311, Aerospace Law, AV 331, Airline Management, AV 365, Human Factors in the Aerospace Industry, AV 425, Airport Planning and Design , AV 472, Internship in the Aerospace Industry,AV 475, Aviation Management Topics, AV 480, Airline Business Strategy Simulation. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | In this Program students are provided with a thorough background in the concepts and principles of accounting along with specialized studies in taxation, auditing, and systems analysis. The Averett graduate is prepared for careers in business, public accounting, government and education. This program enables the student to meet eligibility standards to sit for the CPS exam. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include CSS113 Microcomputers and Application Software, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, ECO201 Principles of Microeconomics, ECO202 Principles of Macroeconomics, BSA206 Business Communications, BSA221 Principles of Accounting I, BSA222 Principles of Accounting II, BSA305 Principles of Management, BSA310 Principles of Marketing, BSA370 Principles of Finance, BSA434 Business Law, BSA320 Taxation of Individuals, BSA325 Managerial and Cost Accounting, BSA343 Intermediate Accounting I, BSA344 Intermediate Accounting II, BSA345 Intermediate Accounting III, BSA372 Money and Banking, BSA373 International Financial Management, BSA416 Taxation of Corporations and Other Business Entities, BSA400 Accounting Information Systems, BSA420 Auditing, BSA421 Governmental and Not-for-Profit Accounting, BSA422 Advanced Accounting, BSA427 Auditing II, Accounting elective or internship, PHL210 Ethics. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science degree in Biology: Radiologic Technology | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 102 General Botany and/or BIO 103 General Zoology, BIO 203 Genetics, BIO 301 Microbiology, CH 101, 102 General Chemistry, BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 103 General Zoology, BIO 461 Topics in Biomedical Sciences, Biology Electives (300-400 level), MTH160 Introduction to Statistics. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science degree in Biology - Concentration in Biology with a Teaching License: Grades 6-12 | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 102 General Botany and/or BIO 103 General Zoology, BIO 203 Genetics, BIO 301 Microbiology, CH 101, 102 General Chemistry, BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 103 General Zoology, BIO 461 Topics in Biomedical Sciences, Biology Electives (300-400 level), MTH160 Introduction to Statistics. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts with Teaching License - Grade PK-12 | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program prepares students for continued study or potential positions in galleries, commercial art, or in community arts organizations. Students in the Bachelor of Arts program are encouraged to build a balanced background in the visual arts rather than to concentrate in a single studio area. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include ART 100 The Visual Arts, ART 110 Basic Drawing, ART 120 Basic Color and Design, ART 130 Three-Dimensional Design, ART 201 Art History: Ancient Through Medieval, ART 205 Art History: Medieval Through Renaissance, ART 223 Painting, ART 283 General Crafts, ART 300 Methods in Art Education I, ART 301 Methods in Art Education II, ART 305 Art History: Baroque Through Romanticism or ART 306 Realism Through Modern or ART 405 Non-Western Art, ART 310 Drawing, ART 330 Sculpture, ART 340 Graphics, ART 362 Pottery, ART 400 Senior Seminar. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Theatre with Teaching License | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include TH 101 Voice and Diction, TH 105 Introduction to the Theatre, TH 110 Theatre Practicum, TH 133 Acting I or TH 233 Acting II or TH 333 Acting III or TH 433 Acting IV, TH 205 Creative Dramatics for the Classroom Teacher, TH 210 Oral Interpretation of Literature, TH 220 History of the Theatre I, TH 221 History of the Theatre II, TH 251 Stagecraft I, TH 252 Stagecraft II, TH 340 Theatre Design, TH 401 Play Directing I, TH 402 Play Directing II, TH 410 Modern Drama, TH 440 Advanced Design, TH 462 Senior Seminar, ENG 414/TH 414 Shakespeare. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include TH 101 Voice and Diction, TH 105 Introduction to the Theatre, TH 110 Theatre Practicum, TH 133 Acting I or TH 233 Acting II or TH 333 Acting III or TH 433 Acting IV, TH 220 History of the Theatre I, TH 221 History of the Theatre II, TH 251 Stagecraft I, TH 252 Stagecraft II, TH 340 Theatre Design, TH 401 Play Directing I, TH 410 Modern Drama, TH 462 Senior Seminar, ENG 414/TH 414 Shakespeare, Theatre Electives. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology/Criminal Justice | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program allows students to prepare themselves for entry into any of hundreds of criminal justice occupations available today. The curriculum provides excellent background for becoming a police officer, crime scene investigator, probation and parole officer, special agent for the F.B.I. and other agencies. The curriculum in Criminal Justice offers the opportunity to examine the area of criminal law, prisons, court processes and procedures, the Constitution, and police procedures. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include SOC 101 Introduction to Sociology, SOC 216 Criminology or CRJ 301 Criminal Justice, CRJ 387 Criminal Law, SOC 470 Research Methods, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, Sociology or Criminal Justice electives, ENG 111 Introduction to Writing and Research, ENG 112 Introduction to Literature, MTH 103 Principles of Mathematics, Fine Arts, REL 101 Introduction to Old Testament Literature or REL 102 Introduction to New Testament Literature, Religion or Philosophy Elective, HIS 101 102 History of Western Civilization I, II, CRJ 440 Senior Seminar or CRJ 445 Internship or CRJ/SOC 488 Criminal Procedure, CRJ or SOC Electives. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Religion program attempts to combine classroom learning with actual field experience so that the graduate is both intellectually equipped and practically trained in his/her profession. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include REL 101 Introduction to Old Testament Literature, REL 102 Introduction to New Testament Literature, PHL 150 Introduction to Philosophy, REL 403 History of Christianity, REL 465 Senior Research Thesis, One advanced Old Testament course, One advanced New Testament course, REL 201 Religions of the World, REL 260 Religion in America, REL 306 African-American Religions, PHL 210 Ethics, PHL 440 Philosophy of Religion, Religion or Philosophy electives at 300-400 level. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The curriculum in Sociology ensures that each student is provided with a strong foundation in the basic principles, techniques of analysis, and theories for understanding and working with the important aspects of social life in the contemporary world. The program gives students an appreciation of their own social world, a broader understanding of different ways of life, and a more complete perspective of the world and their place in it. The program prepares students for careers in government employment, secondary teaching, social services, and research with agencies in industry and business. It also enables students to work as data analysts, office managers, sales directors, labor managers, city planning directors, police officers, parks and recreation directors, community organizers, social workers, management consultants, advertising executives, and insurance agents. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include SOC 101 Introduction to Sociology, SOC 401 Social Theory, SOC 440 Senior Seminar, SOC 470 Research Methods, Sociology Electives, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | In this Program students can expect them to be prepared for vocational goals such as leadership positions in the field of church music or private teaching and performance. This program is also designed for students who want to further their education in graduate school or seminary. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include MUS 100 Introduction to Music Literature, MUS 104 Fundamentals of Music, MUS 207 Basic Conducting, MUS 260 Music History: Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque, MUS 261 Music History: Classical, Romantic, and Twentieth Century, MUS 270 Music Theory I and Lab, MUS 271 Music Theory II and Lab, MUS 307 Choral Conducting for the Church Musicians, MUS 370 Music Theory III, MUS 371 Music Theory IV, Applied Music, Ensemble (MUS 161 and/or 163), MUS 480, Senior Recital, Music Electives. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Church Music | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | In this Program students can expect them to be prepared for vocational goals such as leadership positions in the field of church music or private teaching and performance. This program is also designed for students who want to further their education in graduate school or seminary. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include MUS 100 Introduction to Music Literature, MUS 104 Fundamentals of Music, MUS 207 Basic Conducting, MUS 260 Music History: Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque, MUS 261 Music History: Classical, Romantic, and Twentieth Century, MUS 270 Music Theory I and Lab, MUS 271 Music Theory II and Lab, MUS 307 Choral Conducting for the Church Musicians, MUS 370 Music Theory III, MUS 371 Music Theory IV, Applied Music, Ensemble (MUS 161 and/or 163), MUS 215 Church Music Seminar I (Instrumental Methods), MUS 315 Church Music Seminar II (Children), MUS 380 Church Music, MUS 407 Advanced Choral Conducting, MUS 420 Hymnody/Liturgy, MUS 461, 462 Internship. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include MUS 10 , Introduction to Music Literature, MUS 10 , Fundamentals of Music, MUS 207, Basic Conducting , MUS 260, Music History: Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque, MUS 261, Music History: Classical, Romantic, and Twentieth Century, MUS 270, Music Theory I and Lab, MUS 271, Music Theory II and Lab, MUS 07, Choral Conducting for the Church Musicians ,MUS 70, Music Theory III , MUS 71, Music Theory IV. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in History and Politics | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Curriculum provides breadth in various epochs of American and European history, along with depth in the theory and practice of politics. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include HIS 101 History of Western Civilization I, HIS 102 History of Western Civilization II, HIS 201 United States History I, HIS 202 United States History II, HIS 465 Seminar, History Electives. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Curriculum provides students a broad foundation in the Western heritage and depth in American and modern European history (1450-present). | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include HIS 101 History of Western Civilization I, HIS 102 History of Western Civilization II, HIS 201 United States History I, HIS 202 United States History II, HIS 465 Seminar, History Electives. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in English/Theatre With or Without Teaching License | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This program is designed primarily for students who wish to be certified to teach both English and Theatre in secondary schools. Some students interested in pursuing graduate degrees in either or both fields also select the English/Theatre degree. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include ENG 201 Major British Authors, through 18th Century, ENG 202 Major British Authors, 19th and 20th Centuries, ENG 210 Oral Interpretation of Literature, ENG 390 Origins and Structure of English, ENG 406 The Romantic Movement in American Literature, ENG 407 American Literature: The Gilded Age to WWII, ENG 410 Modern Drama, ENG 414/TH 414 Shakespeare, ENG 421 Teaching Composition, ENG 470 Literature for Children, English Elective, TH 101 Voice and Diction, TH 110 Theatre Practicum, TH 133 Acting I or TH 233 Acting II or TH 333 Acting III or TH 433 Acting IV, TH 205 Creative Dramatics for the Classroom Teacher, TH 220 History of the Theatre I or TH 221 History of the Theatre II, TH 251 Stagecraft I, TH 252 Stagecraft II, TH 340 Theatre Design, TH 401 Play Directing I. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in English | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include ENG 111 Introduction to Writing and Research, ENG 112 Introduction to Literature, ENG 201 Major British Authors, through 18th Century, ENG 202 Major British Authors, 19th and 20th Centuries, ENG 390 Origins and Structure of English, ENG 405 Modern Literature, ENG 414 Shakespeare, ENG 320 English Novel in the 18th and 19th Centuries or ENG 323 Restoration and 18th Century Literature, ENG 401 Romantic Poetry and Prose or ENG 402 Victorian Poetry and Prose, ENG 406 Romantic Movement in American Literature or ENG 407 American Literature: The Gilded Age to WWII, ENG 413 Chaucer or 415, Milton, English electives at 300-400 level. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed to train students in the techniques, theory, and applications of computer science and information systems as well as in specific programming languages and computer systems. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Introduction to Programming II, CSS 231 Programming in C++, CSS 333 Data Structures, CSS 361 Topics in Computer Science I, CSS 372 Networks and Internets, CSS 381 Architecture and Assembly Language, CSS 411 Modeling and Simulation, CSS Elective at the 300-400 level, MTH160 Introduction to Statistics, MTH 201 202 301 Calculus I, II, III, MTH 211 Foundations of Higher Mathematics, MTH Elective at the 300-400 level, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Introduction to Programming II, CSS 231 Programming in C++, CSS Electives (2) at the 300-400 level. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Aerospace Management - Flight Operations | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include AV 112, Private Pilot Ground School 3, AV 113, Private Pilot Flight I 1, AV 114, Private Pilot Flight II 1, AV 210, Instrument Ground School 3, AV 220, Instrument Flight I 1, AV 221, Instrument Flight II 1, AV 300, Commercial Ground School 3, AV 320, Commercial Flight I 1, AV 321, Commercial Flight II 1. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Computer Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This program is designed to train students in the techniques, theory, and applications of computer science and information systems as well as in specific programming languages and computer systems. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Introduction to Programming II, CSS 231 Programming in C++, CSS 333 Data Structures, CSS 361 Topics in Computer Science I, CSS 372 Networks and Internets, CSS 381 Architecture and Assembly Language, CSS 411 Modeling and Simulation, CSS Elective at the 300-400 level, MTH160 Introduction to Statistics, MTH 201 202 301 Calculus I, II, III, MTH 211 Foundations of Higher Mathematics, MTH Elective at the 300-400 level, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, CSS 114 Web Authoring and Office Applications, CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Introduction to Programming II, CSS 271 Topics in Operating Systems, CSS 351 System Administration, CSS 372 Networks and Internets, CSS 375 Principles of Databases, CSS 401 Project in Computer Science, CSS Elective at 200 – 400 level, BSA 206 Business Communication, BSA 221 Principles of Accounting I, BSA 305 Principles of Management, BSA 402 Quantitative Decision Making, BSA 434 Business Law, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, MTH 171 Applied Calculus or MTH 201 Calculus I. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Aerospace Management - Aviation Technical Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Concentration is a response to the changing nature and growing demand within the aviation industry for technically oriented employees with a background in aeronautics, computer science, and mathematics. In addition, the concentration permits students to apply for advanced studies in engineering. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include AV 102 Introduction to the Aerospace Industry, AV 202 Aerospace Safety, AV 244 Aerospace Regulatory Process, AV 316 Aerospace Transportation, AV 401 Airport Management, AV 102 Introduction to Aerospace Industry, AV 202 Aerospace Safety, AV 244 Aerospace Regulatory Process, AV 316 Aerospace Transportation, AV 401 Airport Management, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Programming II or CSS 231 Programming in C++ or CSS 235 Programming in Java, MTH 201 Calculus I, MTH 202 Calculus II, MTH 211 Foundations of Higher Mathematics, MTH 301 Calculus III. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Aerospace Management - Aviation Maintenance Operations | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include AV 102 Introduction to the Aerospace Industry, AV 202 Aerospace Safety, AV 244 Aerospace Regulatory Process, AV 316 Aerospace Transportation, AV 401 Airport Management. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts in Aerospace Management - Aviation Business | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include AV 216, National Airspace System,AV 265, Aerospace Accident Investigation, AV 275, General Aviation Management, AV 285, Aviation Security Operations, AV 311, Aerospace Law, AV 331, Airline Management, AV 365, Human Factors in the Aerospace Industry, AV 425, Airport Planning and Design , AV 472, Internship in the Aerospace Industry,AV 475, Aviation Management Topics, AV 480, Airline Business Strategy Simulation. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program prepares students for continued study or potential positions in galleries, commercial art, or in community arts organizations. Students in the Bachelor of Arts program are encouraged to build a balanced background in the visual arts rather than to concentrate in a single studio area. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include ART 100 The Visual Arts, ART 110 Basic Drawing, ART 120 Basic Color and Design, ART 130 Three-Dimensional Design, Art History; Studio Courses, ART 223 Painting or ART 310 Drawing, ART 283 General Crafts or ART 330 Sculpture, ART 340 Graphics, Advanced Studio; ART 223 Painting, ART 270 Applied Design or ART 351 Applied Three-Dimensional Design, ART 283 General Crafts or ART 383 Advanced Crafts, ART 310 Drawing, ART 323 Advanced Painting, ART 330 Sculpture or ART 430 Advanced Sculpture, ART 440 Advanced Graphics, ART 362 Pottery or ART 462 Advanced Pottery, ART 450 Special Studies in Art, ART 490 Independent Study, ART 400 Senior Seminar. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Applied Science in Early Childhood Education - Spanish | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for students who have completed an associate of applied science degree from a regionally accredited institution. This program enables students to obtain a bachelor's degree and increase their skills and employment potential. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include SPA101, Beginning Spanish I, SPA102, Beginning Spanish II, SPA201, Intermediate Spanish I, SPA202, Intermediate Spanish II, SPA211, Spoken Spanish, SPA221, Conversation and Listening ,SPA222, Adv Writing and Grammar | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Applied Science in Early Childhood Education - Social Science | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for students who have completed an associate of applied science degree from a regionally accredited institution. This program enables students to obtain a bachelor's degree and increase their skills and employment potential. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include HTH200 First Aid/CPR, ED180 Earth Science, ED290 Foundations of Education, ED322 Educational Psychology, ED350/351 Reading/Lang Development, PSY309 Personality Theory, PSY200 Effective Behavior, PSY323 Learning, PSY466 Psychological Measurements, SOC102 Social Problems, SOC317 American Minorities, SOC332 Gender Roles. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Applied Science in Early Childhood Education - Humanities | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for students who have completed an associate of applied science degree from a regionally accredited institution. This program enables students to obtain a bachelor's degree and increase their skills and employment potential. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include HTH200 First Aid/CPR, ED180 Earth Science, ED290 Foundations of Education, ED322 Educational Psychology, ED350/351 Reading/Lang Development, PSY309 Personality Theory, MUS100 Intro Music Literature, ART100 The Visual Arts, IDS290 Creative Expression, ENG412 Creative Writing, ENG470 Children’s Literature, TH105 Introduction to Theatre, TH205 Creative Dramatics. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Applied Science in Early Childhood Education - Health/Physical Education | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for students who have completed an associate of applied science degree from a regionally accredited institution. This program enables students to obtain a bachelor's degree and increase their skills and employment potential. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include HTH200 First Aid/CPR, ED180 Earth Science, ED290 Foundations of Education, ED322 Educational Psychology, ED350/351 Reading/Lang Development, PSY309 Personality Theory, HTH220 Health/Fitness 21st Cent, PE203 Intro to Physical Education, PE303 Elementary School PE, PE351 Adapted Physical Education, PE415 Motor Learning, PE Activity course. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Applied Science in Early Childhood Education - Business | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for students who have completed an associate of applied science degree from a regionally accredited institution. This program enables students to obtain a bachelor's degree and increase their skills and employment potential. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include HTH200 First Aid/CPR, ED180 Earth Science, ED290 Foundations of Education, ED322 Educational Psychology, ED350/351 Reading/Lang Development, PSY309 Personality Theory, BSA206 Business Communications, BSA221 Principles Accounting I, BSA305 Principles of Management, BSA310 Principles of Marketing, BSA353, Entrepreneurship, BSA 370 Principles of Finance. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Management - Aviation Technical Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Concentration is a response to the changing nature and growing demand within the aviation industry for technically oriented employees with a background in aeronautics, computer science, and mathematics. In addition, the concentration permits students to apply for advanced studies in engineering. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include AV 102 Introduction to the Aerospace Industry, AV 202 Aerospace Safety, AV 244 Aerospace Regulatory Process, AV 316 Aerospace Transportation, AV 401 Airport Management, AV 102 Introduction to Aerospace Industry, AV 202 Aerospace Safety, AV 244 Aerospace Regulatory Process, AV 316 Aerospace Transportation, AV 401 Airport Management, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Programming II or CSS 231 Programming in C++ or CSS 235 Programming in Java, MTH 201 Calculus I, MTH 202 Calculus II, MTH 211 Foundations of Higher Mathematics, MTH 301 Calculus III. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Management - Flight Operations | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include AV 112, Private Pilot Ground School 3, AV 113, Private Pilot Flight I 1, AV 114, Private Pilot Flight II 1, AV 210, Instrument Ground School 3, AV 220, Instrument Flight I 1, AV 221, Instrument Flight II 1, AV 300, Commercial Ground School 3, AV 320, Commercial Flight I 1, AV 321, Commercial Flight II. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Medical Technology | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 103 General Zoology, BIO 204 205, Human Anatomy and Physiology I, II, BIO 301 Microbiology, CH 101, 102 General Chemistry, I, II, CH 201, 202 Quantitative Analysis and Laboratory, CH 401 Biochemistry, CH 301, 303 Organic Chemistry I and Laboratory, CH 302, 304 Organic Chemistry II and Laboratory, Clinical experience, MT 400 Clinical Experience. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Biology/Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Concentration prepares the student to pursue further education in pharmacy programs, other professional programs in the biomedical sciences and graduate programs in biochemistry. This concentration is also appropriate preparation for careers in laboratory research and testing in academic and commercial biochemistry labs. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include BIO 101, Introduction to Biology 4, BIO 103, General Zoology 4, BIO 204, 205, Human Anatomy and Physiology I, II 8, BIO301, Microbiology 4, CH 101, 102, General Chemistry I, II 8, CH 301, 303, Organic Chemistry I and Lab 4, CH 302, 304, Organic Chemistry II and Lab 4, CH 401, Biochemistry 4, MTH 160, Statistics 3, MTH 201, Calculus I 3, PSC 201, 202, General College Physics I, II 8. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Biomedical Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Program prepares the student for further education in most professional programs (medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, etc.), allied health programs (physician assistant, nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, etc.) and graduate programs in the biomedical sciences. This concentration is also suitable for students desiring careers in biomedical research in academic or commercial labs. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include BIO 101, Introduction to Biology 4, BIO 103, General Zoology ..4, BIO 203, Genetics 4, BIO 301, Microbiology .4, CH 101, 102, General Chemistry I, II 8, BIO 360, Cellular and Molecular Biology 4, BIO 461, Topics in Biomedical Sciences 3, BIO 204, 205, Human Anatomy and Physiology I and II 8, BIO 302, Immunology 4, BIO 312, Parasitology 4, BIO 303, Human Pathology 4,BIO 348, Virology 4 ,BIO 399, Biology travel course . | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Concentration prepares the student for careers in local, state and federal governmental agencies, as well as careers in field biology. Students may also pursue further education in graduate programs in the environmental sciences or organismal biology. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include BIO 101, Introduction to Biology 4, BIO 102, General Botany4,BIO 103, General Zoology4, BIO 203, Genetics or BIO 301, Microbiology 4, CH 101, 102, General Chemistry I, II 8, CH 206, Biological Chemistry 4, BIO 215, Environmental Problems 4, CH 330, Environmental Chemistry 4, BIO 330, General Ecology 4, BIO 342, Environmental Policy and Law, or BIO 462, Topics in Environmental Biology. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, ECO 201 Principles of Microeconomics, ECO 202 Principles of Macroeconomics, BSA 206 Business Communications, BSA 221 Principles of Accounting I, BSA 222 Principles of Accounting II, BSA 305 Principles of Management, BSA 310 Principles of Marketing, BSA 370 Principles of Finance, BSA 434 Business Law, BSA 320 l Taxation of Individuals, BSA 325 Managerial and Cost Accounting, BSA 343 Intermediate Accounting I, ,BSA 344 Intermediate Accounting II, BSA 345 Intermediate Accounting III, BSA 420 Auditing, BSA 422 Advanced Accounting. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Global Marketing Management | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Program is designed to assist students in their preparation for pursuing careers in areas such as selling, advertising and promotion, customer service or marketing management as well as for pursuing graduate study. This curriculum will provide the student opportunities to develop abilities that are necessary to pursue marketing or related careers in public and private sectors. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include BSA 326, Organizational Behavior, Theory and Leadership, BSA 438, Managing Global Marketing Strategies , BSA 444, Management Strategy, BSA 349, Buying Behavior and Integrated Marketing Communications, BSA 352, Sales Management, BSA 359, Marketing Research and Planning, BSA 449, Internship | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Management Science | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, ECO 201 Principles of Microeconomics, ECO 202 Principles of Macroeconomics, BSA 206 Business Communications, BSA 221 Principles of Accounting I, BSA 222 Principles of Accounting II, BSA 305 Principles of Management, BSA 310 Principles of Marketing, BSA 370 Principles of Finance, BSA 434 Business Law, BSA 320 l Taxation of Individuals, BSA 325 Managerial and Cost Accounting, BSA 343 Intermediate Accounting I, ,BSA 344 Intermediate Accounting II, BSA 345 Intermediate Accounting III, BSA 420 Auditing, BSA 422 Advanced Accounting. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed to train students in the techniques, theory, and applications of computer science and information systems as well as in specific programming languages and computer systems. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Introduction to Programming II, CSS 231 Programming in C++, CSS 333 Data Structures, CSS 361 Topics in Computer Science I, CSS 372 Networks and Internets, CSS 381 Architecture and Assembly Language, CSS 411 Modeling and Simulation, CSS Elective at the 300-400 level, MTH160 Introduction to Statistics, MTH 201 202 301 Calculus I, II, III, MTH 211 Foundations of Higher Mathematics, MTH Elective at the 300-400 level, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, CSS 114 Web Authoring and Office Applications, CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Introduction to Programming II, CSS 271 Topics in Operating Systems, CSS 351 System Administration, CSS 372 Networks and Internets, CSS 375 Principles of Databases, CSS 401 Project in Computer Science, CSS Elective at 200 – 400 level, BSA 206 Business Communication, BSA 221 Principles of Accounting I, BSA 305 Principles of Management, BSA 402 Quantitative Decision Making, BSA 434 Business Law, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, MTH 171 Applied Calculus or MTH 201 Calculus I. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed to train students in the techniques, theory, and applications of computer science and information systems as well as in specific programming languages and computer systems. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Introduction to Programming II, CSS 231 Programming in C++, CSS 333 Data Structures, CSS 361 Topics in Computer Science I, CSS 372 Networks and Internets, CSS 381 Architecture and Assembly Language, CSS 411 Modeling and Simulation, CSS Elective at the 300-400 level, MTH160 Introduction to Statistics, MTH 201 202 301 Calculus I, II, III, MTH 211 Foundations of Higher Mathematics, MTH Elective at the 300-400 level, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, CSS 211 Introduction to Programming I, CSS 212 Introduction to Programming II, CSS 231 Programming in C++, CSS Electives (2) at the 300-400 level. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Physical Education - Coaching | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for students who wish to coach on the scholastic or college level. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include HTH 110 Contemporary Health Issues,HTH 200 First Aid and Safety, PE 280 Prevention of Athletic Injuries and Illnesses, PE 302 Coaching and Officiating, PE 315 Physiology of Activity, PE 320 Kinesiology,PE 365 Sport Psychology, PE 415 Motor Learning, PE 416 Issues in Administration of PE and Sports, PE 425 Biomechanics, PE 432 Sport Law, PE 466 Internship, PE Activity courses. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Physical Education - Non-Teaching | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program provides preparation for careers in such settings as YMCA, Boys Club, and city recreation organizations. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include HTH 200 First Aid and Safety, PE 203 Introduction to Physical Education, PE 315 Physiology of Activity, PE 320 Kinesiology, PE 365 Sport Psychology, PE 415 Motor Learning, PE 466 Internship, Physical Education Activity Courses, Electives. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Physical Education - Sport Management | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for those students interested in management positions in businesses such as collegiate or professional athletics, sporting goods sales, fitness and conditioning centers both in the private and corporate sectors, and facility management. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include PE 303 Elementary School Physical Education, PE 304 Secondary School Physical Education, PE 306 Foundations of Traffic Safety, PE 307 Principles and Methods of Driver’s Education, PE 315 Physiology of Activity, PE 320 Kinesiology, PE 351 Adapted Physical Education, PE 415 Motor Learning, PE 416 Issues in the Administration of Physical Education and Sports, PE 444 Research Methods in Physical Education, HTH 110 Contemporary Health Problems, HTH 200 First Aid and Safety, HTH 220 Health and Fitness for the 21st Century, BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 204 or 205 Human Anatomy and Physiology, Physical Education Activity Courses. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Physical Education - Teaching License (PK-12) | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for students who wish to coach on the scholastic or college level. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include PE 303 Elementary School Physical Education, PE 304 Secondary School Physical Education, PE 306 Foundations of Traffic Safety, PE 307 Principles and Methods of Driver’s Education, PE 315 Physiology of Activity, PE 320 Kinesiology, PE 351 Adapted Physical Education, PE 415 Motor Learning, PE 416 Issues in the Administration of Physical Education and Sports, PE 444 Research Methods in Physical Education, HTH 110 Contemporary Health Problems, HTH 200 First Aid and Safety, HTH 220 Health and Fitness for the 21st Century, BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 204 or 205 Human Anatomy and Physiology, Physical Education Activity Courses. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology - Biological Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Psychology curriculum develops students who are able to think critically and analytically about problems, to apply knowledge to implement solutions, and to utilize the technical skills essential to success in contemporary society. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include PSY 110 Psychology as a Social Science or PSY 120 Psychology as a Natural Science, PSY 200 Effective Behavior, PSY 323 Learning, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, PSY 288 Computing in Psychology, PSY 333 Research Practicum I, PSY 334 Research Practicum II, PSY 338 Research Design, PSY 445 History and Systems, PSY 446 Senior Seminar in Psychology, PSY 465 Senior Research (optional), PSY 205 Developmental Psychology, PSY 315 Physiological Psychology, PSY 387 Sensation and Perception, PSY 395 Animal Behavior. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology - Cognitive Science | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Psychology curriculum develops students who are able to think critically and analytically about problems, to apply knowledge to implement solutions, and to utilize the technical skills essential to success in contemporary society. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include PSY 110 Psychology as a Social Science or PSY 120 Psychology as a Natural Science, PSY 200 Effective Behavior, PSY 323 Learning, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, PSY 288 Computing in Psychology, PSY 333 Research Practicum I, PSY 334 Research Practicum II, PSY 338 Research Design, PSY 445 History and Systems, PSY 446 Senior Seminar in Psychology, PSY 465 Senior Research (optional), PSY 232 Designing User-centered Web Sites, PSY 332 Evaluating Web Site Usability, PSY 373 Memory and Cognition, PSY 387 Sensation and Perception. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology - Counseling and Clinical | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Psychology curriculum develops students who are able to think critically and analytically about problems, to apply knowledge to implement solutions, and to utilize the technical skills essential to success in contemporary society. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include PSY 110 Psychology as a Social Science or PSY 120 Psychology as a Natural Science, PSY 200 Effective Behavior, PSY 323 Learning, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, PSY 288 Computing in Psychology, PSY 333 Research Practicum I, PSY 334 Research Practicum II, PSY 338 Research Design, PSY 445 History and Systems, PSY 446 Senior Seminar in Psychology, PSY 465 Senior Research (optional), PSY 305 Abnormal Psychology, PSY 309 Personality Theory, PSY 325 Helping Relations, PSY 466 Psychological Measurements. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology - Industrial/Organizational | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Psychology curriculum develops students who are able to think critically and analytically about problems, to apply knowledge to implement solutions, and to utilize the technical skills essential to uccess in contemporary society. |
Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include PSY 110 Psychology as a Social Science or PSY 120 Psychology as a Natural Science, PSY 200 Effective Behavior, PSY 323 Learning, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, PSY 288 Computing in Psychology, PSY 333 Research Practicum I, PSY 334 Research Practicum II, PSY 338 Research Design, PSY 445 History and Systems, PSY 446 Senior Seminar in Psychology, PSY 465 Senior Research (optional), POS 325 Perspectives on Leadership, PSY 412 Industrial/Organizational Psychology, BSA 445 Seminar in Managerial Skills Development, PSY 466 Psychological Measurements. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Sociology/Criminal Justice | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program allows students to prepare themselves for entry into any of hundreds of criminal justice occupations available today. The curriculum provides excellent background for becoming a police officer, crime scene investigator, probation and parole officer, special agent for the F.B.I. and other agencies. The curriculum in Criminal Justice offers the opportunity to examine the area of criminal law, prisons, court processes and procedures, the Constitution, and police procedures. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include SOC 101 Introduction to Sociology, SOC 216 Criminology or CRJ 301 Criminal Justice, CRJ 387 Criminal Law, SOC 470 Research Methods, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, Sociology or Criminal Justice electives, ENG 111 Introduction to Writing and Research, ENG 112 Introduction to Literature, MTH 103 Principles of Mathematics, Fine Arts, REL 101 Introduction to Old Testament Literature or REL 102 Introduction to New Testament Literature, Religion or Philosophy Elective, HIS 101 102 History of Western Civilization I, II, CRJ 440 Senior Seminar or CRJ 445 Internship or CRJ/SOC 488 Criminal Procedure, CRJ or SOC Electives. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Bachelor of Science in Theatre with Teaching License | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Bachelor degree | Averett University | The modules include TH 101 Voice and Diction, TH 105 Introduction to the Theatre, TH 110 Theatre Practicum, TH 133 Acting I or TH 233 Acting II or TH 333 Acting III or TH 433 Acting IV, TH 205 Creative Dramatics for the Classroom Teacher, TH 210 Oral Interpretation of Literature, TH 220 History of the Theatre I, TH 221 History of the Theatre II, TH 251 Stagecraft I, TH 252 Stagecraft II, TH 340 Theatre Design, TH 401 Play Directing I, TH 402 Play Directing II, TH 410 Modern Drama, TH 440 Advanced Design, TH 462 Senior Seminar, ENG 414/TH 414 Shakespeare. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Joint Major in Aerospace Management/Criminal Justice | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include AV 102 Introduction to the Aerospace Industry, AV 112 Private Pilot Ground School, AV 113 Private Pilot Flight I, AV 114 Private Pilot Flight II, AV 202 Aerospace Safety, AV 210 Instrument Ground School, AV 220 Instrument Flight I, AV 221 Instrument Flight II, AV 244 Aerospace Regulatory Process, AV 300 Commercial Ground School, AV 316 Aerospace Transportation, AV 320 Commercial Flight I, AV 321 Commercial Flight II, AV 401 Airport Management. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Danville Campus | This program is for those seeking professional competence in the field of human resource management. The Concentration is a series of five three-credit courses, two taken in regular classes in the MBA core curriculum and three taken on-line. In addition, an online preparation course for the Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) certification exam is provided for those seeking professional certification in the field. | MBA | Averett University | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Biology with Teaching License: Grades 6-12 | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 102 General Botany, BIO 103 General Zoology, BIO 203 Genetics, BIO204 Human Anatomy and Physiology I, BIO205 Human Anatomy and Physiology II, BIO 301 Microbiology, BIO 330 General Ecology, BIO 360 Cellular and Molecular Biology, CH 101 102 General Chemistry I, II, CH 301 302 Organic Chemistry I, II, CH 303 304 Organic Chemistry Lab I, II, PSC 201 General College Physics I, MTH160 Introduction to Statistics, MTH 171 Applied Calculus or MTH 201 Calculus I. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Business Administration - Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, ECO 201 Principles of Microeconomics, ECO 202 Principles of Macroeconomics, BSA 206 Business Communications, BSA 221 Principles of Accounting I, BSA 222 Principles of Accounting II, BSA 305 Principles of Management, BSA 310 Principles of Marketing, BSA 370 Principles of Finance, BSA 434 Business Law, BSA 371 Intermediate Finance, BSA 373 International Financial Management, BSA 475 Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management, BSA 322 Managerial Accounting, BSA 372 Money and Banking, BSA 474 Commercial Bank Management, BSA 476 Derivatives and Risk Management. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in English with Teaching License | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include ENG 111 Introduction to Writing and Research, ENG 112 Introduction to Literature, ENG 201 Major British Authors, through 18th Century, ENG 202 Major British Authors, 19th and 20th Centuries, ENG 320 The English Novel in the 18th and 19th Centuries or ENG 323 Restoration and 18th Century Literature, ENG 390 Origins and Structure of English, ENG 401 Romantic Poetry and Prose or ENG 402 Victorian Poetry and Prose, ENG 405 Modern Literature, ENG 406 Romantic Movement in American Literature or ENG 407 American Literature: Gilded Age to WWII, ENG 412 Creative Writing, ENG 413 Chaucer or ENG 415, Milton, ENG 414 Shakespeare, ENG 421 Teaching Composition, English elective at 300-400 level. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Environmental Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include CH 101, 102 General Chemistry I, II, CH 201, 202 Quantitative Analysis and Lab, CH 206 Biological Chemistry, CH 260 Inorganic Chemistry, BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 102 General Botany, BIO 103 General Zoology, BIO 301 Microbiology, BIO 330 General Ecology, BIO 416 General Taxonomy, BIO 462/ENS 462 Topics in Environmental Biology, ENS 215 Environmental Problems, ENS 425 Field Experience in Environmental Studies. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Equestrian Studies - Dressage Track | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This program is for students most interested in business, facility and show management. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include ES 105 Practical Concepts of Equine Care, ES 111 Careers: Integrating Personal Goals, ES 115 Stable Management, ES 208 Equine Anatomy and Physiology, ES 211 Lunge Theory and Application, ES 224 Teaching Elementary Riding, ES 326 Equine Lameness and Disease, ES 420 Equine Nutrition, ES 401 Strategies for Equine Business Management, ES 470 Internship, BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, HTH 200 First Aid and Safety, BSA 206 Business Communication, ES 109 Horse mastership IV, ES 211 Lunge Theory and Application, ES 213 Dressage Through 1st Level, ES 313 Dressage Through 2nd Level, ES 330 Riding Instruction Programs, ES 206, Rider Fitness , ES 213, Dressage Through 1st Level , ES 304, Advanced Stable Management, ES 313, Dressage Through 2nd Level, ES 323, Advancing the Dressage Horse, ES 330, Riding Instruction Programs, ES 401, Strategies for Equine Business Management, ES 418, Instructor Certification Programs, ES 423, Instructor’s Apprentice I, BSA 206, Business Communication. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Equestrian Studies - Equine Management Track | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is for students most interested in business, facility and show management. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include ES 105 Practical Concepts of Equine Care, ES 111 Careers: Integrating Personal Goals, ES 115 Stable Management, ES 208 Equine Anatomy and Physiology, ES 211 Lunge Theory and Application, ES 224 Teaching Elementary Riding, ES 326 Equine Lameness and Disease, ES 420 Equine Nutrition, ES 401 Strategies for Equine Business Management, ES 470 Internship, BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, HTH 200 First Aid and Safety, BSA 206 Business Communication, ES109 Horse mastership III, BSA 221 Principles of Accounting I, BSA 305 Principles of Management , BSA 310 Principles of Marketing, BSA 324 Business Finance, BSA 326 Organizational Behavior, Theory and Leadership, BSA 354 Human Resources Management, BSA 434 Business Law, ECO 201 Microeconomics. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Equestrian Studies - Eventing Track | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is for students who wish to develop a classical foundation of theory and ability in training, teaching and competing in Eventing. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include ES 105 Practical Concepts of Equine Care, ES 111 Careers: Integrating Personal Goals, ES 115 Stable Management, ES 208 Equine Anatomy and Physiology, ES 211 Lunge Theory and Application, ES 224 Teaching Elementary Riding, ES 326 Equine Lameness and Disease, ES 420 Equine Nutrition, ES 401 Strategies for Equine Business Management, ES 470 Internship, BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, CSS 113 Microcomputers and Application Software, HTH 200 First Aid and Safety, BSA 206 Business Communication, ES 109 Horse mastership IV, ES 211 Lunge Theory and Application, ES 214 Fundamentals of Eventing, ES 316 Training the Event Horse I, ES 330 Riding Instruction Programs, ES 416 Training the Event Horse II, ES 418 Preparation for USEA/ICP Instructors, ES 423 Instructor’s Apprentice I, Select one of the following: ES 213 Dressage through 1st level or ES 260Young Stock, Choose one of the following: JR 115 News and Feature Writing, JR 210 Photography, BSA 353 Entrepreneurship, PE 365 Sports Psychology, POS 325 Perspectives on Leadership. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in History with Secondary Teaching License in History and Social Science | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include HIS 101 History of Western Civilization I, HIS 102 History of Western Civilization II, HIS 201 United States History I, HIS 202 United States History II, HIS 455 Political Development, American History 300-400 level, European History 300-400 level, History Elective 300-400 level, ECO 201 Principles of Microeconomics or ECO 202 Principles of Macroeconomics, ED 180 Earth Science for Educators, POS 131 The World of Politics, POS 204 State and Local Government, POS 215 American National Government, POS 311 Comparative Government, POS 380 International Relations, REL 201 Religions of the World. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The purpose of the program is to prepare students as generalists in mass media. Students will be trained for both print and broadcast media professions, and the courses will incorporate both theory and practice. Emphasis in most courses will be upon writing. Students who complete the degree will be eligible for jobs in a variety of settings including newspaper offices, television and radio broadcast facilities, and organizations requiring writing, desktop publishing, and public relations skills. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include JR 110 Introduction to Media, JR 115 News and Feature Writing, JR 152 Student Publications: Newspaper, JR 225 Editorial and Current Affairs, JR 230 Editing and Layout, JR 310 Broadcasting, JR 330 Media Law and Ethics, JR 440 Internship, JR 203 Film Studies, JR 210 Photography, JR 220 Public Relations, JR 411 Magazine Article Writing, English (200 level or above), Political Science (200 level or above), History (200 level or above), Sociology (200 level or above), Psychology (200 level or above), Economics (200 level or above). | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Mathematical Decision Science | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This is an interdisciplinary program for students with a combined interest in mathematics and the quantitative areas of business. This is an excellent choice for students interested in quantitative reasoning in the public or private sector. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include MTH 201 Calculus I, MTH 202 Calculus II, MTH 211 Foundations of Higher Mathematics, MTH 301 Calculus III, MTH 311 Abstract Algebra I, MTH 312 Abstract Algebra II or MTH 316 Theory of Real Variables II, MTH 315 Theory of Real Variables I, MTH 401 Geometry, MTH 403 Probability and Statistics, Mathematics Electives 300-400 level. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Program is a traditional course of study with emphasis on both theory and application. It requires students to master the techniques of mathematics, apply these techniques to real problems, and understand the underlying theory. This program is an excellent choice for those planning to attend graduate school in a variety of areas, wishing to develop their abilities in logic, wanting to expand their horizons by way of mathematics, or using mathematics as a companion area for another major. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include MTH 201 Calculus I, MTH 202 Calculus II, MTH 301 Calculus III, MTH 311 312, Abstract Algebra I, II, MTH 315, 316 Theory of Real Variables I, II, MTH 322 Multivariable Calculus, Mathematics Elective, 200+ level, Mathematics Electives, 400 level. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Mathematics with Teaching Licensure at the Secondary Level | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed for students planning to teach mathematics at the secondary level. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include MTH 201 Calculus I, MTH 202 Calculus II, MTH 211 Foundations of Higher Mathematics, MTH 301 Calculus III, MTH 311 Abstract Algebra I, MTH 312 Abstract Algebra II or MTH 316 Theory of Real Variables II, MTH 315 Theory of Real Variables I, MTH 401 Geometry, MTH 403 Probability and Statistics, Mathematics Electives 300-400 level. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Modern Languages | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | The Major in Modern Languages consists of advanced study of either French or Spanish the primary language and Intermediate+ level study of the other the secondary language. At least 12 semester hours of the primary language and 6 semester hours of the secondary language must be taken at Averett. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | |||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Physical Education - Athletic Training Program | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program is designed to prepare students for careers in athletic training. This curriculum stresses strong liberal arts and science foundation with clinical and problem solving development. The program requires a pre-professional phase where students will be introduced into the clinical experiences that will be required in the curriculum. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include BIO 101 Introduction to Biology, BIO 204 Human Anatomy and Physiology I, BIO 205 Human Anatomy and Physiology II, HTH 110 Contemporary Health Problems, HTH 200 First Aid and Safety, HTH 320 Nutrition and Sports Performance, PE 209 Introduction to Athletic Training, PE 280 Prevention of Athletic Injuries and Illnesses, PE 315 Physiology of Activity, PE 320 Kinesiology or PE 425 Biomechanics, PE 360 Sports Medicine I and Lab, PE 365 Sport Psychology, PE 370 Therapeutic Exercise, PE 409 Advanced Athletic Training, PE 421 Sports Medicine II and Lab, PE 428 Graded Exercise Testing, PE 435 Therapeutic Modalities, PE 438 Administration of Athletic Training Program, PE 444 Research Methods in Physical Education, PE 448 Prevention and Acute Care of Athletic Injuries, PE 449 Therapeutic Modalities and Pharmacology, PE 450 Assessment and Evaluation of Athletic Injuries and Pathologies, PE 451 Therapeutic Exercise for Athletic Training, PE 452 Administration/Psychosocial/Nutrition Issues in Athletic Training. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Major in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $20,300 a year | Danville Campus | This Program provides students with a broad education in politics and government. Students who graduate from the Political Science program will become familiar with American government, with other forms of government, and with the interactions among governments. | Students to be admitted should have a High School graduation with at least 16 acceptable units in grades 9-12, 4 units in English, 3 units in College Prep Math Classes, 3 units in Lab Sciences, 3 units in History and Social Sciences, 3 units in Electives. Averett requires a minimum TOEFL score of 500 (paper-based), 173 (computer-based), or 61 (Internet-based). The SAT will be accepted in lieu of a TOEFL if a minimum verbal score of 480 is achieved. | Major | Averett University | The modules include POS 131 The World of Politics, POS 215 American National Government, POS 204 State and Local Government, POS 311 Comparative Government, POS 343 Ancient Political Thought, POS 344 Modern Political Thought, POS 380 International Relations, POS/BIO/ENS 342 Environmental Policy and Law, JR 330 Media Law and Ethics, POS/CRJ 411 Constitutional Law, POS 445 Internship, BSA 326 Organizational Behavior Theory and Leadership, MTH 160 Introduction to Statistics, PSY 412 Industrial/Organizational Psychology, POS/HIS 455 Political Development, HIS 406 Twentieth Century Europe Post-War Divisions and Unions, HIS 410 Twentieth Century U.S. History, POS/HIS 414 Diplomatic History of the United States Since 1898, Political Science electives. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Danville Campus | This Program is for those seeking professional competence in the field of human resource management. The Concentration is a series of five three-credit courses, two taken in regular classes in the MBA core curriculum and three taken on-line. In addition, an online preparation course for the Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) certification exam is provided for those seeking professional certification in the field. | Students must have a score of 500 (paper-based total) or 173 (computer-based total) on the TOEFL for foreign. A cumulative grade point average of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) over the last sixty semester hours of undergraduate study toward a baccalaureate degree. They must have completed 30 or more transferable credits which include an English composition course with a grade of “C”. | MBA | Averett University | The modules include BSA 5 Legal Aspects, BSA 504 Contemporary Issues in HRM, BSA 529 Marketing Strategies, BSA 518 Business Research Methods and Applications, BSA 52 Operations Management , BSA 5 2 Organizational Behavior, BSA 522 Comprehensive Managerial Accounting, BSA 5 8 Contemporary Issues In Leadership , BSA 542 Advanced Managerial Economics, BSA 554 Comprehensive Financial Management ,BSA 545 International Business, BSA 555 Strategic Management. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 231420 | Averett University | Master of Education | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Danville Campus | This program is designed to encourage the development of the professional educator. The program concentrates on an educational framework that supports the advancement, application, and integration of relevant theory and practice within the classroom. In order to assume leadership positions, teachers must become competent in curriculum content, design, and implementation use of instructional strategies appropriate for the developmental level of students and appropriate for each curriculum area. The Master of Education program provides a strong theoretical base that examines philosophical, psychological, and research-oriented issues. In addition, courses in the areas of specialization are offered to enhance the student's knowledge in his/her chosen area of study to provide practical experience for teachers to become leaders in their profession. | Students must have a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) over the last sixty semester hours of undergraduate study toward a baccalaureate degree. The Graduate Admissions Committee may consider students who are below a 3.0 GPA for admission.A score of 600 paper-based total) or 250 (computer-based total) on the TOEFL for foreign national students is also required. | Masters | Averett University | The modules include ED 504 Philosophy of Education 3, ED 501 Research in Education 3, ED 502 Child and Adolescent Psychology 3, ED 508 The Exceptional Student 3, ED 505 Curriculum Development 3, ED 555 Models and Theories I 3, ED 552 Evaluation of Instructional Procedures 3, ED 55 Models and Theories II 3, ED 500 Comprehensive Exam – 1, ED 509 Instruction via Digital Media 3, ED 591 Portfolio Presentation and Assessment 3. | Averett University | 420 West Main Street, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 5660 | Danville Campus | Danville Campus, 133 Robertson Avenue, DANVILLE, Virginia, 24541, +1 434 791 4996 | Averett University, founded in 1859, offers courses of study leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in Danville and at regional centers in Virginia. Through personal attention for all students, Averett prepares them for successful lives by encouraging them, in the liberal arts tradition, to ask and answer important questions, form and defend judgments, and evaluate diverse views thoughtfully. In accordance with their Christian heritage, they value academic and religious freedom, spiritual growth, academic excellence, diversity, and tolerance. | Yes | Averett offers a variety of residence hall options Main Hall, Davenport Hall, Danville Hall, Bishop Hall, Fugate Hall, Averett Commons Apartments. Rooms include a twin bed, desk and dresser for each student. There are a limited number of 80" long beds available. All campus buildings are non-smoking, free laundry facilities are located in Main Hall, Fugate Hall and in each Averett Commons Apartment. Rooms are wired for cable television and all rooms offer high-speed Internet access. Private Rooms are available at a cost of $600 per year, single rooms are limited to specific halls and there is limited availability for single rooms. | ||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Art - Studio Art Concentration | Full Time | 60 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | Students cultivate individual creativity through the study of history, technique, presentation, and social engagement as a reflection of the creative and transformative nature of God the ultimate Creator. These then provide a framework for advanced study in one of two concentrations, either studio art or teaching/art education. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: General Studio Concentration Requirements 60 units: Required Core Courses 48 units: ART 120 Introduction to Computer Graphics 3, ART 130 Two-dimensional Design 3, ART 135 Three-dimensional Design 3, ART 145 Drawing I 3, ART 146 Painting I 3, ART 170 Sculpture I 3, ART 205 Ceramics I 3, ART 250 Photography I 3, ART 325 New Genre Art Forms 3, ART 431 Gallery Design 3, ART 450 Portfolio 2-3, ART 499 Thesis/Project 1-4, Select one of the following: ART 311 Sculptural Objects and Functional Art 3 - or - ART 403 Multicultural Art 3, Select one of the following: ART 210 Printmaking: Relief 3 - or - ART 211 Printmaking: Serigraph 3, Select three art history classes: ART 354 Ancient Art History 3, ART 356 History of Modern Art/ 3, ART 357 Contemporary Art Trends 3, ART 358 History of Graphic Design and Illustration 3, ART 359 Women in Art 3, ART 361 Early Christian and Medieval Art 3, ART 362 Renaissance to Rococo Art 3, HUM 223 Humanities Seminar III: Aesthetics/ 3-4, HUM 323 Humanities Seminar III: Aesthetics/ 3-4, Upper-Division Emphasis 12 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Art - Teaching Concentration | Full Time | 60 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | Students cultivate individual creativity through the study of history, technique, presentation, and social engagement as a reflection of the creative and transformative nature of God the ultimate Creator. These then provide a framework for advanced study in one of two concentrations, either studio art or teaching/art education. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Total Approved Subject Matter Requirements 60 units: Freshman: ART 130 Two-dimensional Design 3, ART 145 Drawing I 3, ART 120 Introduction to Computer Graphics 3, ART 146 Painting I 3, ART 135 Three-dimensional Design 3, Sophomore: ART 310 Fundamental Art Experiences 3, ART 311 Sculptural Objects and Functional Art 3, ART 325 New Genre Art Forms 3, Art History Class (See below for details) 3, RAC Review Select one of the following: ART 210 Printmaking: Relief (spring only) 3 - or -ART 211 Printmaking: Serigraph (fall only) 3, Junior: ART 403 Multicultural Art 3, ART 312 Secondary Art: Methods, Materials, and Curriculum 3, ART 320 Digital Imaging 3, Art History Class 3, Breadth Class 3, Senior: ART 431 Gallery Design 3, ART 450 Portfolio 2-3, ART 499 Thesis/Project 1-4, Art History Class (See below for details) 3, Breadth Class (See below for details) 3, Breadth Class (See below for details) 3 | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Athletic Training | Full Time | 73 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Exercise and Sport Science | This program prepares students to design and implement fitness and exercise programs that will help clients meet their goals and improve their quality of life. Initial coursework builds comprehensive foundational knowledge in biology, anatomy and physiology, the science of human movement, and exercise prescription. Students explore risk management, psychological considerations in physical activity, and acute care of injury and illness. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Exercise Science Foundation 29-33 units: AES 102 Foundations of Athletic Training and Applied Exercise Science 2, AES 290 Human Movement Science 3, AES 242 Fundamental Principles of Fitness 2, AT 160 Acute Care of Injury and Illness (F, S) 2, AT 220 Risk Management for the Physically Active (F) 3, PE 1XX Any Fitness for Life Course+/ 1, PE 240 Health Education (F, S)+/ 2, PSYC 290 Human Growth and Development 3, PSYC 110 General Psychology 3, Select one of the following: BIOL 101 Fundamentals of Biology 4, BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, Select one of the following: BIOL 115 Anatomy and Physiology 4 - or - BIOL 250 Human Anatomy 4 - and - BIOL 251 Human Physiology 4, Applied Exercise Science Core 39 units: Student must apply to the program and get approval from the program director prior to beginning any course in the Applied Exercise Science Core. AES 360 Nutrition for Exercise and Sport Science 2, AES 363 Physiology of Exercise 4, AES 364 Kinesiology 3, AES 472 Principles of Strength, Conditioning, and Human Performance 3, AES 473 Fitness and Exercise Prescription (F) 3, AES 478 Senior Preparation in Applied Exercise Science 2, AES 492 Practicum in Strength, Conditioning, and Human Performance 2, AES 493 Practicum in Fitness and Exercise Prescription 2, AT 355 Medical Conditions and Disabilities (S) 2, AT 469 Health Care Administration (S) 3, AT 490 Research Methods (F) 4, PE 366 Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries (F, S) 3, PSYC 330 Sports Psychology 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 385 Health Psychology 3, PSYC 485 Stress and Coping 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Biblical Studies | Full Time | 51-53 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Biblical Studies | The biblical studies major combines a broad background in philosophy and Christian theology and ministries with a solid foundation in the Bible. Graduates are furnished with a biblical basis for Christian ministry and evangelism and prepared for future graduate study in the Bible and Christian theology. The biblical studies major provides students with tools for continued education either at a seminary or a university. Graduates have also assumed positions in churches and Christian organizations where knowledge and understanding of the Scriptures are essential. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Biblical Studies Major 51-53 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response General Studies requirements for all biblical studies majors: UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3XX-4XX Approved Additional GS Biblical Studies course 3, CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, Select one of the following: THEO 303 Theology and the Christian Life 3, THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, THEO 363 Contemporary Christian Thought 3, For the doctrine requirement, the School of Theology recommends either THEO 303, 352, 354, or 363. HUM 325 also fulfills the General Studies doctrine requirement. Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3–4 or HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4, Select one of the following: PHIL 496 Senior Seminar 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3, XXX 496 Senior Seminar 3, Remaining major requirements: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, UBBL 3XX-4XX Five upper-division UBBL or BLNG classes 15, UBBL 3XX-4XX Biblical Studies Elective 3, THEO 363 Contemporary Christian Thought 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, HUM 225 Humanities Seminar V: Christian Classics 4 or HUM 325, Humanities Seminar V: Christian Classics 3-4 (3 units on APU campus, 4 units on High Sierra campus), Select one of the following: PHIL 315 History of Ancient Philosophy 3, PHIL 316 Medieval Philosophy 3, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Business Administration | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | The degree provides a solid business foundation covering accounting principles, business law, international business, finance, economics, statistics, and marketing. Students then focus on special areas of interest corresponding with their individual career goals. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the B.A. in Business Administrationa52 units, Business Core Courses 43 units, Business Electives 9 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Christian Ministries - Church Ministry | Full Time | 51-55 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | This program equips students for practical ministry. Students become equipped for professional ministry tasks and relationships by learning about themselves and about ministry. They may select from a concentration in pastoral/church ministry, intercultural ministry, nontraditional (faith-based) contexts, and sports ministry. They can choose careers as pastor, sociologist, teacher/professor, writer, chaplain, counselor, missionary, evangelist, church administrator, director of a Christian nonprofit organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Christian Ministries Major 51-55 units; Core Requirements 21-22 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, Select one of the following: HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas/ 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration 12-15 units, Church Ministry 15 units, Select four classes from the following: CMIN 318 Theology and Practice of Ministry 3, CMIN 356 Developing Disciples 3, CMIN 456 Ministry Organization and Administration 3, YMIN 403 Adolescent Issues and Intervention 3, YMIN 495 Topics in Youth Ministry 3, Select one of the following Senior Seminar classes (General Studies): CMIN 496 Senior Seminar: Church and Society (petition needed) 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Christian Ministries - Intercultural Christian Ministry | Full Time | 51-55 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | This program equips students for practical ministry. Students become equipped for professional ministry tasks and relationships by learning about themselves and about ministry. They may select from a concentration in pastoral/church ministry, intercultural ministry, nontraditional (faith-based) contexts, and sports ministry. They can choose careers as pastor, sociologist, teacher/professor, writer, chaplain, counselor, missionary, evangelist, church administrator, director of a Christian nonprofit organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Christian Ministries Major 51-55 units; Core Requirements 21-22 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, Select one of the following: HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas/ 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration 12-15 units, Intercultural Christian Ministry Concentration 12 units: CMIN 110 Introduction to Intercultural Christian Ministry 3, CMIN 405 Christian Mission in the 21st Century 3, GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday Life 3, Select one of the following: CMIN 318 Theology and Practice of Ministry 3, CMIN 326 Effective Teaching in Christian Education 3, CMIN 346 Ministry to the City 4, CMIN 356 Developing Disciples 3, CMIN 406 History and Philosophy of Christian Education 3, CMIN 408 Principles of Preaching 3, CMIN 416 Communicating the Gospel 3, CMIN 446 Children's Educational Ministries 3, CMIN 466 Adult Development and Spiritual Formation 3, CMIN 486 Urban Ministry Practicum 6, CMIN 487 Exegeting the City 3, CMIN 495 Topics in Christian Ministry 3, GLBL 310 Intercultural Communications 3, GLBL 315 Urban Culture 3, GMIN 529 City in Theological Perspective 4, PHIL 370 Comparative Religions 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, YMIN 403 Adolescent Issues and Intervention 3, YMIN 495 Topics in Youth Ministry 3, Select one of the following Senior Seminar classes (General Studies): CMIN 496 Senior Seminar: Church and Society 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Christian Ministries - Ministry in Non-Traditional (Faith-based) Contexts | Full Time | 51-55 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | This program equips students for practical ministry. Students become equipped for professional ministry tasks and relationships by learning about themselves and about ministry. They may select from a concentration in pastoral/church ministry, intercultural ministry, nontraditional (faith-based) contexts, and sports ministry. They can choose careers as pastor, sociologist, teacher/professor, writer, chaplain, counselor, missionary, evangelist, church administrator, director of a Christian nonprofit organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Christian Ministries Major 51-55 units; Core Requirements 21-22 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, Select one of the following: HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas/ 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration 12-15 units, Non-Traditional (Faith-Based) Contexts 15 units: SOCW 250 Introduction to Social Work 3, SOCW 351 Child Welfare 3, YMIN 403 Adolescent Issues and Intervention 3, Select one of the following: SOCW 410 Family Violence 3, SOCW 415 Addictions: Assessment and Intervention 3, YMIN 495 Topics in Youth Ministry 3, Select one of the following: CMIN 496 Senior Seminar: Church and Society (petition needed) 3, SOCW 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics in the Helping Professions 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Christian Ministries - Pastoral Ministry | Full Time | 51-55 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | This program equips students for practical ministry. Students become equipped for professional ministry tasks and relationships by learning about themselves and about ministry. They may select from a concentration in pastoral/church ministry, intercultural ministry, nontraditional (faith-based) contexts, and sports ministry. They can choose careers as pastor, sociologist, teacher/professor, writer, chaplain, counselor, missionary, evangelist, church administrator, director of a Christian nonprofit organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Christian Ministries Major 51-55 units; Core Requirements 21-22 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, Select one of the following: HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas/ 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration 12-15 units, Pastoral Ministry Concentration 12 units: CMIN 318 Theology and Practice of Ministry 3, CMIN 456 Ministry Organization and Administration 3, Select one of the following: CMIN 326 Effective Teaching in Christian Education 3, CMIN 346 Ministry to the City 4, CMIN 356 Developing Disciples 3, CMIN 405 Christian Mission in the 21st Century 3, CMIN 406 History and Philosophy of Christian Education 3, CMIN 408 Principles of Preaching 3, CMIN 416 Communicating the Gospel 3, CMIN 446 Children's Educational Ministries 3, CMIN 466 Adult Development and Spiritual Formation 3, CMIN 486 Urban Ministry Practicum 6, CMIN 487 Exegeting the City 3, CMIN 495 Topics in Christian Ministry 3, GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday Life 3, GLBL 310 Intercultural Communications 3, GLBL 315 Urban Culture 3, GMIN 529 City in Theological Perspective 4, PHIL 370 Comparative Religions 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, YMIN 403 Adolescent Issues and Intervention 3, YMIN 495 Topics in Youth Ministry 3, Select one of the following Senior Seminar classes (General Studies): CMIN 496 Senior Seminar: Church and Society 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Christian Ministries - Sports Ministry | Full Time | 51-55 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | This program equips students for practical ministry. Students become equipped for professional ministry tasks and relationships by learning about themselves and about ministry. They may select from a concentration in pastoral/church ministry, intercultural ministry, nontraditional (faith-based) contexts, and sports ministry. They can choose careers as pastor, sociologist, teacher/professor, writer, chaplain, counselor, missionary, evangelist, church administrator, director of a Christian nonprofit organization. The sports ministry concentration consists of 15 units which prepare the ministry oriented student to be a sports ministry leader in a church setting. Many American churches utilize sports or recreation to accomplish their mission. Students study the historical, theological, biblical, and philosophical aspects of leisure time activities, competition, and how sports and recreation can be utilized to serve others. Coursework challenges students both inside and outside the classroom so they emerge as leaders in the growing sports ministry arena. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Christian Ministries Major 51-55 units; Core Requirements 21-22 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, Select one of the following: HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas/ 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration 12-15 units, Sports Ministry Concentration 15 units: AT 160 Acute Care of Injury and Illness (F, S) 2, YMIN 305 Integration of Faith and Sports 3, YMIN 310 Evangelism and Discipleship in Sports Ministry 3, YMIN 320 Organization and Administration of a Sports Ministry 3, YMIN 478 Senior Preparation in Sports Ministry 3, Required Senior Seminar class (General Studies): PE 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics in Physical Education and Sport (F, S) 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Cinematic Arts - Critical Studies Track | Full Time | 46-51 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater, Film, and Television | This is designed for those who wish to understand the deeper principles that underlie film and television production, the Critical Studies track also challenges students to explore how the arts and entertainment industry and culture impact one another. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Critical Studies Track 15 units: TFT 311 Film and Literature 3, TFT 317 Cinematic Aesthetics 3, TFT 351 Film and Social Issues 3, TFT 360 Studies in Popular Culture 3, Select one of the following: TFT 444 Advanced Film Theory 3, TFT 495 Special Topics 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Cinematic Arts - Screenwriting Track | Full Time | 46-51 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater, Film, and Television | This program is designed for those who wish to craft stories from the blank page to the finished final draft, the Screenwriting track offers a deeper experience in hands-on writing that will help students master the techniques of storytelling through intensive practical application. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Screenwriting Track 18 units: TFT 361 Producing and Production Management 3, TFT 385 Intermediate Screenwriting 3, TFT 485 Advanced Screenwriting 3, Select one of the following: TFT 311 Film and Literature 3, TFT 351 Film and Social Issues 3, TFT 495 Special Topics 3, Select two of the following: TFT 487 Television Writing: Episodic Drama 3, TFT 488 Television Writing: Situation Comedy 3, TFT 498 Directed Research 1-4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Communication Studies - Interpersonal and Organizational Communication | Full Time | 45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | Students learn how to bridge the gap between divergent viewpoints and find a common ground from which to address problems. Students can choose careers as a journalist, writer/editor, grant writer, college recruiter, community service coordinator, event planner, governmental press secretary, labor negotiator, mediator. This concentration focuses on focuses on the communication and conflict-management skills needed in business and nonprofit settings. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Communication Studies Major 45 units: Lower-Division Core Requirements 9 units: COMM 200 Introduction to Mass Communication 3, COMM 201 Introduction to Communication Studies 3, JOUR 210 Introduction to Journalism 3, Upper-Division Core Requirements 15 units: COMM 300 Research Methods in Communication 3, COMM 302 Rhetorical Theory 3, COMM 303 Communication Theory 3, COMM 425 Interpersonal Communication Processes 3, COMM 490 Communication Internship/ 1-3, Areas of Concentration 21 units. Interpersonal and Organizational Emphasis 21 units: COMM 330 Small-Group Communication 3, COMM 420 Conflict Management/ 3, COMM 430 Organizational Communication 3, COMM 440 Persuasion and Attitude Change 3, JOUR 450 Public Relations 3, Upper-division communication studies or journalism elective, excluding COMM 496 3, Select one of the following: COMM 116 Intercollegiate Forensics 1-3, COMM 211 Presentational Speaking 3, COMM 315 Intercollegiate Forensics 1-3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Communication Studies - Media Studies | Full Time | 45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | Students learn how to bridge the gap between divergent viewpoints and find a common ground from which to address problems. Students can choose careers as a journalist, writer/editor, grant writer, college recruiter, community service coordinator, event planner, governmental press secretary, labor negotiator, mediator. This concentration Students learn how to bridge the gap between divergent viewpoints and find a common ground from which to address problems. Students can choose careers as a journalist, writer/editor, grant writer, college recruiter, community service coordinator, event planner, governmental press secretary, labor negotiator, mediator. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Communication Studies Major 45 units: Lower-Division Core Requirements 9 units: COMM 200 Introduction to Mass Communication 3, COMM 201 Introduction to Communication Studies 3, JOUR 210 Introduction to Journalism 3, Upper-Division Core Requirements 15 units: COMM 300 Research Methods in Communication 3, COMM 302 Rhetorical Theory 3, COMM 303 Communication Theory 3, COMM 425 Interpersonal Communication Processes 3, COMM 490 Communication Internship/ 1-3, Areas of Concentration 21 units. Media Studies 21 units: COMM 360 Studies in Popular Culture 3, COMM 440 Persuasion and Attitude Change 3, JOUR 305 Media Law and Ethics 3, TFT 101 Christianity and the Creative Process 3, TFT 275 History of Broadcasting and Electronic Media 3, TFT 341 Media Criticism and Theory 3, TFT 351 Film and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Communication Studies - Rhetoric and Public Address | Full Time | 45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | Students learn how to bridge the gap between divergent viewpoints and find a common ground from which to address problems. Students can choose careers as a journalist, writer/editor, grant writer, college recruiter, community service coordinator, event planner, governmental press secretary, labor negotiator, mediator. It centers on persuasion, argumentation, and debate. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Communication Studies Major 45 units: Lower-Division Core Requirements 9 units: COMM 200 Introduction to Mass Communication 3, COMM 201 Introduction to Communication Studies 3, JOUR 210 Introduction to Journalism 3, Upper-Division Core Requirements 15 units: COMM 300 Research Methods in Communication 3, COMM 302 Rhetorical Theory 3, COMM 303 Communication Theory 3, COMM 425 Interpersonal Communication Processes 3, COMM 490 Communication Internship/ 1-3, Areas of Concentration 21 units. Rhetoric and Public Address 21 units: COMM 115 Essentials of Argumentation and Debate 3, COMM 330 Small-Group Communication 3, COMM 340 Advanced Argumentation 3, COMM 440 Persuasion and Attitude Change 3, COMM 495 Special Topics in Communication 3, Upper-division communication studies or journalism elective, excluding COMM 496 3, Select one of the following: COMM 116 Intercollegiate Forensics 1-3, COMM 211 Presentational Speaking 3, COMM 315 Intercollegiate Forensics 1-3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Computer Information Systems | Full Time | 57 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | The focus of this degree is on the analysis, design, and implementation of information systems. Core courses provide a solid foundation in object-oriented and structured programming, modern operating systems, and database management and development. Students will be prepared for careers as a computer systems analyst, computer programmer, software engineer, web developer, database manager, information security specialist, network administrator, game designer, chief technology officer, freelance technology consultant. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Computer Information Systems Major 57 units: Computer Science Required Courses 35 units: CS 205 Microcomputer Software Tools 3, CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4,CS 225 Fundamentals of Computer Science 4, CS 250 Operating Systems 3, CS 320 Data Structures 3, CS 325 Database Management Systems 3, CS 330 Systems Programming I 3, CS 420 Telecommunications and Interfacing 3, CS 435 Advanced Database Application Programming 3, CS 470 Software Engineering I 3, CS 480 Software Engineering II 3, Computer Science Electives 9 units: Math Requirements 6 units: MATH 151 Applied Calculus I 3, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, Other Requirements 7 units, BUSI 120, Principles of Accounting I 4, BUSI 210 Principles of Organization and Management 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Economics | Full Time | 39 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | This major provides a solid grounding in economic principles, statistics, and the economics of religion. These then serve as a framework for in-depth study of labor concerns, financial markets, environmental economics, urban and regional economies, and international trade. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Economics Major 39 units: Economics Core 18 units: ECON 250 Principles of Macroeconomics 3, ECON 251 Principles of Microeconomics 3, ECON 350 Intermediate Macroeconomics 3, ECON 351 Intermediate Microeconomics 3, ECON 458 Economics and Religion 3, PSYC 299 Applied Statistics 3, Economics Electives 21 units: Select 21 units from the following list: ECON 352 Financial Markets and Institutions 3, ECON 353 Health Economics 3, ECON 355 Environmental Economics 3, ECON 356 Labor Economics 3, ECON 357 Economics of the Developing World 3, ECON 359 Urban and Regional Economics 3, ECON 371 Comparative Economics 3, ECON 372 International Trade and Finance 3, ECON 452 Econometrics 3, ECON 453 Microfinance and Microenterprise 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Economics with a Concentration in Business | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | This major provides a solid grounding in economic principles, statistics, and the economics of religion. These then serve as a framework for in-depth study of labor concerns, financial markets, environmental economics, urban and regional economies, and international trade. Business economics focuses on the economic environment of business and society. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Economics Major 39 units: Economics Core 18 units: ECON 250 Principles of Macroeconomics 3, ECON 251 Principles of Microeconomics 3, ECON 350 Intermediate Macroeconomics 3, ECON 351 Intermediate Microeconomics 3, ECON 458 Economics and Religion 3, PSYC 299 Applied Statistics 3, Economics Electives 21 units: Select 21 units from the following list: ECON 352 Financial Markets and Institutions 3, ECON 353 Health Economics 3, ECON 355 Environmental Economics 3, ECON 356 Labor Economics 3, ECON 357 Economics of the Developing World 3, ECON 359 Urban and Regional Economics 3, ECON 371 Comparative Economics 3, ECON 372 International Trade and Finance 3, ECON 452 Econometrics 3, ECON 453 Microfinance and Microenterprise 3, Business Concentration: Economics Core 18 units: Business Economics 21 units: ECON 352 Financial Markets and Institutions 3, ECON 353 Health Economics 3, ECON 355 Environmental Economics 3, ECON 356 Labor Economics 3, ECON 359 Urban and Regional Economics 3, ECON 452 Econometrics 3, ECON 453 Microfinance and Microenterprise 3, Business Courses 13 units: BUSI 120 Principles of Accounting I 4, BUSI 210 Principles of Organization and Management 3, BUSI 330 Principles of Finance 3, BUSI 360 Principles of Marketing 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Economics with a Concentration in International Development | Full Time | 51 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | This major provides a solid grounding in economic principles, statistics, and the economics of religion. These then serve as a framework for in-depth study of labor concerns, financial markets, environmental economics, urban and regional economies, and international trade. International development examines the economic needs of the developing world. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Economics Major 39 units: Economics Core 18 units: ECON 250 Principles of Macroeconomics 3, ECON 251 Principles of Microeconomics 3, ECON 350 Intermediate Macroeconomics 3, ECON 351 Intermediate Microeconomics 3, ECON 458 Economics and Religion 3, PSYC 299 Applied Statistics 3, Economics Electives 21 units: Select 21 units from the following list: ECON 352 Financial Markets and Institutions 3, ECON 353 Health Economics 3, ECON 355 Environmental Economics 3, ECON 356 Labor Economics 3, ECON 357 Economics of the Developing World 3, ECON 359 Urban and Regional Economics 3, ECON 371 Comparative Economics 3, ECON 372 International Trade and Finance 3, ECON 452 Econometrics 3, ECON 453 Microfinance and Microenterprise 3, Requirements for the B.A. in Economics with a concentration in International Development 51 units: Economics Core Courses 18 units: International Development 24 units: ECON 355 Environmental Economics 3, ECON 356 Labor Economics 3, ECON 357 Economics of the Developing World 3, ECON 359 Urban and Regional Economics 3, ECON 371 Comparative Economics 3, ECON 372 International Trade and Finance 3, ECON 452 Econometrics 3, ECON 453 Microfinance and Microenterprise 3, Select three of the following: 9 units: BUSI 110 Introduction to Business 3, BUSI 370 International Business 3, GLBL/COMM 310 Intercultural Communications 3, GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday Life/ 3, HIST 210 World Geography 3, POLI 340 International Relations 3, THEO 480 Theologies of Liberation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Global Studies | Full Time | 48 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Global Studies Sociology, and TESOL | The aim is to form students with the global knowledge, intercultural grace, practical learning skills, and moral imaginativeness to support vocations dedicated to promoting God's truth and justice in the world. Students create an individual learning plan that moves through increasingly broad levels of involvement and experience: from university, to local community, to inner city Los Angeles, to global learning. This involves two semester-long internships, one in L.A. and one overseas, where students complete study and service projects with a special focus on the urban poor. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: On-Campus Coursework 24 units: GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday life/ 3, GLBL 305 Peoples and Places 3, GLBL 320 Global Engagement in the 21st Century 3, GLBL 365 Women and Globalization 3, GLBL 420 Sustainable Societies 3, GLBL 496 Senior Seminar: Global Issues and Prospects 3, HIST 210 World Geography 3, Select one of the following: POLI 320 Comparative Politics 3, POLI 390 History and Politics of the Non-Western World 3, Los Angeles Term 15 units: GLBL 315 Urban Culture 3, GLBL 330 Community Transformation 6, GLBL 345 Urban Religious Movements 3, SOC 359 Immigrant L.A. 3, Global Learning Term Coursework 9 units minimum: Required: GLBL 325 Family Organization 3, GLBL 335 International Internship 3-6, GLBL 350 Global Study Project 3, Global Studies Electives: GLBL 300 Self-Directed Language Learning 3, GLBL 340 Community Life 3, Other Recommended Electives: ECON 371 Comparative Economics 3, GLBL 310 Intercultural Communications 3, HIST 121 World Civilizations since 1648 3, SOC 120 Introduction to Sociology 3, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3, SOCW 400 Grant and Proposal Writing 3, SOC 471 Qualitative Social Research Methods 3, THEO 480 Theologies of Liberation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Graphic Design | Full Time | 53-56 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The degree provides a solid foundation in the formal principles of design, aesthetics and craftsmanship, traditional skills (such as hand lettering and drawing, and sophisticated graphics software. Students explore the principles of graphic design within traditional linear print media, Web design, and motion graphics and time-based media. Students learn how to develop design solutions using a wide range of media, including poster, book, and magazine layouts, Web design and interactive communication, and the creation of graphic identities and branding. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Graphic Design Major 53-56 units: Core Courses 43-46 units: ART 120 Introduction to Computer Graphics 3, ART 130 Two-dimensional Design 3, ART 135 Three-dimensional Design 3, ART 145 Drawing I 3, ART 250 Photography I 3, ART 281 Graphic Design I (formerly ART 220) 3, ART 321 Production for Print Design (formerly ART 221) 3, ART 356 History of Modern Art/ 3, ART 358 History of Graphic Design and Illustration 3, ART 382 Webpage Design I 3, ART 383 Graphic Design II (formerly ART 380) 3, ART 385 Graphic Design III (formerly ART 381) 3, ART 450 Portfolio 2-3, ART 475 Art Internship 1-4, ART 481 Graphic Design IV (formerly ART 480) 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in History | Full Time | 36 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | The degree provides a solid foundation in American and world history, geography, research, and writing. These then provide context for in-depth study of the student’s preferred time periods, regions, and historical themes. The degree prepares students for multiple career paths that call for clear and logical reasoning, the ability to analyze complex relations between cause and effect, well-developed writing skills, and familiarity with other cultures and historical eras. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: History Major 36 units: Core Requirements 21 units: HIST 120 World Civilizations to 1648 3, HIST 121 World Civilizations since 1648 3, HIST 151 United States History to 1865 3, HIST 152 United States History since 1865 3, HIST 210 World Geography 3, POLI 300 Research and Writing 3, POLI 496 Senior Seminar: Religion and Politics 3, Additional Requirements 15 units: Select 15 additional units of upper-division department electives from the following list: HIST 320 Modern Africa 3, HIST 330 History of Religion in America 3, HIST 334 History of American Foreign Affairs 3, HIST 338 History of California 3, HIST 342 The American West 3, HIST 346 History of American Immigration 3, HIST 350 Medieval Europe 3, HIST 352 Renaissance and Reformation 3, HIST 357 Enlightenment Europe 3, HIST 358 Europe 1789-1914 3, HIST 359 Europe 1914-1992 3, HIST 360 History of the Middle East I: Early and Medieval Islam 3, HIST 374 Colonial Era 3, HIST 376 The Revolution and the Republic 3, HIST 380 Civil War and Reconstruction 3, HIST 382 Emergence of Modern America 3, HIST 386 Modern America 3, HIST 484 Historical Themes 3, HIST 497 Readings 1-4, HIST 498 Directed Research 1-4, HIST 499 Thesis/Project 1-4, POLI 326 Civil Rights and Civil Liberties 3, POLI 360 Classical Political Thought 3, POLI 363 Modern Political Thought 3, POLI 376 The American Founding 3, POLI 390 History and Politics of the Non-Western World 3, UBBL 450 Ancient Near Eastern History 3, UBBL 451 Greco-Roman World 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Journalism | Full Time | 45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | The degree provides a solid foundation in convergent journalism, mass communication, media law and ethics, desktop publishing and design, public affairs reporting, and magazine article writing. These then serve as a framework for advanced study in the student’s area of interest, such as broadcast journalism, newspapers and magazines, nonfiction creative writing, international journalism, entertainment reporting, faith and values reporting, public relations, marketing communications, radio and sound production, and documentary filmmaking. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Journalism Major 45 units: Core Requirements 15 units: COMM 200 Introduction to Mass Communication 3, COMM 201 Introduction to Communication Studies 3, COMM 300 Research Methods in Communication 3, COMM 490 Communication Internship 1-3, JOUR 210 Introduction to Journalism 3, Required Classes 18 units: ENGL 361 Freelance Magazine Article Writing 3, JOUR 300 Editing 3, JOUR 305 Media Law and Ethics 3 , JOUR 315 Desktop Publishing and Design 3, JOUR 430 Public Affairs Reporting 3, Select 3 units in any combination from the following: COMM 414 Student Broadcast Workshop 1-3, JOUR 325 Student Publication Workshop 1, Remaining Elective Units 12 units: Choose 12 units from the following courses: COMM 261 Radio and Sound Production 3, COMM 340 Advanced Argumentation 3, COMM 376 Broadcast Journalism 3, COMM 414 Student Broadcast Workshop/ 1-3, ENGL 304 Creative Writing: Creative Nonfiction 3, JOUR 310 History of American Journalism 3, JOUR 325 Student Publication Workshop 1, JOUR 410 International Journalism 3, JOUR 420 Entertainment Reporting 3, JOUR 425 Opinion and Editorial Writing 3, JOUR 440 Faith and Values Reporting 3, JOUR 450 Public Relations 3, JOUR 460 Advanced Public Relations 3, MKTG 361 Marketing Communication 3, TFT 260 Cinema-TV Production II 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Management | Distance / Online | 2-4 years (Average) | US $425 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This program equips entrepreneurs with professional knowledge and practical skills in strategic leadership, management, production, marketing, finance, technology, human relations, and business law. The program promotes personal and spiritual growth by emphasizing Christian values, ethical principles, and effective interpersonal relationships in diverse settings. | Applicants must be 18 years of age or older. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Major Course Sequence: MGT 105 Introduction to Business 3, MGT 130 Principles of Accounting I 4, MGT 131 Principles of Accounting II 3, MGT 215 Principles of Organization and Management 3, MGT 270 Business Law 3, MGT 280 Applied Statistics 3, MGT 310 Quantitative Analysis for Management 3, MGT 320 Principles of Finance 3, MGT 350 Principles of Marketing 3, MGT 365 International Business 3, MGT 375 Consumer Behavior 3, MGT 410 Business Report Writing 3, MGT 415 Production Management 3, MGT 420 Conflict Management 3, MGT 435 Organization and Administrative Behavior 3, MGT 480 Strategic Management 3, MGT 490 Directed Study: Applied Research 3, MGT 492 Senior Seminar: Business Ethics 3, MIN 417 The Art of Leadership 3, Elective 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Math/Physics | Full Time | 50 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The Math/Physics major is particularly appropriate for students pursuing teaching careers in physics or mathematics, and is designed to prepare students to apply a variety of mathematical models to physical phenomena. Students are prepared for careers as a physicist, architect, actuary, software engineer/developer/programmer, urban designer, forensic analyst, public utilities analyst, statistician, air traffic controller, climate analyst. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Computer programming language course 3, CHEM 151 General Chemistry 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, PHYC 401 Thermodynamics 3, Upper-division courses in math or physics (including MATH 263; minimum of six units in physics) 21. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Mathematics - Applied Math Track | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The degree provides a foundation in calculus, discrete mathematics, linear and abstract algebra, differential equations, computer programming, and physics. Students may then tailor the remainder of the curriculum to their intended profession using one of four tracks: general math, secondary math education, applied math, and graduate school prep. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 43 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, MATH 400 Abstract Algebra 3, MATH 450 Introduction to Real Analysis 3, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper-Division Mathematics Electives 9-19. Applied Math Track 15 units: MATH 360 Probability and Statistics 3, MATH 430 Mathematical Physics 3, MATH 455 Numerical Analysis 3, MATH 470 Complex Variables 3, MATH 480 Mathematical Reading, Writing, and Presentation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Mathematics - General Math Track | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The degree provides a foundation in calculus, discrete mathematics, linear and abstract algebra, differential equations, computer programming, and physics. Students may then tailor the remainder of the curriculum to their intended profession using one of four tracks: general math, secondary math education, applied math, and graduate school prep. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 43 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, MATH 400 Abstract Algebra 3, MATH 450 Introduction to Real Analysis 3, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper-Division Mathematics Electives 9-19. General Math Track 9 units: MATH 340 Geometry 3, MATH 360 Probability and Statistics 3, MATH 390 History of Mathematics and Number Theory 3, MATH 430 Mathematical Physics 3, MATH 455 Numerical Analysis 3, MATH 470 Complex Variables 3, MATH 480 Mathematical Reading, Writing, and Presentation 3, MATH 499 Thesis/Project 1-4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Mathematics - Graduate School Prep Track | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The degree provides a foundation in calculus, discrete mathematics, linear and abstract algebra, differential equations, computer programming, and physics. Students may then tailor the remainder of the curriculum to their intended profession using one of four tracks: general math, secondary math education, applied math, and graduate school prep. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 43 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, MATH 400 Abstract Algebra 3, MATH 450 Introduction to Real Analysis 3, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper-Division Mathematics Electives 9-19. Graduate School Prep Track 15 units: MATH 340 Geometry 3, MATH 360 Probability and Statistics 3, MATH 390 History of Mathematics and Number Theory 3, MATH 470 Complex Variables 3, MATH 480 Mathematical Reading, Writing, and Presentation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Mathematics - Secondary Math Education Track | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The degree provides a foundation in calculus, discrete mathematics, linear and abstract algebra, differential equations, computer programming, and physics. Students may then tailor the remainder of the curriculum to their intended profession using one of four tracks: general math, secondary math education, applied math, and graduate school prep. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 43 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, MATH 400 Abstract Algebra 3, MATH 450 Introduction to Real Analysis 3, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper-Division Mathematics Electives 9-19. Secondary Math Education Track 19 units: EDLS 300 Introduction to Teaching as a Profession, K-12 4, MATH 301 Mathematics for Secondary Teachers 3, MATH 340 Geometry 3, MATH 360 Probability and Statistics 3, MATH 390 History of Mathematics and Number Theory 3, MATH 480 Mathematical Reading, Writing, and Presentation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Music - Applied Music Emphasis (Performance) | Full Time | 57-77 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The degree provides a solid foundation in music theory, practical musicianship, music technology, sight singing, and dictation. These then provide a framework for advanced study in music history, choral and instrumental conducting, commercial music, and music literature. Students can choose careers as a composer/arranger, performer, music educator, conductor, band/choir director, music industry executive, musical product sales representative, producer, audio recording engineer. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Applied Music Emphasis (Performance) 10-12 units, Additional units of private lessons 8, Senior Recital N/C, Pedagogy (F/S)(all) 2, MUS 224 Diction for Singers I (F)(So) (vocal performance only) 1, MUS 227 Diction for Singers II (S)(So) (vocal performance only) 1. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Music - Commercial Music Emphasis | Full Time | 57-77 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The commercial music emphasis prepares students for careers in both the Christian and secular music business, including recording arts, commercial arranging/composing, performing, and production. Course work maintains a real-world point of view, reflective of faculty who are primarily working professionals in the field of commercial music. Rather than train relatively narrowly prepared “specialists,” this program seeks to produce broadly prepared musicians who are “generalists” with respect to the common skills required in a variety of careers in commercial music, and who are able to teach themselves new technologies and popular music styles as commercial music changes. Graduates may become engineers who can perform or arrange, arrangers who can engineer, or performers who are entrepreneurial business men and women. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Commercial Music Core 9 units: All commercial music students complete four courses which make up the 9-unit commercial music core. These are in addition to the regular music major core. MUS 323 Arranging I (F/S)(Jr) 3, MUS 327 Audio Recording I (F/S)(So) 2, MUS 337 Music Business I (F/S)(So) 2, MUS 494 Commercial Music Internship (F/S)(Jr,Sr) 2, Commercial Music Tracks 16-18 units, Audio Engineering 17-18 units, Commercial Music Core (MUS 323, MUS 327, MUS 337, MUS 494) 9 , MUS 328 Audio Recording II (S)(Jr) 2, MUS 396 Advanced Music Technology (F)(Jr) 2, MUS 495 Production Techniques (F/S)(Sr) 2, Commercial Music Elective 2-3, Arranging 18-19 units, Commercial Music Core (MUS 323, MUS 327, MUS 337, MUS 494) 9, MUS 423 Orchestration I (F/S)(Jr) 3, MUS 428 Arranging II (S)(Jr) 2, MUS 495 Production Techniques (F/S)(Sr) 2, Commercial Music Elective 2-3 ,Performance (Instrumental Commercial) 17 units, Commercial Music Core (MUS 323, MUS 327, MUS 337, MUS 494) 9, Four additional units of private lessons (in addition to the normal eight required of all music majors), focused on jazz/commercial playing 4, MUS 382 Jazz and Commercial Ensemble (F/S)(Sr) 1, MUS 383, Jazz and Commercial Ensemble (F/S)(Sr) 1, MUS 391 Jazz Improvisation Workshop (F/S)(Sr) 1, MUS 392 Jazz Improvisation Workshop (F/S)(Sr) 1, Business (with School of Business and Management) 18-19 units, Commercial Music Core (MUS 323, MUS 327, MUS 337, MUS 494) 9, BUSI 110 Introduction to Business (F/S)(Jr) 3, MUS 338 Music Business II (S)(Jr) 2, MUS 495 Production Techniques (F/S)(Jr) 2, Business or Commercial Music Elective 2-3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Music - Music Education Emphasis | Full Time | 57-77 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The music education emphasis provides future vocal, instrumental, and general music teachers with necessary skills, knowledge, and appropriate methodologies for success at all levels of music education within California. Students can choose careers as a composer/arranger, performer, music educator, conductor, band/choir director, music industry executive, musical product sales representative, producer, audio recording engineer. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Music Education Emphasis 12 units: MUS 331 String Instrument Techniques (S)(Jr,Sr) 1, MUS 332 Woodwind Instrument Techniques (even F)(Jr,Sr) 1, MUS 333 Brass Instrument Techniques (F)(Jr,Sr) 1, MUS 334 Percussion Instrument Techniques (S)(Jr,Sr) 1, MUS 423 Orchestration I (F/S)(Jr,Sr) 3, MUS 431 Introduction to Music Education (F)(Jr,Sr) 2, MUS 433 Music Methods for the Elementary and Secondary Schools (S)(Jr,Sr). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Music - Music Theory Emphasis | Full Time | 57-77 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The music theory emphasis provides students who wish to work in the field of music composition, arranging, orchestrating, and multimedia scoring with skills necessary for entry level positions or advanced study. Students can choose careers as a composer/arranger, performer, music educator, conductor, band/choir director, music industry executive, musical product sales representative, producer, audio recording engineer. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Music Theory Emphasis 10 units: Required Courses: MUS 321 Counterpoint (S)(Jr,Sr) 3, MUS 423 Orchestration I (F/S)(Jr,Sr) 3, Select remaining units from: MUS 323 Arranging I (F/S)(Jr,Sr) 3, MUS 421 Choral Arranging (formerly Interpretive Arranging) (on demand)(Jr,Sr) 2, MUS 422 20th Century Composition Techniques (S)(Jr,Sr) 2, MUS 424 Projects in Music Theory (on demand)(Jr,Sr) 2, MUS 427 Form and Analysis (F)(Jr,Sr) 2, MUS 428 Arranging II (S)(Jr,Sr) 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Philosophy | Full Time | 27-28 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Theology and Philosophy | The program equips its majors to become effective and faithful philosophers, well prepared for further philosophical education as well as for a range of professional careers, by exposing them to the history and methods of philosophy, inspiring them to see philosophy as a tool for the discipleship of the mind, motivating them to explore philosophy further, and training them in advanced philosophical topics and analytical, reflective, and expressive skills. They can choose careers as a group facilitator, counselor, or consultant; lawyer; politician; teacher/professor; reporter/critic; pastor; marketer; researcher; foreign service specialist/diplomat; corporate compliance officer. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Philosophy Major 27-28 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response Requirements 18 units: CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3xx Any UBBL General Studies Bible course 3, Select one of the following: THEO 303 Theology and the Christian Life 3, THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, THEO 363 Contemporary Christian Thought 3, For the doctrine requirement, the School of Theology recommends either THEO 303, THEO 352, THEO 354, or THEO 363. HUM 325 also fulfills the General Studies doctrine requirement. Select one of the following: PHIL 496 Senior Seminar 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3, The philosophy major also requires the following courses: Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 (3 units on APU campus, 4 units on High Sierra campus) , Select eight upper-division courses from the following (24 units): HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 (3 units on APU campus, 4 units on High Sierra campus), PHIL 225 Critical Thinking and Informal Logic (formerly PHIL 330) 3, PHIL 300 Ethics 3, PHIL 315 History of Ancient Philosophy 3, PHIL 316 Medieval Philosophy 3, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, PHIL 340 Concepts of Human Nature/ 3, PHIL 370 Comparative Religions 3, PHIL 380 Formal Logic 3, PHIL 410 Philosophy of Religion 3, PHIL 430 Philosophy of Science 3, PHIL 440 Epistemology 3, PHIL 445 Metaphysics 3, PHIL 495 Seminar in Philosophy 3, PHIL 496 Senior Seminar 3, PHIL 497 Readings 1-4, PHIL 498 Directed Research 1-4, POLI 360 Classical Political Thought 3, POLI 363 Modern Political Thought 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Physical Education | Full Time | 65-66 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Exercise and Sport Science | This program prepares students to inspire others to higher levels of physical fitness. Students train to become “movement scientists” with the ability to effectively and innovatively create and teach physical education. Through in-depth, hands-on exposure to motor skill acquisition, movement analysis, and testing the physiological responses to exercise in both lab and real-world settings, physical education majors gain the instructional skills needed to be effective teachers. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Prerequisite Science Courses for the Major: Both BIOL 101 and BIOL 115 must be taken prior to AES 363, AES 364, PE 325, PE 326, PE 366, and PE 475. BIOL 101 Fundamentals of Biology 4, BIOL 115 Anatomy and Physiology 4, Physical Education Course Requirements: AES 242 Fundamental Principles of Fitness 2, AES 363 Physiology of Exercise 4, AES 364 Kinesiology 3, EDLS 300 Introduction to Teaching as a Profession, K-12 4, PE 138 Introduction to Physical Education and Exercise Science 2, PE 237 Methods of Teaching Rhythmic and Multicultural Activities 3, PE 250 Methods of Teaching Individual Sports 2, PE 251 Methods of Teaching Contemporary Activities 2, PE 252 Methods of Teaching Team Sports 3, PE 320 History and Principles of Physical Education (F, S) 3, PE 321 Organization and Administration of Physical Education, Athletics, and Recreation (S) 3, PE 325 Motor Development and Learning 3, PE 366 Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries (F, S) 3, PE 406 Sociological and Psychological Aspects of Physical Activity and Sport 3, PE 450 Physical Education in Elementary Schools, K-6 (F, S) 3, PE 451 Methods in Physical Education, 7-12 (F, S) 3, PE 452 Adapted Physical Education 3, PE 475 Tests and Measurements in Physical Education and Sports (S) 3, PE 478 Senior Preparation in Physical Education (F, S) 2, Each student must take at least one unit of aquatics from PE 112-114: PE 112 Fitness for Life: Beginning Swimming and Conditioning (F, S)+ 1, PE 113 Lifeguard Training (F, S) 2, PE 114 Water Safety Instructor Course (S)(Prerequisite: PE 112) 2, Each student must complete one coaching course from PE 433-438: PE 433 Techniques of Coaching Team Sports: Football (S - alternate years) 2, PE 434 Techniques of Coaching Team Sports: Track and Field (S - alternate years) 2, PE 435 Techniques of Coaching Team Sports: Basketball (F - alternate years) 2, PE 436 Techniques of Coaching Team Sports: Baseball (F - alternate years) 2, PE 437 Techniques of Coaching Team Sports: Volleyball (F - alternate years) 2, PE 438 Techniques of Coaching Team Sports: Soccer (S - alternate years). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Political Science | Full Time | 36 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | Students gain the knowledge needed to make and recognize good laws, distinguish justice from injustice, and understand the legitimate purposes and necessary limits of political power. The degree provides a solid foundation in American government, politics, history, and classical political thought. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Political Science Major 36 units: Core Requirements 12 units: POLI 150 American Government 3, POLI 160 Introduction to Politics 3, POLI 300 Research and Writing 3, POLI 496 Senior Seminar: Religion and Politics 3, Subject Requirements 9 units, One course must be taken in each of the following subfields: American Institutions: POLI 405 The American Presidency 3, POLI 410 Congress 3, POLI 415 The Federal Judiciary 3, Comparative/International: HIST 334 History of American Foreign Affairs 3, POLI 320 Comparative Politics 3, POLI 340 International Relations 3, Political Philosophy: POLI 360 Classical Political Thought 3, POLI 363 Modern Political Thought 3, POLI 376 The American Founding 3, Elective Courses 15 units, Students must take 15 additional units from among the electives below. A course taken to meet the above Subject Requirement may not also count for elective credit. HIST 334 History of American Foreign Affairs 3, POLI 220 State and Local Government 3, POLI 250 Introduction to Criminal Law 3, POLI 310 Political Geography 3, POLI 320 Comparative Politics 3, POLI 340 International Relations 3, POLI 350 Constitutional Law: Fundamental Freedoms 3, POLI 351 Constitutional Law: Criminal Justice 3, POLI 352 Constitutional Law: National Powers 3, POLI 353 Seminar on Legal Studies 3, POLI 360 Classical Political Thought 3, POLI 363 Modern Political Thought 3, POLI 376 The American Founding 3, POLI 380 Studies of Terrorism 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - Child Life Specialist Concentration | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The Child Life Specialist program offers a unique approach by which students receive a solid theoretical and experiential background in the psychological sciences which prepares them not only for the Child Life Specialist Exam, but also for further graduate study in child life or other areas of the behavioral sciences. Students in the Child Life Program have good preparation both academically and clinically for work in child life. Students receive cross-disciplinary instruction from specialists in recreational, art, play, family, and child therapies. Child life students will also be prepared to work in a variety of settings including early childhood education, child development centers, and special education settings. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Child Life Specialist Concentration 32 units: Required General Studies Requirements: ENGL 434 Children's Literature 3, Select one of the following: BIOL 101 Fundamentals of Biology 4, BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, Required Psychology Courses 25 units: PSYC 345 Psychology of Child and Adolescent Development 3, PSYC 385 Health Psychology 3, PSYC 430 Intervention Strategies with Children 3, PSYC 432 Recreational and Psychosocial Interventions for the Ill and Injured Child 3, PSYC 445 Psychology of the Family 3, PSYC 450 Counseling 3, PSYC 455 Behavioral Science Practicum I 3, PSYC 485 Stress and Coping 3, PSYC 494 Professional Studies in Child Life 1, Recommended Courses: AT 160 Acute Care of Injury and Illness (F, S) 2, BIOL 115 Anatomy and Physiology 4, PSYC 440 Psychology of Religion 3, SOCW 351 Child Welfare 3, UNRS 380 Transcultural Health Care Outreach 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - Counseling Psychology Concentration | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The counseling psychology concentration is directed toward students who have an interest in developing a background in foundational counseling theories, skills, and methods. This concentration prepares students for advanced study leading to positions in clinical or counseling psychology, social agencies, or church-based counseling ministries. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Counseling Psychology Concentration 18 units: Required Courses 18 units: PSYC 415 Group Process 3, PSYC 445 Psychology of the Family 3, PSYC 450 Counseling 3, PSYC 480 Psychological Testing and Measurement 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 455 Behavioral Science Practicum I 3, PSYC 475 Research Methods Practicum I 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 390 Cognition 3, PSYC 405 Psychology of Learning 3, Recommended Courses optional: COMM 420 Conflict Management/ 3, PSYC 430 Intervention Strategies with Children 3, PSYC 435 Psychology and Christianity: Integration Seminar 3, PSYC 440 Psychology of Religion 3, PSYC 460 Behavioral Science Practicum II 3, PSYC 485 Stress and Coping 3, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - Family and Child Psychology | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The family and child concentration provides background in the process of child and family development and the related issues of prevention and treatment. This concentration is directed toward students who are preparing for bachelor's-level work with children and families and/or graduate study. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Family and Child Concentration 18 units: Required Courses 18 units: PSYC 345 Psychology of Child and Adolescent Development 3, PSYC 355 Psychology of Adult Development 3, PSYC 410 Psychology of Exceptional Children 3, PSYC 445 Psychology of the Family 3, PSYC 455 Behavioral Science Practicum I 3, PSYC 475 Research Methods Practicum I 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 430 Intervention Strategies with Children 3, PSYC 450 Counseling 3, Recommended Courses optional: ENGL 434 Children's Literature 3, PSYC 355 Psychology of Adult Development 3, PSYC 390 Cognition 3, PSYC 440 Psychology of Religion 3, PSYC 462 Advanced Research and Statistical Methods 3, PSYC 470 Physiological Psychology 3, SOC 230 Comparative Family Systems 3, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3, SOCW 310 Human Behavior and the Social Environment (HBSE) I/ 3, SOCW 311 Human Behavior and the Social Environment II/ 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - General Psychology Concentration | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The general psychology concentration is directed toward students who desire training in the field of psychology, but because of their unique career interests, goals, or life needs, are best served by selecting courses throughout the concentrations. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: General Psychology Concentration 18 units: Any six upper-division electives (PSYC 300-499) offered by the department. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - Health Psychology Concentration | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The health psychology concentration increases the student's understanding of the field and prepares him/her for advanced study in this area of psychology. This emphasis involves understanding the psychological aspects related to promoting health behavior and how psychological principles can be applied to the treatment and prevention of illness. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Health Psychology Concentration 18 units: Required Courses 18 units: PSYC 385 Health Psychology 3, PSYC 450 Counseling 3, PSYC 485 Stress and Coping 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 345 Psychology of Child and Adolescent Development 3, PSYC 355 Psychology of Adult Development 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 390 Cognition 3, PSYC 405 Psychology of Learning 3, Recommended Courses optional: BIOL 115 Anatomy and Physiology 4, BIOL 326 Neurobiology 4, BIOL 330 Gender Differences 3, PSYC 440 Psychology of Religion 3, PSYC 455 Behavioral Science Practicum I 3, PSYC 475 Research Methods Practicum I 3, PSYC 480 Psychological Testing and Measurement 3, SOCW 415 Addictions: Assessment and Intervention 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - Industrial and Organizational Psychology Concentration | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The industrial/organizational psychology concentration is directed toward students who have an interest in applying the knowledge and methods of psychology to business and organizational settings. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Industrial and Organizational Psychology Concentration 18 units: Required Courses 18 units: PSYC 355 Psychology of Adult Development 3, PSYC 370 Industrial/Organizational Psychology 3, PSYC 415 Group Process 3, PSYC 480 Psychological Testing and Measurement 3, Two of the following: BUSI 445 Human Resource Development 3, BUSI 448 Organization and Administrative Behavior 3, MKTG 362 Consumer Behavior 3, Recommended Courses optional: BUSI 360 Principles of Marketing 3, COMM 200 Introduction to Mass Communication 3, COMM 425 Interpersonal Communication Processes 3, COMM 330 Small-Group Communication 3, GLBL 310 Intercultural Communications 3, PSYC 455 Behavioral Science Practicum I 3, PSYC 475 Research Methods Practicum I 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - Psychological Sciences Concentration | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The psychological sciences concentration is directed toward students who have an interest in pursuing doctoral studies in psychology. Students develop the skills and background necessary for producing and evaluating psychological research and applying research methodologies. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Psychological Sciences Concentration 18 units: Required Courses 18 units: PSYC 462 Advanced Research and Statistical Methods 3, PSYC 475 Research Methods Practicum I 3, PSYC 480 Psychological Testing and Measurement 3, Any three of the following four courses: PSYC 345 Psychology of Child and Adolescent Development 3, PSYC 385 Health Psychology 3, PSYC 390 Cognition 3, PSYC 405 Psychology of Learning 3, Recommended Courses optional: PSYC 440 Psychology of Religion 3, PSYC 355 Psychology of Adult Development 3, PSYC 435 Psychology and Christianity: Integration Seminar 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - Psychology and Ministry Concentration | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The psychology and ministry concentration is directed toward students who are interested in applying the methods and principles of psychology to church- and ministry-related settings. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Psychology and Ministry Concentration 18 units: Required Courses 18 units: PSYC 375 Psychology of Conflict Management and Mediation 3, PSYC 435 Psychology and Christianity: Integration Seminar 3, PSYC 440 Psychology of Religion 3, PSYC 445 Psychology of the Family 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 415 Group Process 3, PSYC 450 Counseling 3, Select one of the following: One course from CMIN/YMIN approved by the department - or - One course in psychology from the Focus on the Family Institute: Recommended Courses optional: COMM 330 Small-Group Communication 3, COMM 425 Interpersonal Communication Processes 3, PHIL 340 Concepts of Human Nature/ 3, THEO 363 Contemporary Christian Thought 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Psychology - Sports Psychology Concentration | Full Time | 49-63 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The sports psychology concentration increases the student's understanding of the field and prepares him/her for advanced study in this area of psychology. This emphasis involves the study and understanding of the psychological factors associated with performance in sports and other types of physical activity. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Sports Psychology Concentration 18 units: Required Courses 18 units: PSYC 330 Sports Psychology 3, PSYC 385 Health Psychology 3, PSYC 415 Group Process 3, PSYC 450 Counseling 3, PSYC 485 Stress and Coping 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 345 Psychology of Child and Adolescent Development 3, PSYC 355 Psychology of Adult Development 3, Recommended Courses optional: AES 363 Physiology of Exercise 4, AES 364 Kinesiology 3, BIOL 115 Anatomy and Physiology 4, BIOL 330 Gender Differences 3, PE 325 Motor Development and Learning 3, PE 363 Physiology of Exercise (F) 3,PE 364 Kinesiology (S: PE majors) 3, PE 406 Sociological and Psychological Aspects of Physical Activity and Sport 3, PE 474 Practicum in Coaching (F, S) 2, PSYC 480 Psychological Testing and Measurement 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Social Science | Full Time | 36 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | The degree is designed primarily to prepare students to teach social science disciplines (particularly history, political science, geography, economics, and sociology) at the secondary level. The coursework provides a solid foundation in macro- and microeconomics, world civilizations, U.S. history, world geography, American government, comparative religions, psychology, and history and politics of the non-Western world. The degree provides future teachers with an integrated study of these social sciences that will help develop analytical skill, comparative perspectives, critical judgment, and a thorough knowledge base about the world around them. Students integrate their study of social science with a Christian worldview, and evaluate each subject through a lens of biblical principles and ethics. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Social Science Major 57 units: ECON 250 Principles of Macroeconomics 3, ECON 251 Principles of Microeconomics 3, EDLS 300 Introduction to Teaching as a Profession, K-12 4, EDLS 405 Diversity in the Classroom 3, HIST 120 World Civilizations to 1648 3, HIST 121 World Civilizations since 1648 3, HIST 151 United States History to 1865 3, HIST 152 United States History since 1865 3, HIST 210 World Geography 3, HIST 338 History of California 3, PHIL 370 Comparative Religions 3, POLI 150 American Government 3, POLI 300 Research and Writing 3, POLI 496 Senior Seminar: Religion and Politics 3, PSYC 290 Human Growth and Development 3, One Upper-Division History Course (HIST 300-499) 3, One Upper-Division Political Science Course (POLI 300-499) 3, Choose one course from the following: PSYC 110 General Psychology 3, SOC 120 Introduction to Sociology 3, Choose one course from the following: HIST 320 Modern Africa 3, HIST 360 History of the Middle East I: Early and Medieval Islam 3, POLI 390 History and Politics of the Non-Western World 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Sociology | Full Time | 39 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Global Studies Sociology, and TESOL | The degree provides a solid foundation in basic sociological theory, applied statistics, contemporary social problems, and comparative family systems. These then serve as a framework for advanced study in human diversity, the sociology of religion, social stratification, crime and delinquency, social psychology, and philosophical concepts of human nature. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Sociology Major 39 units: A total of 39 units is required for the major. A minimum grade-point average of 2.0 is required in these courses. Core Requirements 12 units: Required courses should be taken in the following sequence: SOC 120 Introduction to Sociology 3, SOC 298 Basic Sociological Theory 3, PSYC 299 Applied Statistics 3, Select one of the following: SOC 471 Qualitative Social Research Methods 3, SOC 472 Quantitative Social Research Methods 3, Meets the Upper-Division Writing Intensive requirement. Elective Courses 27 units: Selected courses from this list complete the required 39 units for a sociology major. SOC 225 Contemporary Social Problems 3, SOC 230 Comparative Family Systems 3, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3, SOC 359 Immigrant L.A. 3, SOC 360 Sociology of Religion 3, SOC 404 Community 3, SOC 405 Women and Men in Society 3, SOC 425 Social Movements 3, SOC 455 Crime and Delinquency 3, SOC 464 Social Stratification 3, SOC 496 Senior Seminar: Faith and Social Issues 3, SOC 497 Readings 1-4, GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday Life 3, GLBL 345 Urban Religious Movements 3, PHIL 340 Concepts of Human Nature 3, PSYC 425 Social Psychology/ 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Spanish (Non Single-Subject Teaching Credential) | Full Time | 45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages | The Spanish major seeks to guide student development in Spanish conversation, develop reading and compositional skills, introduce major Spanish language literary works, heighten cultural sensitivity, and encourage creative and reflective thinking with respect to the history and civilization of Hispanic countries, all to better serve God through service to others. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Spanish Major (non Single-Subject Teaching Credential) 45 units: Language 15 units (15 units beyond SPAN 101, SPAN 102 or equivalent), SPAN 201 Intermediate Spanish I 3, SPAN 202 Intermediate Spanish II 3, SPAN 250 Intermediate Conversation and Writing Abroad 3 (Abroad in a Spanish-speaking country), SPAN 310 Advanced Language-study Practicum(Abroad in a Spanish-speaking country) 3, SPAN 320 Advanced Spanish Composition 3, Civilization and Culture 6 units, SPAN 311 Civilization of Spain 3, SPAN 312 Latin American Civilization 3, Literature 9 units, SPAN 421 Survey of Spanish Literature 3, SPAN 422 Survey of Latin American Literature 3, Select one of the following: SPAN 431 Spanish Language Poetry and Short Story 3, SPAN 432 Literary Masters 3, Applied Linguistics 3 units, SPAN 440 Spanish Applied Linguistics 3, Integration Course 3 units, SPAN 480 Capstone Seminar 3, Electives 9 units, Elective options may include: Spanish Courses: SPAN 301 Advanced Spanish 3, SPAN 431 Spanish Language Poetry and Short Story 3, SPAN 432 Literary Masters(This course may be repeated for credit) 3, SPAN 450 Spanish Language Pedagogy 3, SPAN 494 Internship 3, SPAN 495 Special Topics in Spanish 3, SPAN 497 Readings 1-4, Global Learning Term course work (completed anywhere in the Spanish-speaking world), GLBL 325 Family Organization 3, GLBL 335 International Internship 3-6, GLBL 340 Community Life 3, GLBL 350 Global Study Project 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Spanish (Single-Subject Teaching Credential) | Full Time | 104 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages | The Spanish major seeks to guide student development in Spanish conversation, develop reading and compositional skills, introduce major Spanish language literary works, heighten cultural sensitivity, and encourage creative and reflective thinking with respect to the history and civilization of Hispanic countries, all to better serve God through service to others. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Spanish Major (Single-Subject Teaching Credential) 104 units: EDLS 300 Introduction to Teaching as a Profession, K-12 4, EDLS 405 Diversity in the Classroom 3, ENGL 402 Principles of Language 3, POLI 150 American Government 3, PSYC 290 Human Growth and Development 3, Language 18 units (18 units beyond SPAN 101, SPAN 102, or equivalent), SPAN 201 Intermediate Spanish I 3, SPAN 202 Intermediate Spanish II 3, SPAN 250 Intermediate Conversation and Writing Abroad(Abroad in a Spanish-speaking country) 3, SPAN 301 Advanced Spanish 3, SPAN 310 Advanced Language-study Practicum(Abroad in a Spanish-speaking country) 3, SPAN 320 Advanced Spanish Composition 3, Civilization and Culture 6 units: SPAN 311 Civilization of Spain 3, SPAN 312 Latin American Civilization 3, Literature 9 units: SPAN 421 Survey of Spanish Literature 3, SPAN 422 Survey of Latin American Literature 3, Select one of the following: SPAN 431 Spanish Language Poetry and Short Story 3, SPAN 432 Literary Masters 3, Applied Linguistics 3 units: SPAN 440 Spanish Applied Linguistics 3, Subject-Matter Competency Course 3 units: SPAN 450 Spanish Language Pedagogy 3, Integration Course 3 units: SPAN 480 Capstone Seminar 3, Electives 9 units Elective options may include: Spanish Courses: SPAN 431 Spanish Language Poetry and Short Story 3, SPAN 432 Literary Masters(This course may be repeated for credit.) 3, SPAN 494 Internship 3, SPAN 495 Special Topics in Spanish 3, SPAN 497 Readings 1-4, Global Learning Term coursework (completed anywhere in the Spanish-speaking world), GLBL 325 Family Organization 3, GLBL 335 International Internship 3-6, GLBL 340 Community Life 3, GLBL 350 Global Study Project 3, Post-graduate Education Program, Courses Leading to a Teaching Credential 21 units: TEP 518 Methods of Teaching Reading and Writing (7-12) 3, TEP 528 Teaching Strategies (7-12) 3, TEP 548 Curriculum Planning and Assessment (7-12) 3, TEP 558 Methods of Teaching English Language Learners (7-12) 3, TEP 568A Field Experience I (7-12) 1, TEP 568B Field Experience II (7-12) 1, TEP 578A Clinical Practice I (Student Teaching, 7-12) 2, TEP 578B Clinical Practice II (Student Teaching, 7-12) 2, TEP 588 Student Teaching Seminar (7-12) 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Theater Arts | Full Time | 45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater, Film, and Television | The degree provides a solid foundation in theater history, acting styles and techniques, and theater literature. These then serve as a foundation for in-depth study of the creative process, acting, directing, theater ministry, screenwriting, dramatic theory and criticism, scenic design, and stagecraft. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Theater Arts Major 45 units: Performance Courses 15 units: TFT 101 Christianity and the Creative Process 3, TFT 113 Acting Fundamentals 3, Select one of the following: TFT 313 Intermediate Acting 3, TFT 423 Directing 3, Select two of the following: TFT 263 Broadcast Performance 3, TFT 313 Intermediate Acting 3, TFT 340 Mime: Principles and Performance 3, TFT 375 Screenwriting 3, TFT 413 Advanced Acting 3, TFT 423 Directing 3, TFT 440 Musical Theater Workshop 3, TFT 495 Special Topics 3 Voice Instruction (extra fee required) 3, Theory and Criticism Courses 15 units: TFT 325 History of Theater to the Restoration 3, TFT 326 History of Theater: Restoration to Present 3, TFT 460 Dramatic Theory and Criticism 3, Select one of the following: TFT 213 Introduction to Theater 3, TFT 293 Theater Field Study 3, Select one of the following: ENGL 377 Shakespeare 3, ENGL 488 Significant Authors 3, TFT 435 Acting Styles and Techniques 3, TFT 495 Special Topics 3, Applied Theater Courses 15 units: TFT 102 Scenic Design (formerly TFT 302) 3, TFT 116 Stage Craft (formerly TFT 316) 3, TFT 499 Capstone Project in Theater, Film, and Television 3, Select 3 units from the following: TFT 416 Performance and Production/ 1-3, TFT 466 Drama Ministries: Performance and Production/ 3, Choice of 3 additional units from this list: TFT 102 Scenic Design (formerly TFT 302) 3, TFT 355 Theater Education, K-12 3, TFT 365 Civic Theater 3, TFT 455 Drama Ministry Principles 3, TFT 495 Special Topics 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Theology | Full Time | 51-52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Theology and Philosophy | The program provides a solid foundation in the academic study of Christian theology and church history, the doctrines of the ancient and contemporary Church, and the framework for Christian belief. Students learn how to engage in sustained and thoughtful devotion to God and the Gospel. They can choose from careers as a pastor (senior, associate, youth); relief worker; community organizer; missionary; teacher/professor; counselor; nonprofit program administrator; worship leader; chaplain. | Applicants are not required to have completed a specific set of courses; however the following college preparatory courses are strongly recommended: English (four years), Mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), Science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government and Strong academic electives. A grade-point average of 2.75 is required. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Theology Major 51-52 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response requirements: CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3XX Additional General Studies Approved Biblical Studies class 3, THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3, Additional Requirements: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, THEO 363 Contemporary Christian Thought 3, THEO 4XX 400-level Theology course 3, THEO 4XX 400-level Theology course 3, THEO 4XX 400-level Theology course 3, THEO 410 Systematic Theology I 3, THEO 411 Systematic Theology II 3, UBBL 3/4XX Biblical Studies Elective 3, Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 (3 units on APU campus, 4 units on High Sierra campus), Select one of the following: PHIL 315 History of Ancient Philosophy 3, PHIL 316 Medieval Philosophy 3, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325, History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Theology - Church History Concentration | Full Time | 51-52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Theology and Philosophy | The Theology major is available with a concentration in church history. The concentration in theology develops analytical, reflective, and expressive skills in the study of theology in a historical context. Students are trained in the use of interdisciplinary methods from history, sociology, psychology, philosophy, cultural anthropology, and theology to perform a thoughtful examination of the history of the Christian Church in light of the Church’s Scriptures and traditions. Students who complete the church history concentration will be well equipped for graduate study in ministry, church history, historical theology, or systematic theology as well as the history of religion. | Applicants are not required to have completed a specific set of courses; however the following college preparatory courses are strongly recommended: English (four years), Mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), Science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government and Strong academic electives. A grade-point average of 2.75 is required. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Theology Major 51-52 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response requirements: CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3XX Additional General Studies Approved Biblical Studies class 3, THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3, Additional Requirements: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3, THEO 363 Contemporary Christian Thought 3, THEO 4XX 400-level Theology course 3, THEO 4XX 400-level Theology course 3, THEO 4XX 400-level Theology course 3, THEO 410 Systematic Theology I 3, THEO 411 Systematic Theology II 3, UBBL 3/4XX Biblical Studies Elective 3, Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 (3 units on APU campus, 4 units on High Sierra campus), Select one of the following: PHIL 315 History of Ancient Philosophy 3, PHIL 316 Medieval Philosophy 3, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325, History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3. Church History Concentration Requirements: Select three courses from the following: THEO 423 Seminar in Church History 3, THEO 424 The Formation of Early Christianity 3, THEO 425 American Christianity 3, THEO 427 The History of Pentecostalism 3, THEO 428 Global Christianity 3, THEO 454 Christian Traditions 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Youth Ministry - Church Ministry | Full Time | 75-79 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | The youth ministry program features the Philosophy and Theology of Ministry course in which each student develops his or her own personal philosophy of ministry. This works hand-in-hand with the two-semester Christian Ministries Internship requirement, which provides an opportunity to put that philosophy into practice. Students graduate with a clearly formulated ministry plan and a year of applicable work experience on their resumes. Students can choose careers as youth minister, urban ministry administrator, director of a faith-based organization, pastor, teacher, chaplain, counselor, social worker, school athletic coach, director of youth-focused nonprofit organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Youth Ministry Major 75-79 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response General Studies requirements for all Youth Ministry majors: 21-22 units: UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3XX-4XX Approved Additional GS Biblical Studies course 3, CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, THEO 303 Theology and the Christian Life 3, Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 or HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4, Core Requirements 39 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, YMIN 106 Introduction to Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 200 Philosophy and Theology of Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 301 Adolescent Development and Family Ministry 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies (UBBL) Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3,Select one of the following: HUM 325 Humanities Seminar V: Christian Classics 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration Requirements 15-19 units: Church Ministry 15 units, Select four classes from the following: CMIN 318 Theology and Practice of Ministry 3, CMIN 356 Developing Disciples 3, CMIN 456 Ministry Organization and Administration 3, YMIN 403 Adolescent Issues and Intervention 3, YMIN 495 Topics in Youth Ministry 3, Select one of the following Senior Seminar classes (General Studies): CMIN 496 Senior Seminar: Church and Society (petition needed) 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Youth Ministry - Intercultural Christian Ministry | Full Time | 75-79 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | The youth ministry program features the Philosophy and Theology of Ministry course in which each student develops his or her own personal philosophy of ministry. This works hand-in-hand with the two-semester Christian Ministries Internship requirement, which provides an opportunity to put that philosophy into practice. Students graduate with a clearly formulated ministry plan and a year of applicable work experience on their resumes. Students can choose careers as youth minister, urban ministry administrator, director of a faith-based organization, pastor, teacher, chaplain, counselor, social worker, school athletic coach, director of youth-focused nonprofit organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Youth Ministry Major 75-79 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response General Studies requirements for all Youth Ministry majors: 21-22 units: UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3XX-4XX Approved Additional GS Biblical Studies course 3, CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, THEO 303 Theology and the Christian Life 3, Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 or HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4, Core Requirements 39 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, YMIN 106 Introduction to Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 200 Philosophy and Theology of Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 301 Adolescent Development and Family Ministry 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies (UBBL) Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3,Select one of the following: HUM 325 Humanities Seminar V: Christian Classics 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration Requirements 15-19 units: Intercultural Ministry Concentration 12 units: CMIN 110 Introduction to Intercultural Christian Ministry 3, CMIN 405 Christian Mission in the 21st Century 3, GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday Life 3, Select one of the following: CMIN 318 Theology and Practice of Ministry 3, CMIN 326 Effective Teaching in Christian Education 3, CMIN 346 Ministry to the City 4, CMIN 356 Developing Disciples 3, CMIN 406 History and Philosophy of Christian Education 3, CMIN 408 Principles of Preaching 3, CMIN 416 Communicating the Gospel 3, CMIN 446 Children's Educational Ministries 3, CMIN 466 Adult Development and Spiritual Formation 3, CMIN 486 Urban Ministry Practicum 6, CMIN 487 Exegeting the City 3, CMIN 495 Topics in Christian Ministry 3, GLBL 310 Intercultural Communications 3, GLBL 315 Urban Culture 3, GMIN 529 City in Theological Perspective 4, PHIL 370 Comparative Religions 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, YMIN 403 Adolescent Issues and Intervention 3, YMIN 495 Topics in Youth Ministry 3, Select one of the following Senior Seminar classes (General Studies): CMIN 496 Senior Seminar: Church and Society 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Youth Ministry - Ministry in Non-Traditional Faith-Based Contexts | Full Time | 75-79 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | The youth ministry program features the Philosophy and Theology of Ministry course in which each student develops his or her own personal philosophy of ministry. This works hand-in-hand with the two-semester Christian Ministries Internship requirement, which provides an opportunity to put that philosophy into practice. Students graduate with a clearly formulated ministry plan and a year of applicable work experience on their resumes. Students can choose careers as youth minister, urban ministry administrator, director of a faith-based organization, pastor, teacher, chaplain, counselor, social worker, school athletic coach, director of youth-focused nonprofit organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Youth Ministry Major 75-79 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response General Studies requirements for all Youth Ministry majors: 21-22 units: UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3XX-4XX Approved Additional GS Biblical Studies course 3, CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, THEO 303 Theology and the Christian Life 3, Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 or HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4, Core Requirements 39 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, YMIN 106 Introduction to Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 200 Philosophy and Theology of Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 301 Adolescent Development and Family Ministry 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies (UBBL) Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3,Select one of the following: HUM 325 Humanities Seminar V: Christian Classics 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration Requirements 15-19 units: Ministry in Non-Traditional Faith-Based Contexts 15 units: SOCW 250 Introduction to Social Work 3, SOCW 351 Child Welfare 3, YMIN 403 Adolescent Issues and Intervention 3, Select one of the following: SOCW 410 Family Violence 3, SOCW 415 Addictions: Assessment and Intervention 3, YMIN 495 Topics in Youth Ministry 3, Select one of the following: CMIN 496 Senior Seminar: Church and Society 3, SOCW 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics in the Helping Professions 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Youth Ministry - Pastoral Ministry | Full Time | 75-79 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | The youth ministry program features the Philosophy and Theology of Ministry course in which each student develops his or her own personal philosophy of ministry. This works hand-in-hand with the two-semester Christian Ministries Internship requirement, which provides an opportunity to put that philosophy into practice. Students graduate with a clearly formulated ministry plan and a year of applicable work experience on their resumes. Students can choose careers as youth minister, urban ministry administrator, director of a faith-based organization, pastor, teacher, chaplain, counselor, social worker, school athletic coach, director of youth-focused nonprofit organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Youth Ministry Major 75-79 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response General Studies requirements for all Youth Ministry majors: 21-22 units: UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3XX-4XX Approved Additional GS Biblical Studies course 3, CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, THEO 303 Theology and the Christian Life 3, Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 or HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4, Core Requirements 39 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, YMIN 106 Introduction to Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 200 Philosophy and Theology of Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 301 Adolescent Development and Family Ministry 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies (UBBL) Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3,Select one of the following: HUM 325 Humanities Seminar V: Christian Classics 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration Requirements 15-19 units: Pastoral Ministry Concentration 12 units: CMIN 318 Theology and Practice of Ministry 3, CMIN 456 Ministry Organization and Administration 3, Select one of the following: CMIN 326 Effective Teaching in Christian Education 3, CMIN 346 Ministry to the City 4, CMIN 356 Developing Disciples 3, CMIN 405 Christian Mission in the 21st Century 3, CMIN 406 History and Philosophy of Christian Education 3, CMIN 408 Principles of Preaching 3, CMIN 416 Communicating the Gospel 3, CMIN 446 Children's Educational Ministries 3, CMIN 466 Adult Development and Spiritual Formation 3, CMIN 486 Urban Ministry Practicum 6, CMIN 487 Exegeting the City 3, CMIN 495 Topics in Christian Ministry 3, GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday Life 3, GLBL 310 Intercultural Communications 3, GLBL 315 Urban Culture 3, GMIN 529 City in Theological Perspective 4, PHIL 370 Comparative Religions 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, YMIN 403 Adolescent Issues and Intervention 3, YMIN 495 Topics in Youth Ministry 3, Select one of the following Senior Seminar classes (General Studies): CMIN 496 Senior Seminar: Church and Society 3, THEO 496 Senior Seminar: Theology and Social Issues 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.A. in Youth Ministry - Sports Ministry | Full Time | 75-79 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Theology, Department of Practical Theology | The youth ministry program features the Philosophy and Theology of Ministry course in which each student develops his or her own personal philosophy of ministry. This works hand-in-hand with the two-semester Christian Ministries Internship requirement, which provides an opportunity to put that philosophy into practice. Students graduate with a clearly formulated ministry plan and a year of applicable work experience on their resumes. Students can choose careers as youth minister, urban ministry administrator, director of a faith-based organization, pastor, teacher, chaplain, counselor, social worker, school athletic coach, director of youth-focused nonprofit organization. The sports ministry concentration consists of 15 units that prepare the ministry oriented student to be a sports ministry leader in a church setting. Many American churches utilize sports or recreation to accomplish their mission. Students study the historical, theological, biblical, and philosophical aspects of leisure time activities, competition, and how sports and recreation can be utilized to serve others. Coursework challenges students both inside and outside the classroom so they emerge as leaders in the growing sports ministry arena. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Youth Ministry Major 75-79 units: God’s Word and the Christian Response General Studies requirements for all Youth Ministry majors: 21-22 units: UBBL 100 Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy 3, UBBL 230 Luke/Acts 3, UBBL 3XX-4XX Approved Additional GS Biblical Studies course 3, CMIN 108 Christian Life, Faith, and Ministry 3, THEO 303 Theology and the Christian Life 3, Select one of the following: PHIL 220 Introduction to Philosophy 3, HUM 224 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4 or HUM 324 Humanities Seminar IV: Great Ideas 3-4, Core Requirements 39 units: CMIN 206 Introduction to Practical Theology 3, CMIN 316 The Art of Leadership 3, CMIN 401 Christian Ministry Internship I 3, CMIN 402 Christian Ministry Internship II 3, YMIN 106 Introduction to Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 200 Philosophy and Theology of Youth Ministry 3, YMIN 226 Studying and Teaching the Bible (formerly YMIN 236) 3, YMIN 300 Adolescent Culture and Evangelism 3, YMIN 301 Adolescent Development and Family Ministry 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3, Upper-Division Biblical Studies (UBBL) Elective 3, Select one of the following: THEO 352 Church History: Apostolic Era to 1517 3, THEO 354 Church History from 1517 to Present 3,Select one of the following: HUM 325 Humanities Seminar V: Christian Classics 3-4, PHIL 320 History of Early Modern Philosophy (formerly History of Modern Theology) 3, PHIL 325 History of 19th and 20th Century Philosophy (formerly Contemporary Philosophy) 3, Concentration Requirements 15-19 units: Sports Ministry Concentration 15 units: AT 160 Acute Care of Injury and Illness (F, S) 2, YMIN 305 Integration of Faith and Sports 3, YMIN 310 Evangelism and Discipleship in Sports Ministry 3, YMIN 320 Organization and Administration of a Sports Ministry 3, YMIN 478 Senior Preparation in Sports Ministry 3, Required Senior Seminar class (General Studies): PE 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics in Physical Education and Sport (F, S) 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music Performance - Violin, Viola, Cello, or Bass Performance | Full Time | Variable | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The degree is tailored to students desiring a career in performance, pedagogy (private teaching), or to pursue advanced degrees in performance. Students can choose careers as an orchestra performer, band performer, opera singer, solo/freelance musician, studio musician, pedagogue/private music teacher, musical theater performer, director/conductor. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 41-45 units: The following piano classes must be taken until a proficiency exam is passed (0-4 units): MUS 103 Beginning Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 104 Elementary Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 105 Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 106 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 107 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 108 Advanced Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, The following are applied lessons. They must take one course every semester for a total of 16 units: Applied Strings (F/S)(all) MUS 1S1/MUS 1S2, MUS 2S1/MUS 2S2, MUS 3S1/MUS 3S2, MUS 4S1/MUS 4S2 16, They must take four semesters of the following for a total of 4 units: Chamber Music (F/S)(all) MUS 151/MUS 152, MUS 251/MUS 252, MUS 355/MUS 356, MUS 457/MUS 458 4, They must also take the following courses: MUS 452 Instrumental Music Literature (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 440 Instrumental Pedagogy (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 393 Junior Recital (F/S)(Jr) 0, MUS 491 Senior Recital (F/S)(Sr) 2, Music Electives 0-10, Major Total 71-85 units, General Studies Total 44 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music Performance - Brass, Wind, or Percussion Performance | Full Time | 67-88 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The degree is tailored to students desiring a career in performance, pedagogy (private teaching), or to pursue advanced degrees in performance. Students can choose careers as an orchestra performer, band performer, opera singer, solo/freelance musician, studio musician, pedagogue/private music teacher, musical theater performer, director/conductor. | Applicants are not required to have completed a specific set of courses; however the following college preparatory courses are strongly recommended: English (four years), Mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), Science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government and Strong academic electives. A grade-point average of 2.75 is required. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 41-45 units: The following piano classes must be taken until a proficiency exam is passed (0-4 units): MUS 103 Beginning Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 104 Elementary Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 105 Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 106 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 107 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 108 Advanced Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, Students must also take the following courses: MUS 452 Instrumental Music Literature (S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 440 Instrumental Pedagogy (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 393 Junior Recital (F/S)(Jr) 0, MUS 491 Senior Recital (F/S)(Sr) 2, Music Electives 0-10 Applied Lessons (F/S)(all)(see below) 16, Chamber Music (2 semesters)(see below) 2, Major total 69-83 units, General Studies total 44 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music Performance - Guitar Performance | Full Time | 67-88 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The degree is tailored to students desiring a career in performance, pedagogy (private teaching), or to pursue advanced degrees in performance. Students can choose careers as an orchestra performer, band performer, opera singer, solo/freelance musician, studio musician, pedagogue/private music teacher, musical theater performer, director/conductor. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 41-45 units: The following piano classes must be taken until a proficiency exam is passed (0-4 units): MUS 103 Beginning Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 104 Elementary Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 105 Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 106 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 107 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 108 Advanced Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, The following are applied lessons. Students must take one course every semester for a total of 16 units. Applied Guitar MUS 1S1/MUS 1S2, MUS 2S1/MUS 2S2, MUS 3S1/MUS 3S2, MUS 4S1/MUS 4S2 16, They must take two semesters of the following for a total of 2 units: Chamber Ensemble Strings (Guitar) MUS 151/MUS 152, MUS 251/MUS 252, MUS 355/MUS 356, MUS 457/MUS 458 2, They must also take the following courses: MUS 452 Instrumental Music Literature (even S)(Jr) 2, MUS 440 Instrumental Pedagogy (TBA)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 393 Junior Recital (F/S)(Jr) 0, MUS 491 Senior Recital (F/S)(Sr) 2, MUS 379 Guitar Fingerboard Harmony (odd F)(Jr) 2, Music Electives 0-8, Major Total 67-83 units, General Studies Total 44 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music Performance - Harp Performance | Full Time | 67-88 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The degree is tailored to students desiring a career in performance, pedagogy (private teaching), or to pursue advanced degrees in performance. Students can choose careers as an orchestra performer, band performer, opera singer, solo/freelance musician, studio musician, pedagogue/private music teacher, musical theater performer, director/conductor. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 41-45 units: The following piano classes must be taken until a proficiency exam is passed (0-4 units): MUS 103 Beginning Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1,MUS 104 Elementary Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 105 Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 106 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 107 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 108 Advanced Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, The following are applied lessons. They must take one course every semester for a total of 16 units. Applied Strings (F/S)(all) MUS 1S1/MUS 1S2, MUS 2S1/MUS 2S2, MUS 3S1/MUS 3S2, MUS 4S1/MUS 4S2 16, Students must take four semesters of the following for a total of 4 units: Chamber Music (F/S)(all) MUS 151/MUS 152, MUS 251/MUS 252, MUS 355/MUS 356, MUS 457/MUS 458 4, They must also take the following courses: MUS 452 Instrumental Music Literature (F/S)(Jr) 2, MUS 440 Instrumental Pedagogy (TBA)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 393 Junior Recital (F/S)(Jr) 0, MUS 491 Senior Recital (F/S)(Sr) 2, Music Electives 2-8 ,Major Total 67-81 units, General Studies total 44 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music Performance - Organ Performance | Full Time | 67-88 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The degree is tailored to students desiring a career in performance, pedagogy (private teaching), or to pursue advanced degrees in performance. Students can choose careers as an orchestra performer, band performer, opera singer, solo/freelance musician, studio musician, pedagogue/private music teacher, musical theater performer, director/conductor. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 41-45 units: The following are applied lessons. They must take one course every semester for a total of 16 units. Applied Organ (F/S)(all) MUS 115/MUS 116, MUS 215/MUS 216, MUS 315/MUS 316, MUS 415/MUS 416 16, They must also take the following courses: MUS 417 Organ Literature (F)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 420 Organ Literature II (S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 440 Instrumental Pedagogy (odd F)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 397 Instrumental Collaboration for Pianists (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 398 Vocal Collaboration for Pianists (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 399 Keyboard Ensemble (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 393 Junior Recital (F/S)(Jr) 0, MUS 491 Senior Recital (F/S)(Sr) 2, Chamber Music (2 Semesters) 2, Music Electives 0-4, Major total 73-81 units, General Studies total 44 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music Performance - Piano Performance | Full Time | 67-88 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | This program prepares musicians for a career in performance, pedagogy (private teaching), or to pursue advanced degrees in performance. This prepares students for a career in several areas of the music field, including theory, education, performance, church music, and commercial music. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 41-45: The following are applied lessons. Students must take one course every semester for a total of 16 units. Applied Piano (F/S)(all) MUS 113/MUS 114, MUS 213/MUS 214, MUS 313/MUS 314, MUS 413/MUS 414 16, They must also take the following courses: MUS 429 Piano Literature I (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 430 Piano Literature II (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 434 Piano Pedagogy (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 397 Instrumental Collaboration for Pianists (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 398 Vocal Collaboration for Pianists (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 399 Keyboard Ensemble (F/S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 393 Junior Recital (F/S)(Jr) 0, MUS 491 Senior Recital (F/S)(Sr) 2, Chamber Music (2 semesters) 2, Music Electives 0-4, Major total 73-81 units, General Studies total 44 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music Performance - Vocal Performance | Full Time | 67-88 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The degree is tailored to students desiring a career in performance, pedagogy (private teaching), or to pursue advanced degrees in performance. Students can choose careers as an orchestra performer, band performer, opera singer, solo/freelance musician, studio musician, pedagogue/private music teacher, musical theater performer, director/conductor. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 40-54 units: The following piano classes must be taken until a proficiency exam is passed (0-4 units): MUS 103 Beginning Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 104 Elementary Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 105 Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 106 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 107 Advanced - Intermediate Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, MUS 108 Advanced Piano Class (F/S)(all) 1, The following are applied lessons. They must take one course every semester for a total of 16 units. Applied Voice (F/S)(all) MUS 111/MUS 112, MUS 211/MUS 212, MUS 311/MUS 312, MUS 411/MUS 412 16, They must also take the following courses: MUS 224 Diction for Singers I (F)(So) 1, MUS 227 Diction for Singers II (S)(So) 1, MUS 348 Song Literature Survey (F)(Jr) 2, MUS 443 Vocal Pedagogy (S)(Jr, Sr) 2, MUS 484 Preparing the Total Performer (S)(Jr, Sr) 1, MUS 486, Opera Workshop: Lead Roles and Minor Roles (F/S)(So, Jr) 2, MUS 393 Junior Recital (F/S)(Jr) 0, MUS 491 Senior Recital (F/S)(Sr) 2, Foreign Language 12, Music Electives 0-5, Major total 79-88 units, General Studies total 44 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music and Worship - Classical Church Music Concentration | Full Time | 43-45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The music and worship major provides the student with a broad perspective in the field of music ministry and consists of academic preparation in music, Christian ministry, and practical theology. Graduates are given the tools needed to minister effectively in an ever-changing music ministry environment, and they are prepared for more specialized graduate study in music or Christian ministry. Coursework addresses congregational song, corporate worship, music ministry administration, worship technology, practical theology, music, worship and culture, and worship design. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: MUS 423 Orchestration I 3, MUS 428 Arranging II 2, THEO 454 Christian Traditions 3, Select one of the following, whichever is not chosen for the School of Music Core: MUS 362 Choral Conducting 2, MUS 363 Instrumental Conducting 2, Select one of the following: MUS 443 Vocal Pedagogy 2, MUS 445 Service Playing 2, MUS 456 Choral Literature 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music and Worship - Music Ministry Development and Administration Concentration | Full Time | 43-45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The music and worship major provides the student with a broad perspective in the field of music ministry and consists of academic preparation in music, Christian ministry, and practical theology. Graduates are given the tools needed to minister effectively in an ever-changing music ministry environment, and they are prepared for more specialized graduate study in music or Christian ministry. Coursework addresses congregational song, corporate worship, music ministry administration, worship technology, practical theology, music, worship and culture, and worship design. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: BUSI 110 Introduction to Business 3, CMIN 456 Ministry Organization and Administration 3, MUS 337 Music Business I 2, MUS 338 Music Business II 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music and Worship - Music, Worship, and Creative Art Concentration | Full Time | 43-45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The music and worship major provides the student with a broad perspective in the field of music ministry and consists of academic preparation in music, Christian ministry, and practical theology. Graduates are given the tools needed to minister effectively in an ever-changing music ministry environment, and they are prepared for more specialized graduate study in music or Christian ministry. Coursework addresses congregational song, corporate worship, music ministry administration, worship technology, practical theology, music, worship and culture, and worship design. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: ART 120 Introduction to Computer Graphics 3, TFT 455 Drama Ministry Principles 3, Select one of the following: ENGL 301 Creative Writing: Fiction 3, ENGL 302 Creative Writing: Poetry 3, ENGL 303 Creative Writing: Drama and Film 3, ENGL 304 Creative Writing: Creative Nonfiction 3, Select one of the following: ART 150 Introduction to Art 3, MUS 223 Web-Based Tools 3, TFT 110 Introduction to Acting 3, TFT 274 Story and Character 3, TFT 365 Civic Theater 3, TFT 375 Screenwriting 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music and Worship - Music, Worship, and Culture Concentration | Full Time | 43-45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The music and worship major provides the student with a broad perspective in the field of music ministry and consists of academic preparation in music, Christian ministry, and practical theology. Graduates are given the tools needed to minister effectively in an ever-changing music ministry environment, and they are prepared for more specialized graduate study in music or Christian ministry. Coursework addresses congregational song, corporate worship, music ministry administration, worship technology, practical theology, music, worship and culture, and worship design. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: CMIN 110 Introduction to Intercultural Christian Ministry 3, GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday Life/ 3, MUS 201 Introduction to World Music 3, Select one of the following: MUS 301 Music of Africa 3, MUS 302 Soul Music 3, MUS 303 Music of Latin America 3, MUS 304 Music of Asia 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.M. in Music and Worship - Worship Leader Concentration | Full Time | 43-45 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Music | The music and worship major provides the student with a broad perspective in the field of music ministry and consists of academic preparation in music, Christian ministry, and practical theology. Graduates are given the tools needed to minister effectively in an ever-changing music ministry environment, and they are prepared for more specialized graduate study in music or Christian ministry. Coursework addresses congregational song, corporate worship, music ministry administration, worship technology, practical theology, music, worship and culture, and worship design. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: MUS 324 Songwriting 2, MUS 327 Audio Recording I 2, MUS 423 Orchestration I 3, MUS 428 Arranging II 2, Select one of the following: MUS 320 Keyboard Improvisation 2, MUS 379 Guitar Fingerboard Harmony 2, MUS 389 Commercial Styles I 1, MUS 495 Production Techniques 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Accounting | Full Time | 67 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | The Accounting major surveys the principles, theories, and concepts of the accounting profession while providing an intense review of the economic, quantitative, and managerial aspects of business. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Accounting Major 67 units: Business Core Courses 43 units: Accounting Courses 24 units: ACCT 225 Intermediate Accounting I 3, ACCT 226 Intermediate Accounting II 3, ACCT 325 Cost Accounting 3, ACCT 331 Federal Taxes I 3, ACCT 332 Federal Taxes II 3, ACCT 336 Advanced Accounting 3, ACCT 426 Auditing Principles I 3, ACCT 427 Auditing Principles II 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Applied Exercise Science | Full Time | 68-72 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Exercise and Sport Science | This program is designed to prepare students with the knowledge, skills, and abilities necessary to become health fitness instructors and human performance specialists through a strong academic and applied background, leading to potential professional certifications through the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM), and/or the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA). In addition, students will be prepared to enter and successfully complete a post-professional degree in the exercise science field. This major is designed in a sequential approach building on the student’s knowledge, skills, and abilities from previous coursework and experiences. Students are introduced to exercise science through foundational courses and then progress to core courses which require the student to demonstrate competency in a variety of exercise science areas and complete practicum experiences prior to graduation. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Exercise Science Foundation 29-33 units: AES 102 Foundations of Athletic Training and Applied Exercise Science 2, AES 290 Human Movement Science 3, AES 242 Fundamental Principles of Fitness 2, AT 160 Acute Care of Injury and Illness (F, S) 2, AT 220 Risk Management for the Physically Active (F) 3, PE 1XX Any Fitness for Life Course+/ 1, PE 240 Health Education (F, S)+/ 2, PSYC 290 Human Growth and Development 3, PSYC 110 General Psychology 3, Select one of the following: BIOL 101 Fundamentals of Biology 4, BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, Select one of the following: BIOL 115 Anatomy and Physiology 4 - or - BIOL 250 Human Anatomy 4 - and - BIOL 251 Human Physiology 4, Applied Exercise Science Core 39 units: Student must apply to the program and get approval from the program director prior to beginning any course in the Applied Exercise Science Core. AES 360 Nutrition for Exercise and Sport Science 2, AES 363 Physiology of Exercise 4, AES 364 Kinesiology 3, AES 472 Principles of Strength, Conditioning, and Human Performance 3, AES 473 Fitness and Exercise Prescription (F) 3, AES 478 Senior Preparation in Applied Exercise Science 2, AES 492 Practicum in Strength, Conditioning, and Human Performance 2, AES 493 Practicum in Fitness and Exercise Prescription 2, AT 355 Medical Conditions and Disabilities (S) 2, AT 469 Health Care Administration (S) 3, AT 490 Research Methods (F) 4, PE 366 Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries (F, S) 3, PSYC 330 Sports Psychology 3, Select one of the following: PSYC 385 Health Psychology 3, PSYC 485 Stress and Coping 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Applied Health - Business Emphasis | Full Time | 64-66 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology and Chemistry | The degree is tailored to students who wish to go directly into physical therapy, physician assistant, or other graduate-level allied health programs. Core courses in biology, cell biology, chemistry, and physics provide a framework for emphases in physical therapy, physician assistantship, or business. These emphases allow students to tailor the curriculum to support their desired career track. Applied Health prepares students for a career or further graduate study in physical therapy, applying scientific knowledge to the subject areas of biology, anatomy, physiology, and associated scientific disciplines. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Core Courses 35 units: BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, BIOL 240 Biology of Microorganisms 4, BIOL 280 Cell Biology 4, BIOL 300 Genetics 4, BIOL 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics and the Sciences 3, CHEM 151 General Chemistry/ 4, CHEM 152 General Chemistry II 4, PHYC 151 Physics for Life Sciences I/ 4, PHYC 152 Physics for Life Sciences II 4. Business Emphasis 29 units: AT 465 Pharmacology for Athletic Trainers (F) 2, BIOL 152 General Biology II 4, CHEM 240 Introduction to Organic and Biochemistry 4, BUSI 120 Principles of Accounting I 4, BUSI 210 Principles of Organization and Management 3, BUSI 240 Introduction to Information Systems 3, ECON 250 Principles of Macroeconomics 3, BUSI 330 Principles of Finance 3, Select one of the following: BUSI 350 Business Internship 1-3, BIOL 395 Science Internship 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Applied Health - Physical Therapy Emphasis | Full Time | 64-66 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology and Chemistry | The degree is tailored to students who wish to go directly into physical therapy, physician assistant, or other graduate-level allied health programs. Core courses in biology, cell biology, chemistry, and physics provide a framework for emphases in physical therapy, physician assistantship, or business. These emphases allow students to tailor the curriculum to support their desired career track. Applied Health prepares students for a career or further graduate study in physical therapy, applying scientific knowledge to the subject areas of biology, anatomy, physiology, and associated scientific disciplines. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Core Courses 35 units: BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, BIOL 240 Biology of Microorganisms 4, BIOL 280 Cell Biology 4, BIOL 300 Genetics 4, BIOL 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics and the Sciences 3, CHEM 151 General Chemistry/ 4, CHEM 152 General Chemistry II 4, PHYC 151 Physics for Life Sciences I/ 4, PHYC 152 Physics for Life Sciences II 4. Physical Therapy Emphasis 29 units BIOL 250 Human Anatomy 4, BIOL 251 Human Physiology 4, BIOL 326 Neurobiology 4, CHEM 240 Introduction to Organic and Biochemistry 4, PSYC 290 Human Growth and Development 3, PSYC 299 Applied Statistics 3, PSYC 360 Abnormal Psychology 3, Select one of the following: BIOL 465 Clinical Research/Practicum in Applied Health 4 - or - AES 364 Kinesiology 3 - and - BIOL 490 Biology Seminar 1. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Applied Health - Physician Assistant Emphasis | Full Time | 64-66 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology and Chemistry | The degree is tailored to students who wish to go directly into physical therapy, physician assistant, or other graduate-level allied health programs. Core courses in biology, cell biology, chemistry, and physics provide a framework for emphases in physical therapy, physician assistantship, or business. These emphases allow students to tailor the curriculum to support their desired career track. Applied Health prepares students for a career or further graduate study in physical therapy, applying scientific knowledge to the subject areas of biology, anatomy, physiology, and associated scientific disciplines. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Core Courses 35 units: BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, BIOL 240 Biology of Microorganisms 4, BIOL 280 Cell Biology 4, BIOL 300 Genetics 4, BIOL 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics and the Sciences 3, CHEM 151 General Chemistry/ 4, CHEM 152 General Chemistry II 4, PHYC 151 Physics for Life Sciences I/ 4, PHYC 152 Physics for Life Sciences II 4. Physician Assistant Emphasis 31 units: BIOL 250 Human Anatomy 4, BIOL 251 Human Physiology 4, BIOL 3xx-4xx Biology Elective 7, CHEM 251 Organic Chemistry - Theory I 4, CHEM 252 Organic Chemistry - Theory II 4, CHEM 261 Organic Chemistry - Lab 1, CHEM 262 Organic Chemistry - Lab 1, MATH 151 Applied Calculus I 3, MATH 152 Applied Calculus II 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Biochemistry | Full Time | 72-80 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology and Chemistry | The degree provides a solid foundation in general chemistry, biology, and physics; applied calculus and quantitative analysis; organic chemistry; microbiology; cell biology; and genetics. These then provide a framework for advanced study in the student’s area of interest, such as thermodynamics, kinetics, and quantum mechanics, or research in biochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, or electron microscopy. Students can choose careers as a doctor, veterinarian, pharmacist, pharmaceutical researcher, dentist, research scientist, research and laboratory technician, professor/teacher. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Biochemistry Major (B.S.) 72-80 units: Biology 16 units: BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, BIOL 152 General Biology II 4, BIOL 240 Biology of Microorganisms 4, BIOL 280 Cell Biology 4, Chemistry 18 units: CHEM 151 General Chemistry 4, CHEM 152 General Chemistry II 4, CHEM 251 Organic Chemistry - Theory I 4, CHEM 252 Organic Chemistry - Theory II 4, CHEM 261 Organic Chemistry - Lab 1, CHEM 262 Organic Chemistry - Lab 1, Math 6-9 units, Select one of the following sequences: MATH 151 Applied Calculus I 3, MATH 152 Applied Calculus II 3, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162, Calculus II 4, Physics 8-10 units: Select one of the following sequences: PHYC 151 Physics for Life Sciences I 4, PHYC 152 Physics for Life Sciences II 4, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper Division Biology/Biochemistry requirements 24-27 units: Required classes: BIOC 380 Biochemistry I 4, BIOC 381 Biochemistry II 4, BIOL 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics and the Sciences 3, Select one of the following: BIOL 300 Genetics 4, BIOL 410 Molecular Biology 4, Electives (Three courses required) 9-12 units, Electives must include at least one of CHEM 300/310, CHEM 390, or CHEM 401, BIOL 326 Neurobiology 4, BIOL 336 Vertebrate Biology 4, BIOL 350 Mammalian Physiology 4, BIOL 490 Biology Seminar 1, BIOL 498 Directed Research 1-3, CHEM 300 Quantitative Analysis - Theory 2, CHEM 310 Quantitative Analysis - Laboratory 2, CHEM 320 Instrumental Analysis - Theory 3, CHEM 330 Instrumental Analysis - Lab 1, CHEM 390 Physical Chemistry for the Life Sciences 3, CHEM 401 Thermodynamics 3, CHEM 402 Kinetics and Quantum Mechanics 3, CHEM 451 Advanced Organic Chemistry 4, CHEM 461 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry 3, CHEM 490 Chemistry Seminar 1, CHEM 495 Advanced Topics in Chemistry 3-4, CHEM 498 Directed Research 1-4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Biology | Full Time | 73-75 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology and Chemistry | The degree provides a solid foundation in microbiology, cell biology, organic chemistry, physics, calculus, and genetics. These then provide a framework for an emphasis in either molecular or organismic biology. Students can choose careers as a doctor, pharmacist, botanist, oceanographer, ecologist, forensic scientist, microbiologist, veterinarian. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Biology Major (B.S.) 73-75 units: Chemistry 18 units: CHEM 151 General Chemistry/ 4, CHEM 152 General Chemistry II 4, CHEM 251 Organic Chemistry - Theory I 4, CHEM 252 Organic Chemistry - Theory II 4, CHEM 261 Organic Chemistry - Lab 1, CHEM 262 Organic Chemistry - Lab 1, Mathematics 6 units: MATH 151 Applied Calculus I 3, MATH 152 Applied Calculus II 3, Physics 8-10 units, Select two the following: PHYC 151 Physics for Life Sciences I/ 4, PHYC 152 Physics for Life Sciences II 4, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I/ 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Biology 23 units: BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, BIOL 152 General Biology II 4, BIOL 240 Biology of Microorganisms 4, BIOL 280 Cell Biology 4, BIOL 300 Genetics 4, BIOL 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics and the Sciences 3, Biology Electives 10 units: Select 10 additional units of 300- or 400-level BIOL or BIOC courses, including one 4-unit laboratory course, and excluding courses used in fulfilling the required emphasis. The following BIOL classes also do not fulfill this requirement: BIOL 325, 30, 400, 435, 445, 454, 455, 470. Required Emphasis (one emphasis must be chosen) 8 units, Molecular BIOC 380, Biochemistry I 4, BIOL 410 Molecular Biology 4, Organismic (two from the following) BIOL 320 Ecology 4, BIOL 336 Vertebrate Biology 4, BIOL 350 Mammalian Physiology 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Business Economics | Full Time | 64 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | The Business Economics major provides students analytical skills built on a strong general business foundation. This major focuses on business management responsibilities and the improvement in business decision making that comes from a deeper understanding of the economic environment of business including labor, environmental, and international issues. Students are prepared for careers as a stock broker, it project manager, teacher/professor, insurance underwriter, risk manager, market researcher, think tank researcher/scholar, banker, health care administrator, city planner. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Business Economics Major 64 units: Business Core Courses 43 units: Business Economics Courses 21 units: ECON 350 Intermediate Macroeconomics 3, ECON 351 Intermediate Microeconomics 3, ECON 452 Econometrics 3, ECON 352 Financial Markets and Institutions 3, ECON 353 Health Economics 3, ECON 355 Environmental Economics 3, ECON 356 Labor Economics 3, ECON 359 Urban and Regional Economics 3, ECON 372 International Trade and Finance 3, ECON 453 Microfinance and Microenterprise 3, ECON 458 Economics and Religion 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Chemistry | Full Time | 63-65 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology and Chemistry | The degree provides a solid foundation in general, organic, inorganic, analytical, and physical chemistry; quantitative and instrumental analysis; physics; and calculus. These then provide a framework for in-depth study of advanced chemistry concepts and related fields such as thermodynamics, kinetics, quantum mechanics, biochemistry, synthesis, and more. Students can choose careers as a patent lawyer, environmental chemist, perfume and cosmetics chemist, forensic chemist, quality control chemist, pharmaceutical chemist, art museum chemist/restorer, science policy advisor, medicinal chemist, science teacher. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Chemistry Major 63-65 units: Chemistry 39 units: CHEM 151 General Chemistry/ 4, CHEM 152 General Chemistry II 4, CHEM 300 Quantitative Analysis - Theory 2, CHEM 310 Quantitative Analysis - Laboratory 2, CHEM 320 Instrumental Analysis - Theory/ 3, CHEM 330 Instrumental Analysis - Lab/ 1, CHEM 251 Organic Chemistry - Theory I 4, CHEM 252 Organic Chemistry - Theory II 4, CHEM 261 Organic Chemistry - Lab 1, CHEM 262 Organic Chemistry - Lab 1, CHEM 401 Thermodynamics 3, CHEM 402 Kinetics and Quantum Mechanics 3, CHEM 461 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry 3, CHEM 490 Chemistry Seminar 1, BIOL 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics and the Sciences 3, Select at least 7 units from the following courses: BIOC 380 Biochemistry I 4, BIOC 381 Biochemistry II 4, CHEM 451 Advanced Organic Chemistry 4, CHEM 495 Advanced Topics in Chemistry 3-4, CHEM 498 Directed Research 1-4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, Mathematics 9 units: MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, Physics 8-10 units: Select one of the following sequences: PHYC 151 Physics for Life Sciences I/ 4, PHYC 152 Physics for Life Sciences II 4, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I/ 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Computer Science | Full Time | 60 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | The degree prepares professionals who understand the complexities of computer systems and can use them to address pressing and intricate problems. Students can choose careers as a webmaster, software engineer/developer, computer animator, cryptanalyst, military intelligence specialist, unmanned vehicle operation specialist, robotics engineer, electrical engineer, computer science teacher, telecommunications engineer. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Computer Science Major 60 units: Core Requirements 39 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, CS 225 Fundamentals of Computer Science 4, CS 250 Operating Systems 3, CS 320 Data Structures 3, CS 325 Database Management Systems 3, CS 330 Systems Programming I 3, CS 340 Systems Programming II 3, CS 400 Compiler Construction 3, CS 445 Computer Architecture and Organization 4, CS 455 Numerical Analysis 3, CS 470 Software Engineering I 3, CS 480 Software Engineering II 3, Upper-division Computer Science Electives 9 units, Select 9 units from the following: CS 363 Web Programming 3, CS 420 Telecommunications and Interfacing 3, CS 425 Fundamentals of Network Administration 3, CS 430 Artificial Intelligence 3, CS 435 Advanced Database Application Programming 3, CS 460 Software Project 3, CS 495 Topics in Computer Science 1-3, CS 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics in Computer Science 3, CS 497 Readings 1-4, CS 498 Directed Research 1-4, CS 499 Thesis/Project 1-4, Mathematics Requirements 12 units: MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, General Credit Courses: Computer Courses for General Credit (not applicable for the computer science major or minor): CS 120 Computer Literacy 3, CS 205 Microcomputer Software Tools 3, CS 210 Microcomputer Programming 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Finance | Full Time | 64 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | The program provides a solid foundation in accounting principles, investments, economics, business law, international business, statistics, and marketing. These then serve as a framework for in-depth study of financial markets, international trade, financial analysis, and risk management. Students learn practical application of finance theory through case studies and internships in order to guide organizations toward financial opportunities and risk management. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Finance Major 64 units: Business Core Courses 43 units: Finance Courses 21 units: ECON 352 Financial Markets and Institutions 3, ECON 372 International Trade and Finance 3, FIN 330 Financial Analysis 3, FIN 432 Investment Analysis 3, FIN 434 Derivatives 3, FIN 436 Financial Risk Management 3, FIN 439 Seminar in Finance 3, Recommended: BUSI 350 Business Internship (Finance) 1-3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in International Business | Full Time | 64 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | The degree provides a solid foundation in accounting principles, business law, finance, economics, statistics, and marketing. These then serve as a framework for in-depth study of the unique challenges presented by international business endeavors, and provide an understanding of the global market from a Christian worldview. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the International Business Major 64 units: Business Core Courses 43 units: International Business Courses 21 units: ECON 371 Comparative Economics 3, ECON 372 International Trade and Finance 3, IBUS 373 International Marketing 3, Select one of the following: IBUS 374 Topics in International Management and Strategy 3, BUSI 350 Business Internship (International) 1-3, The following 9 units may be taken on campus: IBUS 479 Seminar in International Business 3, POLI 340 International Relations 3, Select one of the following: XXX 201 Intermediate Language 3, GLBL 300 Self-Directed Language Learning 3, GLBL/COMM 310 Intercultural Communications 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Marketing | Full Time | 64 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Business and Management | This degree provides a solid business foundation, covering accounting principles, business law, finance, economics, statistics, and international business. Students gain a theoretical academic education integrated with practical marketing and job-related skills, which is ideal for building a future career. They also explore how marketing is evolving in today's online world. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Marketing Major 64 units: Business Core Courses 43 units: Marketing Courses 21 units: IBUS 373 International Marketing 3, MKTG 361 Marketing Communication 3, MKTG 362 Consumer Behavior 3, MKTG 363 Marketing Research 3, MKTG 368 Retail Marketing 3, MKTG 465 Strategic Marketing Management 3, MKTG 466 Internet Marketing 3, Recommended: MKTG 350 Marketing Internship 1-3, BUSI 350 Business Internship 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Mathematics - Applied Math Track | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The degree provides a foundation in calculus, discrete mathematics, linear and abstract algebra, differential equations, computer programming, and physics. Students may then tailor the remainder of the curriculum to their intended profession using one of four tracks: general math, secondary math education, applied math, and graduate school prep. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 43 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, MATH 400 Abstract Algebra 3, MATH 450 Introduction to Real Analysis 3, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper-Division Mathematics Electives 9-19. Applied Math Track 15 units: MATH 360 Probability and Statistics 3, MATH 430 Mathematical Physics 3, MATH 455 Numerical Analysis 3, MATH 470 Complex Variables 3, MATH 480 Mathematical Reading, Writing, and Presentation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Mathematics - General Math Track | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The degree provides a foundation in calculus, discrete mathematics, linear and abstract algebra, differential equations, computer programming, and physics. Students may then tailor the remainder of the curriculum to their intended profession using one of four tracks: general math, secondary math education, applied math, and graduate school prep. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 43 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, MATH 400 Abstract Algebra 3, MATH 450 Introduction to Real Analysis 3, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper-Division Mathematics Electives 9-19. General Math Track 9 units: MATH 340 Geometry 3, MATH 360 Probability and Statistics 3, MATH 390 History of Mathematics and Number Theory 3, MATH 430 Mathematical Physics 3, MATH 455 Numerical Analysis 3, MATH 470 Complex Variables 3, MATH 480 Mathematical Reading, Writing, and Presentation 3, MATH 499 Thesis/Project 1-4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Mathematics - Graduate School Prep Track | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The degree provides a foundation in calculus, discrete mathematics, linear and abstract algebra, differential equations, computer programming, and physics. Students may then tailor the remainder of the curriculum to their intended profession using one of four tracks: general math, secondary math education, applied math, and graduate school prep. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 43 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, MATH 400 Abstract Algebra 3, MATH 450 Introduction to Real Analysis 3, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper-Division Mathematics Electives 9-19. Graduate School Prep Track 15 units: MATH 340 Geometry 3, MATH 360 Probability and Statistics 3, MATH 390 History of Mathematics and Number Theory 3, MATH 470 Complex Variables 3, MATH 480 Mathematical Reading, Writing, and Presentation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Mathematics - Secondary Math Education Track | Full Time | 52 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | The degree provides a foundation in calculus, discrete mathematics, linear and abstract algebra, differential equations, computer programming, and physics. Students may then tailor the remainder of the curriculum to their intended profession using one of four tracks: general math, secondary math education, applied math, and graduate school prep. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 43 units: CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4, MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, MATH 280 Discrete Mathematics 3, MATH 290 Linear Algebra 3, MATH 400 Abstract Algebra 3, MATH 450 Introduction to Real Analysis 3, PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, Upper-Division Mathematics Electives 9-19. Secondary Math Education Track 19 units: EDLS 300 Introduction to Teaching as a Profession, K-12 4, MATH 301 Mathematics for Secondary Teachers 3, MATH 340 Geometry 3, MATH 360 Probability and Statistics 3, MATH 390 History of Mathematics and Number Theory 3, MATH 480 Mathematical Reading, Writing, and Presentation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Nursing (BSN) | Full Time | 4 years (Average) | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Nursing | The program provides a solid foundation in nursing care for individuals, families, communities, and people groups across the lifespan and in a wide variety of environments. Students take part in multiple clinical experiences at leading research-based centers, teaching hospitals, and other community health centers throughout the curriculum, beginning with the first nursing course. Students can choose careers as a critical care nurse, medical-surgical nurse, public health nurse, emergency room nurse, mental health care nurse, military nurse, school nurse, missionary nurse, oncology nurse, geriatric nurse, pediatric nurse. | Applicants are not required to have completed a specific set of courses; however the following college preparatory courses are strongly recommended: English (four years), Mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), Science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government and Strong academic electives. A grade-point average of 2.75 is required. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Nursing Major 68 units: UNRS 105 Foundations of Professional Nursing 6, (or UNRS 270 for LVNs and students with nursing transfer credits) UNRS 113 Pharmacology 2, UNRS 210 Nursing Care in Maternal, Newborn, and Women's Health 6, UNRS 212 Nursing Care of Adults and Elderly 6, UNRS 220 Health Assessment 3, UNRS 260 Nutrition 2, UNRS 270 Theories and Concepts in Professional Nursing 2 (or UNRS 105), UNRS 306 Theoretical Frameworks for Nursing 3, UNRS 310 Mental Health Nursing 3, UNRS 313 Restorative Nursing 3, UNRS 314 Nursing Care of Children and Young Adults 6, UNRS 367 Pathophysiology 3, UNRS 403 Leadership and Management in Professional Practice 3, UNRS 410 Community Health Nursing 6, UNRS 411 Advanced Nursing Care of Adults and Aging 7, UNRS 425 Nursing Research 3, UNRS 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics and Issues in Health Care 4, Nursing Courses Elected/Recommended for the Nursing Major: UNRS 300 Complementary and Alternative Therapies: Herbs, Supplements, and Nutrition 3, UNRS 380 Transcultural Health Care Outreach 2, UNRS 381 Transcultural Health Care Outreach – Practicum 1, UNRS 400 Advanced Practice: Professional Studies and Communication Skills 3, UNRS 436 Fundamentals of Case Management 3, Selected graduate nursing courses require a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 or better. Support Courses and General Studies Requirements for the Nursing Major: BIOL 220 General Microbiology 4, IOL 250 Human Anatomy 4, BIOL 251 Human Physiology 4, CHEM 111 Organic Chemistry for the Health Sciences/ 2, CHEM 112 Biochemistry for the Health Sciences/ 1, CHEM 114 Laboratory for the Health Sciences/ 1, COMM 111 Public Communication 3, CSA 101 Beginnings: Personal Development and the College Experience 1, (for students with fewer than 28 transfer units), ENGL 110 Freshman Writing Seminar 3, ENGL XXX Literature core requirement 3, MATH 110 College Algebra 3, PE XXX Fitness for Life 1, PHIL XXX Core requirement 3, PSYC 110 General Psychology 3, PSYC 290 Human Growth and Development 3, PSYC 299 Applied Statistics 3, Heritage and Institutions (Core requirement) 3, Aesthetics and the Creative Arts (Core requirement) 3, God’s Word and the Christian Response (core requirements) (includes core units of ethics in UNRS 496) 18, University Skills Foreign Language requirement (unless waived by proficiency testing) 8, Elective (If MATH 110 is successfully waived), Choose one of the following: 3, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3, GLBL 301 Anthropology and Everyday Living/ 3, GLBL/COMM 310 Intercultural Communication 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Nursing (BSN) - Summer Start Option | Full Time | 6 semesters (Average) | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Nursing | The program provides a solid foundation in nursing care for individuals, families, communities, and people groups across the lifespan and in a wide variety of environments. Students take part in multiple clinical experiences at leading research-based centers, teaching hospitals, and other community health centers throughout the curriculum, beginning with the first nursing course. Students can choose careers as a critical care nurse, medical-surgical nurse, public health nurse, emergency room nurse, mental health care nurse, military nurse, school nurse, missionary nurse, oncology nurse, geriatric nurse, pediatric nurse. | Applicants are not required to have completed a specific set of courses; however the following college preparatory courses are strongly recommended: English (four years), Mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), Science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government and Strong academic electives. A grade-point average of 2.75 is required. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Prerequisite Requirements 55 units: BIOL 220 General Microbiology 4, BIOL 250 Human Anatomy 4, BIOL 251 Human Physiology 4, CHEM 111 Organic Chemistry for the Health Sciences/ 2, CHEM 112 Biochemistry for the Health Sciences/ 1, CHEM 114 Laboratory for the Health Sciences/ 1, ENGL 110 Freshman Writing Seminar 3, ENGL XXX Literature (core requirement)/ 3, MATH 110 College Algebra 3, PE XXX Fitness for Life 1, PHIL XXX Core Requirement 3, PSYC 110 General Psychology 3, PSYC 290 Human Growth and Development 3, PSYC 299 Applied Statistics 3, Heritage and Institutions (core requirement) 3, Aesthetics and the Creative Arts (core requirement)/ 3, Foreign Language-2 semesters 8, Bible requirement varies, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3 - or - GLBL 301 Anthropology for Everyday Life/ 3 - or - GLBL 310 Intercultural Communications 3 - or -COMM 310 Intercultural Communications 3, Course Requirements 66 units: First Semester: UNRS 105 Foundations of Professional Nursing 6, UNRS 113 Pharmacology 2, UNRS 220 Health Assessment 3, Second Semester: UNRS 212 Nursing Care of Adults and Elderly 6, UNRS 260 Nutrition 2, UNRS 367 Pathophysiology 3, Third Semester: UNRS 210 Nursing Care in Maternal, Newborn, and Women's Health 6, UNRS 314 Nursing Care of Children and Young Adults 6, Forth Semester: UNRS 306 Theoretical Frameworks for Nursing 3, UNRS 410 Community Health Nursing 6, Fifth Semester: UNRS 310 Mental Health Nursing 3, UNRS 313 Restorative Nursing 3, UNRS 403 Leadership and Management in Professional Practice 3, UNRS 425 Nursing Research 3, Sixth Semester: UNRS 411 Advanced Nursing Care of Adults and Aging 7, UNRS 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics and Issues in Health Care 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | High Desert Regional Center | High Desert Regional Center, 15283 Pahute St, VICTORVILLE, California, 92395, +1 877 247 3462 | No | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Organizational Leadership | Distance / Online | 15 months (Average) | US $515 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This program allows students to take advantage of the convenience of online learning without sacrificing the quality of instruction or professor-student interaction. The program is taught from a Christian worldview, creating a unique opportunity for students to develop as informed and ethical decision makers. | Applicants must be 25 years of age or more. They must possess 60 units or more of transferable credit, five years of overall work experience, a minimum of 2.0 GPA. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses: BMGT 301 Dynamics of Group Behavior 3, BMGT 302 Adult Development and Learning Assessment 3, BMGT 303 Introduction to Research Methodology 2, BMGT 304 Organizational Analysis 3, BMGT 306 The Bible and Business Ethics 3, BMGT 307 Managerial Communication 2, BMGT 401 Directed Study: Applied Research Project I 3, BMGT 402 Directed Study: Applied Research Project II 3, BMGT 408 Introduction to Data Analysis and Presentation 3, BMGT 409 Cultural Influences in the Workplace 3, BMGT 410 Principles of Management and Supervision 3, BMGT 411 A Christian Worldview and the Professions 3, BMGT 412 Integrating Managerial Principles with Practice 2, BMGT 413 Leadership and Change 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | No | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | B.S. in Physics | Full Time | 64-65 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Physics | he degree provides a foundation in general physics, calculus, chemistry, and computer programming. Students prepare to make an impact on the world with expertise related to many current issues, such as computer technology, alternative fuels, space flight, and climate change. The degree is a Bachelor of Science, which requires that the student also choose a minor in biology, chemistry, computer science, or mathematics. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Physics Major (B.S.) 64-65 units: Physics Requirements 36 units: PHYC 161 Physics for Science and Engineering I 5, PHYC 162 Physics for Science and Engineering II 5, PHYC 263 Physics for Science and Engineering III 5, PHYC 361 Electricity and Magnetism 3, PHYC 370 Waves and Optics 3, PHYC 380 Classical Mechanics 3, PHYC 401 Thermodynamics 3, PHYC 430 Mathematical Physics 3, PHYC 440 Quantum Mechanics 3, PHYC 470 Advanced Laboratory 2, PHYC 490 Physics Seminar 1, Engineering Requirements: Select one of the following: PHYC 281 Statics 3, PHYC 282 Dynamics 3, PHYC 283 Electric Circuits 4, PHYC 284 Materials 3, Mathematics Requirements 17 units: MATH 161 Calculus I 5, MATH 162 Calculus II 4, MATH 263 Multivariate Calculus 4, MATH 270 Differential Equations 4, Chemistry Requirements 4 units CHEM 151 General Chemistry 4, Computer Science Requirements 4 units, CS 220 Introduction to Computer Science 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | BFA in Cinematic Arts Production | Full Time | 60 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater, Film, and Television | The BFA in Cinematic Arts Production requires the highest standards in arts education. Combining mastery of craft with scholarship, the BFA program encourages the artistic and spiritual growth of students and the exploration of their calling from a thoughtful and culturally engaged Christian worldview. Students are prepared for careers as screenwriter, film/television editor, director, production manager/assistant director, producer, videographer/cinematographer, postproduction supervisor, script editor, production designer, sound editor/designer, entertainment executive, critic/historian. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for Cinematic Arts Production Major (BFA) 60 units: Required Courses 35 units: TFT 101 Christianity and the Creative Process 3, TFT 260 Cinema-TV Production II 4, TFT 274 Story and Character 3, TFT 275 History of Broadcasting and Electronic Media 3, TFT 285 History of Film 3, TFT 295 Film and Television Business 3, TFT 317 Cinematic Aesthetics 3, TFT 335 Cinema-TV Production II 4, TFT 341 Media Criticism and Theory 3, TFT 490 Internship 1-3, TFT 494 Production Capstone 3, Select one of the following: TFT 110 Introduction to Acting 3, TFT 263 Broadcast Performance 3, Select one of the following: TFT 375 Screenwriting 3, TFT 387 Nonfiction Writing for Visual Media 3, Select one of the following: TFT 311 Film and Literature 3, TFT 351 Film and Social Issues 3, TFT 495 Special Topics 3, Select four of the following: TFT 319 Directing for the Camera 3, TFT 320 Cinematography 3, TFT 321 Film/Video Editing 3, TFT 322 Sound Design 3, TFT 361 Producing and Production Management 3, Select one of the following: TFT 415 Advanced Television Production 4, TFT 438 Advanced Documentary Film 4, TFT 462 Advanced Cinema Production 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | BFA in Visual Art - Ceramics Concentration | Full Time | 74 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Art is the professional undergraduate degree that is highly desired by serious students intent on pursuing careers or advanced degrees in the visual arts. The BFA in Visual Art gives art students flexibility in constructing a program that allows them to choose one of five concentrations that is best suited to their academic and career goals. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: ART 206 Ceramics II 3, ART 305 Ceramics III 3, ART 306 Ceramics IV 3, ART 406 Ceramic Studio Processes 6. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | BFA in Visual Art - Crafts Concentration | Full Time | 74 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Art is the professional undergraduate degree that is highly desired by serious students intent on pursuing careers or advanced degrees in the visual arts. The BFA in Visual Art gives art students flexibility in constructing a program that allows them to choose one of five concentrations that is best suited to their academic and career goals. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: ART 403 Multicultural Art 3, ART 411 Sculptural Objects and Functional Art Processes 6, ART 413 Multicultural Art Processes 6. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | BFA in Visual Art - Drawing and Painting Concentration | Full Time | 74 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Art is the professional undergraduate degree that is highly desired by serious students intent on pursuing careers or advanced degrees in the visual arts. The BFA in Visual Art gives art students flexibility in constructing a program that allows them to choose one of five concentrations that is best suited to their academic and career goals. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Select 15 units from the following list: ART 240 Figure Drawing and Painting 3, ART 315 Printmaking II 3, ART 340 Drawing and Painting II 3, ART 350 Illustration 3, ART 365 Printmaking III 3, ART 445 Drawing and Painting Processes 6. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | BFA in Visual Art - Photography Concentration | Full Time | 74 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Art is the professional undergraduate degree that is highly desired by serious students intent on pursuing careers or advanced degrees in the visual arts. The BFA in Visual Art gives art students flexibility in constructing a program that allows them to choose one of five concentrations that is best suited to their academic and career goals. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: ART 260 Photography II 3, ART 360 Photography III 3, ART 460 Photography IV 3, ART 465 Photographic Processes 6. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | BFA in Visual Art - Sculpture Concentration | Full Time | 74 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Art is the professional undergraduate degree that is highly desired by serious students intent on pursuing careers or advanced degrees in the visual arts. The BFA in Visual Art gives art students flexibility in constructing a program that allows them to choose one of five concentrations that is best suited to their academic and career goals. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: ART 270 Sculpture II 3, ART 370 Sculpture III 3, ART 470 Sculpture IV 3, ART 471 Sculptural Processes 6. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Studies | Distance / Online | 19 months (Average) | US $495 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This is an accelerated liberal studies degree-completion program designed to help prospective elementary school and special education teachers complete their bachelor's degree while gaining valuable subject matter preparation for their role as a teacher. | Applicants must be 22 years of age or more. They must possess 60 units or more of transferable credit, a minimum of 2.0 GPA. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 36 units: HDEV 301 Humans and Communication 5, HDEV 302 Humans: Self and Others 5, HDEV 303 Humans and Computation 5, HDEV 401 Humans and History 5, HDEV 402 Humans and Scientific Inquiry 5, HDEV 403 Humans and the Arts 5, HDEV 404 Humans and Ethical Behavior 5, HDEV 405 Portfolio Assessment/Reflection 1, English Concentration 12 units: ENGL 403 Language Principles and Processes (CAPS only) 4, ENGL 407 Composition: Theory and Practice (CAPS only) 4, ENGL 433 Children's Literature (CAPS only) 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) | Full Time | 71-79 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Social Work | The social work major prepares students with knowledge, values, and skills for generalist social work professional practice in work with diverse individuals, families, groups, and communities, both locally and globally. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Requirements for the Social Work Major 71-79 units: Specified General Studies Requirements 9 units: PSYC 110 General Psychology 3, SOC 120 Introduction to Sociology 3, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3, Biology Requirement 3-8 units, Select one of the following courses: BIOL 101 Fundamentals of Biology 4, BIOL 151 General Biology I 4, PSYC 470 Physiological Psychology 3 - or take both of the following courses: BIOL 250 Human Anatomy 4, BIOL 251 Human Physiology 4, Core Requirements 53-56 units: PSYC 299 Applied Statistics 3, SOCW 250 Introduction to Social Work 3, SOCW 251 Social Welfare Policy and Service 3, SOCW 310 Human Behavior and the Social Environment (HBSE) I 3, SOCW 311 Human Behavior and the Social Environment II 3, SOCW 332 Social Work Practice I 3, SOCW 350 Aging: Implications for Policy and Practice 3, SOCW 351 Child Welfare 3, SOCW 360 Social Work Practice III (Groups) 3, SOCW 466 Field Internship I 4, SOCW 468 Field Internship II 4, SOCW 467Senior Practicum Seminar I 3, SOCW 469 Senior Practicum Seminar II 3, SOCW 478 Social Work Research Methods 3, SOCW 479 Social Work Research Project 3, SOCW 496 Senior Seminar: Ethics in the Helping Professions 3, Select one of the following: SOCW 333 Social Work Practice II 3, SOCW 335 Community Transformation 6, Social Work Electives 6 units: Choose 3 units from the following social work electives: SOCW 380 Understanding International Social Problems and Services through Study Abroad 3, SOCW 400 Grant and Proposal Writing 3, SOCW 410 Family Violence 3, SOCW 415 Addictions: Assessment and Intervention 3, SOCW 497 Readings 1-4, Choose another 3 units from the above or one of the following courses: Course cannot be found. (CMIN 428), CMIN 456 Ministry Organization and Administration 3, ETHN 355 The Asian American Experience 3, ETHN 356 The African American Experience 3, ETHN 357 The Chicano(a)/Latino(a) Experience 3, GLBL 355 Principles and Practice of Community Engagement (only available through study abroad) 3, PSYC 360 Abnormal Psychology 3, PSYC 410 Psychology of Exceptional Children 3, PSYC 430 Intervention Strategies with Children 3, PSYC 450 Counseling 3, SOC 359 Immigrant L.A. (only available through L.A. Term) 3, SOC 455 Crime and Delinquency 3, SOC 464 Social Stratification 3, YMIN 400 Christian Values and Human Sexuality 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Cooperative M.A./Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | 270 per unit for 3 terms each | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Global Studies Sociology, and TESOL | The APU/Christ's College Cooperative M.A./Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) Program offers college graduates in Taiwan the opportunity to earn a Master of Arts in TESOL. The Cooperative Program requires two years, one at Christ's College and one at APU, and leads one to academic accomplishments equal to those attained by graduates of the regular on-campus program. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university is required. (Applicants for the TESOL programs are not required to have undergraduate majors in fields such as English, linguistics, or education; however a strong background in one of these is recommended). A 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. Nonnative speakers of English must score 600 or above on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), at least 250 on the computer-based TOEFL or 100 on the IBT, and must pass a test of written English. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | ||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Doctor of Ministry (D.Min.) | Full Time | 36 units | US $425 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | The Doctor of Ministry in spiritual formation and ministry leadership offers a comprehensive curriculum track that focuses on the real-world skills ministry leaders need today. The ultimate goal is to renew and transform ministry leaders, churches, and communities toward those of Jesus Christ. | Applicants must have an M.Div. from an ATS-accredited school or its educational equivalent, achieved with a grade-point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) and verified by the submission of an official transcript (educational equivalent is evidenced by 90 semester units of theological study in coursework commensurate with requirements by the Graduate School of Theology for granting an M.Div. Applicants for whom English is a second language must demonstrate language aptitude for advanced studies at the doctoral level by a score of 550 on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) and pass a test of written English. Students who have completed at least 48 units in an accredited English-speaking program just prior to application may be admitted without the TOEFL. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 20 units: GDMN 704 Research and Design 4, GDMN 710 History of Christian Spirituality 4, GDMN 720 Theology for Spiritual Formation 4, GDMN 730 Church Renewal 4, GDMN 740 Spiritual Leadership 4 , Electives 12 units: GDMN 750 Civic Spirituality 4, GDMN 760 Christian Spirituality and Modern Technology 3, GDMN 762 Spiritual Practices in the Church 4, GDMN 764 History and Theology of Worship 3, GDMN 766 Empowering the Laity 3, GDMN 768 Urban Immersion 3, GDMN 770 Church Growth and Church Planting 3, GDMN 772 Contemplative Spirituality 4,GDMN 782 Scripture: Its Spirituality and Proclamation 4, GDMN 799 Readings in Doctoral Ministry 1-4, Project 4 units, GDMN 790 Ministry Project 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing (PhD) | Full Time | 4 years (Average) | US $800 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | The Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing (PhD) is a research-based program designed to prepare scholars for a lifetime of systematic inquiry and knowledge development. The curriculum integrates a wide body of knowledge in the area of wellness promotion and health maintenance, and incorporates two main areas of research: health of the family and community and international health. Additional nursing education content incorporates educational theories into the larger context of health education and academic preparation. Graduates of this program are nurse scholars, educators, and researchers who are prepared to pursue systematic research inquiry to improve the health of society and prepare the future generation of nurse clinicians and academicians. | Applicants must hold a master’s degree in nursing from an accredited program with a GPA of 3.5 on a 4.0 scale. For international students whose native language is not English and whose degrees were not earned in countries where English is the primary language, the following iBT (Internet-based) TOEFL scores are required: reading: 25, speaking: 25, Writing: 25, listening: 25. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Knowledge/Theory (6 courses required) 24 units: GNRS 700 Philosophy of Science 4, GNRS 701 Nursing Knowledge Development 4, GNRS 702 Nursing Theory 4, GNRS 703 Spirituality and Health 4, GNRS 704 Faith Integration and Nursing Scholarship 4, GNRS 705 Social Ethics and Social Change 4, Statistical Analysis (1 course required) 4 units, GNRS 713 Advanced Statistical Analysis 4, Research (3 courses required) 9 units: GNRS 706 Methods of Inquiry 3, GNRS 707 Quantitative Nursing Research Designs 3, GNRS 708 Qualitative Research Designs 3, Method of Inquiry 3 units (Students are required to choose one of following courses.), GNRS 709 Advanced Quantitative Methods 3, GNRS 710 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods 3, GNRS 711 Advanced Research Methods in the Humanities 3, GNRS 712 Advanced Evaluation Research 3, Two areas of concentration courses 6 units, Two areas of elective courses 6 units, Dissertation Research 12 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) | Full Time | 31months (Average) | US $556 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy | This is an entry-level professional program emphasizing the scientific basis of human structure and human movement, the spiritual basis of human worth, and the integration of these foundational elements into a comprehensive and problem-solving, evidence- and consensus-based approach to artful evaluation and skillful treatment. Graduates have a solid generalist perspective of patient care in a variety of professional treatment settings with a strong foundation for post-professional specialization and lifelong learning. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and a 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Year 1 - DPT I 61 units: Term I: Spring I Session - 9 weeks 12 units: PT 502 Professional Relationships 2, PT 506 Seminar I 2, PT 520 Functional Anatomy I 5, PT 718 PT Clinical Skills IA 3, Term II: Spring II Session - 9 weeks 12 units, PT 501 Research I 1, PT 522 Functional Anatomy II 5, PT 722 PT Clinical Skills IB 3, PT 724 PT Clinical Skills II 3, Term III: Summer Session - 8 weeks 8 units: PT 541 Exercise Physiology 3, PT 558 Research II 2, PT 726 PT Clinical Skills III 1, PT 731 Practicum 2, Term IV: Fall I Session - 9 weeks 15 units: PT 524 Pathophysiology I 5, PT 550 Neuroscience I 3, PT 728 PT Clinical Skills IV 4, PT 752 PTDDT II 3, Term V: Fall II Session - 9 weeks 14 units: PT 525 Pathophysiology II 3, PT 551 Neuroscience II 3, PT 746 PTDDT I-Ortho I 4, PT 756 PTDDT V - Neuro Rehabilitation 4, Year 2 - DPT II 59 units: Term VI: Spring I Session - 9 Weeks 13 units: PT 732 PT Clinical Skills V 4, PT 744 Professional Ethics, Advocacy, and Spiritual Care 2, PT 748 PTDDT III-Ortho II 4, Term VII: Spring II Session - 9 Weeks 13 units: PT 572 Pharmacology 4, PT 742 Prosthetics and Orthotics 2, PT 754 PTDDT IV-General Medicine 3, PT 760 PTDDT VIII-Pediatrics 4, Term VIII: Summer Session - 7 weeks 9 units: PT 750 Comprehensive Exams 1, PT 758 Special Populations 3, PT 762 Seminar II 2, PT 778 Diagnostic Imaging 3, PT 798 Special Topics 3, Term IX: Fall I Session - 8 weeks 8 units: PT 771 Internship A 8, Term X: Fall II Session - 8 weeks 8 units: PT 773 Internship B 8, Term XI: Fall II Session - 8 weeks 8 units: PT 775 Internship C 8, Year 3 - DPT III 30 units: Term XII: Spring I Session - 6 weeks 10 units, PT 738 Wellness and Nutrition 3, PT 764 PTDDT VII-Clinical Case Studies 2, PT 768 Administration 3, PT 774 Capstone I 2, Term XIII: Spring II Session - 9 weeks 5 units: PT 790 Physical Diagnosis Screening 5, Term XIV: Summer Session - 9 weeks 6 units: PT 787 Residency I 6, Term XV: Fall I Session - 9 weeks 9 units, PT 776 Capstone II 2, PT 789 Residency II 6, PT 792 Professional Portfolio 1. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Ed.D. in Educational Leadership - Leadership Emphasis | Full Time | 4-5 years (Average) | US $715 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Doctoral Studies in Education | The Leadership emphasis focuses on preparing graduates for administrative positions at the school site, district office, or county, state, and federal levels in public or private education. | Applicants must have a master's degree in education or a closely related field from a regionally accredited institution and a minimum graduate GPA of 3.5 on a 4-point scale. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Courses for All Emphases 33 units: EDUC 700 Proseminar in Doctoral Study 3, EDUC 701 Strengths-based Leadership for Teaching and Learning 3, EDUC 705 Ethical Dilemmas in Educational Leadership 2, EDUC 715 Diversity and Equity 2, EDUC 731 Achievement Motivation 3, EDUC 734 Teaching Strategies for Diverse Learners 3 - or - EDUC 737 Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 3, EDUC 740 Intermediate Statistics and Data Analysis 3, EDUC 741 Research Design 3, EDUC 742 Qualitative Research 3, EDUC 746 Advanced Data Analysis 3, EDUC 748, EDUC 749 Guided Inquiry Project, I-II 2, Elective Courses: EDUC 798 Special Topics 1-3, EDUC 799 Readings in Educational Leadership 1-3, Additional Elective Options: EDUC 780 Global Communities of Educational Practice 2-3, Dissertation Courses: EDUC 794 Dissertation Research 3-6, EDUC 795 Dissertation Research 3-6, Leadership Emphasis Courses 15 units: EDUC 714 Leading Change in Organizations 3, EDUC 717 Leadership Theories and Strategies in K-12 Education 3, EDUC 728 Building and Sustaining Community 3, EDUC 739 Professional Development and Adult Learning 3, EDUC 747 Standards-based Assessment 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Orange County Regional Center | Orange County Regional Center, 1915 Orangewood Avenue Ste 100, ORANGE, California, 92868, +1 800 272 0111 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Ed.D. in Educational Leadership - School Psychology Emphasis | Full Time | 4-5 years (Average) | US $715 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Doctoral Studies in Education | The school psychology emphasis prepares graduates for leadership roles in pupil services areas and for teaching, consultation, and independent practice. | Applicants must have a master's degree in education or a closely related field from a regionally accredited institution and a minimum graduate GPA of 3.5 on a 4-point scale. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Courses for All Emphases 33 units: EDUC 700 Proseminar in Doctoral Study 3, EDUC 701 Strengths-based Leadership for Teaching and Learning 3, EDUC 705 Ethical Dilemmas in Educational Leadership 2, EDUC 715 Diversity and Equity 2, EDUC 731 Achievement Motivation 3, EDUC 734 Teaching Strategies for Diverse Learners 3 - or - EDUC 737 Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 3, EDUC 740 Intermediate Statistics and Data Analysis 3, EDUC 741 Research Design 3, EDUC 742 Qualitative Research 3, EDUC 746 Advanced Data Analysis 3, EDUC 748, EDUC 749 Guided Inquiry Project, I-II 2, Elective Courses: EDUC 798 Special Topics 1-3, EDUC 799 Readings in Educational Leadership 1-3, Additional Elective Options: EDUC 780 Global Communities of Educational Practice 2-3, Dissertation Courses: EDUC 794 Dissertation Research 3-6, EDUC 795 Dissertation Research 3-6, School Psychology Emphasis Courses 15 units, EDUC 751 Research-based Interventions in the Classroom 3, EDUC 753 School Neuropsychology I: Foundations and Theory 3, EDUC 755 School Neuropsychology II: Assessment and Applications 3, EDUC 757 Assessment of Young Children: Theory and Research 3, EDUC 759 Legal Issues and Crisis Management in School 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Orange County Regional Center | Orange County Regional Center, 1915 Orangewood Avenue Ste 100, ORANGE, California, 92868, +1 800 272 0111 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Ed.D. in Educational Leadership - Teaching and Learning Emphasis | Full Time | 4-5 years (Average) | US $715 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Doctoral Studies in Education | The Teaching and Learning emphasis prepares graduates for leadership roles in districts and schools, particularly in curriculum and instruction, and for faculty roles in teacher education and other graduate education programs in colleges and universities. Curriculum development, independent consulting, and research are other career possibilities. | Applicants must have a master's degree in education or a closely related field from a regionally accredited institution and a minimum graduate GPA of 3.5 on a 4-point scale. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Courses for All Emphases 33 units: EDUC 700 Proseminar in Doctoral Study 3, EDUC 701 Strengths-based Leadership for Teaching and Learning 3, EDUC 705 Ethical Dilemmas in Educational Leadership 2, EDUC 715 Diversity and Equity 2, EDUC 731 Achievement Motivation 3, EDUC 734 Teaching Strategies for Diverse Learners 3 - or - EDUC 737 Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 3, EDUC 740 Intermediate Statistics and Data Analysis 3, EDUC 741 Research Design 3, EDUC 742 Qualitative Research 3, EDUC 746 Advanced Data Analysis 3, EDUC 748, EDUC 749 Guided Inquiry Project, I-II 2, Elective Courses: EDUC 798 Special Topics 1-3, EDUC 799 Readings in Educational Leadership 1-3, Additional Elective Options: EDUC 780 Global Communities of Educational Practice 2-3, Dissertation Courses: EDUC 794 Dissertation Research 3-6, EDUC 795 Dissertation Research 3-6, Teaching and Learning Emphasis Courses 15 units: EDUC 730 Theories of Learning 3, EDUC 733 Seminar in Research on Curriculum Studies 3, EDUC 739 Professional Development and Adult Learning 3, EDUC 747 Standards-based Assessment 3, EDUC 750 Writing for Publication 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Orange County Regional Center | Orange County Regional Center, 1915 Orangewood Avenue Ste 100, ORANGE, California, 92868, +1 800 272 0111 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Ed.D. in Higher Education Leadership | Full Time | 4-5 years (Average) | US $815 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Doctoral Higher Education | The Doctor of Education in Higher Education Leadership Program prepares graduates for leadership roles in colleges and universities, especially in student development, academic support, academic leadership, and administration. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution, a master’s degree, preferably in higher education or a related field from a regionally accredited institution and must have minimum Grade Point Average (GPA) of 3.0 in master’s level work on a 4-point scale. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Courses 44 units: HED 701 Strengths-oriented Leadership 4, HED 702 The Nature of Inquiry 4, HED 704 Ethical Issues in Higher Education 2, HED 708 College Impact on Student Success 2, HED 712 Leading Change in Higher Education 4, HED 721 Diversity and Social Justice in Higher Education 4, HED 725 Administration in Higher Education 4, HED 727 Introduction to U.S. Higher Education 4, HED 737 Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 4, HED 742 Qualitative Research Methods 4, HED 744 Research Design and Statistics 4, HED 748 Guided Inquiry Project I 1, HED 749 Guided Inquiry Project II 1, HED 790 Doctoral Seminar in Research Studies 2, Elective Courses 4-6 units: HED 707 Principles of Student Retention 2, HED 719 Financing Higher Education 2, HED 723 Higher Education and the Law 3, HED 726 Policy Analysis in Higher Education 2, HED 728 Policy and Politics 2, HED 743 Program Evaluation in Higher Education 2, HED 761 Strengths-oriented Research and Programming 2-3, HED 780 International Higher Education Policy and Practice 2, HED 798 Special Topics 2, Dissertation Courses: HED 794 Dissertation Research 3, HED 795 Dissertation Research 3, Independent Study: Students may petition to take an independent study course to substitute for an elective course. HED 799 Readings in Higher Education 1-3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Clinical Psychology: Marriage and Family Therapy | Full Time | 2-4 years | US $560 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Graduate Psychology | The Master of Arts in Clinical Psychology with an emphasis in Marriage and Family Therapy is intended for individuals who wish to develop a solid foundation in the theoretical and applied practice of professional counseling with individuals, couples, and families. Also included in the program are interdisciplinary studies in theology, ethics, and psychotherapy. For those wishing to practice with a master's degree, this program meets the current requirements for California licensure as a marriage and family therapist. | Applicants must satisfy two undergraduate prerequisites for full admission into the master's degree program. These courses are Abnormal Psychology, and Human Growth and Development or General Psychology, both of which must have been taken within the previous eight years and completed with a grade of B or better. International applicants whose first language is not English must submit a TOEFL score of 600 minimum and are also encouraged to submit results of the Test of Written English (TWE) and the Test of Spoken English (TSE). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Foundational Coursework 12 units: PPSY 551 Theories of Psychotherapy 3, PPSY 558 Advanced Developmental Psychology 3, PPSY 563 Psychopathology 3, PPSY 572 Research Methodology 3, Professional Coursework 45 units: PPSY 510 Psychotherapy and Cultural Diversity 3, PPSY 511 Addictions, Assessment, and Interventions 3, PPSY 512 Legal, Ethical, and Moral Issues in Therapy 3, PPSY 525 Crisis and Trauma in Community Mental Health 3, PPSY 552 Human Sexuality and Sex Therapy 3, PPSY 557 Marriage Therapy 3, PPSY 561 Child and Adolescent Therapy 3, PPSY 571 Family Therapy 3, PPSY 577 Psychological Assessment 3, PPSY 580 Introduction to Clinical Practice: Basic Skills 3, PPSY 581 Introduction to Clinical Practice: Advanced Skills 3, PPSY 582 Introduction to Clinical Practice: Group Skills 3, PPSY 585 Psychobiology and Psychopharmacology 3, PPSY 597 Clinical Placement I 3, PPSY 598 Clinical Placement II 3, Interdisciplinary Coursework 9 units: PPSY 531 Moral Identity Formation and Psychotherapy 3, PPSY 533 Spiritual Formation and Psychotherapy 3, PPSY 534 Interdisciplinary Integration and Psychotherapy 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Orange County Regional Center | Orange County Regional Center, 1915 Orangewood Avenue Ste 100, ORANGE, California, 92868, +1 800 272 0111 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Educational Leadership | Distance / Online | 15 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | The program offers a dynamic leadership program designed to help school administrators develop the vision and skills needed to transform educational environments. The program emphasizes a strong Christian approach and incorporates four integrative themes into all coursework: collaborative leadership and decision making for effective culturally diverse schools, instructional system design/management, care and enhancement of individuals, and moral/ethical development of students and staff. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university and a minimum grade-point baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: EDL 580 Leadership Induction 1, EDL 581 Research and Leadership 6, EDL 582 Cornerstones of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 583 Educational Leadership and Change 6, EDL 584 Policy and Politics of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 585 Leadership in a Legal Culture 6, EDL 586 Leadership Performance Assessment 5. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Educational Leadership with an Emphasis in Educational Technology and Learning and the Preliminary Administrative Services Internship Credential (PASC), Tier I | Distance / Online | 18-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This program fulfills the needs of school districts desiring to hire administrators with a strong technology background. This degree meets an ever-growing demand of school districts for administrators who understand the 21st-century learner and integrate technology tools and learning strategies to meet students' needs. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university and a minimum grade-point baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: EDL 580 Leadership Induction 1, EDL 581 Research and Leadership 6, EDL 582 Cornerstones of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 583 Educational Leadership and Change 6, EDL 584 Policy and Politics of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 585 Leadership in a Legal Culture 6, EDL 586 Leadership Performance Assessment 5, EDUC 514 Digital Video in the Classroom 3, EDUC 515 Evolving Educational Technologies 3, EDUC 522 Learning in the 21st Century 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Educational Leadership: Educational Technology and Learning | Distance / Online | 18-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This program fulfills the needs of school districts desiring to hire administrators with a strong technology background. This degree meets an ever-growing demand of school districts for administrators who understand the 21st-century learner and integrate technology tools and learning strategies to meet the students' needs. The program offers an increased opportunity for educators looking to utilize their talents and strengths in technology in a leadership role as they ensure equal access to technology for all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university and a minimum grade-point baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: EDL 580 Leadership Induction 1, EDL 581 Research and Leadership 6, EDL 582 Cornerstones of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 583 Educational Leadership and Change 6, EDL 584 Policy and Politics of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 585 Leadership in a Legal Culture 6, EDL 586 Leadership Performance Assessment 5, EDUC 514 Digital Video in the Classroom 3, EDUC 515Evolving Educational Technologies 3, EDUC 522 Learning in the 21st Century 3, EDUC 523 Hypermedia-Enhanced Learning Environments 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Educational Leadership: Educational Technology and Learning | Full Time | 18-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership | The Master of Arts in Educational Leadership Program with an Emphasis in Educational Technology and Learning fulfills the needs of school districts desiring to hire administrators with a strong technology background. This degree meets an ever-growing demand of school districts for administrators who understand the 21st century learner and integrate technology tools and learning strategies to meet the students' needs. The program offers an increased opportunity for educators looking to utilize their talents and strengths in technology in a leadership role as they ensure equal access to technology for all students. | Applicants must hold bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution, minimum baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale (Provisional admittance may be granted to individuals who do not meet this criterion if competency can be shown). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: EDL 580 Leadership Induction 1, EDL 581 Research and Leadership 6, EDL 582 Cornerstones of Educational Leadership (not required for candidates with master’s degree in education) 6, EDL 583 Educational Leadership and Change 6, EDL 584 Policy and Politics of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 585 Leadership in a Legal Culture 6, EDL 586 Leadership Performance Assessment 5, EDUC 514 Digital Video in the Classroom 3, EDUC 515 Evolving Educational Technologies 3, EDUC 522 Learning in the 21st Century 3, EDUC 523 Hypermedia-Enhanced Learning Environments 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Educational Technology | Distance / Online | 15 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This cutting-edge online version of the Master of Arts in Educational Technology degree includes a functional analysis of computers and e-learning, applications of technology-supported curricular tools, telecommunications, global learning and cross-cultural literacy, instructional design and development, and emerging trends in technologies-all encased in a dynamic online learning environment. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university and a minimum grade-point baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Term 1: EDTC 511 Foundations in Educational Technology 3, EDTC 571 Curriculum Foundations 3, Term 2: EDTC 517 Telecommunications 3, EDTC 527 Special Topics in Educational Technology 3, Term 3: EDTC 518 Global Learning/Cross-Cultural Classroom 3, EDTC 524 Instructional Design and Development 3, Term 4: EDTC 523 Educational Applications of Hypermedia 3, EDTC 573 Philosophy/Ethics and History of Education 3, Term 5: EDTC 515 Emerging Trends in Technology 3, EDTC 520 Applications of Technology-Supported Curricular Tools 3, Term 6: EDTC 526 Practicum in Educational Applications of Technology 3, EDTC 572 Advanced Educational Psychology 3, Other education electives as approved by the program director or approved transfer units 3-6 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Educational Technology and Learning | Full Time | 15-18 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Innovative Educational Technology and Physical Education | Students in the Master of Arts in Educational Technology and Learning Program gain firsthand experience in the integration and direct application of technology in the classroom through a blend of hands-on instruction and online learning. The focus moves beyond merely learning about technology to using specific tools to meaningfully engage today's learner. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution and must have minimum baccalaureate or master's grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Level One Core Courses 12 units: EDUC 512 Instructional Applications of Productivity Software 3, EDUC 513 Digital-Age Literacies 3, EDUC 517 Digital Imaging in the Classroom 3, EDUC 522 Learning in the 21st Century 3, Level Two Core Courses 12 units: EDUC 514 Digital Video in the Classroom 3, EDUC 515 Evolving Educational Technologies 3, EDUC 524 Curriculum Design and Delivery 3, EDUC 525 Web Design for the Classroom 3, Level Three Courses 9 units: EDUC 519 Document Design for the Classroom 3, EDUC 520 Creating Web Media 3, EDUC 523 Hypermedia-Enhanced Learning Environments 3, Final Course 3 units, EDUC 526 Capstone Experience in Educational Technology and Learning 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Murrieta Regional Center | Murrieta Regional Center, 39573 Los Alamos Road, MURRIETA, California, 92563, +1 877 210 8841 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Global Leadership | Full Time | 3 years (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Leadership and College Student Development | The Global Leadership Program provides educational support internationally to leaders of mission, government, nongovernment, and nonprofit organizations by delivering the Master of Arts in Leadership Program in a distributed-learning approach to global-learning groups worldwide. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's or master's degree from a regionally accredited institution. They must have minimum baccalaureate or master's grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale (Provisional admittance may be granted to individuals who do not meet this criterion if competency can be shown.) | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Foundational Studies 15 units: GLDR 501 Foundations of Personal Leadership Development 3, GLDR 591 Organizational Behavior and Development 3, LDRS 529 Ethics in a Changing Organizational Environment 3, LDRS 561 Group and Conflict Issues in Leadership 3, LDRS 592 Research and Assessment Tools for Leaders 3, Professional Studies 15-18 units/: GLDR 500 Academic Writing Skills 3, GLDR 516 Mentoring and Developing Leaders for the Future 3, GLDR 552 Adult Development 3, GLDR 563 Counseling and Coaching Skills for Leaders 3, GLDR 574 Servant Leadership 3, LDRS 510 Creative and Collaborative Leadership 3, LDRS 520 Understanding Vocation in a Changing World 3, LDRS 534 Leader as an Agent of Change 3, LDRS 542 Leading across Cultures 3, LDRS 571 Leadership for a Learning Environment 3, LDRS 597 Current Issues in Leadership 3, LDRS 598 Special Topics 3, LDRS 599 Independent Study: Readings in Leadership Studies 3, Integration (LDRS 595). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Leadership | Full Time | 3 years (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Leadership and College Student Development | The program promotes understanding of how human growth and development influences and enhances interorganizational life and productivity, and develops skills for leading personal and organizational change processes. The nature of the degree is interdisciplinary, intercultural, international, and organizational. The degree program provides an action-research emphasis for informed decision making. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Leadership Courses 18 units: LDRS 501 Foundations of Leadership Theory 3, LDRS 502 Cornerstones of Christian Leadership 3, LDRS 503 Organizational Behavior 3, LDRS 516Leadership Development and Practice 3, LDRS 534 Leader as an Agent of Change 3, LDRS 592 Research and Assessment Tools for Leaders 3, Emphases 9-12 units: Organizational Leadership Emphasis classes: LDRS 510 Creative and Collaborative Leadership 3, LDRS 542 Leading across Cultures 3, LDRS 561 Group and Conflict Issues in Leadership 3, LDRS 598 Special Topics 3, Leadership Development Emphasis classes: LDRS 510 Creative and Collaborative Leadership 3, LDRS 520 Understanding Vocation in a Changing World 3, LDRS 571 Leadership for a Learning Environment 3, LDRS 598 Special Topics 3, Leadership Studies Emphasis classes: LDRS 542 Leading across Cultures 3, LDRS 545 Leadership from Interdisciplinary Perspectives (Advanced graduate research methodology course (quantitative or qualitative), to be arranged with the thesis advisor in consultation with the program director.) 3, LDRS 590 Thesis in Leadership (Leadership Studies emphasis only) 6, Electives (one elective class for all emphases). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Pacific University | Azusa Pacific University, 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 969 3434 | Azusa Pacific University is located in the San Gabriel Valley community of Azusa, 26 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Situated on 52 acres, East Campus houses administrative facilities, classrooms, residence halls, a library, student center, and gymnasium. The 53-acre West Campus is home to the School of Nursing, Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Education, School of Theology, two libraries, the Richard and Vivian Felix Event Center, the John and Marilyn Duke Academic Complex, the Barbara and Jack Lee Place of Prayer, as well as numerous classrooms and offices. | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Leadership and Organizational Studies | Distance / Online | 20 months (Average) | US $560 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This is an accelerated master's degree program tailored for working professionals seeking professional advancement or a leadership position. It is ideal for individuals who already possess professional skills, but who are in need of advanced leadership and organizational skills. Above all, emphasis is placed on the development of excellent management skills and personal integrity. Graduates walk away with leadership fundamentals, a stronger understanding of organizational life, and real-life methods of practicing ethical conduct. | Students should have bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, possess an undergraduate grade-point average of 3.0 or better (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: MLOS 500 Research in Organizations 3, MLOS 501 Group and Team Dynamics 3, MLOS 504 Managerial Marketing 3, MLOS 514 Information Systems for Managers 3, MLOS 516 Organizational Behavior and Analysis 3, MLOS 517 Human Resource Management 3, MLOS 529 Leadership and Managerial Ethics 3, MLOS 535 Survey of Organizational Finance 3, MLOS 561 Conflict and Negotiation in Organizations 3, MLOS 570 Improving Quality and Productivity 3, MLOS 578 Strategy and Planning 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Pacific University is located in the San Gabriel Valley community of Azusa, 26 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Situated on 52 acres, East Campus houses administrative facilities, classrooms, residence halls, a library, student center, and gymnasium. The 53-acre West Campus is home to the School of Nursing, Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Education, School of Theology, two libraries, the Richard and Vivian Felix Event Center, the John and Marilyn Duke Academic Complex, the Barbara and Jack Lee Place of Prayer, as well as numerous classrooms and offices. | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | ||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Management | Distance / Online | 18-30 months (Average) | US $660 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This program offers students an integrated learning environment in which to put theory and methodology into practice as they learn to implement management and leadership principles in the modern workplace. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university with a minimum grade-point average of 3.0 (Students with grade-point average of 2.50-2.99 will be considered for admission on a provisional basis) and must be potential as a scholar. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: BUSI 516 Organizational Behavior 3, BUSI 529 Ethics in a Changing Organizational Environment 3, BUSI 541 Management for the Worldwide Organization 3, BUSI 510 Current Issues in Business and Management 3, HROD 540 Diversity for Strategic Advantage 3, HROD 500 Foundations of Human Resource Development 3, HROD 517 Human Resource Management 3, MGMT 515 Applied Research and Analysis 3, MGMT 521 Organizational Development and Change 3, MGMT 561 Group Dynamics and Conflict Management 3, MGMT 581 Corporate and Organizational Leadership 3, MGMT 570 Organizational Performance Improvement 3, MGMT 597 Master's Project in Management 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Pacific University is located in the San Gabriel Valley community of Azusa, 26 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Situated on 52 acres, East Campus houses administrative facilities, classrooms, residence halls, a library, student center, and gymnasium. The 53-acre West Campus is home to the School of Nursing, Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Education, School of Theology, two libraries, the Richard and Vivian Felix Event Center, the John and Marilyn Duke Academic Complex, the Barbara and Jack Lee Place of Prayer, as well as numerous classrooms and offices. | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | ||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Management | Full Time | 12-30 months (Average) | US $660 per credit / unit | School of Business and Management | The Master of Arts in Management (MAM) Program exposes students to realistic organizational management situations through service-learning projects for profit and not-for-profit companies in the local community. Students are able to put theory and methodology into practice as they collaborate to implement management and leadership principles in the modern workplace. | bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university with a minimum grade-point average of 3.0 (Students with grade-point average of 2.50-2.99 will be considered for admission on a provisional basis) and must be potential as a scholar. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: BUSI 510 Current Issues in Business and Management 3, BUSI 516 Organizational Behavior 3, BUSI 529 Ethics in a Changing Organizational Environment 3, BUSI 541 Management for the Worldwide Organization 3, HROD 500 Foundations of Human Resource Development 3, HROD 517 Human Resource Management 3, MGMT 515 Applied Research and Analysis 3, MGMT 521 Organizational Development and Change 3, MGMT 540 Diversity for Strategic Advantage 3, MGMT 561 Group Dynamics and Conflict Management 3, MGMT 570 Organizational Performance Improvement 3, MGMT 581 Corporate and Organizational Leadership 3, MGMT 597 Master's Project in Management 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Azusa Pacific University is located in the San Gabriel Valley community of Azusa, 26 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Situated on 52 acres, East Campus houses administrative facilities, classrooms, residence halls, a library, student center, and gymnasium. The 53-acre West Campus is home to the School of Nursing, Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Education, School of Theology, two libraries, the Richard and Vivian Felix Event Center, the John and Marilyn Duke Academic Complex, the Barbara and Jack Lee Place of Prayer, as well as numerous classrooms and offices. | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) | Full Time | 17-24 months (Average) | $270 per unit for 3 terms each | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Global Studies Sociology, and TESOL | The program offers courses and seminars in language acquisition theory, English grammar and pronunciation, intercultural communication and socio-linguistics, language teaching methods and materials development, observation and practice in classroom teaching, language assessment, program design, and language-development research. The Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) prepares students to become exemplary classroom teachers committed to continued professional development within a variety of adult contexts. Graduates of the program currently serve in the United States and several foreign countries in public and adult schools, colleges, universities, private institutions, and businesses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university (Applicants for the TESOL programs are not required to have undergraduate majors in fields such as English, linguistics, or education; however a strong background in one of these is recommended). A 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. Nonnative speakers of English must score 600 or above on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), at least 250 on the computer-based TOEFL or 100 on the IBT, and must pass a test of written English. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Courses 27 units: TESL 505 Second-Language Acquisition 3, TESL 515 Teaching English Grammar 3, TESL 525 Teaching English Pronunciation 3, TESL 545 Second-Language Pedagogy I 3, TESL 550 Second-Language Pedagogy II 3, TESL 557 Reflective Teaching 3, TESL 560 Language Program Design 3, TESL 570 Second-Language Assessment 3, Select one of the following: TESL 530 Intercultural Communication and Language Teaching 3, TESL 535 Sociolinguistics and Language Teaching 3, Required course for the TEFL Certificate, Elective Courses 9 units: Students select three courses from a variety of electives. Options include: TESL 509 Special Topics in TESOL 1-3, TESL 537 Critical Perspectives on Christianity and English Language Teaching 3, TESL 548 Teaching EFL with Children 3, TESL 589 Research Methods in TESOL 3, TESL 590 Thesis Preparation 3, TESL 599 Readings in TESOL 1-3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Azusa Pacific University is located in the San Gabriel Valley community of Azusa, 26 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Situated on 52 acres, East Campus houses administrative facilities, classrooms, residence halls, a library, student center, and gymnasium. The 53-acre West Campus is home to the School of Nursing, Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Education, School of Theology, two libraries, the Richard and Vivian Felix Event Center, the John and Marilyn Duke Academic Complex, the Barbara and Jack Lee Place of Prayer, as well as numerous classrooms and offices. | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) | Distance / Online | 19 months (Average) | US $470 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | The Online Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) offers graduate students the opportunity to study TESOL from anywhere around the world. The online program allows students to develop the vision, concepts, and skills necessary to teach English to diverse student populations locally and internationally. | Applicants must have a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution with at least a 3.0 baccalaureate or master's grade-point average on a 4.0 scale. Candidates with a GPA of 2.5-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission. A strong background in English, linguistics, or education is recommended, but not required; and Nonnative speakers of English must score 600 or above on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), at least 250 on the computer-based TOEFL or at least 100 on the Internet-based TOEFL. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Fall Session I: TESL 545 Second-Language Pedagogy I 3, TESL 505 Second-Language Acquisition 3, Fall Session II: TESL 557 Reflective Teaching 3, TESL 550 Second-Language Pedagogy II 3, Spring Session I TESL 515 Teaching English Grammar 3, TESL 530 Intercultural Communication and Language Teaching 3, Spring Session II: TESL 525 Teaching English Pronunciation 3, TESL 537 Critical Perspectives on Christianity and English Language Teaching 3, Fall Session I: TESL 560 Language Program Design 3, TESL 570 Second-Language Assessment 3, Fall Session II: TESL 501 Language Learning through Technology 3, TESL 580 TESOL Portfolio 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Pacific University is located in the San Gabriel Valley community of Azusa, 26 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Situated on 52 acres, East Campus houses administrative facilities, classrooms, residence halls, a library, student center, and gymnasium. The 53-acre West Campus is home to the School of Nursing, Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Education, School of Theology, two libraries, the Richard and Vivian Felix Event Center, the John and Marilyn Duke Academic Complex, the Barbara and Jack Lee Place of Prayer, as well as numerous classrooms and offices. | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | ||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Theological Studies | Full Time | 60 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | The Master of Arts (Theological Studies) Program provides a general foundation in the biblical and theological disciplines as well as an opportunity for specialized training in either Biblical Studies or Theology and Ethics. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Biblical Language Requirement 8-16 units: GBBL 510 New Testament Greek I 4, GBBL 520 New Testament Greek II 4, GBBL 530 Hebrew I 4, GBBL 540 Hebrew II 4, Biblical Studies Core 16 units: GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, Choice of one: GBBL 531 Kingdom of God 4, GBBL 532 Paul the Apostle and Theologian 4, Theology and Ethics Core 16 units: GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, Choice of one: GTHE 503 History of the Early and Medieval Church 4, GTHE 505 Christian Ethics 4, Concentration 8-16 units: Research Paper/Thesis 4 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Transformational Urban Leadership | Full Time | 2 years (Average) | $270 per unit for 5 terms each | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Global Studies Sociology, and TESOL | The Master of Arts in Transformational Urban Leadership (MATUL) is an entirely field-based program that prepares students to implement spiritual, socioeconomic, political, and environmental change throughout the world. Residence in or near actual slum communities (in Asia, Africa, North America, and South America) enables students to combine living and learning in an integrated approach to leadership development, with a primary focus on improving opportunities for the urban poor. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university (Applicants for the TESOL programs are not required to have undergraduate majors in fields such as English, linguistics, or education; however a strong background in one of these is recommended). A 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses: TUL 500 Writings, Reign, and Urban Realities 3, TUL 505 Language and Culture Learning 6, TUL 520 Urban Spirituality 3, TUL 530 Building Faith Communities 3, TUL 540 Urban Reality and Theology 3, TUL 620 Leadership in Urban Movements 3, TUL 630 Community Transformation 3, TUL 640 Entrepreneurial and Organizational Leadership 3, TUL 670 Integration Seminar (Capstone Project) 3, Internship Courses: Each of the following five courses includes a supervised community internship (50 percent) under a skilled practitioner. TUL 550 Service to the Marginalized 3, TUL 555 Educational Center Development 3, TUL 560 Theology and Practice of Community Economics 3, TUL 650 Primary Health Care 3, TUL 655 Advocacy and the Urban Environment 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A. in Youth Ministry | Full Time | 48 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | The Master of Arts in Youth Ministry Program prepares men and women for the specialized field of youth ministry. An important feature of the program is its intentional integration of academic and experiential components. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 28 units: GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, GMIN 547 Foundations for Ministry Life 4, GBBL 511 is offered as 511A and 511B at some centers. Concentration 12 units: Required: GMIN 501 Foundations of Youth Ministry 4, Select two of the following: GMIN 502 Discipleship and Evangelism of Youth 4, GMIN 503 Multicultural Youth Ministry 4, GMIN 504 Pastoral Counseling of Youth 4, Field Education 4 units, GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, Capstone Course 4 units: GMIN 605 Leadership in Youth Ministry 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction in Multicultural Contexts | Full Time | 18-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Foundations and Transdisciplinary Studies | This program is designed for educators who possess a state credential or have significant experience in teaching, APU's Master of Arts in Education: Curriculum and Instruction in Multicultural Contexts Program provides candidates varied opportunities to acquire innovative curriculum knowledge and instructional strategies to better serve the personal, social, academic, and literacy needs of all K-U students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university with a minimum grade-point average of 3.0 (Students with grade-point average of 2.50-2.99 will be considered for admission on a provisional basis.) | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 9 units: EDUC 571 Curriculum Foundations 3, EDUC 572 Advanced Educational Psychology 3, EDUC 573 Philosophy/Ethics and History of Education 3, Required Concentration Courses 18 units: EDUC 505 Advanced Literacy Development 3, EDUC 507 Family, Community, and School Connections 3, EDUC 508 Assessment and Evaluation in Multicultural Classrooms 3, EDUC 554 Instructional Principles and Practices 3, EDUC 574 Current Issues in Education 3, EDUC 589A Research for Educators: Beginning Process 2, EDUC 589B Research for Educators: Finish Reporting 1, Recommended Elective Courses Up to 9 units, EDUC 501 Language Structure and Use 3, EDUC 502 Methods of Bilingual English Language Teaching 3, EDUC 503 School Practicum in English Language Development 3, EDUC 504 Teaching and Cultural Diversity 3, EDUC 509 Special Topics in Education 3, EDUC 544 Educational Equity and Cultural Diversity in a Pluralistic Society 3, EDUC 555 Comparative Education: A Global Perspective 3, Other education electives as approved by the program director or approved transfer units 3-6 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Murrieta Regional Center | Murrieta Regional Center, 39573 Los Alamos Road, MURRIETA, California, 92563, +1 877 210 8841 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A.Ed. in Educational Counseling with Embedded School Counseling Credential | Full Time | 18-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of School Counseling and School Psychology | The master’s degree coupled with the Pupil Personnel Services Credential: School Counseling significantly increases one’s marketability. This program immerses the candidate into the world of school counseling, emphasizing practical techniques to help pupils stay in school. Candidates explore problem-solving skills, discipline procedures, crisis and routine intervention, and work side-by-side with practicing school counselors. | Applicants must hold baccalaureate or master's degree grade-point average (GPA) should be at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Term 1: EDCO 533 Basic School Counseling 3, EDCO 557 Child and Adolescent Development and Learning 3, Term 2: EDCO 550 Issues in School Counseling 3, EDCO 593 Historical Development of School Counseling and School Psychology 3, Term 3: EDCO 528 Community, Family, and School Collaboration 3, EDUC 555 Comparative Education: A Global Perspective 3, Term 4: EDCO 535 Legal Mandates for School Counselors and School Psychologists 3, EDCO 545 Positive Behavior Supports and Classroom Intervention 3, Term 5: EDCO 583 Intervention Through Consultation 3, EDCO 592 Educational Psychology: Theory into Practice 3, Term 6: EDCO 549 Career Development and Technology in School Counseling 3, EDCO 579 Sociocultural Issues in School Counseling 3, Term 7: EDCO 534 Educational Measurement and Assessment 3, EDCO 587 PPS Leadership, Ethics, and Professionalism 3, Prerequisites for Fieldwork/Internship: Supervised Field Experience/Fieldwork Internship: EDCO 564 School Counseling Fieldwork 1 3, EDCO 568 School Counseling Fieldwork 2 3 - or - EDCO 594 School Counseling: Internship 1 3, EDCO 595 School Counseling: Internship 2 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | High Desert Regional Center | High Desert Regional Center, 15283 Pahute St, VICTORVILLE, California, 92395, +1 877 247 3462 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A.Ed. in Educational Psychology with Embedded School Psychology Credential | Full Time | 3 years (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of School Counseling and School Psychology | This is for those candidates seeking a convenient, efficient track toward their ultimate education goals. The combination, along with the program's nationally recognized, conditional NASP approval, significantly increases graduates' marketability by equipping them with a more comprehensive approach to students of varied cultures, social levels, and learning abilities. | Applicants must hold baccalaureate or master's degree grade-point average (GPA) should be at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: YEAR 1: Term 1: EDCO 533 Basic School Counseling 3, EDCO 557 Child and Adolescent Development and Learning 3, Term 2: EDCO 550 Issues in School Counseling 3, EDCO 593 Historical Development of School Counseling and School Psychology 3, Term 3: EDCO 528 Community, Family, and School Collaboration 3, EDCO 592 Educational Psychology: Theory into Practice 3, Term 4: EDCO 535 Legal Mandates for School Counselors and School Psychologists 3, EDCO 545 Positive Behavior Supports and Classroom Intervention 3, Term 5 : EDCO 583 Intervention Through Consultation 3, EDPY 556 Academic Assessment and Intervention 3, YEAR 2: Semester 1: EDPY 635A Role and Function of a School Psychologist: Positive Behavior Supports 1, EDPY 624 Disabilities in Children (Mild, Moderate, and Severe) 3, EDPY 681 Psychoeducational Assessment I 3, Semester 2: EDPY 635B Role and Function of a School Psychologist: Individual/Group Counseling 1, EDPY 682 Psychoeducational Assessment II 3, EDPY 637 Child Psychopathology: Assessment and Treatment 3, Semester 3: EDPY 635C Role and Function of a School Psychologist: Assessment 1, EDPY 633 Multicultural and Bilingual Assessment and Intervention 3, EDPY 683 Psychoeducational Assessment III 3, Prerequisites for Fieldwork/Internship: YEAR 3: Semester 4 (Student Begins Fieldwork-See Below): EDPY 636 Research and Evaluation in School Psychology 3, EDPY 697 Readings in School Psychology 3, Semester 4 (Student Continues Fieldwork-See Below): EDPY 690 Advanced Individual Research 1-3, Supervised Fieldwork Courses: EDPY 695 School Psychology Fieldwork 1 (600 hours) 3, EDPY 696 School Psychology Fieldwork 2 (600 hours) 3 - or - EDPY 655 School Psychology Internship 1 (600 hours) 3, EDPY 656 School Psychology Internship 2 (600 hours) 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Orange County Regional Center | Orange County Regional Center, 1915 Orangewood Avenue Ste 100, ORANGE, California, 92868, +1 800 272 0111 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A.Ed. in School Librarianship | Distance / Online | 18 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | The M.A.Ed. in School Librarianship program at Azusa Pacific University is a cutting-edge online program which prepares candidates for the specialized and comprehensive role of school librarianship in California’s pluralistic schools and communities. The program prepares librarian services teachers as educational leaders with expertise in technology, literacy, and curricula. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university and a minimum grade-point baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Requirements 9 units: EDUC 571 Curriculum Foundations 3, EDUC 572 Advanced Educational Psychology 3, EDUC 573 Philosophy/Ethics and History of Education 3, Concentration Requirements 30 units: LIB 500 School Library Media Center Management 3, LIB 505 Selection, Evaluation, and Management of Learning Resources 3, LIB 510 Learning Resources for Elementary Schools 3, LIB 515 Learning Resources for Secondary Schools 3, LIB 520 Organization and Cataloging of Learning Materials/Resources 3, LIB 525 Information Retrieval and Reference Services 3, LIB 530 School Library-Classroom Partnerships 3, LIB 535 Library Media Technologies 3, LIB 540 Current Topics in School Media Centers 3, LIB 550 Field Experiences for the Teacher Librarian/Capstone 3, Other education electives as approved by the program director or approved transfer units 3-6 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.A.Ed. in Special Education (Non-Credential) | Distance / Online | 12-18 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This is designed for individuals eager to pursue a master's degree with emphases in classroom interventions, bilingual special education strategies, emotional disturbance (behavior analysis), autism spectrum disorders, or resource specialist. This program does not lead to a California teaching credential. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university and a minimum grade-point baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Coursework 15 units: SPED 581 Historical and Philosophical Perspectives of Disabilities Studies 3, SPED 582 Theories of Learning and Research in Disabilities Studies 3, SPED 583 Current Trends in Curriculum and Disabilities Studies 3, SPED 584A Guided Research Project: Procedures 3, SPED 584B Guided Research Project: Findings 3, Required Advanced Courses 15 units: SPED 509 Technology in Special Education 3, SPED 510 Research Based Learning Theories 3, SPED 538 Special Education Issues: Mild to Moderate Disabilities 3, SPED 547 Implementation of Special Education Legislation 3, SPED 558 Advanced Theory and Research-based Practices for Supporting Students with Disabilities 3, Required Emphasis Courses 12 units: Emphasis in Autism Spectrum Disorders, Emphasis in Bilingual Special Education Strategies, Emphasis in Classroom Interventions, Emphasis in Emotional Disturbance, Emphasis in Resource Specialist (RSP), Elective Courses 6 units, EDPY 633 Multicultural and Bilingual Assessment and Intervention 3, EDUC 500 Technology and the K-12 Educator 3, EDUC 501 Language Structure and Use 3, EDUC 503 School Practicum in English Language Development 3, EDUC 504 Teaching and Cultural Diversity 3, EDUC 507 Family, Community, and School Connections 3, EDUC 574 Current Issues in Education 3, Elective Courses (continued) 6 units: SPED 500 Special Topics 1-3, SPED 505 Educational Foundations and Classroom Experiences (K-12) 3, SPED 509 Technology in Special Education 3, SPED 511 Language Development for All Students 3, SPED 515 Clinical Experiences in Teaching Reading and Writing (K-8) 3, SPED 530 Introduction to Individual Differences and Strengths-based Education 3, SPED 531 Assessment Issues and Methodologies Related to Student Learning 3, SPED 535 Counseling, Collaboration, and Consultation 3, SPED 536 Rtl/Brain-based Teaching and Learning: Reading and Written Language Arts Disorders 3, SPED 537 Theories and Interventions in Behavior Disorders 3, SPED 538 Special Education Issues: Mild to Moderate Disabilities 3, SPED 540 Rtl/Brain-based Teaching and Learning: Math Disorders 3, SPED 547 Implementation of Special Education Legislation 3, SPED 554 Advanced Study Teaching Special Populations 3, Total Elective Units 6. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.M. in Composition | Full Time | 2 years (Average) | US $510 per credit / unit | School of Music | The Master of Music in Composition prepares musicians for professional careers in the specialized and competitive field of composition and arranging. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university is required. A 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. (Applicants with a GPA between 2.5-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 15 units: GMUS 500 Introduction to Graduate Music Program 3, GMUS 501 Seminar in Music History I 3, GMUS 502 Seminar in Music History II 3, GMUS 503 Advanced Analysis of Form and Style 3, GMUS 509 Conducting I (Choral) 3 - or - GMUS 510 Conducting II (Instrumental) 3, Additional Courses 21 units: GMUS 504 Advanced Orchestration 3, GMUS 505 Advanced Arranging 3, GMUS 520 Applied Instruction I 2, GMUS 521 Applied Instruction II 2, GMUS 522 Applied Instruction III 2, GMUS 523 Applied Instruction IV 2, GMUS 544 Music Technology Seminar 3, Electives or Piano 4 Composition Recital N/C. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.M. in Conducting | Full Time | 2 years (Average) | US $510 per credit / unit | School of Music | The Master of Music in Conducting prepares musicians for professional careers in the specialized and competitive field of conducting. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university is required. A 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. (Applicants with a GPA between 2.5-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 15 units: GMUS 500 Introduction to Graduate Music Program 3, GMUS 501 Seminar in Music History I 3, GMUS 502 Seminar in Music History II 3, GMUS 503 Advanced Analysis of Form and Style 3, GMUS 509 Conducting I (Choral) 3, Additional Courses Required for the Master of Music Conducting 21 units: GMUS 504 Advanced Orchestration 3, GMUS 505 Advanced Arranging 3, GMUS 510 Conducting II (Instrumental) 3, GMUS 511 Conducting III (Applied Lessons) 3, GMUS 512 Conducting IV (Applied Lessons) 3, GMUS 542 Vocal Techniques 2, Electives/ 4, Graduate Recital N/C. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.M. in Performance | Full Time | 2 years (Average) | US $510 per credit / unit | School of Music | The opportunity to perform comes with the responsibility to master the performance. The 30-unit Master of Music in Performance degree intensifies performance preparation for professional musicians seeking graduate-level training and experiential opportunities. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university is required. A 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. (Applicants with a GPA between 2.5-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 15 units: GMUS 500 Introduction to Graduate Music Program 3, GMUS 501 Seminar in Music History I 3, GMUS 502 Seminar in Music History II 3, GMUS 503 Advanced Analysis of Form and Style 3, GMUS 509 Conducting I (Choral) 3 - or - GMUS 510 Conducting II (Instrumental) 3, Specialization Options 15-17 units: Instrumental 15 units: GMUS 520 Applied Instruction I 2, GMUS 521 Applied Instruction II 2, GMUS 522 Applied Instruction III 2, GMUS 523 Applied Instruction IV 2, GMUS 525 Chamber Ensemble 2, GMUS 526 Fingerboard Harmony 2, GMUS 588 Ensemble 1, GMUS 589 Ensemble 1, Electives// 3, Graduate Recital N/C, Keyboard Collaborative Arts 17 units: GMUS 520 Applied Instruction I 2, GMUS 521 Applied Instruction II 2, GMUS 522 Applied Instruction III 2GMUS 523Applied Instruction IV 2, GMUS 525 Chamber Ensemble 2, GMUS 550 Vocal Collaboration for Pianists 2, GMUS 551 Instrumental Collaboration for Pianists 2, Electives 3, Private lessons taken for elective units require an additional fee. One unit of elective credit for Guitar; three units for all others. Elective courses may be selected from any of APU's graduate programs with approval of the graduate chair. Classes must be numbered 500 or higher. Piano and Organ 15 units: GMUS 520 Applied Instruction I 2, GMUS 521 Applied Instruction II 2, GMUS 522Applied Instruction III 2GMUS 523 Applied Instruction IV 2, GMUS 524 Keyboard Literature 2, GMUS 525 Chamber Ensemble 2, Electives/ 3 Graduate Recital N/C, Vocal 17 units, GMUS 530 Applied Voice 2, GMUS 531 Applied Voice 2.GMUS 532Applied Voice 2, GMUS 533Applied Voice 2, GMUS 534Vocal Literature 2, GMUS 542 Vocal Techniques 2, GMUS 588 Ensemble 1, GMUS 589 Ensemble 1, Electives/ 3, Graduate Recital N/C. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.S. in College Counseling and Student Development | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Leadership and College Student Development | This program prepares individuals to become student affairs educators whose special interest is college students and the environments that affect their development as persons and as scholar-students. Graduates from the M.S. in College Counseling and Student Development Program pursue career opportunities in residential life, career development, campus ministries, admissions, counseling, academic support services, student activities, student financial services, service learning, and many other co-curricular campus programs. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Foundational Studies 12 units: CSA 551 Introduction to College Student Affairs 3, CSA 567 The Role of Diversity in Student Affairs Practice 3, CSA 575 Quantitative Analysis in College Student Affairs 3, CSA 581 Foundations of Higher Education 3, Professional Studies 30 units: CSA 543 Legal and Ethical Issues in College Student Affairs 3, CSA 552 The Process of Adult Development 3, CSA 553 Administration in College Student Affairs 3, CSA 562 Today's College Students 3, CSA 563 Counseling: The Helping Relationship 3, CSA 571 Student Learning in the Co curriculum 3, CSA 573 Career Counseling and Development 3, CSA 583 Counseling Issues and Practice 3, CSA 592 Program Evaluation in College Student Affairs 3, CSA 595 Capstone Project in College Student Affairs 3-6, Integration and Supervised Practice, Capstone Project and Colloquium, 600 hours of supervised field placement in two practice areas. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.S. in Human Physiology | Full Time | 1-2 years (Average) | US $556 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy | The M.S. in Human Physiology is not offered as a stand-alone program. It is a dual degree option for those enrolled in the Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) program. This program provides students with in-depth anatomic and physiologic study of the human body, as well as research emphasis on human anatomy, physiology, performance, and biochemical systems. The program’s curriculum provides an educational opportunity for an academic graduate degree option for entry-level Doctor of Physical Therapy students. | Applicants must have the following for admission: human anatomy (with laboratory), human physiology (with laboratory), cell biology (with laboratory), general chemistry (one year with laboratory), organic chemistry or biochemistry (with laboratory), general physics (with laboratory) - or - acceptance into APU’s entry-level doctor of physical therapy program | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Courses 28 units: PT 501 Research I 1, PT 520 Functional Anatomy I 5, PT 522 Functional Anatomy II 5, PT 524 Pathophysiology I 5, PT 525 Pathophysiology II 3, PT 541 Exercise Physiology 3, PT 558 Research II 2, PT 774 Capstone I 2, PT 776 Capstone II 2, Elective Courses 6 units: PT 550 Neuroscience I 3, PT 551 Neuroscience II 3, PT 572 Pharmacology 4, PT 738 Wellness and Nutrition 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | M.S. in Physical Education | Full Time | 18-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Innovative Educational Technology and Physical Education | The program provides advanced study within the broad discipline of physical education and allows students to elect coursework in sports medicine, fitness and wellness, sociology of sport, sport psychology, curriculum, and the history and philosophy of physical education. The goal of this academic program is to develop each student’s awareness of the process involved in effecting a change in the lives of the people they will serve in the years to come through the mastery of professional skills, knowledge, teaching techniques and strategies, as well as social and ethical considerations. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution and must have minimum baccalaureate or master's grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 12 units: PE 551 Curriculum Theory and Design in Physical Education 3, PE 552 History and Philosophy of Physical Education 3, PE 582 Seminar in Professional Literature in Physical Education and Sport 3, PE 584 Assessment and Evaluation in Physical Education and Exercise Science 3, Research Project Component 6 units: PE 589A Research Methods for Physical Education and Exercise Science: Beginning Process 3, PE 589B Physical Education and Exercise Science Capstone 3, Emphasis Elective Courses 18 units: PE 509 Special Topics in Physical Education 3, PE 550 Sociology of Sport 3, PE 560 Sports Medicine 3, PE 561 Ethics in Physical Education and Athletics 3, PE 565 Physical Education, Athletics, and the Law 3, PE 575 Advanced Principles of Physical Conditioning 3, PE 576 Trends and Issues in Physical Education and Sport 3, PE 577 Administration of Physical Education and Athletic Programs 3, PE 578 Sport Psychology 3, PE 580 Wellness and Fitness for Life 3, PE 581 Techniques of Fundraising 3, PE 599 Readings in Physical Education 1-3, Other education electives as approved by the program director or approved transfer units 3-6 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | High Desert Regional Center | High Desert Regional Center, 15283 Pahute St, VICTORVILLE, California, 92395, +1 877 247 3462 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Major in English - Literature Concentration | Full Time | 42-76 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The literature concentration focuses on the analysis and criticism of literary works, including Shakespeare, the American and British novel, and contemporary, adolescent, and children’s literature. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Literature Concentration 18 units: Required Courses 6 units: ENGL 377 Shakespeare 3, ENGL 480 Contemporary Literary Criticism 3, Electives 12 units, ENGL 222 English Literature Survey to 1789 3, ENGL 232 English Literature Survey since 1789 3, ENGL 311 Film and Literature 3, ENGL 324 World Literature to the Renaissance/ 3, ENGL 334 World Literature since the Renaissance/ 3, ENGL 344 American Literature to 1865/ 3, ENGL 354 American Literature since 1865/ 3, ENGL 364 American Ethnic Literature 3, ENGL 374 African American Literature 3, ENGL 410 American Novel 3, ENGL 434 Children's Literature 3, ENGL 435 Social and Psychological Aspects of Language 3, ENGL 436 Adolescent Literature 3, ENGL 466 British Novel 3, ENGL 486 Topics in Film Analysis 3, ENGL 487 Literary Movements 3, ENGL 488 Significant Authors 3, ENGL 489 Literary Topics 3, ENGL 496 Senior Seminar: English and the Professions 3, ENGL 497 Readings 1-4, ENGL 498 Directed Research 1-4, ENGL 499 Thesis/Project 1-4, HUM 322 Humanities Seminar II: Literary Masterpieces (3 units on Azusa campus, 4 units on High Sierra campus) 3-4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Major in English - Teaching Concentration | Full Time | 42-76 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The teaching concentration prepares students to be “highly qualified” according to No Child Left Behind for teaching grades 7-12, to waive the state-required CSET English exam, to participate in service learning in local classrooms, and to enter a credential program. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Teaching Concentration 49 units: Required Courses 36 units For admission to the APU credential program, English majors must maintain a grade-point average of at least 3.0. ENGL 377 Shakespeare 3, ENGL 404 Approaches to Grammar 3, ENGL 405 American English Language History 3, ENGL 406 Advanced Composition 3, ENGL 436 Adolescent Literature 3, ENGL 480 Contemporary Literary Criticism 3, Upper-division literature course (ENG 3xx-4xx) 3, Select one of the following: ENGL 222 English Literature Survey to 1789 3, ENGL 232 English Literature Survey since 1789 3, Select one of the following: ENGL 324 World Literature to the Renaissance/ 3, ENGL 334 World Literature since the Renaissance/ 3, Select one of the following: ENGL 344 American Literature to 1865 3, ENGL 354 American Literature since 1865 3, Select one of the following: ENGL 361 Freelance Magazine Article Writing 3, JOUR 210 Introduction to Journalism 3, Select one of the following: TFT 113 Acting Fundamentals 3, TFT 213 Introduction to Theater 3, Additional Requirements 13 units In addition, students must complete field experience by permission or by taking: EDLS 300 Introduction to Teaching as a Profession, K-12 4, Students should also complete prerequisites for the professional credential program as follows: EDLS 405 Diversity in the Classroom 3, POLI 150 American Government 3, PSYC 290 Human Growth and Development 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Major in English - Writing Concentration | Full Time | 42-76 units | $29100 for two semesters (12-17 units) | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The writing concentration prepares students for a professional writing or editing career, such as freelance magazine article writing, creative writing, public relations, and professional technical writing. English majors leave APU prepared to think critically and write compellingly. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Major | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Writing Concentration 18 units: (At least 6 of the 18 units in the concentration beyond the core must be ENGL classes.) ART 120 Introduction to Computer Graphics 3, ART 281 Graphic Design I (formerly ART 220) 3, ART 382 Webpage Design I 3, ART 383 Graphic Design II (formerly ART 380) 3, ART 384 Webpage Design II 3, COMM 302 Rhetorical Theory 3, ENGL 301 Creative Writing: Fiction 3, ENGL 302 Creative Writing: Poetry 3, ENGL 303 Creative Writing: Drama and Film 3, ENGL 304 Creative Writing: Creative Nonfiction 3, ENGL 360 Technical and Professional Writing 3, ENGL 361 Freelance Magazine Article Writing 3, ENGL 404 Approaches to Grammar 3, ENGL 406 Advanced Composition 3, ENGL 490 Writing Internship 3, ENGL 496 Senior Seminar: English and the Professions 3, ENGL 497 Readings 1-4, JOUR 210 Introduction to Journalism 3, JOUR 300 Editing 3, JOUR 315 Desktop Publishing and Design 3, JOUR 325 Student Publication Workshop 1, JOUR 420 Entertainment Reporting 3, JOUR 425 Opinion and Editorial Writing 3, JOUR 450 Public Relations 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Education: Digital Teaching and Learning | Full Time | 43-45 units | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Innovative Educational Technology and Physical Education | The Master of Arts in Education: Digital Teaching and Learning focuses on foundational tools teachers need to design and implement instructional experiences that integrate technology throughout the curriculum. Attention is given to learning theory for today’s digital learner, instructional video, and Web 2.0 tools for enhanced interactive learning. This combined program pairs the Single-Subject Teaching Credential, for candidates who are or are not teaching full time, with an innovative new master’s degree, resulting in a graduate program designed to meet the needs of the 21st-century classroom while advancing educators’ careers. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s or master’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university. Applicants with an earned master’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university with a 3.0 GPA or higher qualify for university graduate admission consideration. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Multiple-Subject Teaching Credential Track A: Module 1: TEP 506 Educational Foundations and Classroom Management (K-8) 3, TEP 516 Methods of Teaching Reading and Writing (K-8) 3, TEP 566A Field Experience I (K-8) 1, Module 2: TEP 526 Methods of Teaching Mathematics (K-8) 3, TEP 556 Methods of Teaching English Language Learners (K-8) 3, TEP 566B Field Experience II (K-8) 1, To proceed with Modules 3 and 4, candidates must apply and be cleared by the Department of Teacher Education. Module 3: TEP 536 Methods of Teaching Science (K-8) 3, TEP 586 Student Teaching Seminar (K-8) 3, TEP 576A Clinical Practice I (Student Teaching, K-8) 2, Module 4: TEP 546 Methods of Integrating the Humanities (K-8) 3, TEP 576B Clinical Practice II (Student Teaching, K-8) 2, Additional Credential Courses: EDUC 504 Teaching and Cultural Diversity 3, EDUC 572 Advanced Educational Psychology 3, Credential Total 33 units: Additional Advanced Courses Required for the Master’s Degree: EDUC 512 Instructional Applications of Productivity Software 3, EDUC 514 Digital Video in the Classroom 3, EDUC 515 Evolving Educational Technologies 3, EDUC 522 Learning in the 21st Century 3, EDUC 526 Capstone Experience in Educational Technology and Learning 3, Total units credential and master’s degree 48 units: Multiple-Subject Teaching Credential Track B Requirements: Module 1: TEP 505 Educational Foundations and Classroom Experiences (K-8) 3, TEP 515 Clinical Experiences in Teaching Reading and Writing (K-8) 3, TEP 565A Field Experience I (K-8) 1, Module 2: TEP 525 Clinical Experiences in Teaching Mathematics (K-8) 3, TEP 555 Clinical Experiences in Teaching English Language Learners (K-8) 3, TEP 565B Field Experience II (K-8) 1, To proceed with Modules 3 and 4, candidates must apply and be cleared by the Department of Teacher Education. Module 3: TEP 535 Clinical Experiences in Teaching Science (K-8) 3, TEP 575A Clinical Practice I (Contract Teaching, K-8) 1, TEP 585 Intern Teaching Seminar (K-8) 3, Module 4: TEP 545 Clinical Experiences with Integrating the Humanities (K-8) 3, TEP 575B Clinical Practice II (Contract Teaching, K-8) 1, Additional Credential Courses: EDUC 504 Teaching and Cultural Diversity 3, EDUC 572 Advanced Educational Psychology 3, Credential Total 31 units: Additional Advanced Courses Required for the Master’s Degree, EDUC 512 Instructional Applications of Productivity Software 3, EDUC 514 Digital Video in the Classroom 3, EDUC 515 Evolving Educational Technologies 3, EDUC 522 Learning in the 21st Century 3, EDUC 526 Capstone Experience in Educational Technology and Learning 3, Total units credential and master’s degree 46 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Murrieta Regional Center | Murrieta Regional Center, 39573 Los Alamos Road, MURRIETA, California, 92563, +1 877 210 8841 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Education: P-12 Teaching with a Concentration in Gifted and Talented Education (GATE) | Distance / Online | 18 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This program provides educators and teacher practitioners with the skills and competencies they need to be successful in gifted and talented education, as a way to meet the divergent needs of the 21st-century education landscape. This degree offers candidates the prospect of an accelerated education while allowing them to learn within a community context. This master’s degree combines with a GATE certification. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university and a minimum grade-point baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 15 units: TEP 571 History and Philosophy of U.S. Education 3, TEP 581 Brain Research and Learning: Using Brain Research to Improve Teaching and Learning 3, TEP 582 Educational Psychology and Human Development in P-12 Education 3, TEP 589 Introduction to Research for the P-12 Educational Setting 3, EDUC 589C Action Research in Education 3 - or - EDUC 589D Educational Research: Thesis 3, Required Gifted and Talented Education Concentration 18 units: TEG 500 Introduction to Curriculum and Instruction in Gifted and Talented Education 3, TEG 501 Identification and Characteristics of Gifted and Talented Students 3, TEG 502 Introduction to Curriculum and Instruction in Gifted and Talented Education 3, TEG 503 Teaching the Creatively Gifted and Talented Child 3, TEG 504 Organization and Leadership in Gifted and Talented Programs 3, TEG 505 Supporting the Emotional Needs of Gifted and Talented Learners 3, Elective Course (required) 3 units: EDUC 604 Teaching across Cultures 3, TEP 573 21st-Century Teaching and Learning Theories 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Educational Leadership | Full Time | 15 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership | The program emphasizes a strong Christian approach and incorporates the following themes throughout: strengths-based leadership, theory to practice, collaboration, ethics, reflection, diversity, teaching and learning, student achievement, and technology. Graduates emerge well equipped to fulfill leadership roles in Pre-K-12 schools as principals, assistant principals, teacher leaders, curriculum leaders, and department chairs. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution. They must have minimum baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. International students who have graduated from a college or university where English was not the principal language must provide evidence of a minimum TOEFL score of 550. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: EDL 580 Leadership Induction 1, EDL 581 Research and Leadership 6, EDL 582 Cornerstones of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 583 Educational Leadership and Change 6, EDL 584 Policy and Politics of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 585 Leadership in a Legal Culture 6, EDL 586 Leadership Performance Assessment 5. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | High Desert Regional Center | High Desert Regional Center, 15283 Pahute St, VICTORVILLE, California, 92395, +1 877 247 3462 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Educational Leadership and Preliminary Administrative Services Credential or Internship Credential (PASC), Tier I | Distance / Online | 15-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | The program emphasizes a strong Christian approach and incorporates four integrative themes into all coursework: collaborative leadership and decision making for effective culturally diverse schools, instructional system design/management, care and enhancement of individuals, and moral/ethical development of students and staff. | Applicants must have a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution with at least a 3.0 baccalaureate or master's grade-point average on a 4.0 scale. Candidates with a GPA of 2.5-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission. A strong background in English, linguistics, or education is recommended, but not required; and Nonnative speakers of English must score 600 or above on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), at least 250 on the computer-based TOEFL or at least 100 on the Internet-based TOEFL. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: EDL 580 Leadership Induction 1, EDL 581 Research and Leadership 6, EDL 582 Cornerstones of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 583 Educational Leadership and Change 6, EDL 584 Policy and Politics of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 585 Leadership in a Legal Culture 6, EDL 586 Leadership Performance Assessment 5, Credential and master’s degree 36 units, Internship credential and master’s degree 36 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | |||||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Educational Leadership with an Emphasis in Educational Technology and Learning and the Preliminary Administrative Services Credential Program, Tier I | Full Time | 18-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership | This program fulfills the needs of school districts desiring to hire administrators with a strong technology background. This degree meets an ever-growing demand of school districts for administrators who understand the 21st century learner and integrate the technology tools and learning strategies to meet all students' needs. The program offers an increased opportunity for educators looking to utilize their talents and strengths in technology in a leadership role as they ensure equal access to technology for all students. | Applicants must hold bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution, minimum baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale (Provisional admittance may be granted to individuals who do not meet this criterion if competency can be shown). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: EDL 580 Leadership Induction 1, EDL 581 Research and Leadership 6, EDL 582 Cornerstones of Educational Leadership (not required for candidates with master’s degree in education) 6, EDL 583 Educational Leadership and Change 6, EDL 584 Policy and Politics of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 585 Leadership in a Legal Culture 6, EDL 586 Leadership Performance Assessment 5, EDUC 514 Digital Video in the Classroom 3, EDUC 515 Evolving Educational Technologies 3, EDUC 522 Learning in the 21st Century 3, EDUC 523 Hypermedia-Enhanced Learning Environments 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Educational Leadership with an Emphasis in Educational Technology and Learning and the Preliminary Administrative Services Internship Credential Program, Tier I | Full Time | 18-24 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership | This program fulfills the needs of school districts desiring to hire administrators with a strong technology background. This degree meets an ever-growing demand of school districts for administrators who understand the 21st century learner and integrate technology tools and learning strategies to meet students' needs. The program offers an increased opportunity for educators looking to utilize their talents and strengths in technology in a leadership role as they ensure equal access to technology for all students. | Applicants must hold bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited institution, minimum baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale (Provisional admittance may be granted to individuals who do not meet this criterion if competency can be shown). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: EDL 580 Leadership Induction 1, EDL 581 Research and Leadership 6, EDL 582 Cornerstones of Educational Leadership (Not required of candidates with a master’s degree in education.) 6, EDL 583 Educational Leadership and Change 6, EDL 584 Policy and Politics of Educational Leadership 6, EDL 585 Leadership in a Legal Culture 6, EDL 586 Leadership Performance Assessment 5, EDUC 514 Digital Video in the Classroom 3, EDUC 515 Evolving Educational Technologies 3, EDUC 522 Learning in the 21st Century 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies - Church Leadership and Development Concentration | Full Time | 60 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | This concentration provides students with education in practical ministry with particular focus on leadership development and spiritual formation, equipping ministers for the broad, multifaceted needs of the contemporary church. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 36 units: GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, GMIN 516 Dynamics of Christian Formation 4, GMIN 547 Foundations for Ministry Life 4, GMIN 548 Pastoral Counseling 4, Field Education 4 units: GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, Concentration: Required Courses 8 units: GMIN 508 Church Leadership and Administration 4, GMIN 518 Pastoral Servant Leadership 4, Select two of the following 8 units, GMIN 528 Contemporary Issues in Ministry 4, GMIN 538 Evangelism and Discipleship 4, GMIN 598 Growing Healthy Churches 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies - Urban Studies Concentration | Full Time | 60 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | The North American church is becoming increasingly urbanized. To prepare students for ministry in the city, this concentration engages students with urban social structures, trends, and ministry strategies. Issues of contextualization, social analysis, and cross-cultural communication will be addressed. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 36 units: GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, GMIN 516 Dynamics of Christian Formation 4, GMIN 547 Foundations for Ministry Life 4, GMIN 548 Pastoral Counseling 4, Field Education 4 units: GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, Concentration: Required Courses 8 units: GMIN 509 Urban Anthropology and Christian Ministry 4, GMIN 519 Current Issues and Urban Ministry 4, Select two of the following 8 units, GMIN 538 Evangelism and Discipleship 4, GMIN 528 Contemporary Issues in Ministry 4, GMIN 559 Urban Cross-Cultural Ministry 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies - Worship Leadership Concentration | Full Time | 60 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | The postmodern worship leader combines theology, skill, and heart in order to facilitate the church’s corporate worship experience. This concentration includes worship history, worship planning, development of musical ensembles, and communication and leadership theory. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 36 units: GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, GMIN 516 Dynamics of Christian Formation 4, GMIN 547 Foundations for Ministry Life 4, GMIN 548 Pastoral Counseling 4, Field Education 4 units: GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, Concentration: Required Courses 8 units: GMIN 578 Worship Leadership 4, GMIN 579 Church Music Administration 4, Select two of the following 8 units: GTHE 543 History of Worship and Liturgy 4, GMIN 577 Music in the Worshiping Church 4, GMIN 580 Aesthetics, Arts, and Actions in Corporate Worship 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies - Youth and Family Ministry Concentration | Full Time | 60 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | This concentration trains students to assist parents, youth, and family ministry staff to plan and engage in intentional spiritual formation in the home and church. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 36 units: GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, GMIN 516 Dynamics of Christian Formation 4, GMIN 547 Foundations for Ministry Life 4, GMIN 548 Pastoral Counseling 4, Field Education 4 units: GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, Concentration: Required Courses 8 units: GMIN 587 Advanced Youth and Family Ministry 4, Select two of the following 8 units, GMIN 501 Foundations of Youth Ministry 4, GMIN 526 Curriculum and Instruction 4, GMIN 528 Contemporary Issues in Ministry 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Physical Education with Single-Subject Teaching Credential, Track A Program | Full Time | 12-18 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Innovative Educational Technology and Physical Education | The Master of Arts in Physical Education with Single-Subject Teaching Credential, Track A Program is designed for non-teaching candidates with a bachelor degree in physical education, kinesiology or exercise science who are seeking a single-subject teaching credential and a Master of Arts in Physical Education concurrently. The program combines the curricula of the credential and master’s programs to deliver a unique comprehensive educational package. Upon completion, the credential candidate will have earned both a 2042 Preliminary Single-Subject Teaching Credential and a Master of Arts in Physical Education. The master’s degree is earned after the candidate has completed all requirements for the Preliminary Credential Program coursework. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s or master’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university. Applicants with an earned master’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university with a 3.0 GPA or higher qualify for university graduate admission consideration. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Credential Total 30 units: Required Courses for Master of Arts in Physical Education 6 units: PE 551 Curriculum Theory and Design in Physical Education 3, PE 582 Seminar in Professional Literature in Physical Education and Sport 3, Elective Courses 6 units, Select one of the following: PE 550 Sociology of Sport 3, PE 561 Ethics in Physical Education and Athletics 3, PE 576 Trends and Issues in Physical Education and Sport 3, PE 577 Administration of Physical Education and Athletic Programs 3, PE 578 Sport Psychology 3, PE 581 Techniques of Fundraising 3, Select one of the following: PE 560 Sports Medicine 3, PE 575 Advanced Principles of Physical Conditioning 3, PE 580 Wellness and Fitness for Life 3, Final Courses - Required 6 units (To be taken after all other coursework/student teaching are completed): PE 589A Research Methods for Physical Education and Exercise Science: Beginning Process 3, PE 589B Physical Education and Exercise Science Capstone 3, Master’s Degree Total 18 units, Total units credential and master’s degree: 48 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Murrieta Regional Center | Murrieta Regional Center, 39573 Los Alamos Road, MURRIETA, California, 92563, +1 877 210 8841 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Physical Education with Single-Subject Teaching Credential, Track B Program | Full Time | 12-18 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Education, Department of Innovative Educational Technology and Physical Education | The program provides advanced study within the broad discipline of physical education and allows students to elect coursework in sports medicine, fitness and wellness, sociology of sport, sport psychology, curriculum, and the history and philosophy of physical education. The goal of this academic program is to develop each student’s awareness of the process involved in effecting a change in the lives of the people they will serve in the years to come through the mastery of professional skills, knowledge, teaching techniques and strategies, as well as social and ethical considerations. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s or master’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university. Applicants with an earned master’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university with a 3.0 GPA or higher qualify for university graduate admission consideration. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Credential Total 28 units: Required Courses for Master of Arts in Physical Education 6 units: PE 551 Curriculum Theory and Design in Physical Education 3, PE 582 Seminar in Professional Literature in Physical Education and Sport 3, Elective Courses 6 units, Select one of the following: PE 550 Sociology of Sport 3, PE 561 Ethics in Physical Education and Athletics 3, PE 576 Trends and Issues in Physical Education and Sport 3, PE 577 Administration of Physical Education and Athletic Programs 3, PE 578 Sport Psychology 3, PE 581 Techniques of Fundraising 3, Select one of the following: PE 560 Sports Medicine 3, PE 575 Advanced Principles of Physical Conditioning 3, PE 580 Wellness and Fitness for Life 3, Final Courses - Required 6 units (To be taken after all other coursework/student teaching are completed), PE 589A Research Methods for Physical Education and Exercise Science: Beginning Process 3, PE 589B Physical Education and Exercise Science Capstone 3, Master’s Degree Total 18 units, Total units credential and master’s degree: 43 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Murrieta Regional Center | Murrieta Regional Center, 39573 Los Alamos Road, MURRIETA, California, 92563, +1 877 210 8841 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages TESOL - Field Based | Full Time | 30 months (Average) | $270 per unit for 5 terms each | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Global Studies Sociology, and TESOL | The field-based Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) Program offers in-service teachers with a secured teaching contract abroad the opportunity to earn their degree while teaching abroad. The Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) prepares students to become exemplary classroom teachers committed to continued professional development within a variety of adult contexts. Graduates of the program currently serve in the United States and several foreign countries in public and adult schools, colleges, universities, private institutions, and businesses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university (Applicants for the TESOL programs are not required to have undergraduate majors in fields such as English, linguistics, or education; however a strong background in one of these is recommended). A 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Total 36 units: Term 1 Summer APU: TESL 503 Language and Culture Learning 3, TESL 545 Second-Language Pedagogy I 3, Term 2 Winter Abroad: TESL 505 Second-Language Acquisition 3, TESL 530 Intercultural Communication and Language Teaching 3 - or - TESL 535 Sociolinguistics and Language Teaching 3, TESL 557 Reflective Teaching/ 3, Term 3 Summer APU: TESL 515 Teaching English Grammar 3, TESL 537 Critical Perspectives on Christianity and English Language Teaching/ 3, TESL 550 Second-Language Pedagogy II 3, Term 4 Winter Abroad: TESL 570 Second-Language Assessment 3, TESL 595A Action Research Project 2, Term 5 Summer APU: TESL 525, Teaching English Pronunciation 3, TESL 560 Language Program Design 3, TESL 595B Action Research Project 1. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Divinity (M.Div.) | Full Time | 90 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | The Master of Divinity (M.Div.) equips pastors and lay leaders for professional ministry in the Church. The M.Div. provides students with basic training in theological and ministerial studies through rigorous coursework and ongoing supervised ministry. This program is also available with an emphasis in either Anglican Studies or Biblical Studies. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Biblical Language Requirement 4 units, Biblical Studies Core 20 units, GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, GBBL 531 Kingdom of God 4, GBBL 532 Paul the Apostle and Theologian 4, GBBL 511 is offered as 511A and 511B at some centers. Students may substitute GBBL 631 by petition to the department chair. Theology and Ethics Core 20 unit: GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, GTHE 615 Church and Society 4, One of the following: GTHE 503 History of the Early and Medieval Church 4, GTHE 505 Christian Ethics 4, Ministry Core 20 units: GMIN 507 Preaching and Worship 4, GMIN 516 Dynamics of Christian Formation 4 , GMIN 518 Pastoral Servant Leadership 4, GMIN 547 Foundations for Ministry Life 4, GMIN 548 Pastoral Counseling 4, Professional Block Field Education 6 units: GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, Repeated for total of six units Philosophy of Ministry Requirement 4 units, GMIN 618 Philosophy of Ministry 4, An oral exam is taken in GMIN 618, Electives 16-20 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Divinity (M.Div.) - Anglican Studies Emphasis | Full Time | 90 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | The Master of Divinity (M.Div.) equips pastors and lay leaders for professional ministry in the Church. The M.Div. provides students with basic training in theological and ministerial studies through rigorous coursework and ongoing supervised ministry. This program is also available with an emphasis in either Anglican Studies or Biblical Studies. This emphasis will meet the academic requirements for ordination within the Anglican Communion. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Biblical Language Requirement 4 units: Biblical Studies Core 20 units: GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, GBBL 531 Kingdom of God 4, GBBL 532 Paul the Apostle and Theologian 4, GBBL 511 is offered as 511A and 511B at some centers. Theology and Ethics Core 20 units, GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, GTHE 615 Church and Society 4, GTHE 503 History of the Early and Medieval Church 4, Ministry Core 12 units, GMIN 507 Preaching and Worship 4, GMIN 547 Foundations for Ministry Life 4, GMIN 548 Pastoral Counseling 4, Professional Block Field Education 6 units, GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, Repeated for total of six units Philosophy of Ministry Requirement 4 units, GMIN 618 Philosophy of Ministry 4, An oral exam is taken in GMIN 618. Anglican Studies Emphasis 24 units, GMIN 517 Preaching and Liturgy in the Anglican Tradition 4, GMIN 536 Ascetical Spirituality 4, GMIN 537 Anglican Parish Ministry 4, GTHE 515 Anglican Ethics and Moral Theology 4, GTHE 533 Anglican Church History 4, GTHE 543 History of Worship and Liturgy 4, Electives 0-4 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Divinity (M.Div.) - Biblical Studies Emphasis | Full Time | 90 units | US $415 per credit / unit | School of Theology, Graduate School of Theology | The Master of Divinity (M.Div.) equips pastors and lay leaders for professional ministry in the Church. The M.Div. provides students with basic training in theological and ministerial studies through rigorous coursework and ongoing supervised ministry. This program is also available with an emphasis in either Anglican Studies or Biblical Studies. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university, and a score of 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Biblical Language Requirement 8 units: GBBL 510 New Testament Greek I 4, GBBL 520 New Testament Greek II 4 or GBBL 530 Hebrew I 4, GBBL 540 Hebrew II 4, Biblical Studies Core 20 units, GBBL 511 Seminar in Biblical Interpretation 4, GBBL 512 The Gospels' Witness to Christ 4, GBBL 521 People of God 4, GBBL 531 Kingdom of God 4, GBBL 532 Paul the Apostle and Theologian 4, GBBL 511 is offered as 511A and 511B at some centers. Students may substitute GBBL 631 Community of God by petition to the department chair. Theology and Ethics Core 20 units, GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 513 History of the Modern Church 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, GTHE 615 Church and Society 4, One of the following: GTHE 503 History of the Early and Medieval Church 4, GTHE 505 Christian Ethics 4, Ministry Core 20 units, GMIN 507 Preaching and Worship 4, GMIN 516 Dynamics of Christian Formation 4, GMIN 518 Pastoral Servant Leadership 4, GMIN 547 Foundations for Ministry Life 4, GMIN 548 Pastoral Counseling 4, Professional Block Field Education 6 units, GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, Repeated for total of six units: Philosophy of Ministry Requirement 4 units, GMIN 618 Philosophy of Ministry 4, An oral exam is taken in GMIN 618. Biblical Studies Emphasis 12 units, Select three of the following: GBBL 522 The Gospel of Mark 4, GBBL 552 Epistle to the Romans 4, GBBL 561 Psalms as Resource for Ministry 4, GBBL 562 Biblical Foundations of Worship 4, GBBL 591 Isaiah 4, GBBL 611 Old Testament Seminar 4, GBBL 612New Testament Seminar 4GBBL 621 Jeremiah 4, GBBL 622 The Church of the First Century 4, GBBL 631 Community of God 4, GBBL 632 The New Testament World 4, GBBL 641 Theological Themes of the Old Testament 4, GBBL 651 Scripture and Canon 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Los Angeles Regional Center | Los Angeles Regional Center, 3580 Wilshire Blvd Ste 200, LOS ANGELES, California, 90010, +1 213 252 0962 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Fine Arts in Visual Art (MFA) | Full Time | 37 months (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This program provides an educational context within which artists of unusual artistic promise and strong motivation explore the horizons of their talents in the midst of an intense critical dialogue of both faith and art. This dialogue is generated by students, distinguished visitors, and a faculty comprised of experienced artists and designers mature in their faith and art. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited, officially recognized university with a minimum grade-point average (GPA) equivalent of 3.0. Applicants with a GPA of 2.75-2.9 may be considered for provisional admission. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Year I 17 units: Summer: ART 501 Integration: Theory and Practice I 2, ART 510 Introduction to Graduate Studies/Critical Issues in Art I 2, ART 530 Graduate Studio: Special Topics I 2, ART 580 Critique 1, Fall: ART 590 Independent Studio 5, Spring: ART 581 Critique 1, ART 591 Independent Studio 4, Year II 17 units: Summer: ART 502 Integration: Theory and Practice II 2, ART 520 Critical Issues in Art II 2, ART 540 Graduate Studio: Special Topics II 2, ART 582 Critique 1, Fall: ART 592 Independent Studio 5, Spring: ART 583 Critique 1, ART 593 Independent Studio 4, Year III 17 units: Summer: ART 584 Critique 1, ART 601 Integration: Theory and Practice III 2, ART 610 Critical Issues in Art III 2, ART 690 Creative Work Project 2, Fall: ART 594 Independent Studio 5, Spring: ART 585 Critique 1, ART 595 Independent Studio 4, Year IV 17 units: Summer: ART 602 Integration: Theory and Practice IV 3, ART 620 Critical Issues in Art IV 3, ART 695 Exhibition Preparation 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Music Education | Full Time | 2 years (Average) | US $510 per credit / unit | School of Music | The Master of Music Education builds upon the field experience of current teachers and educational professionals, transforming teachers who love music into music education specialists. This degree melds rigorous academic standards with practical classroom skills that translate into innovative K-12 programs in both private and public school settings. Equipping educators with the adaptability and commitment needed for the classroom, program requirements include core academic and music courses, and specialization in either choral or instrumental conducting. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university is required. A 3.0 baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. (Applicants with a GPA between 2.5-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 21-24 units: GMUS 500 Introduction to Graduate Music Program 3, GMUS 501 Seminar in Music History I 3, GMUS 502 Seminar in Music History II 3, GMUS 503 Advanced Analysis of Form and Style 3, GMUS 513 Philosophical and Psychological Foundations of Music Education 2, GMUS 514 Issues in Music Classroom Pedagogy 2, GMUS 516 Social and Historical Foundations of Music Education 2, GMUS 590 Directed Research 1-4, GMUS 591 Thesis 2, Additional Courses Required for the Master of Music Education with Choral Emphasis 12 units, GMUS 505 Advanced Arranging 3, GMUS 509 Conducting I (Choral) 3, GMUS 517 Seminar in Choral Pedagogy 2, Electives 4, Additional Courses Required for the Master of Music Education with Instrumental Emphasis 12 units, GMUS 504 Advanced Orchestration 3, GMUS 510 Conducting II (Instrumental) 3, GMUS 515 Instrumental Pedagogy 2, Electives 4. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with Adult Clinical Nurse Specialist | Full Time | 2-3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | In the MSN with CNS, the student learns the process of developing and sustaining evidence-based practice in illness management, advancing the practice of other nurses and nursing personnel, and developing organizational or systems modifications to support and improve nursing practice. The traditional CNS roles of expert clinical practice, consultation, clinical leadership, research, and education are shaped toward producing desirable patient outcomes as the CNS works in several spheres of influence. Students work closely with faculty and clinical preceptors to obtain the theory and practice skills essential for their functional role as clinical specialists. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Advanced Practice Specialty Courses 12 units: GNRS 520 Theory and Practice in Adult Nursing 6 (2/4) - or - GNRS 521 Clinical Specialization in Nursing Care of Adults 6 (2/4), GNRS 530 Theory and Practice in Parent-Child Nursing 6 (2/4) - or - GNRS 531 Clinical Specialization in Parent-Child Nursing 6 (2/4), Specialization Option Courses 4 units: Students take both of the following: GNRS 540 Care Management 2 (2/0), GNRS 541 Clinical Practicum in Care Management 2 (0/2), Or choose one of the following: GNRS 593 Psychosocial Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 4 (2/2), GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with Adult Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) and Adult Nurse Practitioner (ANP) | Full Time | 3-4 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This program prepares registered nurses to be effective practitioners in both of these advanced practice roles with adults and their families. In the CNS, the focus is illness management, advancing the practice of other nurses and nursing personnel, and developing organizational or systems modifications to support and improve nursing practice. The traditional CNS roles of expert clinical practice, consultation, clinical leadership, research and education are shaped toward producing desirable patient outcomes as the CNS works in several spheres of influence. The focus of the ANP is health care of adults in the primary care setting and includes direct client assessment, diagnosis, management and treatment, client advocacy, client/family education, consultation, and program planning, implementation, evaluation, and research. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Academic Core Courses 10 units: GNRS 504 Bioethics and Health Policy 3, GNRS 506 Spiritual Care 3, GNRS 508A Research and Theory in Advanced Practice Nursing 4, Advanced Practice Core Courses 11 units: GNRS 511 Advanced Pediatric Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1) - or - GNRS 512 Advanced Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1), GNRS 513 Advanced Nursing Practice Role 2, GNRS 515 Advanced Pathophysiology 2, GNRS 594 Pharmacology in Advanced Practice Nursing 3, Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) Courses 12 units: GNRS 520 Theory and Practice in Adult Nursing 6 (2/4), GNRS 521 Clinical Specialization in Nursing Care of Adults 6 (2/4), Adult Nurse Practitioner (ANP) Courses 16 units: GNRS 591 Primary Health Care of the Childbearing Family 4 (2/2), GNRS 592A Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 592B Primary Health Care Clinical Practicum 2 (0/2), GNRS 593 Psychosocial Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 4 (2/2), Specialization Option Courses 1 course with 2 units clinical, GNRS 540 Care Management 2 (2/0) - or - GNRS 541 Clinical Practicum in Care Management 2 (0/2), Concluding Courses 1-3 units, GNRS 597 Comprehensive Examination Directed Study 1 - or - GNRS 598 Thesis 1, GNRS 514 Research Proposal Writing (required for thesis) 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with Adult Nurse Practitioner | Full Time | 3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This specialty program prepares students to be nurse practitioners for patients across the adult years. The program prepares graduates for certification by the state of California and provides preparation for ANP National Certification examinations. This advanced clinical practice specialty includes direct patient assessment, diagnosis, management, and treatment, client advocacy, client/family education, consultation, and program planning, implementation, evaluation and research. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: GNRS 591 Primary Health Care of the Childbearing Family 4 (2/2), GNRS 592A Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 592B Primary Health Care Clinical Practicum 2 (0/2), GNRS 593 Psychosocial Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 4 (2/2), GNRS 540 Care Management 2 (2/0), GNRS 541 Clinical Practicum in Care Management 2 (0/2), Specialization Option Courses None required. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with Family Nurse Practitioner | Full Time | 3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This specialty program prepares students to be nurse practitioners for patients across the human lifespan. The program prepares graduates for certification by the state of California and provides preparation for FNP National Certification examinations. This advanced clinical practice specialty includes direct patient assessment, diagnosis, management, and treatment, client advocacy, client/family education, consultation, and program planning, implementation, evaluation, and research. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Advanced Practice Specialty Courses 18 units: GNRS 590A Primary Health Care of the Young Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 591 Primary Health Care of the Childbearing Family 4 (2/2), GNRS 592A Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 592B Primary Health Care Clinical Practicum 2 (0/2), Specialization Option Courses 4 units: Students take both of the following: GNRS 540 Care Management 2 (2/0), GNRS 541 Clinical Practicum in Care Management 2 (0/2), Or choose one of the following: GNRS 593 Psychosocial Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 4 (2/2), GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with Parent-Child Clinical Nurse Specialist | Full Time | 2-3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | In the MSN with CNS, the student learns the process of developing and sustaining evidence-based practice in illness management, advancing the practice of other nurses and nursing personnel, and developing organizational or systems modifications to support and improve nursing practice. The traditional CNS roles of expert clinical practice, consultation, clinical leadership, research, and education are shaped toward producing desirable patient outcomes as the CNS works in several spheres of influence. Students work closely with faculty and clinical preceptors to obtain the theory and practice skills essential for their functional role as clinical specialists. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Advanced Practice Specialty Courses 12 units: GNRS 520 Theory and Practice in Adult Nursing 6 (2/4) - or - GNRS 521 Clinical Specialization in Nursing Care of Adults 6 (2/4), GNRS 530 Theory and Practice in Parent-Child Nursing 6 (2/4) - or - GNRS 531 Clinical Specialization in Parent-Child Nursing 6 (2/4), Specialization Option Courses 4 units: Students take both of the following: GNRS 540 Care Management 2 (2/0), GNRS 541 Clinical Practicum in Care Management 2 (0/2), Or choose one of the following: GNRS 593 Psychosocial Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 4 (2/2), GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with Pediatric Nurse Practitioner | Full Time | 3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This PNP specialty prepares registered nurses to be nurse practitioners with children and their families in primary health care settings. This advanced practice specialty includes direct client assessment, diagnosis, management, and treatment, client advocacy, client/family education, consultation, and program planning, implementation, evaluation, and research. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Advanced Practice Specialty Courses 20 units: GNRS 510 Family Theory in Health Care 2, GNRS 590A Primary Health Care of the Young Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 590B Clinical Practicum in Pediatrics 3 (0/3), GNRS 532 Advanced Nursing Practice in Pediatrics 5 (2/3), GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0), Specialization Option Courses None required: Elective Courses (optional) 4 units, Students take both of the following: GNRS 540 Care Management 2 (2/0), GNRS 541 Clinical Practicum in Care Management 2 (0/2), Or take the following: GNRS 593 Psychosocial Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 4 (2/2). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner | Full Time | 3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This specialty program prepares students to be nurse practitioners for patients in the psychiatric and mental health settings. The graduate of this program is prepared to work respectfully and collaboratively with client consumers who are experiencing severe mental illness to determine bio-psychosocial health care needs within a complex and changing environment. Theory and clinical coursework focus on assessment, intervention planning, application, and evaluation of advanced practice therapeutics in response to acute and chronic biologic and psychiatric mental health programs. The life span focus of the curriculum ranges from adolescence through geriatrics, and includes health promotion, illness prevention, the therapeutic alliance, health-related policy, and application of research and evidence-based findings to professional practice. The inherent equality and worthiness of those who are vulnerable and disenfranchised, the role of spirituality in health, and the value of diversity are threaded throughout the program. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Advanced Practice Specialty Courses 30 units: GNRS 510 Family Theory in Health Care 2, GNRS 533 Psychiatric Theories across the Life Span 3, GNRS 534 Psychiatric Assessment across the Life Span 2, GNRS 535 Psychiatric Interventions and Health Promotion across the Life Span 5 GNRS 536 Psychiatric Interventions with the Adult and Aging Client 3, GNRS 537 Psychiatric Interventions with the Adolescents 3, GNRS 538 Psychiatric Interventions with Selected Vulnerable Populations 4, GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0), GNRS 593 Psychosocial Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 4 (2/2), Specialization Option Courses None required. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with School Nurse Services Credential (SNCSC) and Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) | Full Time | 4-5 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This program prepares registered nurses who have completed a bachelor’s degree to be effective practitioners of school health, and the Family Nurse Practitioner Credential prepares them to provide primary care for people of all ages in a variety of other settings. Through the program, students develop theoretical and practical expertise in nursing and education applied to basic health services in the public schools (K-12). This enables them to establish, maintain and coordinate a comprehensive school health program. The advanced practice Family Nurse Practitioner specialty includes direct client assessment, diagnosis, management and treatment, client advocacy, client/family education, consultation, program planning, implementation, evaluation, and research. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Advanced Core Courses 10 units: GNRS 504 Bioethics and Health Policy 3, GNRS 506 Spiritual Care 3, GNRS 508A Research and Theory in Advanced Practice Nursing 4, Advanced Practice Core Courses 17 units: GNRS 510 Family Theory in Health Care 2, GNRS 511 Advanced Pediatric Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1), GNRS 512 Advanced Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1), GNRS 513 Advanced Nursing Practice Role 2, GNRS 515 Advanced Pathophysiology 2, GNRS 594 Pharmacology in Advanced Practice Nursing 3, Specialty Courses 32 units: GNRS 550A Theory and Practice in School Nursing 6 (3/3), GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0), GNRS 590A Primary Health Care of the Young Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 591 Primary Health Care of the Childbearing Family 4 (2/2), GNRS 592A Primary Health Care of the Mature and Aging Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 592B Primary Health Care Clinical Practicum 2 (0/2), TEP 506 Educational Foundations and Classroom Management (K–8) 3 - or - TEP 508 Educational Foundations and Classroom Management (7–12) 3, GNRS 559 Audiometry for School Nurses 3, Specialization Option Courses No requirement: Concluding Courses 1-3 units GNRS 597 Comprehensive Examination Directed Study 1 - or - GNRS 598 Thesis 1, GNRS 514 Research Proposal Writing (required for thesis) 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with School Nurse Services Credential (SNSC) | Full Time | 2-3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This program prepares nurses to be effective practitioners of school health. Throughout the program, students develop theoretical and practical expertise in nursing and education applied to basic health services in the public schools (K-12). This program emphasizes the application of theory and knowledge in working with school children, their families, and school personnel. Nurses who obtain a SNSC specialty along with their MSN are qualified to establish, maintain, and coordinate a comprehensive school health program. Among the school health activities that nursing students undertake are planning health programs, assessing the health of children, providing health care and health referral, and contributing to formulation and evaluation of health policy. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Academic Core Courses 10 units: GNRS 504 Bioethics and Health Policy 3, GNRS 506 Spiritual Care 3, GNRS 508A Research and Theory in Advanced Practice Nursing 4, Advanced Practice Core Courses 10 units: GNRS 510 Family Theory in Health Care 2, GNRS 511 Advanced Pediatric Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1), GNRS 513 Advanced Nursing Practice Role 2, GNRS 515 Advanced Pathophysiology 2, Advanced Practice Specialty Courses 20 units: GNRS 550A Theory and Practice in School Nursing 6 (3/3), GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0), GNRS 590A Primary Health Care of the Young Family 6 (3/3), TEP 506 Educational Foundations and Classroom Management (K-8) 3 - or - TEP 508 Educational Foundations and Classroom Management (7-12) 3, GNRS 559 Audiometry for School Nurses 3, Specialization Option Courses No requirement: Concluding Courses 1-3 units, GNRS 597 Comprehensive Examination Directed Study 1 - or - GNRS 598 Thesis 1, GNRS 514 Research Proposal Writing (required for thesis) 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with School Nurse Services Credential (SNSC) and Pediatric Nurse Practitioner (PNP) | Full Time | 4-5 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This program prepares registered nurses who have completed a bachelor’s degree to be effective practitioners of school health, and the Pediatric Nurse Practitioner Credential prepares them to provide primary care for children in a variety of other settings. Through the program, students develop theoretical and practical expertise in nursing and education applied to basic health services in the public schools (K-12). This enables them to establish, maintain, and coordinate a comprehensive school health program. The advanced practice Pediatric Nurse Practitioner specialty includes direct client assessment, diagnosis, management and treatment, client advocacy, client/family education, consultation, program planning, implementation, evaluation, and research. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Academic Core Courses 10 units: GNRS 504 Bioethics and Health Policy 3, GNRS 506 Spiritual Care 3, GNRS 508A Research and Theory in Advanced Practice Nursing 4, Advanced Practice Core Courses 13 units: GNRS 510 Family Theory in Health Care 2, GNRS 511 Advanced Pediatric Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1) - or - GNRS 512 Advanced Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1), GNRS 513 Advanced Nursing Practice Role 2, GNRS 515 Advanced Pathophysiology 2, GNRS 594 Pharmacology in Advanced Practice Nursing 3, Advanced Practice Specialty Courses 30 units: GNRS 550A Theory and Practice in School Nursing 6 (3/3), GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0), GNRS 590A Primary Health Care of the Young Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 590B Clinical Practicum in Pediatrics 3 (0/3), GNRS 532 Advanced Nursing Practice in Pediatrics 5 (2/3), TEP 506 Educational Foundations and Classroom Management (K-8) 3 - or -TEP 508 Educational Foundations and Classroom Management (7-12) 3, GNRS 559 Audiometry for School Nurses 3, Specialization Option Courses No requirement: Concluding Courses 1-3 units GNRS 597 Comprehensive Examination Directed Study 1 - or - GNRS 598 Thesis 1, GNRS 514 Research Proposal Writing (required for thesis) 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing with Parent-Child Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) and Pediatric Nurse Practitioner (PNP) | Full Time | 3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This program prepares registered nurses to be effective practitioners in both of these advanced practice roles with children and their families. In the CNS, the focus is illness management, advancing the practice of other nurses and nursing personnel, and developing organizational or systems modifications to support and improve nursing practice. The traditional CNS roles of expert clinical practice, consultation, clinical leadership, research, and education are shaped toward producing desirable patient outcomes as the CNS works in several spheres of influence. The focus of the PNP is health care of children in the primary care setting and includes direct client assessment, diagnosis, management and treatment, client advocacy, client/family education, consultation, program planning, implementation, evaluation, and research. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Academic Core Courses 10 units: GNRS 504 Bioethics and Health Policy 3, GNRS 506 Spiritual Care 3, GNRS 508A Research and Theory in Advanced Practice Nursing 4, Advanced Practice Core Courses 13 units: GNRS 510 Family Theory in Health Care 2, GNRS 511 Advanced Pediatric Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1) - or - GNRS 512 Advanced Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1), GNRS 513 Advanced Nursing Practice Role 2, GNRS 515 Advanced Pathophysiology 2, GNRS 594 Pharmacology in Advanced Practice Nursing 3, Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) Courses 12 units: GNRS 530 Theory and Practice in Parent-Child Nursing 6 (2/4), GNRS 531 Clinical Specialization in Parent-Child Nursing 6 (2/4), Pediatric Nurse Practitioner (PNP) Courses 18 units: GNRS 532 Advanced Nursing Practice in Pediatrics 5 (2/3), GNRS 589 Adolescent Health Care 2 (2/0), GNRS 590A Primary Health Care of the Young Family 6 (3/3), GNRS 590B Clinical Practicum in Pediatrics 3 (0/3), Specialization Option Courses 1 course with 2 units clinical, GNRS 540 Care Management 2 (2/0) - or - GNRS 541 Clinical Practicum in Care Management 2 (0/2), Concluding Courses 1-3 units, GNRS 597 Comprehensive Examination Directed Study 1- or -GNRS 598 Thesis 1, GNRS 514 Research Proposal Writing (required for thesis) 2. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Science in Nursing with a Parish Nursing (PN) | Full Time | 2-3 years (Average) | US $555 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | This is an interdisciplinary program that prepares nurses to serve within churches or other religiously based settings as nurse specialists in spiritual aspects of patient care. This program integrates formal theological knowledge and methodology, professional ministry skills, and advanced nursing practice to address the bioethical, health, and spiritual concerns of a faith-based community, its members, and its neighbors. That is, both a ministry of health and faith integration, health maintenance, and health promotion for the prayer community itself, and mission outreach for health advocacy and social ethics are encompassed within this specialization. The uniqueness of this program resides in the depth of theological knowledge and ministry skill that is required to be integrated into advanced nursing practice. | Applicants must have 3.0. baccalaureate or master’s grade-point average (Candidates with a grade-point average of 2.7-2.99 may be considered for provisional admission). | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Academic Core Courses 10 units: GNRS 504 Bioethics and Health Policy 3, GNRS 506 Spiritual Care 3, GNRS 508A Research and Theory in Advanced Practice Nursing 4, Advanced Practice Core Courses 14 units: GNRS 512 Advanced Health Assessment and Health Promotion 4 (3/1), GNRS 513 Advanced Nursing Practice Role 2, GTHE 504 God, Creation, and Humanity 4, GTHE 514 Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, and the Church 4, Advanced Practice Specialty Courses 9 units: GNRS 570 Parish Nursing/Health Ministries 2, GMIN 568 Field Education in Ministry 2, GMIN 569 Field Education in Ministry 1, GMIN 618 Philosophy of Ministry 4, Concluding Courses 5 units: GNRS 540 Care Management 2 (2/0), GNRS 541 Clinical Practicum in Care Management 2 (0/2), GNRS 597 Comprehensive Examination Directed Study 1 - or - GNRS 598 Thesis 1. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | San Diego Regional Center | San Diego Regional Center, 5353 Mission Center Road Ste 300, SAN DIEGO, California, 92108, +1 619 718 9655 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Social Work (MSW) - Clinical Practice with Individuals and Families Concentration | Full Time | 10-48 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Social Work | The Clinical Practice with Individuals and Families Concentration prepares students for clinically oriented practice in contexts focused on health and mental health care, shelters, group homes, child welfare agencies, hospices, schools, older adult services, correctional facilities, and other settings where personal helping relationships are developed. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited university or college (or an equivalent degree from a college or university in another country) with a minimum 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale. At the discretion of the university, a higher professional or graduate degree may be accepted as a substitute for the bachelor’s degree. A limited number of applicants with a grade point average between 2.5-2.99 and relevant work experience may be admitted provisionally at the program’s discretion and must satisfy the prerequisite requirement of a statistics course with a grade of C or higher. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Foundational Coursework 30 units: SOCW 511 Introduction to the Social Work Profession 2, SOCW 512 Social Welfare Policy and Policy Practice 3, SOCW 513 Micro-Theory and Human Development 3, SOCW 514 Practice I: Interviewing and Assessment 3, SOCW 515 Field Seminar I 1, SOCW 516 Field I 3, SOCW 521 Introductory Research Methods 2, SOCW 522 Diversity and Social Justice 3, SOCW 523 Macro-Theory and Practice with Communities and Organizations 3, SOCW 524 Practice II: Intervention and Evaluation 3, SOCW 525 Field Seminar II 1, SOCW 526 Field II 3, Concentrations 30 units. SOCW 534 Field Seminar III 1, SOCW 536 Adv. Clinical Practice I: Adult Mental Health 3, SOCW 537 Children and Adolescents 3, SOCW 538 Clinical Practice with Groups 2, SOCW 539 Field III: Clinical Practice 3, SOCW 541 Capstone Leadership Project 3, SOCW 544 Field Seminar IV 1 , SOCW 546 Adv. Clinical Practice II: Child Welfare and Family Therapy 3, SOCW 547 Social Welfare Policy and Health/Mental Health Care 2, SOCW 548 Field IV: Clinical Practice with Individuals and Families 3, SOCW XXX Elective 3, SOCW XXX Elective 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Master of Social Work (MSW) - Community Practice and Partnerships Concentration | Full Time | 10-48 months (Average) | US $550 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Social Work | The Community Practice and Partnerships Concentration prepares students for community-based practice in local, national, and international contexts. This curriculum is designed for students interested in international social work, global relief and development activities, community advocacy, transnational issues (immigration, adoption, labor practices, etc.), leadership, and grant writing. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited university or college (or an equivalent degree from a college or university in another country) with a minimum 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale. At the discretion of the university, a higher professional or graduate degree may be accepted as a substitute for the bachelor’s degree. A limited number of applicants with a grade point average between 2.5-2.99 and relevant work experience may be admitted provisionally at the program’s discretion and must satisfy the prerequisite requirement of a statistics course with a grade of C or higher. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Foundational Coursework 30 units: SOCW 511 Introduction to the Social Work Profession 2, SOCW 512 Social Welfare Policy and Policy Practice 3, SOCW 513 Micro-Theory and Human Development 3, SOCW 514 Practice I: Interviewing and Assessment 3, SOCW 515 Field Seminar I 1, SOCW 516 Field I 3, SOCW 521 Introductory Research Methods 2, SOCW 522 Diversity and Social Justice 3, SOCW 523 Macro-Theory and Practice with Communities and Organizations 3, SOCW 524 Practice II: Intervention and Evaluation 3, SOCW 525 Field Seminar II 1, SOCW 526 Field II 3, Concentrations 30 units. SOCW 531 Human Rights and Sustainable Development 2, SOCW 532 Advanced Community Practice 3, SOCW 533 Organizational Behavior and Management 3, SOCW 534 Field Seminar III 1, SOCW 535 Field III: Community Practice and Partnerships 3, SOCW 542 International Social Work Policy and Practice 2, SOCW 543 Fundraising, Grant Writing, and Fiscal Decision Making 3, SOCW 541 Capstone Leadership Project 3, SOCW 544 Field Seminar IV 1, SOCW 545 Field IV: Community Practice and Partnerships 3, SOCW XXX Elective 3, SOCW XXX Elective 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Millennial MBA - Master of Business Administration (MMBA) | Full Time | 13 months (Average) | US $660 per credit / unit | School of Business and Management | The Millennial MBA (MMBA) program is an accelerated, comprehensive, and intensive 13-month graduate business program that develops exceptional business management professionals with outstanding moral character, strong analytical and innovative decision-making skills, and a world view that understands and appreciates the global diversity in cultures, markets, and economies. This program is designed as an integral part of the university’s vision of scholastic leadership in this millennium through excellence in academic programs, community service focus, and deep commitment to faith that reaches across the globe. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university. They must have minimum grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4-point scale and must be potential as a scholar. | MBA | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: BUSI 509 Worldview Leadership Formation 1, BUSI 581 Strategic Leadership 2, BUSI 512 Management Accounting 3, BUSI 513 Corporate Finance 3, BUSI 521 Managerial Economics 3, BUSI 514 Operations Management 3, BUSI 515 Marketing Research 3, BUSI 522 Private Enterprise and Public Policy 3, BUSI 516 Organizational Behavior 3, BUSI 527 Marketing Strategy 3, BUSI 567 Advanced Financial Analysis 3, BUSI 578 Strategy and Planning 3, BUSI 548 International Business 3, Concentrations 9 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Ph.D. in Higher Education | Full Time | 4-5 years (Average) | US $815 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Doctoral Higher Education | The Doctor of Philosophy in Higher Education prepares graduates for positions as faculty, researchers, and academic leaders who are able to conduct original research that contributes to higher education policy and practice, and to interpret and communicate the results of that research through their writing, teaching, and leadership. The curriculum has two tracks: Leadership and Student Success. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree in higher education or a related field from a regionally accredited institution, a master’s degree in higher education or a related field from a regionally accredited institution and a 3.0 graduate grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale is required. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Courses 40 units: HED 701 Strengths-oriented Leadership 4, HED 702 The Nature of Inquiry 4, HED 704 Ethical Issues in Higher Education 2, HED 721 Diversity and Social Justice in Higher Education 4, HED 726 Policy Analysis in Higher Education 2, HED 727 Introduction to U.S. Higher Education 4, HED 742 Qualitative Research Methods 4, HED 744 Research Design and Statistics 4, HED 746 Advanced Qualitative Research 4, HED 760 Research Seminars 6, HED 790 Doctoral Seminar in Research Studies 2, Concentration Courses 10 units, Organizational Leadership: HED 712 Leading Change in Higher Education 4, HED 725 Administration in Higher Education 4, HED 728 Policy and Politics 2, Student Success: HED 707 Principles of Student Retention 2, HED 708 College Impact on Student Success 2, HED 737 Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 4, HED 743 Program Evaluation in Higher Education 2, Elective Courses 4 units: HED 719 Financing Higher Education 2, HED 723 Higher Education and the Law 3, HED 761 Strengths-oriented Research and Programming 2-3, HED 780 International Higher Education Policy and Practice 2, HED 798 Special Topics 2, Dissertation Courses: HED 794 Dissertation Research 3, HED 795 Dissertation Research 3, Independent Study: Students may petition to take an independent study course to substitute for an elective course. HED 799 Readings in Higher Education 1-3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Psy.D. in Clinical Psychology: Family Psychology | Full Time | 4-5 years (Average) | US $798 per credit / unit | School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, Department of Graduate Psychology | The Doctor of Psychology (Psy.D.) in Clinical Psychology with an emphasis in Family Psychology is a professional doctorate. The Psy.D. is becoming the recognized degree in psychology for practitioners. The Psy.D. retains a commitment to provision of a comprehensive education in psychological science as the foundation for any training in psychology, yet emphasizes the service orientation of a clinical degree in which training and supervision comprise a substantial part of the curriculum. | Students may enter the Psy.D. in one of two categories: with an existing master's degree in clinical psychology or while enrolled in a master's program in clinical psychology, or directly from completion of a bachelor's degree or with a master's degree that is not in clinical psychology. | Doctoral | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Required Courses 100 units: PPSY 701 Clinical Practicum I: Legal and Ethical Competence 2, PPSY 702 Clinical Practicum II: Professional Practice and an Introduction to Case Conceptualization 2, PPSY 711 Psychology and Systems Theory 3, PPSY 712 Theories of Change and Evidence-Based Treatment 3, PPSY 713 Assessment II: Personality 4, PPSY 714 Assessment III: Intelligence and Academics 4, PPSY 715 Adult Psychology 3, PPSY 716 Family Psychology 3, PPSY 717 Child Psychology 2 - or - PPSY 735 Adolescent Psychology 2, PPSY 718 History and Systems of Psychology 3, PPSY 719 Social Psychology 2, PPSY 721 Addictive Behaviors 2, PPSY 722 Research Design I 3, PPSY 723 Research Design II 3, PPSY 724 Couples Theory and Therapy 3, PPSY 726 Biblical Ethics and Psychotherapy 3, PPSY 727 Clinical Practicum III: Diversity Competency 2, PPSY 728 Clinical Practicum IV: Domestic Violence and Case Conceptualization 2, PPSY 729 Treatment Planning 1, PPSY 730 Cognition 2, PPSY 731 Dissertation Development 1, PPSY 734 Gerontology 2, PPSY 736 Social Ethics and Psychotherapy 3, PPSY 737 Clinical Practicum V: Interdisciplinary Integration 2, PPSY 738 Clinical Practicum VI: The Future Psychologist—Management, Private Practice, and Advocacy 2, PPSY 739 Psychobiology 3, PPSY 740 Consultation in Clinical Psychology 2, PPSY 744 Supervision in Clinical Psychology 2, PPSY 745 Dissertation I 1, PPSY 746 Dissertation II 1, PPSY 747 Dissertation III 1, PPSY 748 Dissertation IV 1, PPSY 750 Predoctoral Internship, (Full-time, Pre-Doctoral Internship: 2 semesters/1 unit each) 1, PPSY 753 Moral and Spiritual Identity Formation in the Family 3, PPSY 754 Assessment IV: Projective 4, PPSY 755 Dissertation V 1, PPSY 756 Dissertation VI 1, PPSY 757 Psychopharmacology 2, PPSY 758A Techniques of Change: Cognitive-behavioral Interventions 2, PPSY 759B Techniques of Change: Solution-focused Brief Therapy 2, PPSY 760 Techniques of Change: Psychodynamic Interventions 2, PPSY 798 [Multiple Courses] 1-6 | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Registered Nurse to Bachelor of Science in Nursing | Full Time | 15 months (Average) | US $515 per credit / unit | School of Nursing | The Registered Nurse to Bachelor of Science in Nursing (RN to BSN) Program caters to working health care practitioners who want to develop the professional skills needed to be agents of change in the 21st century. The degree instills advanced theories and skills that position graduates for a deeper level of patient care and greater roles of leadership within their organization. | Applicants must have the following college preparatory courses which are strongly recommended: English (four years), mathematics (including first- and second-year algebra and geometry), science (two years, including a laboratory science), foreign language (three years), United States history or government, strong academic electives. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Prerequisite Courses 15 units: Chemistry 3, Human Anatomy (BIOL 250 - Includes Lab) 4, Human Physiology (BIOL 251 - Includes Lab) 4, Microbiology (BIOL 220 - Includes Lab) 4, Support Courses and General Education Requirements 24 units: Freshman Writing or English Composition 3, Speech 3, College Algebra 3, General Psychology 3, History/Civics/Political Science 3, Language and Literature 3, Aesthetics and Creative Arts 3, Religion (General Survey/Introduction to Biblical Literature) 3, Nursing Courses (Degree Completion): BNRS 221 Health Assessment 3, BNRS 271 Theories and Concepts in Professional Nursing 3, BNRS 303 Adult Development and Learning Assessment 3, BNRS 307 Theoretical Frameworks in Nursing 3, BNRS 326 Nursing Research and Statistic 3, BNRS 368 Pathophysiology 3, BNRS 412 Christian Worldview and the Profession of Nursing 3, BNRS 448 Leadership in Acute Care Settings 6, BNRS 449 Theory and Practice in Community Health Settings 6, BNRS 497 Ethics/Issues in Health Care 4, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Registered Nurse to Bachelor of Science in Nursing (RN to BSN) Program | Distance / Online | 15 months (Average) | US $515 per credit / unit | Azusa Pacific University | This program is designed for adult learners wishing to complete their undergraduate degree without the on-campus class requirement. The degree instills advanced theories and skills that position graduates for a deeper level of patient care and greater roles of leadership within their organization. | Applicants must be of 23 years of age or more, they must possess 60 units or more of transferable credit and a minimum of 2.0 GPA. Applicant must be a registered professional nurse, licensed in the U.S., with at least one year of work experience as a registered nurse, and graduated from an accredited associate degree or diploma nursing program. | Bachelor degree | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Prerequisite Courses 15 units: Chemistry 3, Human Anatomy (BIOL 250 - Includes Lab) 4, Human Physiology (BIOL 251 - Includes Lab) 4, Microbiology (BIOL 220 - Includes Lab) 4, Support Courses and General Education Requirements 24 units: Freshman Writing or English Composition 3, Speech 3, College Algebra 3, General Psychology 3, History/Civics/Political Science 3, Language and Literature 3, Aesthetics and Creative Arts 3, Religion (General Survey/Introduction to Biblical Literature) 3, Nursing Courses (Degree Completion): BNRS 221 Health Assessment 3, BNRS 271 Theories and Concepts in Professional Nursing 3, BNRS 303 Adult Development and Learning Assessment 3, BNRS 307 Theoretical Frameworks in Nursing 3, BNRS 326 Nursing Research and Statistic 3, BNRS 368 Pathophysiology 3, BNRS 412 Christian Worldview and the Profession of Nursing 3, BNRS 448 Leadership in Acute Care Settings 6, BNRS 449 Theory and Practice in Community Health Settings 6, BNRS 497 Ethics/Issues in Health Care 4, SOC 358 Human Diversity 3. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |||
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Young Executive M.A. in Management (YEMAM) | Full Time | 13 months (Average) | US $660 per credit / unit | School of Business and Management | The Young Executive Master of Arts in Management (YEMAM) program is a full-time, one-year immersion for recent graduates. Students concurrently work in part-time paid internships and take all-day courses twice a week. The cohort model allows students to learn and problem-solve in collaborative teams. This is an intensive, one-year mix of rigorous study, intimate fellowship, hands-on organizational experience, and travel to major public and private corporations in New York and Washington, D.C. The program culminates in high-level, boardroom organizational field experience. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university. They must have minimum grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4-point scale and must be potential as a scholar. | Masters | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: BUSI 509 Worldview Leadership Formation 1, BUSI 510 Current Issues in Business and Management 3, BUSI 516 Organizational Behavior 3, BUSI 529 Ethics in a Changing Organizational Environment 3, BUSI 541 Management for the Worldwide Organization 3, BUSI 597 Field Experience 2, HROD 500 Foundations of Human Resource Development 3, HROD 517 Human Resource Management 3, MGMT 515 Applied Research and Analysis 3, MGMT 521 Organizational Development and Change 3, MGMT 540 Diversity for Strategic Advantage 3, MGMT 561 Group Dynamics and Conflict Management 3, MGMT 570 Organizational Performance Improvement 3, MGMT 581 Corporate and Organizational Leadership 3, Concentrations (9 units). | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 109785 | Azusa Pacific University | Young Executive MBA - Master of Business Administration (YEMBA) | Full Time | 13 months (Average) | US $660 per credit / unit | School of Business and Management | The Young Executive MBA (YEMBA) program is a comprehensive, 13-month, full-time intensive graduate business management program for recent graduates. Students concurrently work in part-time management internship positions in business firms, government agencies, and nonprofit organizations, while completing full-time coursework on campus. Students learn global business strategy, operations, marketing, finance, and organizational management concepts while maintaining active involvement in business environments with opportunities to tackle actual business problems and decision-making challenges. The program culminates in a one-month international business strategy study and field experience trip to Asia. Students also have the opportunity to complete elective courses in one or more of the optional course concentration areas. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university. They must have minimum grade-point average of 3.0 on a 4-point scale and must be potential as a scholar. | MBA | Azusa Pacific University | The following are the modules: Core Courses 38 units: BUSI 509 Worldview Leadership Formation 1, BUSI 581 Strategic Leadership 2, BUSI 512 Management Accounting 3, BUSI 513 Corporate Finance 3, BUSI 521 Managerial Economics 3, BUSI 597 Field Experience 2, BUSI 514 Operations Management 3, BUSI 515 Marketing Research 3, BUSI 522 Private Enterprise and Public Policy 3, BUSI 516 Organizational Behavior 3, BUSI 527 Marketing Strategy 3, BUSI 567 Advanced Financial Analysis 3, BUSI 578 Strategy and Planning 3, BUSI 548 International Business 3, Concentrations 9 units. | Azusa Pacific University | Jessica Marriott, International Graduate Enrollment Coordinator | 8539 | 901 E Alosta Avenue, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 812 3076 | Azusa Campus | Azusa Campus, Azusa Pacific University, PO Box 7000, AZUSA, California, 91702, +1 626 815 6000 | Yes | Housing is available on the APU campus for undergraduate and some ALCI students. It is important to apply early, as on-campus housing is limited. Housing facilities on campus include dormitories and apartments. There will be at least two students in each room in the dormitories or apartments. Engstrom Hall and Trinity Hall, APU's newest dormitories, are coed dorms. Though male and female students share the same dormitory, they are separated into different floors.Bowles, Shire Modulars, University Park, University Village are apartments provided by the University. These apartments are located within walking distance of the university for those who do not want to live on campus and for graduate students. The apartment complexes vary in distance from the main campus from across the street to approximately 1.5 miles from campus. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Associate Degree in Business Information Technology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | This program includes 24 hours of general education plus a 39-hour core of business course work, the majority from the Department of Information Systems and Operations Management. Courses focus on such subject matter as project management, business data communication, business information systems, and microcomputer applications. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Associate degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management, Whitinger Business Building room 203, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5300 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Associate in Arts - Legal Assistance | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Associate degree | Ball State University | The modules are: COMM 210 Fund Pub Com, ENG 103 Eng Comp 1, ENG 104 Eng Comp 2, HIST 150 West World, POLS 130 Amer Nat Gov, SOC 100 Principles, ACC 201 Prin Acct 1, ACC 266 Inc Tax fund, BIT 225 Micro App, BL 260 Prin Bus Law, BL 367 Estate Plan, POLS 141 Intro Parleg, POLS 142 Lgl Res Writ, POLS 143 Litigation, POLS 244 Adv Lgl Res, POLS 369 Prof Exp, POLS 479 Pract Exp, POLS 455 Administ Law, POLS 457 Alt Dis Res, RE 332 Legal Asp Re. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science, NQ 240, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8780 | This department prides itself on teaching excellence. Most of its faculty members have received teaching awards. Likewise, in public service, its professors have contributed thousands of volunteer hours to various government and not-for-profit boards and commissions, many faculty members have sought elective office and are active in both major political parties. This department is home to the Bowen Center for Public Affairs. The Center, named after former Governor Otis R. Bowen, holds civic education seminars throughout the state through the Bowen Institute on Political Participation, conducts training for public officials to ensure effective and efficient government administration, and helps establish best practices in public administration through original research and surveys of Hoosier citizens. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Associate in Arts - Public Service | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Associate degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 Eng Comp 1, ENG 104 Eng Comp 2, COMM 210 Fund Pub Com, JOURN 101 Mass Media, AHS 100 Intro Art, MUHIS 100 Intro Music, THEAT 100 Intro Theat, TCOM 101 Foundations, GEOG 101 Erth Sea Sky, HSC 160 Human Health, MATHS 125 Math Applic, NREM 101 Env and Socy, ECON 116 Survey Ideas, POLS 130 Amer Nat Gov, POLS 210 Int Politics, POLS 237 State Loc Pol, POLS 238 Urban Gov US, POLS 342 Public Policy, POLS 350 Pub Administ, PSYSC 100 General, SOC 100 Principles. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science, NQ 240, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8780 | This department prides itself on teaching excellence. Most of its faculty members have received teaching awards. Likewise, in public service, its professors have contributed thousands of volunteer hours to various government and not-for-profit boards and commissions, many faculty members have sought elective office and are active in both major political parties. This department is home to the Bowen Center for Public Affairs. The Center, named after former Governor Otis R. Bowen, holds civic education seminars throughout the state through the Bowen Institute on Political Participation, conducts training for public officials to ensure effective and efficient government administration, and helps establish best practices in public administration through original research and surveys of Hoosier citizens. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Associate in Science - Nuclear Medicine Technology | Full Time | 3 Year(s) More 2 - 3 years |
$18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program prepares students for careers in Nuclear Medicine Technology. The Ball State University Nuclear Medicine Technology program is offered in cooperation with Clarian Health in Indianapolis. The program is divided into two phases and usually takes 2 to 3 years to complete. The first, or preclinical, phase of the program takes place on the Ball State University campus and includes course work in the sciences and the University Core Curriculum program. The second, or clinical, phase of the program is offered in Indianapolis at Clarian Health with rotations to other clinical affiliate sites. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. Those who are applying to this program must be a currently a BSU student, successfully earned 14 hours of required courses, with "C" or better in required math/science courses, 2.5 overall GPA from only required preclinical courses. | Associate degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ANAT 201 Fund Hum Ana, CHEM 100 People Chem, COMM 210 Fund Pub Com, CS 104 Intro Comp, ENG 103 Eng Comp 1, MATHS 125 Math Applic, PHYCS 100 Cncept Phycs, PHYSL 205 Fund Physl, PSYSC 100 General, AHSC 200 Intro Care, AHSC 240 Clinical 1 N M, AHSC 241 Clinical 2 N M, AHSC 242 Clinical 3 N M, AHSC 243 Clinical 4 N M, AHSC 245 Theory Adm, AHSC 247 Radioactivty, AHSC 248 Radiopharmal, AHSC 249 Rad Bio Sfty, AHSC 251 Nuc Med Inst, AHSC 252 Nuc Med Lab, AHSC 254 Dir Res N M. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Associate in Science - Radiation Therapy | Full Time | 3 Year(s) More 2 - 3 years |
$18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program prepares students for careers in Radiation Therapy. The Ball State University Radiation Therapy program is offered in cooperation with Clarian Health in Indianapolis. The program is divided into two phases and usually takes 2 to 3 years to complete. The first, or preclinical, phase of the program takes place on the Ball State University campus and includes course work in the sciences and the University Core Curriculum program. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. Those who are applying to this program must be a currently a BSU student, successfully earned 14 hours of required courses, with "C" or better in required math/science courses, 2.5 overall GPA from only required preclinical courses. | Associate degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ANAT 201 Fund Hum Ana, CHEM 100 People Chem, COMM 210 Fund Pub Com, CS 104 Intro Comp, ENG 103 Eng Comp 1, MATHS 125 Math Applic, PHYCS 100 Cncept Phycs, PHYSL 205 Fund Physl, PSYSC 100 General, AHSC 200 Intro Care, AHSC 278 Rad Physics, AHSC 279 Rad Bio Ther, AHSC 280 Ornt Rad Thy, AHSC 281 Clinic 1 R T, AHSC 282 Rad Onc Phys, AHSC 283 Onc Path 1, AHSC 284 Clinic 2 R T, AHSC 285 Tec Rad On, AHSC 286 Onc Path 2, AHSC 287 Tec Rad On 2, AHSC 288 Trt Plan Dos, AHSC 289 Clinic 3 R T, AHSC 290 Clinic 4 R T. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Associate in Science - Radiography | Full Time | 3 Year(s) More 2 - 3 years |
$18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program prepares students for careers in Radiography. The Ball State University Radiography program is offered in cooperation with Clarian Health in Indianapolis. The program is divided into two phases and usually takes 2 to 3 years to complete. The first, or preclinical, phase of the program takes place on the Ball State University campus and includes course work in the sciences and the University Core Curriculum program. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. Those who are applying to this program must be a currently a BSU student, successfully earned 14 hours of required courses, with "C" or better in required math/science courses, 2.5 overall GPA from only required preclinical courses. | Associate degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ANAT 201 Fund Hum Ana, CHEM 100 People Chem, COMM 210 Fund Pub Com, CS 104 Intro Comp, ENG 103 Eng Comp 1, MATHS 125 Math Applic, PHYCS 100 Cncept Phycs, PHYSL 205 Fund Physl, PSYSC 100 General, AHSC 200 Intro Care, AHSC 278 Rad Physics, AHSC 279 Rad Bio Ther, AHSC 280 Ornt Rad Thy, AHSC 281 Clinic 1 R T, AHSC 282 Rad Onc Phys, AHSC 283 Onc Path 1, AHSC 284 Clinic 2 R T, AHSC 285 Tec Rad On, AHSC 286 Onc Path 2, AHSC 287 Tec Rad On 2, AHSC 288 Trt Plan Dos, AHSC 289 Clinic 3 R T, AHSC 290 Clinic 4 R T. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Associate of Arts (A.A.) Degree in Criminal Justice and Criminology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology | This program is designed to inform and prepares the students for advanced study and/or for entry level positions in the field of criminal justice and criminology. Areas with which students will become familiar include criminal law, policing, court procedures, and community based and institutional corrections. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Associate degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, ENG 231 Writing in the Workplace, POLS 130 American National Government or PSYSC 100 General Psychology, SOC 100 Principles of Sociology, PEG or PEFWL Physical Education, CJC 101 Introduction to the American Criminal Justice System, CJC 102 Introduction to Criminology, CJC 220 Research Methods in Criminal Justice, CJC 221 Data Analysis in Criminal Justice, CJC 230 Introduction to Policing, CJC 240 Introduction to Corrections, CJC 250 Introduction to Courts. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Ball State University, North Quad 248, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5979 | The Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology offers a variety of courses that help students understand the dimensions and causes of crime and delinquency and the theories of crime prevention and control. Courses examine the structure and philosophy of the American criminal justice system; the operation of criminal courts at the local, state, and federal levels; techniques and theories of law enforcement; and the philosophies and practices of various correctional programs. Students are prepared for entry-level professional positions in the criminal justice system as well as for graduate study in related subjects. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Athletic Training Major in Physical Education | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | The mission of this program is to prepare qualified entry-level athletic trainers for the athletic training profession. Coursework and clinical components are blended to develop knowledge and skills in risk management and injury prevention; pathology of injuries and illnesses; assessment and evaluation; acute care of injury and illness; pharmacology; therapeutic modalities; therapeutic exercise; general medical conditions and disabilities; nutritional aspects of injury and illness; psychosocial intervention and referral; health care administration; and professional development and responsibilities. Athletic Training employment settings include sports medicine clinics, high schools (including teaching), colleges or universities, industrial settings and professional sports. The instructional and clinical staff continually strives to improve its education through seminars, conferences, and research. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) Degree in Criminal Justice and Criminology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology | This program is designed to inform and prepare the students for advanced study and/or for entry level positions in the field of criminal justice and criminology. Areas with which they will become familiar include criminal law, policing, court procedures, and community based and institutional corrections, its careers include professional positions in probation departments, law enforcement agencies, correctional institutions for juveniles or adults, parole offices or community treatment and service settings. Criminal Justice is an excellent pre-law program for persons planning a career in public law (prosecution, defense, government legal representation). This program is same as the B.S. degree program. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: CJC 101 Introduction to the American Criminal Justice System, CJC 102 Introduction to Criminology, CJC 220 Research Methods in Criminal Justice, CJC 221 Data Analysis in Criminal Justice, CJC 230 Introduction to Policing, CJC 240 Introduction to Corrections, CJC 250 Introduction to Courts, CJC 369/479 Professional Experience. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Ball State University, North Quad 248, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5979 | The Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology offers a variety of courses that help students understand the dimensions and causes of crime and delinquency and the theories of crime prevention and control. Courses examine the structure and philosophy of the American criminal justice system; the operation of criminal courts at the local, state, and federal levels; techniques and theories of law enforcement; and the philosophies and practices of various correctional programs. Students are prepared for entry-level professional positions in the criminal justice system as well as for graduate study in related subjects. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Art | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Visual Arts | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, EDSEC 150 Basic Concepts of Secondary Education, EDMUL 205 Ethnic and Multicultural Group Behavior, EDPSY 250 Human Growth and Development, EDPSY 390 Educational Psychology, EDSEC 380 Principles of Teaching: Secondary School, EDJHM 385 Principles of Teaching: Middle School, EDFON 420 Social Foundations of Education, EDALG 470 Student Teaching: All-Grade, AED 399 Classroom Use of Methods and Materials: Art, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Intro to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, ACR 211 Ceramics 1, ACR 221 Introduction to Metals, ART 231 Photography, AFA211 Painting 1, AFA 217 Watercolor 1, AFA 221 Sculpture 1, AFA 231 Introduction to Printmaking. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts in Architecture | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | This program's core curriculum is a sequence of courses in design, design communications, architectural history, structures, environmental systems, and building technology. Related electives in architecture and a variety of other disciplines are available. The program culminates with an architectural design capstone project. This program is not open to undergraduate students majoring in environmental design. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: Architectural Design 1 (ARCH 201), Architectural Building Technology 1 (ARCH 214), Structural Systems 1 (ARCH 218), History of Architecture 1 (ARCH 229), Computer Applications (ARCH 263), Architectural Design 2 (ARCH 202), Cultural and Social Issues (ARCH 252), Environmental Systems 1 (ARCH 273), Architectural Design 3 (ARCH 301), Structural Systems 2 (ARCH 318), Environmental Systems 2 (ARCH 373), Architectural Design 4 (ARCH 302), Architectural Building Technology 2 (ARCH 314), History of Architecture 2 (ARCH 329), Architectural Design 5 (ARCH 401), Structural Systems 3 (ARCH 418), Environment and Culture (ARCH 429), Architectural Design 6 (ARCH 402). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture, Architecture Building 402, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1900 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies - Interpersonal Communication | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | This option exposes students to a range of courses that aid in understanding effective communication with the program's fellow human beings in personal relationships and small groups. Students will explore subjects such as relational development, nonverbal communication, and conflict management. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: COMM 201 Explore Comm, COMM 220 Argmt Debate, COMM 240 Human Comm, COMM 290 Intercul Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 360 Comm Theory, COMM 375 Presen Comm, COMM 401 Sr Seminar, COMM 330 Grp Dec Mkg, COMM 370 Nonverb Comm, COMM 440 Intpers Comm, COMM 442 Conflict, COMM 465 Comm Inquiry, CPSY 230 Hu Relat Dev, PSYSC 213 Adjustment, SOC 221 African-Amer, SOC 224 Family Soc, SOC 235 Women, SOC 242 Problems, FCSFC 250 Family Relat. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies, David Letterman Communication and Media Building Room 351, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1882 | This department was first recognized in the mid-1960s as a separate entity at Ball State, but the beginnings of this type of course work can be found a few decades earlier within the English department. Through its history, the department and its offerings have evolved from a small collection of courses into a vibrant discipline useful to students with wide-ranging career aspirations. It is in the David Letterman Communication and Media Building, packed with advanced technology - the same kind found in communication workplaces - ready to provide the students with hands-on experiences. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies - Organizational Communication | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | This option prepares students to apply communication theory and research in organizational contexts. Students will examine subjects such as business and professional communication, leadership, organizational communication theory, training, and consulting. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: COMM 201 Explore Comm, COMM 220 Argmt Debate, COMM 240 Human Comm, COMM 290 Intercul Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 360 Comm Theory, COMM 375 Presen Comm, COMM 401 Sr Seminar, COMM 251 Bus Prof Com, COMM 351 Commun Organ, COMM 369 Professional (1-6) or COMM 479 Prac Exper (1-6), COMM 441 Iss Org Comm, COMM 452 App Org Comm, COMM 465 Comm Inquiry, COMM 325 Interviewing, COMM 330 Grp Dec Mkg, COMM 340 Ldrshp Comm, COMM 442 Conflict. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies, David Letterman Communication and Media Building Room 351, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1882 | This department was first recognized in the mid-1960s as a separate entity at Ball State, but the beginnings of this type of course work can be found a few decades earlier within the English department. Through its history, the department and its offerings have evolved from a small collection of courses into a vibrant discipline useful to students with wide-ranging career aspirations. It is in the David Letterman Communication and Media Building, packed with advanced technology - the same kind found in communication workplaces - ready to provide the students with hands-on experiences. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies - Public Communication | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | This option allows students to explore the principles that account for human communication between speaker and audience. Students will study such subjects as persuasion theory, campaign communication, and effective language use in public and mediated communication. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: COMM 201 Explore Comm, COMM 220 Argmt Debate, COMM 240 Human Comm, COMM 290 Intercul Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 360 Comm Theory, COMM 375 Presen Comm, COMM 401 Sr Seminar, COMM 310 Spchmkg Demo, COMM 322 Comm Pop Cul, COMM 412 Rhetorc Crit, COMM 420 Classic Rhet, COMM 385 Rhet Pub Adv, COMM 404 Polit Comm, AHS 221 Art US 2, ANTH 342 Amer Culture, ENG 220 Lang Society, ENG 285 Intr Cr Wr, ENG 303 Hist Rhet, HIST 240 Intr Pub His, MUHIS 105 Mus Pop Cul, PHIL 202 Ethics, PHIL 203 Social Phil, POLS 411 Amer Thought, SOC 441 Change. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies, David Letterman Communication and Media Building Room 351, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1882 | This department was first recognized in the mid-1960s as a separate entity at Ball State, but the beginnings of this type of course work can be found a few decades earlier within the English department. Through its history, the department and its offerings have evolved from a small collection of courses into a vibrant discipline useful to students with wide-ranging career aspirations. It is in the David Letterman Communication and Media Building, packed with advanced technology - the same kind found in communication workplaces - ready to provide the students with hands-on experiences. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts in English - Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This is one of the leading preparations for law school. English majors work in business and government, where sharp written communication skills are increasingly in demand. They work in business and government, where sharp written communication skills are increasingly in demand. Creative Writing designed to contribute to the student's liberal and professional education by fostering creative thinking and effective writing. The advanced level Writers in the Community and Literary Editing classes give its students the opportunity to bring their writing skills outside the classroom and into the wider world of both community service and publishing. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: 210 Intr Eng St, 220 Lang Society, 230 Writing About Literature, 285 Intro to Creative Writing, 405 Special Topics in Creative Writing, 409 Creative Writing in the Community, 444 Sr Seminar, 306 Creative Nonfiction Writing, 307 Fiction Writing, 308 Poetry Writing, 310 Script Writing, 406 Adv. CNW, 407 Adv. FW, 408 Adv. PW, 410 Adv. Script Writing, 489 Practicum in Literary Editing/Publishing. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts in English - Literature | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program is designed for students seeking a broad liberal education but not necessarily planning to pursue graduate studies in English. This program is designed to provide a solid foundation in literature and language for students who plan to enter graduate study and perhaps college English teaching. Four semesters (or equivalent) of a modern or classical language at the college level are required. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 210 Intr Eng St, ENG 220 Lang Society, ENG 230 Read Wr Lit, ENG 444 Sr Seminar, ENG 260 Brit Lit 1, ENG 362 Med Br Lit, ENG 363 Rn 17 Br Lit, ENG 364 Rs 18 Br Lit, ENG 280 Brit Lit 2, ENG 240 Amer Lit 1, ENG 250 Amer Lit 2, ENG 490 Lit and Gender, ENG 422 St Authors, ENG 423 St Drama, ENG 424 Genre St, ENG 464 Shakespeare, ENG 400 Spc Top Eng, ENG 402 Top Cult Stu, ENG 421 St Lit Hist. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Arts in English - Rhetoric and Writing | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program is designed for students seeking a broad liberal education but not necessarily planning to pursue graduate studies in English. This program introduces students to rhetoric and composition as the theory and practice of discourse, with emphasis on written forms; especially relevant for students planning further academic or professional studies. Four semesters (or the equivalent) of a modern or classical language at the college level are required. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 210 Intr Eng St, ENG 213 Eng St Tech, ENG 220 Lang Society, ENG 230 Read Wr Lit, ENG 231 Wrt Workplce, ENG 303 Hist Rhet, ENG 335 Pub Disc, ENG 369 Prof Exper or ENG 489 Prc Lit Ed (3), ENG 435 Iss Rhet Wr, ENG 444 Sr Seminar. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program is designed to provide a broad education in the ceramic arts. The studio environment is one where vessel aesthetics - form and surface design, is taught along with ceramic sculpture. Students learn conceptual development and innovative contemporary processes in addition to traditional hand-building and wheel-throwing techniques. Educational experiences include technical explorations with an introduction to clays, ceramic chemistry, glaze calculations, kiln construction, technology, and firing processes. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, AFA 303 Drawing, ACR 211 Ceramics 1, ACR 312 Ceramics: Throwing 1, ACR 221 Introduction to Metals, ACR 313 Ceramics: Hand 1, ACR 314 Ceramics: Throwing 2, ACR 315 Ceramics: Hand 2, ACR 316 Glaze and Kiln Technology, ACR 416 Ceramics: Throwing 3, ACR 417 Ceramics: Hand 3, ACR 418 Senior Project in Ceramics, AFA 221 Sculpture. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Drawing | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program begins with fundamental concepts and practice and proceeds through a directed sequence of studio experiences, including figure drawing, to more advanced studies. The contextual, historical, and stylistic aspects of drawing are an integral part of the curriculum. Analytical and critical thinking are stressed, and interdisciplinary and collaborative studies are encouraged. Students are introduced to a wide range of media and techniques with emphasis on well-informed practice, experimentation, and expression. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AFA 312 Painting 2, AFA 217 Watercolor 1, AFA 221 Sculpture, AFA 231 Introduction to Printmaking, AFA 341 Intaglio Printmaking 1, AFA 303 Drawing 3, AFA 304 Drawing 4, AFA 351 Lithography, AFA 405 Drawing 5, AFA 406 Drawing 6, AFA 487 Senior Project in Drawing. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Electronic Art/Animation | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program provides students with a comprehensive digital media arts experience and explores the intersections between art and technology. Students studying electronic art and animation at Ball State work in numerous forms of digital art including computer animation, intermedia, digital video, digital imaging, installation, interactive art, and Internet-based projects. Students also participate in several hands-on and collaborative interdisciplinary projects, interacting with students in other courses of study. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, AFA 221 Sculpture 1, ART 231 Photography 1, ART 233 Digital Imaging, ART 311 Animation 1, ART 321 Video and Intermedia Art 1, ART 490 Senior Project in Electronic Art and Animation, AFA 303 Drawing 3, AFA 304 Drawing 4, ART 312 Animation 2, ART 313 Animation 3, ART 414 Animation 4. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Metals | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program offers students an education in using the hand as well as the computer to produce well-designed and crafted objects. Ball State's metals/jewelry area offers students the opportunity to tailor personal and professional goals so they graduate with technical, design, and communication skills. Students selecting a fine art emphasis in metals make one-of-a-kind statements, often choosing to create small sculpture as the final product of their artistic inquiry. Those selecting a traditional crafts emphasis concentrate on the basics of jewelry, hollowware, and box making, learning production and marketing methods. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, ACR 211 Ceramics 1, ACR 221 Introduction to Metals, ACR 322 Metalsmithing and Dieforming, ACR 323 Metals: Casting, ACR 324 Metals: Color, ACR 425 Metals: Advanced Fabrication Techniques, ACR 426 Metals: Advanced Surface Techniques, ACR 427 Metals: New Technologies, ACR 428 Senior Project in Metals, AFA 221 Sculpture 1, ART 311 Animation 1. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Painting | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program covers a range of materials, forms, and traditions, both representational and nonrepresentational. Its students explore their individual visions within the context of developing disciplined studio practices as well as developing their work within a wide range of technical, aesthetic, and conceptual approaches. Beginning painting courses introduce the concepts and materials of painting, furthering students' understanding of space, image, and color. Intermediate and advanced courses cover the properties and possibilities of modern media. In advanced painting classes, students build upon their technical facility and conceptual base to develop personal directions. All classes emphasize individual aesthetic choices and expression and the exploration of contemporary critical issues, encouraging students to take responsibility for the definition and direction of his or her own work. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, AFA 303 Drawing 3, ART 231 Photography 1, AFA 312 Painting 2, AFA 217 Watercolor 1, AFA 318 Watercolor 2, AFA 221 Sculpture 1, AFA 231 Intro to Printmaking, AFA 313 Painting 3, AFA 314 Painting 4, AFA 315 Painting 5, AFA 416 Painting 6, AFA 489 Senior Project in Painting. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Photography | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program is committed to teaching students how to work with photography's infinite creative possibilities and how to understand its artistic, social, and commercial applications. Faculty are intent on helping students acquire a strong technical foundation through introductory courses and then assisting them to mature as creative artists as they explore diverse photographic techniques and critical theories addressed in intermediate and advanced courses. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, ART 231 Photography 1, ART 232 Photography 2, ART 233 Digital Imaging, ART 321 Video and Intermedia Art 1, ART 322 Video and Intermedia Art 2, ART 330 Color Photography, ART 331 Photography 3: Studio, ART 332 Photography 4: Special Topics, ART 433 Directions in Photography, ART 434 Advanced Directions in Photography, ART 480 Senior Project in Photography. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Printmaking | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program offers courses of study in four kinds of printmaking: intaglio, lithography, relief, and serigraphy. Courses in these techniques of printmaking present a basic understanding of the media as well as methods to take advantage of the versatility of the processes. Students are expected to go beyond mere technical proficiency and must use the processes effectively to express innovative and personal ideas. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, AFA 231 Introduction of Printmaking, AFA 341 Intaglio Printmaking 1, AFA 351 Lithography 1, AFA 361 Relief Printmaking, AFA 371 Serigraphy 1, AFA 303 Drawing 3, AFA 342 Intaglio Printmaking 2, AFA 352 Lithography 2, AFA 443 Intaglio Printmaking 3, AFA 453 Lithography 3, AFA 493 Senior Project in Printmaking, AFA 217 Watercolor 1, AFA 221 Sculpture 1. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Sculpture | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program encompasses sculpture traditions while teaching contemporary issues. Two faculty members maintain a spacious facility that includes a steel fabrication area, bronze and aluminum foundry, a mould-making facility, an outdoor area for stone carving, and a well-equipped woodworking studio. The program allows the visual art student to find a three-dimensional voice and establish a personal vocabulary unrestricted by material and technical limitations. The program includes a three-dimensional imaging course, metalsmithing courses, ceramic courses, printmaking, and art history taught by Department of Art faculty. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, ACR 211 Ceramics 1, ACR 221 Introduction to Metals, AFA 221 Sculpture 1, AFA 231 Introduction to Printmaking, AFA 322 Sculpture 2, AFA 323 Sculpture: Introduction to Casting, AFA 324 Sculpture: Wood, AFA 325 Sculpture: Casting and Moldmaking, AFA 426 Sculpture: Advanced Problems, AFA 491 Senior Project in Sculpture, ART 311 Animation 1, ACR 312 Ceramics: Throwing 1, ART 231 Photography 1, AFA 361 Relief Printmaking 1. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art - Visual Communication | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program's curriculum develops the student's skills, perceptions, and problem-solving abilities. Visual communication students work with professors to thoughtfully edit and revise their work for presentation and to coalesce their personal growth in creating their unique portfolios. Its maintains a policy of selective enrollment. Admission to the visual communication sequence requires a review at the end of the spring term. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 English Composition 1, ENG 104 English Composition 2, MATHS 125 Mathematics and its Applications, HIST 150 Western Civilization, COMM 210 Fundamentals of Public Communication, ADS 101 Foundations 1, ADS 102 Foundations 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AFA211 Painting 1, ART 100 Art Orientation, ART 200 Introduction to Computer Art, AHS 101 History of Art Survey 1, AHS 102 History of Art Survey 2, ADS 241 Introduction to Visual Communication, ADS 242 Type and Image, ADS 341 Visual Communication 1, ADS 342 Visual Communication 2, ADS 441 Visual Communication 3, ADS 442 Visual Communication 4, ADS 443 Special Topics in Visual Communication, AHS 310 Visual Communication History, ADS 471 Design Practicum, ADS 480 Senior Design Thesis, ART 369 Art Internship, ART 231 Photography 1, AFA 231 Introduction to Printmaking. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Landscape Architecture | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Landscape Architecture | This program teaches students how to apply aesthetic and scientific principles to plan and design the land and outdoor spaces for human use, enjoyment, safety, health, and welfare. Students learn to integrate the work of architects, engineers, planners, ecologists, geographers, and physical and social scientists. Its distinctive blend of hands-on learning, research, and practice enables aspiring professionals to bridge the interests of society and environment, seeking responsive solutions that meet both contemporary human needs and assure the future sustainability of natural systems. The core of the undergraduate landscape architecture curriculum is a sequence of courses in design, design communications, history, environmental systems, site engineering and construction, plant materials, and planting design. Complementary support courses are offered in such subjects as historic landscape preservation, land reclamation, computer-assisted regional analysis and planning, park and recreation planning, and other computer applications. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Site Design (LA 201), Field Study (LA 214), Landscape Architecture History 1 (LA 220), Environmental Systems (LA 270), Park and Open Space Design (LA 202), Landscape Architecture History 2 (LA 221), Computer Applications (LA 280), Housing and Community Design (LA 301), Engineering 1 (LA 311), Landscape Plants 1 (LA 341), Planting Design (LA 302), Engineering 2 (LA 312), Environmental Sciences (BIO 216, NREM 211, NREM 221, or GEOL 207), Regional Design (LA 401), Engineering 3 (LA 413), Internship (LA 369), Urban Design (LA 403), Landscape Architecture Research (LA 451), Internship (LA 369), Landscape Architecture Comprehensive Project (LA 404), Professional Practice (LA 460). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Landscape Architecture | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Landscape Architecture, Architecture Building 226, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1971 | This college has innovative facilities and technology support the diverse learning, research, and service activities that take place daily in Ball State University. In addition to classrooms and conference rooms, the building includes an auditorium, an exhibit gallery, a variety of labs and libraries, and a wireless network. Twenty-five studios provide students with their own personal work space for design and graphics courses. A five-level, glass-walled atrium offers settings for exhibits, special events, and informal meetings in a comfortable lounge atmosphere. The college also maintains satellite facilities in downtown Muncie and Indianapolis for urban design studio work and off-campus educational programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science (B.S.) Degree in Criminal Justice and Criminology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology | This program is designed to inform and prepare the students for advanced study and/or for entry level positions in the field of criminal justice and criminology. Areas with which they will become familiar include criminal law, policing, court procedures, and community based and institutional corrections, its careers include professional positions in probation departments, law enforcement agencies, correctional institutions for juveniles or adults, parole offices or community treatment and service settings. Criminal Justice is an excellent pre-law program for persons planning a career in public law (prosecution, defense, government legal representation). | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: CJC 101 Introduction to the American Criminal Justice System, CJC 102 Introduction to Criminology, CJC 220 Research Methods in Criminal Justice, CJC 221 Data Analysis in Criminal Justice, CJC 230 Introduction to Policing, CJC 240 Introduction to Corrections, CJC 250 Introduction to Courts, CJC 369/479 Professional Experience. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Ball State University, North Quad 248, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5979 | The Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology offers a variety of courses that help students understand the dimensions and causes of crime and delinquency and the theories of crime prevention and control. Courses examine the structure and philosophy of the American criminal justice system; the operation of criminal courts at the local, state, and federal levels; techniques and theories of law enforcement; and the philosophies and practices of various correctional programs. Students are prepared for entry-level professional positions in the criminal justice system as well as for graduate study in related subjects. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Accounting | In this program students will learn all they need to know about accounting, but they can also graduate with knowledge of economics, business law, finance, management, marketing, operations, and information systems. Students may be ready for graduate studies right away or may be they think that sometime down the road would be better. Each year, about 200 Ball State students declare accounting majors in the Miller College of Business. When they graduate, about 40 percent begin their careers with public accounting firms in Indiana, and another 40 percent accept other accounting positions. Many serve as auditors, budget officers, controllers, cost accountants, systems analysts, and tax accountants for private businesses and nonprofit organizations. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ACC 301: Intermediate Accounting 1, ACC 302: Intermediate Accounting 2, ACC 401: Income Tax Accounting, ACC 430: Government and Nonprofit Accounting, ACC 451: Auditing Principles and Practices, BL 363: Uniform Commercial Code Law, FIN 300: Principles of Finance, ISOM 351: Operations Management, MGT 300: Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 491: Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300: Principles of Marketing. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Accounting | Miller College of Business, Department of Accounting, Whitinger Business Building room 303, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5100 | The mission of the Department of Accounting supports the missions of the Miller College of Business and Ball State University by: maintaining separate Association to Advance College Schools of Business (AACSB International) accreditation as evidence of the department's commitment to quality education and continuous improvement; providing high quality accounting education to the department's students with ample opportunities for them to learn to effectively operate in a competitive business environment; making intellectual contributions through a mix of discipline-based, contributions to practice, and learning and pedagogical research that can be applied to the business environment and classroom instruction; maintaining strong ties with the business community, especially the accounting profession; providing strong support of student organizations to foster students' acculturation to the accounting profession; providing responsible service to the accounting profession, the college, the university, and academic organizations. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science in Actuarial Science | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program's graduates find employment with insurance companies (life, health, auto, homeowners, etc.), consulting firms (such as pensions, health care, group benefits), and with governmental units. There are actuarial opportunities worldwide, including most major cities in the US. The majors have the opportunity to intern at actuarial firms, and this often leads to full-time employment after graduation. It is even possible to have an internship after one’s freshman year. Its graduates (actuaries) applies the theory of probability and statistics and the principles of finance to the problems of insurance, pensions, social security, vital statistics, and related fields | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MATHS 155 Intr Act Sci, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 215 Discrete Sys, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 267 Calculus 3, MATHS 320 Probability, MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 351 Math Finance, MATHS 452 Life Cont, CS 120 Comp Sci, RMI 270 Prin R M I, RMI 371 Life/Health, MATHS 355 Top Act Sci, MATHS 362 Numer Anls 1. MATHS 374 Dif Equation, MATHS 428 Reg Time Ser, MATHS 453 Life Cont 2, MATHS 454 Math Invest, MATHS 458 Prac Act, MATHS 465 Comp Tech, ECON 424 Econometrics. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science in Architecture | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | This program's core curriculum is a sequence of courses in design, design communications, architectural history, structures, environmental systems, and building technology. Related electives in architecture and a variety of other disciplines are available. The program culminates with an architectural design capstone project. This program is not open to undergraduate students majoring in environmental design. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: Architectural Design 1 (ARCH 201), Architectural Building Technology 1 (ARCH 214), Structural Systems 1 (ARCH 218), History of Architecture 1 (ARCH 229), Computer Applications (ARCH 263), Architectural Design 2 (ARCH 202), Cultural and Social Issues (ARCH 252), Environmental Systems 1 (ARCH 273), Architectural Design 3 (ARCH 301), Structural Systems 2 (ARCH 318), Environmental Systems 2 (ARCH 373), Architectural Design 4 (ARCH 302), Architectural Building Technology 2 (ARCH 314), History of Architecture 2 (ARCH 329), Architectural Design 5 (ARCH 401), Structural Systems 3 (ARCH 418), Environment and Culture (ARCH 429), Architectural Design 6 (ARCH 402). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture, Architecture Building 402, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1900 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science in Communication Studies - Interpersonal Communication | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | This program is designed to prepare students for careers in business, government, politics, corporate communication, public affairs, not-for-profit enterprises, the media, and for graduate study. The Interpersonal communication option exposes students to a range of courses that aid in understanding effective communication with the department's fellow human beings in personal relationships and small groups. Students will explore subjects such as relational development, nonverbal communication, and conflict management. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: COMM 201 Explore Comm, COMM 220 Argmt Debate, COMM 240 Human Comm, COMM 290 Intercul Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 360 Comm Theory, COMM 375 Presen Comm, COMM 401 Sr Seminar, COMM 330 Grp Dec Mkg, COMM 370 Nonverb Comm, COMM 440 Intpers Comm, COMM 442 Conflict, COMM 465 Comm Inquiry. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies, David Letterman Communication and Media Building Room 351, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1882 | This department was first recognized in the mid-1960s as a separate entity at Ball State, but the beginnings of this type of course work can be found a few decades earlier within the English department. Through its history, the department and its offerings have evolved from a small collection of courses into a vibrant discipline useful to students with wide-ranging career aspirations. It is in the David Letterman Communication and Media Building, packed with advanced technology - the same kind found in communication workplaces - ready to provide the students with hands-on experiences. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science in Communication Studies - Organizational Communication | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | This program is designed to prepare students for careers in business, government, politics, corporate communication, public affairs, not-for-profit enterprises, the media, and for graduate study. The Organizational communication option prepares students to apply communication theory and research in organizational contexts. Students will examine subjects such as business and professional communication, leadership, organizational communication theory, training, and consulting. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: COMM 201 Explore Comm, COMM 220 Argmt Debate, COMM 240 Human Comm, COMM 290 Intercul Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 360 Comm Theory, COMM 375 Presen Comm, COMM 401 Sr Seminar, COMM 251 Bus Prof Com, COMM 351 Commun Organ, COMM 369 Professional, COMM 479 Prac Exper, COMM 441 Iss Org Comm, COMM 452 App Org Comm, COMM 465 Comm Inquiry. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies, David Letterman Communication and Media Building Room 351, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1882 | This department was first recognized in the mid-1960s as a separate entity at Ball State, but the beginnings of this type of course work can be found a few decades earlier within the English department. Through its history, the department and its offerings have evolved from a small collection of courses into a vibrant discipline useful to students with wide-ranging career aspirations. It is in the David Letterman Communication and Media Building, packed with advanced technology - the same kind found in communication workplaces - ready to provide the students with hands-on experiences. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science in Communication Studies - Public Communication | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | This program is designed to prepare students for careers in business, government, politics, corporate communication, public affairs, not-for-profit enterprises, the media, and for graduate study. The Public communication option allows students to explore the principles that account for human communication between speaker and audience. Students will study such subjects as persuasion theory, campaign communication, and effective language use in public and mediated communication. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: COMM 201 Explore Comm, COMM 220 Argmt Debate, COMM 240 Human Comm, COMM 290 Intercul Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 360 Comm Theory, COMM 375 Presen Comm, COMM 401 Sr Seminar, COMM 310 Spchmkg Demo, COMM 322 Comm Pop Cul, COMM 412 Rhetorc Crit, COMM 420 Classic Rhet, COMM 385 Rhet Pub Adv, COMM 404 Polit Comm. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies, David Letterman Communication and Media Building Room 351, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1882 | This department was first recognized in the mid-1960s as a separate entity at Ball State, but the beginnings of this type of course work can be found a few decades earlier within the English department. Through its history, the department and its offerings have evolved from a small collection of courses into a vibrant discipline useful to students with wide-ranging career aspirations. It is in the David Letterman Communication and Media Building, packed with advanced technology - the same kind found in communication workplaces - ready to provide the students with hands-on experiences. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science in Entrepreneurship | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | This program is for the students who want to use their creativity and determination to solve real-world problems for a profit. It prepares the students for every aspect of creating and running their own business. Forty percent of the department's alumni become real-world entrepreneurs. Its other entrepreneurship graduates work for companies that value creative problem-solving and the ability to work under pressure. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. To enter this program students must complete the prerequisite courses with a grade-point average of 2.25. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ECON 201 - Elementary Microeconomics, ENG 103 - English Composition 1, COMM 210 - Fundamentals of Public Communication, SP 101 or other foreign language - Beginning Spanish 1, MATHS 125 - Mathematics and Its Applicationsm, BIO 100 - People and the Life Sciences, SP 102 or other foreign language - Beginning Spanish 2, ACC 201 - Principles of Accounting 1, ECON 202 - Elementary Macroeconomics, BL 260 - Principles of Business Law, ASTRO 100 - Introductory Astronomy: A Study of the Solar System and Beyond, ANTH 101 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, PEFWL 100 - Physical Conditioning, ACC 202 - Principles of Accounting 2, ECON 221 - Business Statistics, ISOM 249 - Foundations of Business Communication, PHIL 100 - Introduction to Philosophy, POLS 293 - International Relations, SP 201 or other foreign language- Intermediate Spanish 1, FIN 300 - Principles of Finance 1, MGT 300 - Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 341 - Introduction to Entrepreneurship, MKG 300 - Principles of Marketing, SOC 228 - Globalization and the Third World, MUHIS 100 - Introduction to Music, MGT 346 - Entrepreneurship, Creativity and Innovation, MGT 361 - Managing Human Resources, ISOM 351 - Operations Management, MGT 369 - Management Internship, MGT 347 - Entrepreneurship Laboratory, MGT 409 - Business Ethics, MGT 443 - Venture Financing, MKG 325 - Professional Selling, MGT 491 - Business Policy and Strategic Management, MGT 441 - Entrepreneurial Consulting, MGT 449 - New Venture Creation. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management, Whitinger Business Building room 100, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Science in Respiratory Therapy | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program prepares students for careers in Respiratory Therapy. The Ball State University program is offered in cooperation with Clarian Health in Indianapolis. The program is divided into two components. The first (General Studies) component is completed on the BSU campus in Muncie, Indiana. The second (Professional Studies) component is offered in Indianapolis at Methodist Hospital with clinical sites throughout Central Indiana. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103- English Composition 1, MATHS 125- Mathematics and Its Applications, CS 104- Introduction to Computers, CHEM 101- General, Organic, and Biochemistry for the Health Sciences, ENG 104- English Composition 2, MATHS 111- Intermediate Algebra, COMM 210- Fundamentals of Public Communication, ANAT 201- Fundamentals of Human Anatomy, PSYSC 100- General Psychology, PHYSL 2105- Human Physiology 1, HIST 150- The West in the World, PSYSC 241- Statistics, PHIL 100- Introduction to Philosophy, BIO 113- Microbiology for the Health Sciences, HSC 160- Fundamentals of Human Health, PHYCS 110- General Physics 1, AHSC 303- Introduction to Human Diseases for Respiratory Therapists, AHSC 311- Cardiorespiratory Physiology, AHSC 315- Cardiorespiratory Assessment and Patient Care, AHSC 325- General Respiratory Care, AHSC 326- Respiratory Care Techniques 1, AHSC 333- Cardiorespiratory Pharmacology 1, AHSC 350- Cardiorespiratory Diseases, AHSC 355- Life Support, AHSC 356- Respiratory Care Techniques 2, AHSC 385- Respiratory Care Practicum 1, AHSC 405- Neonatal - Pediatric Respiratory Care, AHSC 444- Cardiorespiratory Pharmacology 2, AHSC 371- Pulmonary Diagnostics, AHSC 420- Introduction to Research in Respiratory Care, AHSC 451- Cardiorespiratory Monitoring and Special Techniques, AHSC 456- Respiratory Care Practicum 3, AHSC 461- Pulmonary Rehabilitation and Geriatrics, AHSC 430- Management and Leadership for Respiratory Care, AHSC 440- Advanced Cardiac Life Support, AHSC 445- Seminar in Cardiorespiratory Care, AHSC 480- Patient Education Techniques for Respiratory Therapists, AHSC 485- Respiratory Care Practicum 4. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Social Work | This is the most recognized undergraduate degree that prepares the students for immediate entry into professional human-service positions, and makes them eligible to sit for the state licensing exam. The major combines liberal arts and professional social work course work to help them develop the knowledge, values, and skills. All students graduating with an undergraduate degree from Ball State University must earn a minimum of 126 semester hours. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: SOCWK 100 Introduc S W, SOCWK 200 Soc Wk Pra 1, SOCWK 220 So Wel Pol 1, SOCWK 230 Behav Envr 1, SOCWK 300 Soc Wk Pra 2, SOCWK 320 So Wel Pol 2, SOCWK 330 Behav Envr 2, SOCWK 340 Res Soc Wk 1, SOCWK 400 Soc Wk Pra 3, SOCWK 410 Soc Wk Pra 4, SOCWK 440 Res Soc Wk 2, SOCWK 460 Practicum, SOCWK 462 Pract Sem, PSYSC 100 General, PSYSC 367 Intro Biopsy, BIO 254 Bio Soc Cont, SOC 242 Problems, SOC 100 Principles, ANTH 311 Ethnicity, SOC 421 Minorities, EDMUL 205 Multi Educ, SOC 235 Women, PSYSC 324 Psych Women, ANTH 341 Anth Women, WMNST 210 W S Intro, SOCWK 370 Asp S W Pra. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Social Work | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Social Work, AR 227, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1016 | This department is located in the Fine Arts Building, that also houses the university's Art Museum and the Geology department, the social work office is in room 227 on the second floor. Classes are, for the most part, held on the second floor of the building where a Social Work computer lab is also located. There are eight full time faculty and two adjuncts teaching in the program. All faculty hold advanced social work degrees and have many years of practice experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor of Urban Planning and Development | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning | This program combines physical and policy approaches, and it teaches students to improve the design quality of constructed environments while protecting and managing the resources of natural environments. Students also learn the process of community and economic development as applied to small towns and rural areas as well as urban neighborhoods. The core of the undergraduate urban planning curriculum is a sequence of courses in history and theory of planning, presentation techniques, private development, quantitative methods, planning law, and planning issues, coupled with a sequence of planning studios. The core also includes a block of required courses offered outside CAP in the economics, political science, sociology, natural resources, and geography departments. In the third and fourth years, students take elective courses enhancing their particular interests, including land use, housing, transportation, neighborhood or central-city revitalization, environment, energy, or infrastructure. The program culminates with a comprehensive planning field studio. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Site Planning and Design Studio (PLAN 202), History and Theory of Planning 1 (PLAN 220), Communication and Presentation Techniques (PLAN 261), Microeconomics (ECON 201), State and Local Politics (POLS 237), Regional Analysis and Design Studio (PLAN 203), History and Theory of Planning 2 (PLAN 221), Planning and Private Development (PLAN 240), Urban and Neighborhood Analysis Studio (PLAN 302), Quantitative Methods for Urban Planning (PLAN 320), Urban Geography (GEOG 321) or Urban Economics (ECON 485), Politics and Administration of Local Government Budgets (POLS 454) or The Economics of Government Budgets (ECON 345), Economic Development Studio (PLAN 303), Environment and Society (NREM 101), Internship (PLAN 369), Field Studio (PLAN 401), Planning Law (PLAN 452). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning, Architecture Building 327, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1963 | This college has innovative facilities and technology support the diverse learning, research, and service activities that take place daily in Ball State University. In addition to classrooms and conference rooms, the building includes an auditorium, an exhibit gallery, a variety of labs and libraries, and a wireless network. Twenty-five studios provide students with their own personal work space for design and graphics courses. A five-level, glass-walled atrium offers settings for exhibits, special events, and informal meetings in a comfortable lounge atmosphere. The college also maintains satellite facilities in downtown Muncie and Indianapolis for urban design studio work and off-campus educational programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Advertising | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | This program's overall mission is to prepare students both theoretically and practically, and that's what the advertising program is all about. Students are ready to enter the competitive business world with all of the skills, knowledge, and confidence that they need to land a job, make immediate contributions, and grow within the profession. They will find rich opportunities for hands-on experience throughout the comprehensive program, will take at least 48 credit hours of fundamental advertising and marketing courses that will equip them for advanced and specialized advertising options. It's more than just print or broadcast advertising - product development, branding, packaging, promotion, online design. It can involve copywriting, art direction, graphic design, marketing, media planning and buying, research, and production. Above all, careers in advertising are about creativity, the confidence to hatch ideas, and the knowledge to make them viable. Not surprising, preparing for advertising careers involves much more than just textbook work. At Ball State, it means students will be working in teams on practical projects and branching outside of the classroom to explore such opportunities as the student-led advertising/public relations agency, Cardinal Communications. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: JOURN 10 Mass Comm, JOURN 102 Info Gather, JOURN 103 Vis Comm Prs, JOURN 104 J Wrt Pr Adv, JOURN 250 Intro Advert, JOURN 169 Prof Dev Sem, JOURN 325 Media Law, JOURN 352 Advrt Media, JOURN 354 Advrt Copy, JOURN 382 Resrch Strat, JOURN 456 Adver Campns, ECON 201 Elem Micro, ECON 247 Econ-Media, MKG 300 Prin Market, PSYSC 100 General, SOC 100 Principles, JOURN 342 New Media, ECON 355 Advert Brand, ECON 452 Adv Media, ECON 453 Int Campaign, ECON 454 Advert Sem, ECON 455 Advance Copy, JOURN 369 Internship, ANTH 111 Global Div, COMM 290 Intercul Com, EDMUL 205 Multi Educ, POLS 474 Women Poltcs, SOC 235 Women, SOC 421 Minorities, SOC 422 Trends, WMNST 314 Ws Symp Comm. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - Aquatic Biology and Fisheries | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | In this program students will learn to promote the protection and restoration of water quality, the management of freshwater environments, and the recreational and sport-fishing use of lakes and streams. Students will also discover the importance of furthering cooperation among industry, agriculture, and the public, which is necessary to achieve individual and mutual goals. The program has prepared its alumni to work in management and research positions for governmental and private organizations. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Bio 210 Intro Botany, Bio 214 Genetics, Bio 215 Cell Biology, Bio 216 Ecology, Bio 217 Ecology Methods, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Chem 231 Organic Chemistry, Phycs 110 General Physics, Maths 161 Applied Calculus, Bio 448 Biometry, Bio 480 Limnology, Bot 481 Aquatic Botany, Zool 465 Fishery Resource Management, Zool 432 Invertebrate Zoology, Zool 444 Ichthyology, Zool 484 Aquatic Entomology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - Cellular and Molecular Biology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This option allows students to explore basic molecular interactions that both drive and regulate cellular processes by studying model systems in animal, plant, fungal, and bacterial cells. It also prepares them for advanced graduate studies, attaining professional degrees, or working in industry. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Bio 210 Intro to Botany, Bio 214 Genetics, Bio 215 Cell Biology, Bio 216 Ecology, Bio 217 Ecology Methods, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Chem 231 Organic Chemistry, Phycs 110 General Physics 1, Maths 111 or 161 Applied Calculus, Bio 457 Molecular Biology, Bio 498 Undergraduate Research or Biot 490 Introduction to Recombinant DNA and RNA Techniques, Chem 360 Essentials in Biochemistry or Chem 463 Principles of Biochemistry 1, Chem 465 Biochemistry Lab, Bio 213 Microbiology, Bio 344 Immunology-Virology, Bio 369 Internship in Biology, Bio 394 Practicum in Biology, Bio 456 Cancer Biology, Bio 470 Developmental Biology, Bio 498 Research, Bot 451 Plant Physiology, Chem 464 Principles of Biochemistry. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - Ecology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | In this program students will study the three conceptual levels of ecological organization: populations, communities, ecosystems. In addition, they will explore basic analytical and taxonomic skills required for entry-level positions or graduate studies. Graduates will be prepared for careers with environmental consulting firms, environmental divisions in industrial companies, governmental environmental regulatory agencies, governmental natural resource management agencies including state and national parks. Many students who pursue advanced studies at the graduate level may also find careers in education at colleges and universities. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Bio 210 Intro to Botany, Bio 214 Genetics, Bio 215 Cell Biology, Bio 216 Ecology, Bio 217 Ecology Methods, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Chem 231 Organic Chemistry, Phycs 110 General Physics 1, Maths 111 or 161 Applied Calculus 1, Bio 416 Population Ecology, Bio 418 Comm. and Ecosystem Ecology, Bio 448 Biometry, Bio 480 Limnology, Bio 482 Aquatic Microbiology, Bio 483 Marine Biology, Bot 380 Forestry, Bot 440 Taxonomy of Vascular Plants, Bot 470 Dendrology, Bot 481 Aquatic Biology, Zool 432 Invertebrate Zoology, Zool 440 Ornithology, Zool 441 Entomology, Zool 444 Ichthyology, Zool 446 Mammalogy, Zool 484 Aquatic Entomology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - Field Botany | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | In this program, students will study plants as well as fungi and algae to gain a strong understanding of the field. In addition to traditional classroom experiences, they will also find many opportunities for practical experiences through participation in faculty-directed research, internships, or career-related summer employment. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Bio 210 Intro to Botany, Bio 214 Genetics, Bio 215 Cell Biology, Bio 216 Ecology, Bio 217 Ecology Methods, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Chem 231 Organic Chemistry, Phycs 110 General Physics 1, Maths 161 Applied Calculus 1, Bot 440 Taxonomy of Vascular Plants, Bot 481 Aquatic Botany, Bot 460 Plants and Their Allies, Bot 480 Plant Ecology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - General Biology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program gives the opportunity to students to choose from a wide variety of courses in the life sciences and related fields allowing them to customize the degree. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - Genetics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program features a rigorous curriculum taught by top-notch professors, and students will have hands-on research opportunities. Students will gain a broad understanding of genetics, preparing them for an entry-level position or graduate studies. As a genetics graduates, student will be qualified for careers in: medicine, genetic counseling, university research and teaching, biotechnology, science-related industry fields. Graduates will also be prepared to pursue a postgraduate degree including: master of science (MS), doctor of medicine (MD), doctor of philosophy (PhD), combined medical-science doctorate (MD/PhD). Its alumni enjoy successful careers in many areas of genetics, medicine, biotechnology, and pharmaceutical research and sales. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Bio 210 Intro to Botany, Bio 214 Genetics, Bio 215 Cell Biology, Bio 216 Ecology, Bio 217 Ecology Methods, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Chem 231 Organic Chemistry, Phycs 110 General Physics 1, Maths 111 or 161 Applied Calculus 1, Bio 448 Biometry, Bio 452 Advanced Genetics, Bio 453 Human Genetics, Bio 457 Molecular Biology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - Microbiology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | In this program, students will learn about the variety, classification, and biochemistry of microorganisms as they relate to the medical and applied fields of microbiology, immunology, and molecular biology. They will also study the interactions of microorganisms with their surroundings and hosts as well as the hosts' responses to combat infection. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Bio 210 Intro to Botany, Bio 214 Genetics, Bio 215 Cell Biology, Bio 216 Ecology, Bio 217 Ecology Methods, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Chem 231 Organic Chemistry, Phycs 110 General Physics 1, Maths 111 or 161 Applied Calculus 1, Bio 313 Microbiology, Bio 341 Pathogenic Bacteriology, Bio 344 Immunology-Virology, Bio 446 Applied Microbiology, Bot 446 Medical Mycology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - Wildlife Biology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This option is a great opportunity for students to study wild animals, their habitat, and their management. They will develop a strong background in ecology and conservation. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Bio 210 Intro to Botany, Bio 214 Genetics, Bio 215 Cell Biology, Bio 216 Ecology, Bio 217 Ecology Methods, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Chem 231 Organic Chemistry, Phycs 110 General Physics 1, Maths 111 or 161 Applied Calculus 1, Bio 448 Biometry, Bot 380 Forestry, Bot 440 Taxonomy of Vascular Plants, Bot 470 Dendrology or Bot 481 Aquatic Botany, Zool 440 Ornithology, Zool 446 Mammalogy, Zool 483 Wildlife Biology, NREM 221 Soil Resources. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Biology - Zoology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program's curriculum provides a basic understanding of biology, chemistry, and physics courses crucial to student's education in animal biology, and they may get research opportunities. Zoology students are prepared to either enter a job in the zoology field immediately after graduation or apply for graduate programs. Careers in zoology span a tremendous range of biological sub-disciplines, from systematics and taxonomy to physiology and biochemistry to ecology and behavior - all connected by the subject of study: animals. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Bio 210 Intro to Botany, Bio 214 Genetics, Bio 215 Cell Biology, Bio 216 Ecology, Bio 217 Ecology Methods, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Chem 231 Organic Chemistry, Phycs 110 General Physics 1, Maths 111 or 161 Applied Calculus 1, Zool 330 Structure and Development of Vertebrates, Zool 432 Invertebrate Zoology, Bio 448 Biometry, Chem 360 Essentials of Biochemistry, Zool 347 Animal Parasitology, Zool 440 Ornithology, Zool 441 Entomology, Zool 444 Ichthyology, Zool 445 Herpetology, Zool 446 Mammalogy, Zool 484 Aquatic Entomology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | In this program students can build their own curriculum from each of the five departments in the Miller College of Business, it opens up a channel for student's learning by choosing classes from managing financial resources, understanding the marketplace, and organizational processes. Among the possibilities awaiting graduates are jobs as management trainees and administrative services manager roles in such areas as: banking, financial services, sales, accounting, advertising, customer service. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. To enter this program students must complete the prerequisite courses with a grade-point average of 2.25. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: FIN 300: Principles of Finance 1, FIN 352: International Finance, ISOM 351: Operations Management, MGT 300: Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 491: Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300: Principles of Marketing, MKG 320: Advertising Management, ACC 401: Introduction to Taxation, RMI 377: Operations of Insurance Enterprises, ECON 485: Urban Economics. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management, Whitinger Business Building room 100, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Business and Marketing Education | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | In this program students have to complete specific requirements for the Teachers College in order to meet certification requirements and for the Miller College of Business to obtain business and marketing content. The program includes field experiences and student teaching in Indiana public schools. The Indiana Professional Standards Board oversees teacher licensing, and candidates meet requirements of Ball State and the state of Indiana for teacher certification. Business and marketing educators play a crucial role in providing high school and other students a solid foundation for later education and successful careers in business. Graduates can be found on the faculty at a wide range of institutions, including: middle schools, high schools, career centers, adult education programs, community/junior colleges, other educational facilities. Students have to choose one option from business education, business career technical education, marketing career technical education options. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. To enter this program students must complete the prerequisite courses with a grade-point average of 2.25. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management, Whitinger Business Building room 203, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5300 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Career and Technical Education | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | This program prepares the students to teach in career and technical programs in high schools, area career and technical education centers, and other technical institutions. They will take courses in their major as well as in technology, manufacturing, and computer programming, will also take courses in teacher education and educational methods. Graduates of the program are prepared to teach in career and technical programs in high schools, area career and technical education centers, and other technical institutions. Career and technical education teachers may serve as trade or occupational teachers or as instructors of related subjects. Teachers may also train apprentices or workers who attend part-time or during evening classes. By completing additional course work, career and technical education teachers may become certified as cooperative career and technical education coordinators. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ITEDU 290 - Career and Technical Student Organizations, ITEDU 292 - Principles and Philosophy of Career and Technical Education, ITEDU 390 - Trade and Occupational Analysis, ITEDU 490 - Study in Technology, ITEDU 492 - Organization and Coordination of Career and Technical Education, ITMFG 161 - Introduction to Manufacturing Industries, CS 116 - Visual Programming. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology, AT 131, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5642 | The mission of the College of Applied Sciences and Technology is to enhance the quality and, when appropriate, the quantity of the educational and creative opportunities available through the departments of the college to students, faculty, and the broader community. This mission is carried out through teaching, research and creative activity, and public service. Teaching, the primary emphasis of the college, is designed both to prepare students for professions and to maximize students' cultural, intellectual, and fitness/wellness potential. The departments form a well-integrated teaching-learning community that emphasizes learning by doing, as well as learning through stimulating classroom/laboratory experiences and international exchange programs. Research and creative activity are encouraged and seen as inseparable from effective teaching. The college has a long history of serving a diverse cross-section of the public through wellness and nutrition programs, vocational and technological programs, the Adult Fitness Program, and the Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology. In order to assist students in pursuing their maximum potential, the college supports current and future University Core Curriculum programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Chemistry - Biochemistry Option | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: CHEM 111 General Chemistry 1, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, CHEM 112 General Chemistry 2, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, BIO 111 Principles of Biology, CHEM 231 Organic Chemistry 1, CHEM 225 Chemical Analysis, PHYCS 110 General Physics 1, CHEM 232 Organic Chemistry 2, PHYCS 112 General Physics 2, CHEM 344 Physical Chemistry 1, CHEM 400 Chemical Communications, CHEM 345 Physical Chemistry 2, BIO 215 Cell Biology, CHEM 463 Principles of Biochemistry 1, CHEM 465 Biochemistry Lab Techiniques, CHEM 464 Principles of Biochemistry, BIO 457 Molecular Biology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Chemistry - Major Approved by American Chemical Society | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program provides intense training to students that will prepare them for graduate study or careers in chemistry. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: CHEM 111 General Chemistry 1, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, CHEM 112 General Chemistry 2, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, CHEM 231 Organic Chemistry 1, CHEM 225 Chemical Analysis, PHYCS 110 General Physics 1, CHEM 232 Organic Chemistry 2, PHYCS 112 General Physics 2, CHEM 344 Physical Chemistry 1, CHEM 400 Chemical Communications, CHEM 345 Physical Chemistry 2, CHEM 463 Principles of Biochemistry 1, CHEM 465 Biochemistry Lab Techniques, CHEM 420 Chemical Instrumentation 1, or CHEM 450 Inorganic Chemistry. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | This program deals with the study of the theoretical foundations and practical applications of computers. Mathematics and the scientific method are powerful tools for understanding the potential of modern computers. This majors start by learning programming skills, but computer science is much more than programming. Programming is one of the tools that a computer scientist uses to solve problems. The Computer Science option of the Computer Science major follows international curriculum recommendations for computer science. It provides a balance of theoretical foundations with practical applications. A student who chooses this option may choose to enter the high-tech workforce or to pursue graduate education in computer science. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: CS 120 Comp Sci 1, CS 121 Comp Sci 2, CS 124 Discr Struct, CS 230 Org Arch 1, CS 232 Data Struct, CS 324 Dsg Ana Algo, CS 335 Prog Lang, CS 427 Networks, CS 436 Database Dgn, CS 470 Thy Cmptn 1, CS 476 Op Systems, CS 497 Soft Eng 1, CS 498 Soft Eng 2, MATHS 161 Appl Calc 1, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 162 Appl Calc 2, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 221 Pbty Stats, ECON 221 Bus Stats, CS 310 Web Prog, CS 315 Game Prog, CS 330 Org Aarch 2, CS 334 Network DB, CS 339 Seminar. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science, RB 455, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8641 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science - Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | This option is designed for those who wish to study the applications of computer science to modern business information systems. Students get a foundation in theory but focus on implementing practical and usable software systems. A student who graduates with this option is ready to enter the high-tech workforce. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: CS 120 Comp Sci 1, CS 121 Comp Sci 2, CS 124 Discr Struct, CS 230 Org Arch 1, CS 232 Data Struct, CS 324 Dsg Ana Algo, CS 330 Org Arch 2, CS 334 Network Db, CS 427 Networks, CS 476 Op Systems, CS 497 Soft Eng 1, CS 498 Soft Eng 2, MATHS 161 Appl Calc 1, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 62 Appl Calc 2, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 221 Pbty Stats, ECON 221 Bus Stats, ISOM 135 Bus I S, CS 335 Prog Lang, CS 339 Seminar, CS 345 G U I, CS 347 Net Security, CS 397 N-Tier Arch, CS 430 System Prog, ISOM 300 Proj Mgt, ISOM 415 Inf Sys Mgt, ISOM 430 Ent Rs Pln 1, ISOM 431 Ent Rs Pln. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science, RB 455, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8641 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Dance | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | This program is designed to prepare talented students for a career in performance, choreography, or studio teaching or for advanced training in a quality graduate school or conservatory. This program combines concentrated study in dance technique with required courses in theatre and liberal arts. Additional course work is available to gain experience in teaching studio classes, technical theatre, and research. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: DANCE 210: Ballet 3, DANCE 211: Ballet 4, DANCE 220: Modern 3, DANCE 221: Modern 4, DANCE 230: Jazz 2, DANCE 242: Ethnic Styles, DANCE 287: Choreography 1, DANCE 301: Dance History 1, DANCE 302: Dance History 2, DANCE 310: Ballet 5, DANCE 311: Ballet 6, DANCE 315: Partnering, DANCE 320: Modern 5, DANCE 321: Modern 6, DANCE 380: Dance Production, DANCE 487: Choreography 2, DANCE 489: Dance Practicum, DANCE 490: Creative Project, THEAT 107: Design and Tech Awareness in Theatre and Dance, THEAT 223: Theatrical Costuming, THEAT 232: Acting 1, THEAT 270: Basic Musicianship, DANCE 131: Musical Theatre Tap, DANCE 231: Tap 2, DANCE 281: Dance Theatre, DANCE 489: Dance Practicum, DANCE 232: Musical Theatre Dance Styles, DANCE 242: Clogging/Ethnic Styles, DANCE 330: Jazz 3, DANCE 332: Advanced Musical Theatre Dance, DANCE 380: Dance Production, DANCE 488: Dance Pedagogy, DANCE 489: Dance Practicum, DANCE 496: Directed Study in Dance, THEAT 102: Computers in Theatre and Dance, THEAT 318: Adv Topics in Theatre. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8740 | This department's programs are supported by quality facilities on campus that provide diverse performance venues and contemporary learning environments for students. Its 410-seat main stage theatre has state-of-the-art technical equipment, including a completely computerized lighting system and acoustically sophisticated recording and reproduction sound systems. This facility hosts the department's Main stage Subscription Series, which features four theatre productions and two dance concerts each year. Cave Theatre is a small laboratory theatre in the Arts and Communications Building is used for classes and student workshop productions. The department has a design lab, sound recording studio, makeup room, and performance studies classroom in the Arts and Communications Building. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Earth Science | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | This program aims to broaden the intellectual horizons of students who have related interests, want to pursue double majors, or do not want to enter the geological profession directly. In this program students will learn how risk is managed by individuals and businesses; about life and health insurance, personal insurance, commercial insurance, insurance law, and risk management. More than 2.5 million people in the United States have found awesome careers in the insurance industry. This work is challenging yet satisfying. The insurance industry is thriving as the population ages, wealth grows, and opportunities for risk management increase. Working in insurance involves helping individuals and business manage risk to protect themselves from catastrophic losses and to anticipate potential risk problems. This area is not only personally rewarding but can be financially rewarding as well. Its graduates include geologist, ground water hydrogeologist, professional consultant, teacher (earth/space science), professor, engineering geologist, resource manager, environmental scientist, petroleum geologist, and GIS mapping specialist. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: GEOL 102 - Earth, Life, and Time, GEOL 207 - Environmental Geology - Geological/Geochemical Cycles, GEOL 220 - Earth Materials, GEOL 240 - Geomorphology, GEOL 290 - Computer Applications in the Geosciences, GEOL 308 - Invertebrate Paleontology, GEOL 310 - Petrology, GEOL 315 - Structural Geology, Tectonics and Basic Field Methods, GEOL 383 - Geology Field Camp, GEOL 420 - Geological and Physical Oceanography, GEOL 460 - Hydrogeology, GEOG 230 - Elementary Meteorology, NREM 221 - Soil Resources, CHEM 111 - General Chemistry 1, GEOL 409 - Micropaleontology, GEOL 410 - Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology, GEOL 412 - Sedimentary Petrology, GEOL 416 - Engineering Geology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences, Ball State University, Fine Arts Building (AR) room 117, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8270 | This department's classes are small, which means students get more one-on-one time with professors and a stronger bond with their fellow classmates. Its faculties are knowledgeable about geology and its subfields including minerals, igneous and metamorphic rock, fossils, and petroleum. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Economics - Business | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics | This program is a foundation for a master of business administration (MBA). Choose this track to receive preparation for a life in business, including finance, management, or marketing. Students will need 126 hours total to complete the program. The careers open to an economics major wind throughout the business world and well beyond. The study of economics provides a solid foundation for success in a wide variety of careers - including business, government, law, education, and the nonprofit sector. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ACC 201 Prin Acct 1, ACC 202 Prin Acct 2, BL 260 Prin Bus Law, ECON 201 Elem Micro, ECON 202 Elem Macro, ECON 221 Bus Stats, FIN 300 Prin Fin, ISOM 135 Bus I, ISOM 249 Fnds Bus Com, ISOM 351 Op Mgt, MGT 300 Mgt Beh Org, MGT 491 Policy Strat, MKG 300 Prin Market, ECON 301 Intrmd Micro, ECON 302 Intrmd Macro, ACC 301 Inter Acct 1, ACC 302 Inter Acct 2. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics, Whitinger Business Building room 201, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5360 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Economics - Financial Analyst | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics | This program is interested in being a financial investment professional and pursuing certification as a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA). CFA certification is the global standard for measuring portfolio management and investment analysis competence and integrity. Students need 126 hours total to complete the program. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ACC 201 Prin Acct 1, ACC 202 Prin Acct 2, BL 260 Prin Bus Law, ECON 201 Elem Micro, ECON 202 Elem Macro, ECON 221 Bus Stats, FIN 300 Prin Fin 1, ISOM 135 Bus I, ISOM 249 Fnds Bus Com, ISOM 351 Op Mgt, MGT 300 Mgt Beh Org, MGT 491 Policy Strat, MKG 300 Prin Market, ACC 301 Inter Acct 1, ACC 302 Inter Acct 2, ECON 301 Intrmd Micro, ECON 302 Intrmd Macro, ECON 441 Monetary Pol, FIN 301 Prin Fin 2, FIN 310 Invest 1, FIN 410 Invest 2, ECON 351 Internat Eco, ECON 369 Internship, ECON 424 Econometrics, ACC 430 Govt N F P, ACC 440 Adv Fin Acc, FIN 353 Shrt Trm Fin, FIN 367 Prac Fin, FIN 445 Fin Stmt. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics, Whitinger Business Building room 201, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5360 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Economics - Liberal Arts | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics | This program provides students with fundamental and essential knowledge in economics. This track is a great path toward advanced economics or business degrees, or a law degree. If the student choose the liberal arts option, they are not required to take all of the core business courses. The liberal arts option offers three areas of concentration: general economics is perfect if the students is interested in learning more about economics and you may want to pursue a career as an economist; take economics and law to prepare for law school. Pre-law students may find a double major in economics and political science very useful; the financial economics concentration is for students who are interested in both economics and finance. This concentration is a good choice for those who want to pursue an advanced degree in economics and business and is also for those seeking a double major in economics and mathematical sciences or actuarial science. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ECON 201 Elem Micro, ECON 202 Elem Macro, ECON 301 Intrmd Micro, ECON 302 Intrmd Macro, ECON 221 Bus Stats, MATHS 321 Math Stat (4), ACC 201 Prin Acct 1, ACC 202 Prin Acct 2, FIN 300 Prin Fin 1, FIN 320 Fin Mkt, POLS 130 Amer Nat Gov, PHIL 200 Logic, ECON 346 Law Econ, ECON 310 Am Ec Hist 2, ECON 311 Environ Econ, ECON 331 Labor Econ, ECON 332 Labr Rel Law, ECON 345 Gov Budgets, ECON 351 Internat Eco, ECON 370 Indust Organ, BL 260 Prin Bus Law, BL 363 Uni Cod Law, CJC 250 Intro Courts, CJC 350 Crimnl Evdnc, CJC 351 Criminal Law, POLS 210 Pol Sci Res, POLS 340 Law Enforcmt, POLS 347 Env Law Poly, POLS 443 Am Const Law, POLS 444 Const Libert, POLS 455 Administ Law, ECON 424 Econometrics, MATHS 428 Reg Time Ser, ACC 201 Prin Acct 1, ACC 202 Prin Acct 2, ACC 301 Inter Acct 1, FIN 300 Bus Fin 1, FIN 310 Invest 1, MATHS 454 Math Invest, ECON 441 Monetary Pol, ACC 302 Inter Acct 2, FIN 301 Prin Fin 2, FIN 410 Invest. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics, Whitinger Business Building room 201, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5360 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Elementary Education-Special Education, Exceptional Needs | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | This program prepares students to teach in today's diverse and inclusive classrooms. Graduates of the program are highly skilled teachers who can work with both general education students and with students who require mild interventions to be successful. They will take courses in methods and education and complete a multiple placement student teaching experience. The dual program requires 137 credit hours for graduation and leads to certification in both elementary education and mild interventions at the elementary grade levels. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: EDEL 200 Plan Elem, EDEL 300 Elem Instruc, EDEL 350 Tchg El Clsr, EDEL 455 Sr Sem Educ, EDEL 464 St Tch Elem, EDRDG 400 Rd Today Sch, EDRDG 430 Correctv Rdg, SPCED 201 Int Ex Needs, SPCED 202 Legal Pro Fd, SPCED 361 Adv Prac (1-9), SPCED 331 Micro Sp Ed (1-4), EDFON 420 Fnds of Educ, EDPSY 260 Dev Elem Ed, EDPSY 393 Ed Psy El Ed, ENG 204 Children Lit, ENG 311 L Arts Meth, HSC 350 El S Hlth Pg, MATHS 202 Dat Geo Meas, MATHS 391 Tch Math El, SCI 397 Tch Sci Elem, SPAA 270 Lang Develop, SS 397 Tch S S Elem. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Finance - Business Finance | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance | In this program students learn how to face the uncertainties of the market with powerful problem-solving skills in corporate finance, management of financial institutions, security analysis and portfolio management, and personal financial planning, can build their confidence about the role of risky assets in a portfolio, ability to value them, and the role of financial markets. This program will prepare the students for a wide range of career opportunities. Finance occupations generally involve gathering financial information, analyzing information, and making recommendations. Finance professionals work with individuals as financial planners, with large and small businesses as financial analysts and decision makers, and with financial services firms in providing services to individuals and businesses. Its graduates have the tools to excel in the workplace and have the potential for quick advancement, prepares to work in diverse employment situations or initiate entrepreneurial ventures. The program's graduates go on to positions in a wide variety of businesses, including banking securities, real estate, insurance, manufacturing, services, and local and federal government. Other positions for finance graduates include: corporate finance, equity research and sales, credit analyst, debt and structured finance, wealth and asset management, financial and cost control, risk management. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ACC 201 Principles of Accounting 1, ACC 202 Principles of Accounting 2, BL 260 Principles of Business Law, ECON 201 Elementary Microeconomics, ECON 202 Elementary Macroeconomics, ECON 221 Business Statistics, FIN 300 Principles of Finance, ISOM 135 Business Information Systems, ISOM 249 Fundamentals of Business Communications, ISOM 351 Operations Management, MGT 300 Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 491 Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300 Principles of Marketing, FIN 301: Principles of Finance, FIN 310: Principles of Investments, FIN 320: Financial Markets, FIN 410: Principles of Investments, FIN 420: Financial Markets, FIN 490: Decision Making in Finance, FIN 352: International Finance, FIN 353: Short-Term Financial Management, FIN 445: Financial Statement Analysis, FIN 367: Practicum in Finance, FIN 369: Internship in Finance, FIN 497: Independent Study in Finance. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance, Whitinger Business Building room 301, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | This department opens doors to two distinct career paths essential to the business of creating, managing, and protecting wealth. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Finance - Financial Analysis | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance | In this program students learn how to face the uncertainties of the market with powerful problem-solving skills in corporate finance, management of financial institutions, security analysis and portfolio management, and personal financial planning, can build their confidence about the role of risky assets in a portfolio, ability to value them, and the role of financial markets. This program will prepare the students for a wide range of career opportunities. Finance occupations generally involve gathering financial information, analyzing information, and making recommendations. Finance professionals work with individuals as financial planners, with large and small businesses as financial analysts and decision makers, and with financial services firms in providing services to individuals and businesses. Its graduates have the tools to excel in the workplace and have the potential for quick advancement, prepares to work in diverse employment situations or initiate entrepreneurial ventures. The program's graduates go on to positions in a wide variety of businesses, including banking securities, real estate, insurance, manufacturing, services, and local and federal government. Other positions for finance graduates include: corporate finance, equity research and sales, credit analyst, debt and structured finance, wealth and asset management, financial and cost control, risk management. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ACC 201 Principles of Accounting 1, ACC 202 Principles of Accounting 2, BL 260 Principles of Business Law, ECON 201 Elementary Microeconomics, ECON 202 Elementary Macroeconomics, ECON 221 Business Statistics, FIN 300 Principles of Finance, ISOM 135 Business Information Systems, ISOM 249 Fundamentals of Business Communications, ISOM 351 Operations Management, MGT 300 Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 491 Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300 Principles of Marketing, FIN 301: Principles of Finance, FIN 310: Principles of Investments, FIN 320: Financial Markets, FIN 410: Principles of Investmentsm, FIN 420: Financial Markets, FIN 490: Decision Making in Finance, FIN 445: Financial Statement Analysis. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance, Whitinger Business Building room 301, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | This department opens doors to two distinct career paths essential to the business of creating, managing, and protecting wealth. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Finance - Financial Planning and Investments | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance | In this program students learn how to face the uncertainties of the market with powerful problem-solving skills in corporate finance, management of financial institutions, security analysis and portfolio management, and personal financial planning, can build their confidence about the role of risky assets in a portfolio, ability to value them, and the role of financial markets. This program will prepare the students for a wide range of career opportunities. Finance occupations generally involve gathering financial information, analyzing information, and making recommendations. Finance professionals work with individuals as financial planners, with large and small businesses as financial analysts and decision makers, and with financial services firms in providing services to individuals and businesses. Its graduates have the tools to excel in the workplace and have the potential for quick advancement, prepares to work in diverse employment situations or initiate entrepreneurial ventures. The program's graduates go on to positions in a wide variety of businesses, including banking securities, real estate, insurance, manufacturing, services, and local and federal government. Other positions for finance graduates include: corporate finance, equity research and sales, credit analyst, debt and structured finance, wealth and asset management, financial and cost control, risk management. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ACC 201 Principles of Accounting 1, ACC 202 Principles of Accounting 2, BL 260 Principles of Business Law, ECON 201 Elementary Microeconomics, ECON 202 Elementary Macroeconomics, ECON 221 Business Statistics, FIN 300 Principles of Finance, ISOM 135 Business Information Systems, ISOM 249 Fundamentals of Business Communications, ISOM 351 Operations Management, MGT 300 Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 491 Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300 Principles of Marketing, FIN 301: Principles of Finance, FIN 310: Principles of Investments, FIN 320: Financial Markets, FIN 410: Principles of Investmentsm, FIN 420: Financial Markets, FIN 490: Decision Making in Finance, ACC 401: Introduction to Taxation, BL 367: Estate Planning and Administration, RMI 270: Principles of Risk Management and Insurance, RMI 330: Employee Benefits and Retirement Planning, FIN 367: Practicum in Finance, FIN 369: Internship in Finance. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance, Whitinger Business Building room 301, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | This department opens doors to two distinct career paths essential to the business of creating, managing, and protecting wealth. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Geography - Comprehensive Geography | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | This option is attractive to students desiring a broad education in either or both human and physical geography. Many of this option students elect to continue their studies at the graduate level. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: GEOG 101 Earth, Sea, and Sky: A Geographic View, GEOG 120 Economic Geography and Contemporary Issues, GEOG 121 Geography of the Cultural Environment, GEOG 150 Global Geography, GEOG 230 Elementary Meteorology, GEOG 240 Map Reading and Interpretation, GEOG 250 Spatial Analytical Methods in Geography, GEOG 265 Introduction to GIS, GEOG 340 Cartography and Graphics 1, GEOG 342 Remote Sensing 1, GEOG 440 Advanced Physical Geography, GEOG 470 World Political Geography, GEOG 330 Weather Analysis, GEOG 331 Global Climatology, GEOG 344 Advanced GIS Analysis, GEOG 450 Severe Local Storms, GEOG 261 Tourism Systems, GEOG 320 Ethnic Geography, GEOG 321 Urban Geography, GEOG 423 Population Geography, GEOG 350 Geography of the United States and Canada, GEOG 351 Geography of Latin America and the Caribbean, GEOG 352 Geography of Africa, GEOG 354 Geography of Asia, GEOG 356 Geography of Russia and Its Neighbors, GEOG 357 Geography of Europe. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography, Cooper Life Science Building, Room CL 425, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1776 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge, the students shoudl be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Geography - Geographic Information Science (GIS) | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | In this program students learn how to visualize information in ways that reveal relationships, patterns, and trends by using computer software for cartography (the art and science of making maps), remote sensing (provides a means to capture visual and digital information about the earth through airborne cameras and advanced electronic sensors), and GIS, which is a set of computer tools for analyzing spatial data. In this program students learn how to visualize information in ways that reveal relationships, patterns, and trends by using computer software for cartography (the art and science of making maps), remote sensing (provides a means to capture visual and digital information about the earth through airborne cameras and advanced electronic sensors), and GIS, which is a set of computer tools for analyzing spatial data. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: GEOG 101 Earth, Sea, and Sky: A Geographic View, GEOG 150 Global Geography, GEOG 240 Map Reading and Interpretation, GEOG 250 Spatial Analytical Methods in Geography, GEOG 265 Introduction to GIS, GEOG 340 Cartography and Graphics 1, GEOG 341 Cartography and Graphics 2, GEOG 342 Remote Sensing 1, GEOG 343 Remote Sensing 2, GEOG 344 Advanced GIS Analysis, GEOG 369 Professional Experience, GEOG 479 Practical Experience. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography, Cooper Life Science Building, Room CL 425, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1776 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge, the students shoudl be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Geography - Travel and Tourism | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | The program's graduates have their careers in American Trans Air (crew scheduling), Resorts Condominium International (customer representative), Delta Airlines (flight attendant), AAA (travel agent), Ball-Foster Glass (corporate travel agent), Holiday Inn Express. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: GEOG 101 Earth, Sea, and Sky: A Geographic View, GEOG 121 Geography of the Cultural Environment, GEOG 150 Global Geography, GEOG 240 Map Reading and Interpretation, GEOG 250 Spatial Analytical Methods in Geography, GEOG 261 Tourism Systems, GEOG 262 Tourism Regions, GEOG 265 Introduction to GIS, GEOG 369 Professional Experience, GEOG 479 Practical Experience, GEOG 491 Tourism Development, GEOG 360 Tours and Meetings Management, GEOG 460 Travel and Tourism Consulting, FCSFN 250 Lodging Management, FCSFN 363 Institutional Administration, FCSFN 476 Event Management, NREM 371 Outdoor Recreation, MGT 200 Management Principles, MKG 200 Fundamentals of Marketing, GEOG 120 Economic Geography and Contemporary Issues, GEOG 230 Elementary Meteorology, GEOG 320 Ethnic Geography, GEOG 321 Urban Geography, GEOG 323 Tourism and Geography of Food, GEOG 331 Global Climatology, GEOG 340 Cartography and Graphics 1, GEOG 423 Population Geography, GEOG 470 World Political Geography, GEOG 480 Distant Area Field Studies. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography, Cooper Life Science Building, Room CL 425, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1776 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge, the students shoudl be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Geography: Meteorology and Climatology - General | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | This program's goal is to teach the students about the general principles of science in systematic investigations of earth-atmosphere system and subsystem dynamics and to train them in the use of technology (satellites, radar, automated weather observations, and numerical weather prediction) to analyze these systems on a variety of spatial and temporal scales. Graduates who have studied meteorology and climatology have found jobs in commercial and government sectors. Some of the department's graduates have landed jobs with radio and television stations, state emergency management agencies, and private forecasting companies in both the United States and Canada. Specific job titles its graduates include: chief meteorologist, state emergency management training coordinator, Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) program data analysis team member. The general track is for students who are considering a career where knowledge of operational meteorology and climatology, it leads to careers in emergency management, environmental analysis, and transportation planning. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: GEOG 101 Earth, Sea, and Sky: A Geographic View, GEOG 150 Global Geography, GEOG 240 Map Reading and Interpretation, GEOG 250 Spatial Analytical Methods in Geography, GEOG 265 Introduction to GIS, GEOG 230 Elementary Meteorology, GEOG 330 Weather Analysis, GEOG 331 Global Climatology, GEOG 332 Climate Change and Modification, GEOG 344 Advanced GIS Analysis, GEOG 350 Geography of the United States and Canada, GEOG 410 Broadcast Meteorology, GEOG 450 Severe Local Storms, GEOG 351 Geography of Latin America and the Caribbean, GEOG 352 Geography of Africa, GEOG 354 Geography of Asia. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography, Cooper Life Science Building, Room CL 425, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1776 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge, the students shoudl be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Geography: Meteorology and Climatology - Professional | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | This program's goal is to teach the students about the general principles of science in systematic investigations of earth-atmosphere system and subsystem dynamics and to train them in the use of technology (satellites, radar, automated weather observations, and numerical weather prediction) to analyze these systems on a variety of spatial and temporal scales. Graduates who have studied meteorology and climatology have found jobs in commercial and government sectors. Some of the department's graduates have landed jobs with radio and television stations, state emergency management agencies, and private forecasting companies in both the United States and Canada. Specific job titles its graduates include: chief meteorologist, state emergency management training coordinator, Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) program data analysis team member. The professional meteorologist track meets the American Meteorological Society (AMS) qualifications for the title "meteorologist" and Federal Civil Service requirements (GS1340) for employment by the National Weather Service. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: GEOG 101 Earth, Sea, and Sky: A Geographic View, GEOG 150 Global Geography, GEOG 240 Map Reading and Interpretation, GEOG 250 Spatial Analytical Methods in Geography, GEOG 265 Introduction to GIS, GEOG 494 Research Methods, GEOG 230 Elementary Meteorology, GEOG 330 Weather Analysis, GEOG 331 Global Climatology, GEOG 332 Climate Change and Modification, GEOG 344 Advanced GIS Analysis, GEOG 350 Geography of U.S. and Canada, GEOG 410 Broadcast Meteorology, GEOG 425 Physical Meteorology, GEOG 435 Satellite and Radar Meteorology, GEOG 447 Thermodynamic Meteorology, GEOG 449 Synoptic Meteorology, GEOG 450 Severe Local Storms, GEOG 451 Dynamic Meteorology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geography, Cooper Life Science Building, Room CL 425, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1776 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge, the students shoudl be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Geology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | This program is designed to prepare students for geological careers in industry and government agencies and for graduate study that leads to research, teaching, management, and many other positions in industry, government, and universities. In this program students will learn how risk is managed by individuals and businesses; about life and health insurance, personal insurance, commercial insurance, insurance law, and risk management. More than 2.5 million people in the United States have found awesome careers in the insurance industry. This work is challenging yet satisfying. The insurance industry is thriving as the population ages, wealth grows, and opportunities for risk management increase. Working in insurance involves helping individuals and business manage risk to protect themselves from catastrophic losses and to anticipate potential risk problems. This area is not only personally rewarding but can be financially rewarding as well, its graduates include geologist, ground water hydrogeologist, professional consultant, teacher (earth/space science), professor, engineering geologist, resource manager, environmental scientist, petroleum geologist, and GIS mapping specialist. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: GEOL 102 - Earth, Life, and Time, GEOL 207 - Environmental Geology - Geological/Geochemical Cycles, GEOL 220 - Earth Materials, GEOL 240 - Geomorphology, GEOL 290 - Computer Applications in the Geosciences, GEOL 308 - Invertebrate Paleontology, GEOL 310 - Petrology, GEOL 315 - Structural Geology, Tectonics and Basic Field Methods, GEOL 383 - Geology Field Camp, GEOL 460 - Hydrogeology, CHEM 111 - General Chemistry 1, CHEM 112 - General Chemistry 2, PHYCS 110 - General Physics 1, PHYCS 112 - General Physics 2, GEOL 409 - Micropaleontology, GEOL 410 - Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology, GEOL 412 - Sedimentary Petrology, GEOL 416 - Engineering Geology, GEOL 420 - Geological and Physical Oceanography, GEOL 425 - Geophysics. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences, Ball State University, Fine Arts Building (AR) room 117, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8270 | This department's classes are small, which means students get more one-on-one time with professors and a stronger bond with their fellow classmates. Its faculties are knowledgeable about geology and its subfields including minerals, igneous and metamorphic rock, fossils, and petroleum. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Graphic Arts Management | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | This program's goal is to prepare professionals who: entry level technical knowledge of materials, processes, and applications in graphic communications; the theories, concepts, and principles found in mathematics, science, humanities, and the social/behavioral sciences to problems (or to solve problems) in graphic communication and management; and effectively apply computer applications and information systems to technical processes and managerial applications in the industry; the team building, communication skills, and managerial abilities to successfully manage graphic communication projects; continued professional growth and are able to assume leadership roles within the profession. In this program students will gain a broad technical knowledge of graphic arts and hands-on experience with modern printing processes and equipment. This degree will prepare the students with the technical and managerial skills they need for a professional career in the dynamic and diverse graphic arts and printing industry. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ITGRA 180 Intro Gr Art, ITGRA 181 Flexography, ITGRA 182 Ofst Litho 1, ITGRA 183 Screen Print, ITGRA 184 Comp App G A, ITGRA 281 Ink Substrat, ITGRA 282 Dig Imag 1, ITGRA 286 Dig Photo 1, ITGRA 382 Dig Image 2, ITGRA 383 Offset Prswk, ITGRA 387 Dig Photo 2, ITDPT 380 Intern Tech, ITDPT 390 Trng Dvl Ind, ITGRA 381 Qlty Control, ITGRA 385 Comerc Prnt, ITGRA 480 Collq Gr Art, ITGRA 484 Print Managmnt, ITGRA 488 Pr Est Cst A, ITGRA 489 Prod Control, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, ECON 201 Elem Micro. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology, AT 131, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5642 | The mission of the College of Applied Sciences and Technology is to enhance the quality and, when appropriate, the quantity of the educational and creative opportunities available through the departments of the college to students, faculty, and the broader community. This mission is carried out through teaching, research and creative activity, and public service. Teaching, the primary emphasis of the college, is designed both to prepare students for professions and to maximize students' cultural, intellectual, and fitness/wellness potential. The departments form a well-integrated teaching-learning community that emphasizes learning by doing, as well as learning through stimulating classroom/laboratory experiences and international exchange programs. Research and creative activity are encouraged and seen as inseparable from effective teaching. The college has a long history of serving a diverse cross-section of the public through wellness and nutrition programs, vocational and technological programs, the Adult Fitness Program, and the Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology. In order to assist students in pursuing their maximum potential, the college supports current and future University Core Curriculum programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Industrial Technology - Computer Technology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | This program prepares the students for jobs in information technology. It will teach them about operating systems, troubleshooting computer systems, and installing and maintaining computer networks. Student's will take courses in computer science, math, and technology, learn about data storage and security, networking fundamentals, and how computers are assembled. They can also complete a minor in business administration. To gain real-world experience in today's computer environments, students are also encouraged to complete an internship. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MATHS 161 Appl Calc 1, PHYCS 110 Gen Phycs 1, CS 116 Visual Prog, CS 120 Comp Sci 1, CS 121 Comp Sci 2, ITDPT 380 Intern Tech, ITDPT 390 Trng Dvl Ind, ITMFG 270 Indust Elctr, ITMFG 371 Micro Ma Int, ITCMP 111 Mic Asb T S, ITCMP 210 Inetwk Fund, ITCMP 211 Sys Ad Fund, ITCMP 221 Alt PC O S, ITCMP 310 Int Des Adm, ITCMP 311 Infstrat Ser, ITCMP 466 Cap Cmp Tech, ITCMP 321 Alt Ser O S, ITCMP 330 Inetwk Swich, ITCMP 340 Wrls Ntk Com, ISOM 125 Micro App, ISOM 251 Intr Opr Mgt, MGT 200 Mngnt Prin, MKG 300 Prin Market, ISOM 300 Proj Mgt, ACC 201 Prin Acct, ISOM 135 Bus I, MGT 261 Persnel Supr, MKG 310 Consmr Behav. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology, AT 131, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5642 | The mission of the College of Applied Sciences and Technology is to enhance the quality and, when appropriate, the quantity of the educational and creative opportunities available through the departments of the college to students, faculty, and the broader community. This mission is carried out through teaching, research and creative activity, and public service. Teaching, the primary emphasis of the college, is designed both to prepare students for professions and to maximize students' cultural, intellectual, and fitness/wellness potential. The departments form a well-integrated teaching-learning community that emphasizes learning by doing, as well as learning through stimulating classroom/laboratory experiences and international exchange programs. Research and creative activity are encouraged and seen as inseparable from effective teaching. The college has a long history of serving a diverse cross-section of the public through wellness and nutrition programs, vocational and technological programs, the Adult Fitness Program, and the Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology. In order to assist students in pursuing their maximum potential, the college supports current and future University Core Curriculum programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Industrial Technology - Construction Management | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | This program will prepare the students for professional career opportunities in the growing construction industry. They will learn the skills needed to become a proficient manager who can guide multi million dollar projects from concept to completion on time and within budget. Its courses are taught by highly skilled faculty members with real-world experience, and class work is focused on the knowledge they need. The program also use the latest technology in the construction industry, putting the students on the cutting edge. An internship is required, allowing the students to gain valuable field experience and hone the skills they have learned in the classroom, they will also complete a required minor in business administration. This program's objective is to prepare professionals who: utilize critical thinking and decision making to solve problems; possess entry level technical knowledge and skills of construction science and management; apply effective leadership, team building and communication skills to the overall construction process; successfully manage the construction project from start to finish. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: PHYCS 110 Gen Phycs 1, ECON 201 Elem Micro, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, MATHS 112 Pc-Trig, ITDPT 160 Tech Analys, ITCST 104 Intro Const, ITCST106 CAD Cnst Tech, ITCST180 Const Doc, ITCST 200 Sit Prep, ITCST 250 Cn Mthd Mtls, ITCST 252 Bldg Diag, ITCST 300 Struct Mech, ITCST 350 Mech Elc Sys, ITDPT 380 Intern Tech, ITDPT 390 Trng Dvl Ind, ITCST 310 Ethics Cst, ITCST 320 Estimating, ITCST 355 Plan Schedul, ITCST 365 Const Safety, ITCST 400 Con Prj Mgt, ITCST 420 Cons Fin Law, ITCST 460 Cap Const, ACC 201 Prin Acct 1, BL 260 Prin Bus Law, MATHS 181 El Prob Stat or ECON 221 Bus Stats, ISOM 251 Intr Opr Mgt, MGT 200 Mngnt Prin. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology, AT 131, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5642 | The mission of the College of Applied Sciences and Technology is to enhance the quality and, when appropriate, the quantity of the educational and creative opportunities available through the departments of the college to students, faculty, and the broader community. This mission is carried out through teaching, research and creative activity, and public service. Teaching, the primary emphasis of the college, is designed both to prepare students for professions and to maximize students' cultural, intellectual, and fitness/wellness potential. The departments form a well-integrated teaching-learning community that emphasizes learning by doing, as well as learning through stimulating classroom/laboratory experiences and international exchange programs. Research and creative activity are encouraged and seen as inseparable from effective teaching. The college has a long history of serving a diverse cross-section of the public through wellness and nutrition programs, vocational and technological programs, the Adult Fitness Program, and the Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology. In order to assist students in pursuing their maximum potential, the college supports current and future University Core Curriculum programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | This program requires completion of 126 credits that are divided into four groups of courses. The first group is the University Core Curriculum that all undergraduate students must take, totaling 41 credit hours. Second is the set of 13 foundation courses that all undergraduate business students must take, totaling 39 credit hours. The third set includes 27 credits of information systems and operations management coursework, a 6hour department core, 9 credits common to all information systems majors, and 12 credits focusing on one of six specific information systems concentration areas. As an information systems major, they have to choose one of six concentration options that will determine the type of specialized course work in: e-business, enterprise resource planning, information systems security, information technology management, network management, systems analysis and design. A wide range of careers await graduates of the Miller College of Business information systems program. Among the many possibilities: project team member, help desk staff, training specialist, hardware/software troubleshooter, support coordinator. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. To enter this program students must complete the prerequisite courses with a grade-point average of 2.25. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: FIN 300: Principles of Finance 1, ISOM 300: Project Management, ISOM 313: Databases and Information Resource Management, ISOM 351: Operations Management, ISOM 410: Information Systems Security, ISOM 413: Database Structures and Management, ISOM 450: Management of E-Business, MGT 300: Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 491: Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300: Principles of Marketing. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management, Whitinger Business Building room 203, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5300 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in International Business | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | This program launches a whole-world business perspective with an integrated, individualized course of study. Students will have heaps of opportunity to follow their business and cultural interests, use their foreign language skills, and study abroad while gaining a rock-solid foundation in marketing, management, finance, and economics. In today's international environment, a global market view and understanding of interdisciplinary business applications is of great interest to many organizations. Job opportunities include: freight forwarding management, import/export specialist, international banking, international finance, international insurance, international investments, international manufacturing supervisor. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. To enter this program students must complete the prerequisite courses with a grade-point average of 2.25. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: FIN 300: Principles of Finance 1, FIN 352: International Finance, ISOM 351: Operations Management, MGT 300: Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 363: Employee Development, MGT 465: Human Resources Planning and Selection, MGT 491: Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300: Principles of Marketing, MKG 375: Internet-Based Marketing, MKG 470: International Marketing, INTBA 490: Seminar in International Business Decisions. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management, Whitinger Business Building room 100, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Journalism - Journalism Graphics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | In the journalism graphics sequence, students will learn how to tell stories through visual presentation. Regarded by many in the industry as a premier journalism graphics program, this program stresses design as it relates to print and multimedia journalism and is different from a traditional graphic design program. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: JOURN 101 Mass Comm, JOURN 102 Info Gather, JOURN 103 Vis Comm Prs, JOURN 105 Journ Story, JOURN 245 Edit Present, JOURN 169 Prof Dev Sem, JOURN 315 Media Edit, JOURN 321 News Design, JOURN 325 Media Law, JOURN 342 New Media, JOURN 345 Journ Vis Rep, JOURN 445 Adv Ed Pres, NEWS 201 Newswriting, NEWS 485 Adv News Sem, ECON 247 Econ-Media, GEOG 150 Global Geog, GEOG 240 Map Reading, GEOG 265 Intro G I S, ITGRA 180 Intro Gr Art, SOC 100 Principles, JOURN 323 Mag Design, JOURN 332 Visual Ed, NEWS 385 Mult Med Sty, JOURN 369 Internship, JOURN 479 Non Paid Int, ANTH 111 Global Div, COMM 290 Intercul Com, EDMUL 205 Multi Educ, POLS 474 Women Poltcs, SOC 235 Women, WMNST 314 Ws Symp Comm. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Journalism - Magazine | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | This program focuses on teaching the skills needed for the students to tell stories to readers through language and/or images. The magazine sequence is for those who wish to tell stories with words, they learn the business of magazine publishing along with the reporting, writing, and editing skills that will be needed for a magazine career. Students will begin with an introductory course focusing on the industry as a whole and the writing expectations that are unique to magazines. It includes courses introducing the students to magazine writing, magazine production, and the magazine industry in general. Students will also gain knowledge and experience in magazine editing, magazine design, and media ethics. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: JOURN 101 Mass Comm, JOURN 102 Info Gather, JOURN 103 Vis Comm Prs, JOURN 105 Journ Story, JOURN 169 Prof Dev Sem, JOURN 312 Opinion Writ, JOURN 315 Media Edit, JOURN 325 Media Law, JOURN 326 Media Ethics, JOURN 328 Mag Mgmt, JOURN 427 Adv Mag Writ, ECON 247 Econ-Media, HIST 202 US 1877-Pres, NEWS 201 Newswriting, SOC 100 Principles, JOURN 230 Intro Photoj, JOURN 323 Mag Design, JOURN 342 New Media, JOURN 369 Internship, JOURN 479 Non Paid Int, ANTH 111 Global Div, ANTH 311 Ethnicity, COMM 290 Intercul Com, EDMUL 205 Multi Educ, POLS 474 Women Poltcs, POLS 475 Minor Group, SOC 235 Women, SOC 421 Minorities, SOC 422 Trends, WMNST 314 Ws Symp Comm. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Journalism - Photojournalism | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | This program will prepare students to be proficient in editing photographs for newspapers, magazines, and other publications. They will learn to use light, motion, composition, body language, and expression - selecting single or multiple images and positioning them on the page to tell compelling stories. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: JOURN 101 Mass Comm, JOURN 102 Info Gather, JOURN 103 Vis Comm Prs, JOURN 105 Journ Story, JOURN 169 Prof Dev Sem, JOURN 236 Bas Lit Ill, JOURN 325 Media Law, JOURN 326 Media Ethics, JOURN 332 Visual Ed, JOURN 335 Int Photoj, JOURN 437 Advan Photoj, NEWS 201 Newswriting, NEWS 485 Adv News Sem, HIST 202 US 1877-Pres, SOC 100 Principles, JOURN 321 News Design, JOURN 323 Mag Design, JOURN 342 New Media, JOURN 434 Photo Illus, NEWS 202 News Report, JOURN 369 Internship, ANTH 111 Global Div, COMM 290 Intercul Com, EDMUL 205 Multi Educ, POLS 474 Women Poltcs, SOC 235 Women, SOC 422 Trends, WMNST 314 Ws Symp Comm. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Journalism Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | This program is regarded as one of the best in the state and the nation, is a hands-on program that prepares students to become top-notch high school and middle school journalism teachers and publication advisors. In this program students will learn journalism teaching methods and how to advise scholastic newspapers, yearbooks, magazines, and online media. And the program encourage to develop the student's own philosophies of education. The final segment of their studies will include a semester of secondary school participation and a semester of student teaching. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: JOURN 101 Mass Comm, JOURN 102 Info Gather, JOURN 103 Vis Comm Prs, JOURN 105 Journ Story, JOURN 230 Intro Photoj, JOURN 321 News Design, JOURN 323 Mag Design, JOURN 325 Media Law, JOURN 342 New Media, JOURN 474 Advg HS Pub, NEWS 201 Newswriting, NEWS 202 News Report, PSYSC 100 General, SOC 100 Principlies. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Journalism: News-Editorial | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | In this program, students will learn how to sift through electronic databases, government publications, public records, and Internet sources to do research and to edit for grammar, content, style, and legal considerations. And they will get insight into subject matter ranging from media law to ethics. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: JOURN 101 Mass Comm, JOURN 102 Info Gather, JOURN 103 Vis Comm Prs, JOURN 105 Journ Story, JOURN 169 Prof Dev Sem, JOURN 311 News Feat Wr, JOURN 315 Media Edit, JOURN 325 Media Law, JOURN 326 Media Ethics, JOURN 413 Adv Rep News, NEWS 202 News Report, ECON 247 Econ-Media, POLS 130 Amer Nat Gov, SOC 100 Principles, JOURN 312 Opinion Writ, JOURN 322 Sportwrt Rep, JOURN 418 Tech Sci Wrt, JOURN 230 Intro Photoj, NEWS 385 Mult Med Sty, JOURN 369 Internship, ANTH 111 Global Div, COMM 290 Intercul Com, EDMUL 205 Multi Educ, POLS 474 Women Poltcs, POLS 475 Minor Group, SOC 235 Women, SOC 421 Minorities, SOC 422 Trends, WMNST 314 Ws Symp Comm. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Manufacturing Engineering Technology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | This program will teach the students about manufacturing operations and principles, including computer applications, robotics, and industrial materials. It emphasizes the use of computers in process instrumentation and control, materials handling, and inspection. Students will learn about all aspects of manufacturing and take courses in mathematics and science. They can select electives in an area of specialization they choose. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, CS 120 Comp Sci 1, MATHS 161 Appl Calc 1, MATHS 162 Appl Calc 2, MATHS 181 El Prob Stat, PHYCS 110 Gen Phycs 1, PHYCS 112 Gen Phycs 2, ITMFG 105 Tec Dsgn Gra, ITMFG 161 Int Mfg Idus, ITMFG 205 Comp Aid Des, ITMFG 225 Ind Plastics, ITMFG 233 Mach Tools, ITMFG 262 Mfg Material, ITMFG 265 App Q Contrl, ITMFG 270 Indust Elctr, ITMFG 301 Auto and C I M, ITMFG 334 Weld Foundry, ITMFG 335 App Mechancs, ITMFG 340 Hydr Systems, ITMFG 371 Micro Ma Int, ITMFG 463 Mfg Plan Ctr. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology, AT 131, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5642 | The mission of the College of Applied Sciences and Technology is to enhance the quality and, when appropriate, the quantity of the educational and creative opportunities available through the departments of the college to students, faculty, and the broader community. This mission is carried out through teaching, research and creative activity, and public service. Teaching, the primary emphasis of the college, is designed both to prepare students for professions and to maximize students' cultural, intellectual, and fitness/wellness potential. The departments form a well-integrated teaching-learning community that emphasizes learning by doing, as well as learning through stimulating classroom/laboratory experiences and international exchange programs. Research and creative activity are encouraged and seen as inseparable from effective teaching. The college has a long history of serving a diverse cross-section of the public through wellness and nutrition programs, vocational and technological programs, the Adult Fitness Program, and the Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology. In order to assist students in pursuing their maximum potential, the college supports current and future University Core Curriculum programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Marketing | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | This program provides immersive learning opportunities the students a chance to work with business and community partners while they are still in school. As part of an interdisciplinary team, students will find real-world solutions to real-world problems. They can do anything from helping a retail chain open new stores to raising awareness about water pollution. There's a long list of career opportunities for marketing graduates, including: account executive, advertising sales, business-to-business marketing, distribution management, insurance sales, Internet marketing, manufacturer representation, marketing communications, marketing research, product/brand management, professional selling. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. To enter this program students must complete the prerequisite courses with a grade-point average of 2.25. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: FIN 300: Principles of Finance 1, FIN 352: International Finance, ISOM 351: Operations Management, MGT 300: Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 491: Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300: Principles of Marketing, MKG 325: Personal Selling, MKG 375: Internet-Based Marketing, MKG 425: Advanced Selling, MKG 427: Sales Management, MKG 429: Sales Tech, MKG 470: International Marketing, MKG 476: Marketing of Emerging Technology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management, Whitinger Business Building room 100, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Mathematical Economics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics | This program prepares the students for graduate study in economics and also facilitate a double major in either mathematical economics and actuarial science or mathematical economics and mathematical sciences. It combines requirements of both the Department of Economics and the Department of Mathematical Sciences. Students need 126 hours totally to complete the program. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: ECON 201 Elem Micro, ECON 202 Elem Macro, ECON 301 Intrmd Micro, ECON 302 Intrmd Macro, ECON 221 Bus Stats, MATHS 221 Pbty Stats, MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 159 Mth Software, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 215 Discrete Sys, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics | Miller College of Business, Department of Economics, Whitinger Business Building room 201, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5360 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Operations Management | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | This program opens the door to a broad range of career options, generally positions of responsibility in the creation or distribution of goods and services. Graduate with an operations management degree, and you’ll enjoy a wide range of career opportunities. Among the many possibilities: operations manager/analyst, logistics/transportation manager, materials supervisor/manager, quality assurance or process improvement manager, computer-based inventory systems analyst, inventory controller/manager, supply chain analyst, purchasing manager, distribution manager, plant manager. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. To enter this program students must complete the prerequisite courses with a grade-point average of 2.25. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: FIN 300: Principles of Finance 1, ISOM 300: Project Management, ISOM 313: Databases and Information Resource Management, ISOM 321: Quantitative Business Analyses, ISOM 351: Operations Management, ISOM 410: Information Systems Security, ISOM 413: Database Structures and Management, ISOM 453: Design and Control of Operations, MGT 300: Managing Behavior in Organizations, MGT 491: Business Policy and Strategic Management, MKG 300: Principles of Marketing. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management, Whitinger Business Building room 203, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5300 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Physics - Applied Physics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This option is for those students who are primarily interested in careers in industry. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: PHYCS 115 Career Issues, PHYCS 120 General Physics 1, PHYCS 122 General Physics 2, PHYCS 260 Intro to Modern Physics, PHYCS 262 Modern Physics Lab, PHYCS 330 Mechanics, PHYCS 340 Physical Optics, PHYCS 434 Thermodynamics, PHYCS 450 Electricity and Magnetism, PHYCS 464 Independent Study or PHYCS 369 Professional Experience or PHYCS 479 Practical Experience or HONRS 499 Honors Project, PHYCS 483 Seminar in Physics, PHYCS 485 Measures of Learning, CS 120 Computer Science 1, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 267 Calculus, ASTRO 330 Astrophysics 1, ASTRO 332 Astrophysics 2, PHYCS 354 Electronics 1, PHYCS 356 Electronics. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Physics - General Physics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This option is a course of study for those students who intend to pursue graduate work or industrial careers in physics, astronomy, or engineering. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: PHYCS 115 Career Issues, PHYCS 120 General Physics 1, PHYCS 122 General Physics 2, PHYCS 260 Intro to Modern Physics, PHYCS 262 Modern Physics Lab, PHYCS 330 Mechanics, PHYCS 340 Physical Optics, PHYCS 434 Thermodynamics, PHYCS 450 Electricity and Magnetism, PHYCS 464 Independent Study or PHYCS 369 Professional Experience or PHYCS 479 Practical Experience or HONRS 499 Honors Project, PHYCS 483 Seminar in Physics, PHYCS 485 Measures of Learning, CS 120 Computer Science 1, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 267 Calculus, PHYCS 452 Electromagnetic Theory, PHYCS 465 Quantum Mechanics. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Pre-Engineering Preparation | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This major is generally a five-year program in which students attend Ball State for three years and then transfer to an engineering school to complete requirements for their engineering degree. Upon successful completion of the engineering program, a student is eligible to receive a bachelor's degree from Ball State in addition to the engineering degree. Students in this program are responsible for knowing and meeting the graduation requirements of both Ball State and the school to which they transfer. Admission to Ball State as a pre-engineering major does not guarantee admission to an accredited school of engineering. Three options in the pre-engineering major are available: chemical engineering, metallurgical engineering, and general engineering, which include aeronautical, civil, electrical, industrial, mechanical, and nuclear engineering specializations. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: PHYCS 115 Career Issues, PHYCS 120 General Physics 1, PHYCS 122 General Physics 2, PHYCS 260 Intro to Modern Physics, PHYCS 262 Modern Physics Lab, PHYCS 330 Mechanics, PHYCS 354 Electronics 1, PHYCS 483 Seminar in Physics, PHYCS 485 Measures of Learning, CHEM 111 General Chemistry 1, CHEM 112 General Chemistry 2, CS 120 Computer Science 1, ITMFG 105 Technical Design Graphics, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 217 Linear Algebra, MATHS 267 Calculus 3. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | This program incorporates theory, practical skills, and ethical foundations, it is designed to prepare students not just for entry-level positions but also for more responsibility in communications management positions within public relations firms as well as corporations of all kinds, trade associations, hospitals, nonprofit groups, community service organizations, government agencies, and schools. Subject matter provides students with a fundamental understanding of public relations principles and covers research and strategic planning techniques, management, marketing applications, ethics, and use of the latest in communication technology. Writing skills also get strong emphasis. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: JOURN 101 Mass Comm, JOURN 102 Info Gather, JOURN 103 Vis Comm Prs, JOURN 104 J Wrt Pr Adv, JOURN 261 Prin of P R, JOURN 169 Prof Dev Sem, JOURN 325 Media Law, JOURN 326 Media Ethics, JOURN 360 PR Tech, JOURN 368 PR Publicat, JOURN 382 Resrch Strat, JOURN 405 PR Plan Mgt, ANTH 111 Global Div, ECON 116 Survey Ideas, MGT 200 Mngnt Prin, MKG 300 Prin Market, NEWS 201 Newswriting, SOC 100 Principles, JOURN 230 Intro Photoj, JOURN 312 Opinion Writ, JOURN 323 Mag Design, JOURN 342 New Media, JOURN 369 Internship, COMM 251 Bus Prof Com, COMM 290 Intercul Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 440 Intpers Comm. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Risk Management and Insurance | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance | In this program students will learn how risk is managed by individuals and businesses; about life and health insurance, personal insurance, commercial insurance, insurance law, and risk management. More than 2.5 million people in the United States have found awesome careers in the insurance industry. This work is challenging yet satisfying. The insurance industry is thriving as in this program students will learn how risk is managed by individuals and businesses; about life and health insurance, personal insurance, commercial insurance, insurance law, and risk management. More than 2.5 million people in the United States have found awesome careers in the insurance industry. This work is challenging yet satisfying. The insurance industry is thriving as the population ages, wealth grows, and opportunities for risk management increase. Working in insurance involves helping individuals and business manage risk to protect themselves from catastrophic losses and to anticipate potential risk problems. This area is not only personally rewarding but can be financially rewarding as well, population ages, wealth grows, and opportunities for risk management increase. Working in insurance involves helping individuals and business manage risk to protect themselves from catastrophic losses and to anticipate potential risk problems. This area is not only personally rewarding but can be financially rewarding as well. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. Those who wishing to enter this program must have an overall grade point average (GPA) of 2.0, complete business core courses with a GPA of at least 2.25, demonstrate proficiency in computer skills. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: RMI 270: Principles of RMI, RMI 330: Employee Benefits and Retirement Planning or RMI 377: Operations of Insurance Enterprises, RMI 371: Life and Health Insurance, RMI 378: Commercial RMI, RMI 474: Seminar in RMI. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance | Miller College of Business, Department of Finance and Insurance, Whitinger Business Building room 301, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | This department opens doors to two distinct career paths essential to the business of creating, managing, and protecting wealth. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Special Education - Early Childhood Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | In this program students work with infants and toddlers who require mild to severe interventions. Graduates work with young children with disabilities in preschool programs, developmental centers, and agency-based programs. The major requires 126 credit hours for graduation and leads to a license in mild interventions and severe interventions from birth to age five and mild interventions at the elementary school level. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: EDFON 420 Fnds of Educ, EDPSY 250 Hu Growth Dv, EDPSY 345 Tests Meas, EDRDG 400 Rd Today Sch, EDRDG 430 Correctv Rdg, ENG 204 Children Lit, EDLIB 461 Mater Childr, MATHS 392 Tch Math Dis, SPAA 270 Lang Develop, SPCED 201 Int Ex Needs, SPCED 277 Human Relat, SPCED 202 Legal Pro Fd, SPCED 266 Prac Spc Ed (1-9), SPCED 309 Prn Behav Sp, EDPSY 306 Behavior Anl, SPCED 331 Micro Sp Ed (1-4), SPCED 361 Adv Prac (1-9), SPCED 371 Intr Mild In, SPCED 375 Assessment, SPCED 376 Meth Mild In, SPCED 489 St Tch M D (1-12), SPCED 210 T and P ECSE, SPCED 215 Assess Yg Ex, SPCED 311 Meth Inf, SPCED 312 Dm Presch Ex, SPCED 417 Prac/In Pre. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Special Education - Mild Interventions | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | This program is designed to train high-quality teachers to help students who require mild interventions achieve their educational potential. Course content and field experiences focus on the areas of learning disabilities, mild developmental disorders, and mild behavior disorders. In addition to methods and education courses, students will have opportunities for intensive field experiences in local schools and community agencies. Their course work will culminate in a multiple placement student teaching experience during their final semester in the program. The major requires 126 credit hours for graduation and leads to a license for teaching children with mild learning disabilities in elementary through secondary school programs. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: SPCED 202 Legal Pro Fd, SPCED 266 Prac Spc Ed (1-9), SPCED 309 Prn Behav Sp (3), EDPSY 306 Behavior Anl (3), SPCED 331 Micro Sp Ed (1-4), SPCED 361 Adv Prac (1-9), SPCED 371 Intr Mild In, SPCED 375 Assessment, SPCED 376 Meth Mild In, SPCED 489 St Tch M D (1-12), SPCED 361 Adv Prac (1-9), SPCED 475 Trends Sp Ed, SPCED 476 Mild In Y Ad, SPCED 491 St Tc Sec Md, SPCED 332 Antro Beh D, SPCED 366 Phys Disabil, MATHS 112 P C-Trig, ASTRO 101 Matr for Tch, CHEM 108 Intro Chem, GEOG 230 Elem Meteor, GEOL 207 Envir Geol, ENG 205 Wrld Litertr, ENG 220 Lang Society, ENG 321 Linguistics. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Special Education - Severe Interventions (All-Grade) | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | This program prepares future teachers who wish to work with students who require intensive/severe interventions. The program includes course work in physical disabilities and other health impairments, as well as courses in mild interventions at the elementary level. In addition to methods and education courses, students will also have many opportunities to practice their skills in intensive field experiences. The program culminates in a multiple placement student teaching experience. The major requires 126 credit hours for graduation and leads to a license for teaching children with moderate, severe, profound, and/or multiple disabilities in all grades. This program also leads to licensing in mild interventions at the early and middle childhood developmental levels. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: SPCED 202 Legal Pro Fd, SPCED 266 Prac Spc Ed, SPCED 309 Prn Behav Sp, EDPSY 306 Behavior Anl, SPCED 331 Micro Sp Ed (1-4), SPCED 361 Adv Prac (1-9), SPCED 371 Intr Mild In, SPCED 375 Assessment, SPCED 376 Meth Mild In, SPCED 489 St Tch M D, PEP 227 Intro APE/PA, SPCED 361 Adv Prac (1-9), SPCED 361 Adv Prac (1-9), SPCED 366 Phys Disabil, SPCED 377 Ed C and Y Sev, SPCED 378 Mth Sev Dis, SPCED 379 Method Ph MD, SPCED 380 Ed Sev Disab, SPCED 492 St Tch S D. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Technology Teacher Education | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | This program prepares the students to teach technology-based courses at the middle school and high school levels, their education will set them apart from other middle, high, and vocational school teachers. In this specially designed program, students will be exposed to the latest technology and learn about educational methods, they will take technology courses in communication, construction, manufacturing, and transportation and gain real-world experience working with materials, processes, energy systems, robots, and computers. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Technology, AT 131, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5642 | The mission of the College of Applied Sciences and Technology is to enhance the quality and, when appropriate, the quantity of the educational and creative opportunities available through the departments of the college to students, faculty, and the broader community. This mission is carried out through teaching, research and creative activity, and public service. Teaching, the primary emphasis of the college, is designed both to prepare students for professions and to maximize students' cultural, intellectual, and fitness/wellness potential. The departments form a well-integrated teaching-learning community that emphasizes learning by doing, as well as learning through stimulating classroom/laboratory experiences and international exchange programs. Research and creative activity are encouraged and seen as inseparable from effective teaching. The college has a long history of serving a diverse cross-section of the public through wellness and nutrition programs, vocational and technological programs, the Adult Fitness Program, and the Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology. In order to assist students in pursuing their maximum potential, the college supports current and future University Core Curriculum programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Telecommunications - Film and Television Studies | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | This program offers courses examining relationships between visual media and society, focusing on critical thinking and multiple academic approaches. Prepares students for graduate studies in film, electronic media, and related fields. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: TCOM 101 Foundations, TCOM 204 Analysis Crt, TCOM 206 Script Wrt, TCOM 207 Copy Wrt, TCOM 208 News Wrt, TCOM 307 TV Genres, TCOM 363 Film Genres, TCOM 384 Elec Med Law, TCOM 408 Soc Respons, TCOM 301 Elec Med His, TCOM 306 Prog and Aud, TCOM 332 Video Prod 1, TCOM 344 Promotion, TCOM 360 W Film His 1, TCOM 361 W Film His 2, TCOM 381 Sports, TCOM 464 Film Censor, TCOM 465 Sem Flm Thry, ENG 285 Intr Cr Wr, ENG 310 Script Wr, ENG 425 Film Studies, NEWS 201 Newswriting, ANTH 342 Amer Culture, AHS 264 Film Analysis, COMM 322 Comm Pop Cul, FL 306 For Cul Film, HIST 435 US Hist Film, JOURN 382 Resrch Strat, SOC 333 Media. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications, Ball Communications Building (BC) 201, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1480 | This department was originally established as the Center for Radio and Television in 1966. The academic program led graduates into a career in either teaching or commercial broadcasting. Ahead of its time, the center had an emphasis on practical experience over traditional textbook learning. Back then, students could serve as staff members at the 10-watt radio station WBST (now part of Indiana Public Radio) or could work on closed-circuit instructional TV programs. As a decade passed, the degree program evolved into its own academic unit called Radio/Television/Motion Pictures, or R-T-M. The first student organization was the Broadcast Guild which, through the work of Professor Dave Smith, became an official chapter of the National Broadcasting Society, or Alpha Epsilon Rho. The national president of Alpha Epsilon Rho, John Kurtz, became the new department chair in 1980, and the current name of telecommunications (TCOM) was adopted. In the mid-1980s personal computers began appearing on desktops, allotted to faculty members by seniority. Wible worked with David Letterman to start a carrier current student radio station called WCRD. In 1988, the department moved from the Arts and Communication Building to the then new Edmund F. Ball Communications Building. TCOM has grown to serve nearly 1,200 majors and minors with 21 full-time professors. Nine student-run television programs air on WIPB, cable, or closed-circuit television. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Telecommunications - Multimedia Production | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | This option is for all budding filmmakers as well as those interested in computer-based production. This major offers skills and applications courses using digital technology to create content for television, radio, and film, as well as interactive products, including DVDs, CD-ROMs, blogs, podcasts, and Web sites. Prepares students for careers in this developing and changing media arena. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: TCOM 101 Foundations, TCOM 204 Analysis Crt, TCOM 206 Script Wrt, TCOM 207 Copy Wrt, TCOM 208 News Wrt, TCOM 330 Audio Prod, TCOM 332 Video Prod, TCOM 384 Elec Med Law, TCOM 408 Soc Respons, TCOM 333 Audio Prod, TCOM 334 Video Prod, TCOM 350 DVD Design, TCOM 351 Web Dvlpmnt, TCOM 354 Int Med Mgt, TCOM 444 Management, TCOM 433 Audio Prod, TCOM 434 Video Prod, TCOM 435 Cinema Ent, TCOM 436 Motion Graph, TCOM 450 Int Vid Des, TCOM 456 Personal Med, TCOM 487 Sem Prod, TCOM 497 Immersion 2, ENG 285 Intr Cr Wr, ENG 410 Adv Scrpt Wr, ACC 201 Prin Acct 1, BUSAD 101 Intro Busins, COMM 251 Bus Prof Com, COMM 290 Intercul Com, COMM 310 Spchmkg Demo, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 322 Comm Pop Cult, COMM 330 Grp Dec Mkg, COMM 375 Presen Comm, ECON 201 Elem Micro, ECON 202 Elem Macro, ECON 247 Econ-Media, FIN 110 Pers Finance, FIN 255 Intro Fin In, ITGRA 286 Dig Photo 1, ITGRA 387 Dig Photo 2, MKG 200 Fundamentals, MGT 200 Mngnt Prin, THEAT 103 Aesthetics 1, THEAT 220 Stagecraft, THEAT 232 Acting 1, THEAT 233 Acting 2, TCOM 391 Internship. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications, Ball Communications Building (BC) 201, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1480 | This department was originally established as the Center for Radio and Television in 1966. The academic program led graduates into a career in either teaching or commercial broadcasting. Ahead of its time, the center had an emphasis on practical experience over traditional textbook learning. Back then, students could serve as staff members at the 10-watt radio station WBST (now part of Indiana Public Radio) or could work on closed-circuit instructional TV programs. As a decade passed, the degree program evolved into its own academic unit called Radio/Television/Motion Pictures, or R-T-M. The first student organization was the Broadcast Guild which, through the work of Professor Dave Smith, became an official chapter of the National Broadcasting Society, or Alpha Epsilon Rho. The national president of Alpha Epsilon Rho, John Kurtz, became the new department chair in 1980, and the current name of telecommunications (TCOM) was adopted. In the mid-1980s personal computers began appearing on desktops, allotted to faculty members by seniority. Wible worked with David Letterman to start a carrier current student radio station called WCRD. In 1988, the department moved from the Arts and Communication Building to the then new Edmund F. Ball Communications Building. TCOM has grown to serve nearly 1,200 majors and minors with 21 full-time professors. Nine student-run television programs air on WIPB, cable, or closed-circuit television. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Telecommunications - News and Information | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | This program is for those who want to be a TV meteorologist, TV sportscaster, or TV reporter or anchor, it is the only major at Ball State for sportscasters. They can also experience media convergence - newspaper, television, and online news organizations and staffs working in conjunction with one another. In this program students will learn how risk is managed by individuals and businesses; about life and health insurance, personal insurance, commercial insurance, insurance law, and risk management. More than 2.5 million people in the United States have found awesome careers in the insurance industry. This work is challenging yet satisfying. The insurance industry is thriving as the population ages, wealth grows, and opportunities for risk management increase. Working in insurance involves helping individuals and business manage risk to protect themselves from catastrophic losses and to anticipate potential risk problems. This area is not only personally rewarding but can be financially rewarding as well. Its state-of-the-art, high-definition convergence newsroom News Link Indiana, a student-produced, professionally guided, immersive learning news operation that will prepare the students for the real world. They can write, report, produce, and make ethical decisions as they learn about electronic news and information programming and prepare for their dream job in broadcast or online journalism. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: TCOM 101 Foundations, TCOM 204 Analysis Crt, TCOM 206 Script Wrt, TCOM 207 Copy Wrt, TCOM 208 News Wrt, TCOM 288 Crit Issues, TCOM 323 TV Nws Photo, TCOM 384 Elec Med Law, TCOM 408 Soc Respons, TCOM 420 Adv RTV News, TCOM 421 Online News, TCOM 426 TV News Prod, ECON 247 Econ-Media, JOURN 103 Vis Comm Prs, NEWS 201 Newswriting, POLS 237 Stat Loc Pol, HIST 202 US 1877-Pres, HIST 301 US Vietnam, HIST 325 Mod Lat Am, HIST 371 Modern Asia, HIST 372 Modrn Africa. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications, Ball Communications Building (BC) 201, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1480 | This department was originally established as the Center for Radio and Television in 1966. The academic program led graduates into a career in either teaching or commercial broadcasting. Ahead of its time, the center had an emphasis on practical experience over traditional textbook learning. Back then, students could serve as staff members at the 10-watt radio station WBST (now part of Indiana Public Radio) or could work on closed-circuit instructional TV programs. As a decade passed, the degree program evolved into its own academic unit called Radio/Television/Motion Pictures, or R-T-M. The first student organization was the Broadcast Guild which, through the work of Professor Dave Smith, became an official chapter of the National Broadcasting Society, or Alpha Epsilon Rho. The national president of Alpha Epsilon Rho, John Kurtz, became the new department chair in 1980, and the current name of telecommunications (TCOM) was adopted. In the mid-1980s personal computers began appearing on desktops, allotted to faculty members by seniority. Wible worked with David Letterman to start a carrier current student radio station called WCRD. In 1988, the department moved from the Arts and Communication Building to the then new Edmund F. Ball Communications Building. TCOM has grown to serve nearly 1,200 majors and minors with 21 full-time professors. Nine student-run television programs air on WIPB, cable, or closed-circuit television. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Telecommunications - Sales and Promotion | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | This major offers courses in the theory and practice of selling and promoting media time and content. Prepares students for careers in sales, promotion, and management. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: TCOM 306 Prog and Aud, TCOM 340 Elec Med Sls, TCOM 344 Promotion, TCOM 345 Adv Med Sls, TCOM 346 Sales Writing, TCOM 384 Elec Med Law, TCOM 408 Soc Respons, TCOM 444 Management, ECON 247 Econ-Media, COMM 251 Bus Prof Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 322 Comm Pop Cul, COMM 330 Grp Dec Mkg, COMM 375 Presen Comm, ENG 231 Wrt Workplce, JOURN 250 Intro Advert, JOURN 261 Prin of P R, MKG 300 Prin Market, MKG 310 Consmr Behav, MKG 320 Advertsg Mgt, MKG 325 Prof Selling, MKG 420 Int Mkg Comm, MKG 425 Adv Selling, MKG 427 Sales Manage. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications, Ball Communications Building (BC) 201, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1480 | This department was originally established as the Center for Radio and Television in 1966. The academic program led graduates into a career in either teaching or commercial broadcasting. Ahead of its time, the center had an emphasis on practical experience over traditional textbook learning. Back then, students could serve as staff members at the 10-watt radio station WBST (now part of Indiana Public Radio) or could work on closed-circuit instructional TV programs. As a decade passed, the degree program evolved into its own academic unit called Radio/Television/Motion Pictures, or R-T-M. The first student organization was the Broadcast Guild which, through the work of Professor Dave Smith, became an official chapter of the National Broadcasting Society, or Alpha Epsilon Rho. The national president of Alpha Epsilon Rho, John Kurtz, became the new department chair in 1980, and the current name of telecommunications (TCOM) was adopted. In the mid-1980s personal computers began appearing on desktops, allotted to faculty members by seniority. Wible worked with David Letterman to start a carrier current student radio station called WCRD. In 1988, the department moved from the Arts and Communication Building to the then new Edmund F. Ball Communications Building. TCOM has grown to serve nearly 1,200 majors and minors with 21 full-time professors. Nine student-run television programs air on WIPB, cable, or closed-circuit television. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Theatre - Acting | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | This program recognizes that craft mastery is a lifetime process. Accordingly, this option grounds students with experience and training in all areas of professional theatrical performance, both live and recorded. While some graduates directly enter careers in acting, this program helps students become journeyman actors who seek professional employment while continuing their training in formal or informal venues. It includes specialized classes in vocal training, dance, acting for the camera, and a progression of acting classes. The program addresses issues of career as well as art. Students learn how to create reels, edit digital images, and consider the expanding world of electronic performance alongside traditional stage performance. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: THEAT 102: Computers in Theatre and Dance, THEAT 103: Aesthetics of the Theatre 1, THEAT 104: Aesthetics of the Theatre 2, THEAT 105/405: Freshman/Senior Experience, THEAT 107: Design Awareness for Theatre and Dance, THEAT 220: Stagecraft, THEAT 232: Acting 1, THEAT 250: Directing 1, THEAT 280: Theatre Practicum, THEAT 317: History of Theatre 1, THEAT 319: History of Theatre 2, THEAT 435: Shakespeare, THEAT 229: Principles of Stage Makeup, THEAT 233: Acting 2, THEAT 332: Audition, THEAT 333: Movement Studio 1, THEAT 334: Movement Studio 2, THEAT 335: Act Camera 1, THEAT 336: Act Camera 2, THEAT 337: Voice Studio 1, THEAT 338: Voice Studio 2, THEAT 432: Acting 3, THEAT 299X: Exp Dev Tpcs, THEAT 380: Adv Practice, THEAT 433: Styles, THEAT 496: Dr Std Thea. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8740 | This department's programs are supported by quality facilities on campus that provide diverse performance venues and contemporary learning environments for students. Its 410-seat main stage theatre has state-of-the-art technical equipment, including a completely computerized lighting system and acoustically sophisticated recording and reproduction sound systems. This facility hosts the department's Main stage Subscription Series, which features four theatre productions and two dance concerts each year. Cave Theatre is a small laboratory theatre in the Arts and Communications Building is used for classes and student workshop productions. The department has a design lab, sound recording studio, makeup room, and performance studies classroom in the Arts and Communications Building. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Theatre - Design and Technology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | This program is intended for the talented and serious student who wishes to pursue a career in design or technical theatre. This option provides a strong foundation for advanced study in a quality graduate program or an introduction into the profession on an entry level. Areas of concentration in this option include scenery, lighting, costuming, sound, makeup, and stage management. All theatre students also complete a strong core of liberal arts courses. A portfolio review is not required for admission to this option, but students are encouraged to interview for scholarships. Learn more about the success of the department's graduates. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: THEAT 102: Computers in Theatre and Dance, THEAT 103: Aesthetics of the Theatre 1, THEAT 104: Aesthetics of the Theatre 2, THEAT 105/405: Freshman/Senior Experience, THEAT 107: Design Awareness for Theatre and Dance, THEAT 220: Stagecraft, THEAT 232: Acting 1, THEAT 250: Directing 1, THEAT 280: Theatre Practicum, THEAT 317: History of Theatre 1, THEAT 319: History of Theatre 2, THEAT 435: Shakespeare, THEAT 223: Costuming, THEAT 320: Design Skills, THEAT 321: Rendering, THEAT 326: Light Design, THEAT 420: Scene Design, THEAT 421: ACV SCN Design, THEAT 423: Costume Design, THEAT 426: ADV LTG Design, THEAT 225: Theatrical Computer Aided Drafting, THEAT 229: Principles of Stage Makeup, THEAT 291: Stage Management, THEAT 299X: Exp. Dev. Topics, THEAT 318: Advanced Topics in Theatre History, THEAT 351: Directing 2, THEAT 380: Advanced Theatre Practice, THEAT 421: Advanced Scene Design, THEAT 426: Stage Lighting Design, COMM 330: Group Decision Making. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8740 | This department's programs are supported by quality facilities on campus that provide diverse performance venues and contemporary learning environments for students. Its 410-seat main stage theatre has state-of-the-art technical equipment, including a completely computerized lighting system and acoustically sophisticated recording and reproduction sound systems. This facility hosts the department's Main stage Subscription Series, which features four theatre productions and two dance concerts each year. Cave Theatre is a small laboratory theatre in the Arts and Communications Building is used for classes and student workshop productions. The department has a design lab, sound recording studio, makeup room, and performance studies classroom in the Arts and Communications Building. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Theatre - Musical Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | This program is intended for the talented and serious student who wishes to pursue a career in musical theatre. This interdisciplinary program requires course work in dance, music, and theatre. All musical theatre students also complete a strong core of liberal arts courses. It trains performers who can act, dance, and sing. Students completing the program generally pursue a professional career or continue their training in graduate school. Recent alumni have appeared on Broadway; in national tours of Chicago, Sweet Charity, Dora the Explorer, Hairspray, Hello Dolly. Applicants must demonstrate identifiable strengths or the potential for growth in three areas: acting, dance, and voice. Student progress in the option is measured in class work, performances, and juries. Internships are recommended during the third or fourth year. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: THEAT 102: Computers in Theatre and Dance, THEAT 103: Aesthetics of the Theatre 1, THEAT 104: Aesthetics of the Theatre 2, THEAT 105/405: Freshman/Senior Experience, THEAT 107: Design Awareness for Theatre and Dance, THEAT 220: Stagecraft, THEAT 232: Acting 1, THEAT 250: Directing 1, THEAT 280: Theatre Practicum, THEAT 317: History of Theatre 1, THEAT 319: History of Theatre 2, THEAT 435: Shakespeare, DANCE 131: Intro to Musical Theatre Tap, DANCE 132: Jazz Styles 1, DANCE 230: Jazz 2, DANCE 232: Music Theatre Dance, THEAT 270: Basic Musicianship 1, THEAT 271: Basic Musicianship 2, THEAT 273: Music Theatre Ensemble, THEAT 328: Minor Study-Voice, THEAT 371: The Singing Actor, THEAT 229: Principles of Stage Makeup, THEAT 233: Acting 2, THEAT 318: Advanced Topics in History, THEAT 333: Movement Studio 1, THEAT 432: Acting 3. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8740 | This department's programs are supported by quality facilities on campus that provide diverse performance venues and contemporary learning environments for students. Its 410-seat main stage theatre has state-of-the-art technical equipment, including a completely computerized lighting system and acoustically sophisticated recording and reproduction sound systems. This facility hosts the department's Main stage Subscription Series, which features four theatre productions and two dance concerts each year. Cave Theatre is a small laboratory theatre in the Arts and Communications Building is used for classes and student workshop productions. The department has a design lab, sound recording studio, makeup room, and performance studies classroom in the Arts and Communications Building. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Theatre - Production | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | This option is intended for students wanting to pursue a professional career in directing for the stage or stage management. This option also prepares students for admission to production-oriented master of fine arts graduate programs. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: THEAT 102: Computers in Theatre and Dance, THEAT 103: Aesthetics of the Theatre 1, THEAT 104: Aesthetics of the Theatre 2, THEAT 105/405: Freshman Experience, THEAT 107: Design Awareness for Theatre and Dance, THEAT 220: Stagecraft, THEAT 223: Theatrical Costuming, THEAT 232: Acting 1, THEAT 317: History of Theatre 1, THEAT 318: History of Theatre 2, THEAT 319: Modern Theatre, THEAT 350: Directing 1, THEAT 229: Principles of Stage Makeup, THEAT 326: Fundamentals of Stage Lighting, THEAT 233: Acting II, THEAT 340: Playwriting, THEAT 491: Theatre Management, EDSEC 150: Basic Concepts of Secondary Education, EDMUL 205: Introduction to Multicultural Education, EDPSY 251: Human Growth and Development, EDPSY 390: Educational Psychology, THEAT 395: Intro to Teaching Methods for Theatre, EDJHM 385: Principles of Teaching in the Middle School, EDSEC 380: Principles of Teaching in the Secondary School, THEAT 396: Theatre Programs, EDFON 420: Social, Historical, and Philosophical Foundations of Education, EDSEC 460/EDJHM 460: Student Teaching. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8740 | This department's programs are supported by quality facilities on campus that provide diverse performance venues and contemporary learning environments for students. Its 410-seat main stage theatre has state-of-the-art technical equipment, including a completely computerized lighting system and acoustically sophisticated recording and reproduction sound systems. This facility hosts the department's Main stage Subscription Series, which features four theatre productions and two dance concerts each year. Cave Theatre is a small laboratory theatre in the Arts and Communications Building is used for classes and student workshop productions. The department has a design lab, sound recording studio, makeup room, and performance studies classroom in the Arts and Communications Building. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor's Degree in Theatre - Theatrical Studies | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | This program is intended for students who want a broad-based study of the theatre discipline; who want to pursue careers in stage, playwriting or theatre management; or who want to continue their theatrical studies beyond the baccalaureate level in areas not offered in the department's more specialized options. Students completing this program generally pursue a professional career or continue their training in graduate school. Alumni work in nearly all areas of entertainment business. Students must earn and keep a 3.0 or better GPA after earning 36 credit hours or they will be placed on academic probation, they will be dismissed from the Theatrical Studies Option. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: THEAT 102: Computers in Theatre and Dance, THEAT 103: Aesthetics of the Theatre 1, THEAT 104: Aesthetics of the Theatre 2, THEAT 105/405: Freshman/Senior Experience, THEAT 107: Design Awareness for Theatre and Dance, THEAT 220: Stagecraft, THEAT 232: Acting 1, THEAT 250: Directing 1, THEAT 280: Theatre Practicum, THEAT 317: History of Theatre 1, THEAT 319: History of Theatre 2, THEAT 435: Shakespeare, THEAT 102: Computers in Theatre and Dance, THEAT 105: Freshman Experience, THEAT 103: Aesthetics of the Theatre 1, THEAT 104: Aesthetics of the Theatre 2, THEAT 107: Design Awareness for Theatre and Dance, THEAT 220: Stagecraft, THEAT 232: Acting 1, THEAT 250: Directing 1, THEAT 280: Theatre Practicum, THEAT 317: History of Theatre 1, THEAT 319: History of Theatre 2, THEAT 435: Shakespeare, THEAT 223: Costuming, THEAT 233: Acting 2, THEAT 318: Sp Top Hist, DANCE 130: Luigi, THEAT 229: Stage Makeup, THEAT 291: Stage Management, THEAT 318: Sp Top Theat, THEAT 326: Stage Lighting. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8740 | This department's programs are supported by quality facilities on campus that provide diverse performance venues and contemporary learning environments for students. Its 410-seat main stage theatre has state-of-the-art technical equipment, including a completely computerized lighting system and acoustically sophisticated recording and reproduction sound systems. This facility hosts the department's Main stage Subscription Series, which features four theatre productions and two dance concerts each year. Cave Theatre is a small laboratory theatre in the Arts and Communications Building is used for classes and student workshop productions. The department has a design lab, sound recording studio, makeup room, and performance studies classroom in the Arts and Communications Building. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Bachelor’s Degree in Speech-Language Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology | This program encompasses both areas of study. It prepares students to enter either speech pathology master's degree program or doctor of audiology degree program. Pre-audiology is a professional program; it is more science-based and is for students interested in a doctor of audiology program. It is well suited for someone who has no interest in speech pathology and is headed towards audiology. This majors prepare the students for graduate study through lessons in the classroom and experiences in the clinic and, ultimately, for work in private practices, public schools, hospitals, clinics, rehabilitation centers, and other sites. The practice of speech-language pathology requires a master's degree. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: SPAA 100 Survey SPAA, SPAA101 Clin Phonet, SPAA 161 Anat Sp Hr, SPAA 210 Sp Sd Dis, CS 104 Intro Comp, SPAA 260 Spch Acoust, SPAA 270 Lang Develop, SPAA 311 Cln Proc Obs, SPAA 312 Intro Diag, SPAA 319 SPAA Pract, SPAA 343 Intro Aud, SPAA 344 Hearing 2, SPAA 361 Neuro Anat, SPAA 371 Lang Dis, SPAA 418 Org Sp Disor, ENG 320 Intr Ling Sc, FCSFC 265 Inf/Tod Dvlt, FCSFC 275 Child Dvlpmt, PSYSC 100 General, PSYSC 241 Statistics, PSYSC 371 App Bhr Anls, SPCED 201 Int Ex Needs. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, Art and Communication Building AC 104, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8161 | This department has a primary mission to prepare outstanding speech-language pathologists and audiologists. Its supporting and secondary missions include: to provide an educational experience which assists students in acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to deliver high-quality clinical services as well as stimulate the students' intellectual curiosity; to provide high-quality diagnostic and therapeutic audiology and speech-language pathology services to residents of East Central Indiana and surrounding areas; to provide continuing education and serve as a resource center for practicing speech-language pathologists and audiologists; to contribute to the advancement of the professions of speech-language pathology and audiology through research, clinical practice, and professional development; to contribute to the development of Ball State University and the state of Indiana. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Arts in Music | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program prepares superior musicians for careers that combine teaching, performance, and scholarship. The program integrates depth of preparation in one of the traditional disciplines of music with a School of Music core, an area of secondary emphasis, several supervised college teaching experiences, comprehensive written and oral exams, and the dissertation. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program prepares those aspiring to faculty positions in two-year or four-year colleges and universities, where high priority is placed on teaching. Candidates plan a broad-based major in a science field, with supporting work in education and a second science. This program will teach about how to teach students at the college or university level. In this program, students will plan a broad-based major course of study in one science field and take supporting courses in education and a second science. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | This program will teach about how to teach students at the college or university level. In this program, students will plan a broad-based major course of study in one science field and take supporting courses in education and a second science. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences, Ball State University, Fine Arts Building (AR) room 117, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8270 | This department's classes are small, which means students get more one-on-one time with professors and a stronger bond with their fellow classmates. Its faculties are knowledgeable about geology and its subfields including minerals, igneous and metamorphic rock, fossils, and petroleum. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program will teach about how to teach students at the college or university level. In this program, students will plan a broad-based major course of study in one science field and take supporting courses in education and a second science. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program will teach about how to teach students at the college or university level. In this program, students will plan a broad-based major course of study in one science field and take supporting courses in education and a second science. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program will teach about how to teach students at the college or university level. In this program, students will plan a broad-based major course of study in one science field and take supporting courses in education and a second science. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program will teach about how to teach students at the college or university level. In this program, students will plan a broad-based major course of study in one science field and take supporting courses in education and a second science. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | This program will teach about how to teach students at the college or university level. In this program, students will plan a broad-based major course of study in one science field and take supporting courses in education and a second science. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science, RB 455, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8641 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science Education | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | This program will teach about how to be a science education leader at the university level or in grades K through 12. The program consists of fairly equal components of education and one field science with supporting work in additional science fields. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences, Ball State University, Fine Arts Building (AR) room 117, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8270 | This department's classes are small, which means students get more one-on-one time with professors and a stronger bond with their fellow classmates. Its faculties are knowledgeable about geology and its subfields including minerals, igneous and metamorphic rock, fossils, and petroleum. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science Education | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | This program will teach about how to be a science education leader at the university level or in grades K through 12. The program consists of fairly equal components of education and one field science with supporting work in additional science fields. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science, RB 455, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8641 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science Education | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program will teach about how to be a science education leader at the university level or in grades K through 12. The program consists of fairly equal components of education and one field science with supporting work in additional science fields. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science Education | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program will teach about how to be a science education leader at the university level or in grades K through 12. The program consists of fairly equal components of education and one field science with supporting work in additional science fields. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science Education | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program will teach about how to be a science education leader at the university level or in grades K through 12. The program consists of fairly equal components of education and one field science with supporting work in additional science fields. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science Education | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program prepares those seeking to assume positions as science education leaders at the university level or in K-12 settings. The major consists of approximately equal components of education and science, with supporting work in additional science fields. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education (EdD) in Science Education | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program will teach about how to be a science education leader at the university level or in grades K through 12. The program consists of fairly equal components of education and one field science with supporting work in additional science fields. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education Degree (Ed.D.) in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | This program helps students to achieve their professional goals. Program activities may include in-service training, research and publication, college teaching, curriculum development, clinical or laboratory work, and graduate courses in the major and related subjects. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education in Educational Administration and Supervision | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership | This program is designed to meet the needs of advanced graduate students who hold or are seeking to assume leadership roles in education and who are dedicated to advancing the profession through quality teaching, research, and service. The curriculum emphasizes school administration in K-12 settings. The program is designed to satisfy the licensing requirements in Indiana for the school superintendency; however, sufficient flexibility exists to design a program to meet the needs of the individual candidate. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership, Teachers College 918, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8488 | The Department of Educational Leadership offers outstanding graduate programs designed to help to succeed in myriad educational leadership roles in both school and community settings. Specific degree programs based on high standards of excellence, innovation, applied research, and service lay the groundwork for careers as school principals, administrators, and superintendents. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Education in Special Education (Ed.D.) | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Special Education | This program is designed to meet the needs of advanced graduate students who would like to assume leadership roles in special education. These leadership roles may include administrative positions, such as teacher educator, special education manager, curriculum specialist. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Special Education | Teachers College, Department of Special Education, TC 722, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5700 | This department's teach lab is an adaptive computer lab, it provides adaptive computer experiences for education students in the Department of Special Education, provides a resource center for Indiana special educators, assists educators in assessing the computing needs of children with special needs. The lab is equipped with 15 Macintosh computers with adjustable tables and contains various computer adaptations - both software and hardware. Its students have access to the fastest wireless network available and are using technology in innovative ways. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Philosophy Degree (Ph.D.) in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | This program helps students to achieve their professional goals. Program activities may include in-service training, research and publication, college teaching, curriculum development, clinical or laboratory work, and graduate courses in the major and related subjects. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Philosophy in Human Bioenergetics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program has have fostered a variety of research projects that include carbohydrate metabolism, heat stress, fluid balance, over-training and tapering in runners, swimmers, and cyclists. This applied approach continues today with the focus on limits of human performance and clinical investigations of aging, space flight, children, and diabetes to name a few. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 603. Advance Exercise Physiology (4 hrs), EXSCI 611. Research Design (3 hrs), EXSCI 630. Metabolic Adaptation (3 hrs), EXSCI 637.Human Dynamics (5 hrs), EXSCI 633. Seminar (2-6 hrs), CHEM 563. Principles of Biochemistry I (3 hrs), CHEM 564. Principles of Biochemistry 2 (3 hrs), EXCSI 634.Mechanical Analysis (3 hrs), EDPSY 641.Statistical I Methods or (3 hrs), EDPSY 642.Statistical Methods II (3 hrs), BIO 524. Biophysics (3 hrs), BIO 557. Molecular (4 hrs), BIO 558. Advanced Cell Mol (4 hrs), BIO 559. Bioenergetics (4 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctor of Philosophy in School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | This program is based on the practitioner-scientist model. Students are expected to fulfill a set of core courses in theoretical and scientific foundations of psychology and additional courses that apply the theoretical and scientific contributions of psychology to practical problems. Examples of the latter category are courses in diagnosis and treatment and required practical and an internship. The doctoral track in school psychology is among the best in the nation for scholarly productivity and successful graduates. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology, Teachers College TC 1008, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5252 | The Department is the academic home of the Psychoeducational, Diagnostic, and Intervention Clinic and the Neuropsychology Lab. The research interests are wide-ranging, but include cognition and learning, human development, assessment and measurement, gifted studies, neuropsychology and program evaluation, among others. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctoral Cognate in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program is cognate for those seeking a Ph.D. within the English Department. This program encourage cross-genre study, and graduate students choose among writing workshops in poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction, as well as graduate literature seminars and a broad range of electives from across the Ball State campus. | Students should have a masters degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctoral Degree in Audiology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology | This program involves evaluation and rehabilitative management of people with hearing and balance disorders. The Indiana Commission for Higher Education (ICHE) approved Doctor of Audiology (AuD) degree October 13, 1995. This program, the third initiated program in the country (after Baylor University and Central Michigan University), currently ranks as the second oldest existing AuD program in the country. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, Art and Communication Building AC 104, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8161 | This department has a primary mission to prepare outstanding speech-language pathologists and audiologists. Its supporting and secondary missions include: to provide an educational experience which assists students in acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to deliver high-quality clinical services as well as stimulate the students' intellectual curiosity; to provide high-quality diagnostic and therapeutic audiology and speech-language pathology services to residents of East Central Indiana and surrounding areas; to provide continuing education and serve as a resource center for practicing speech-language pathologists and audiologists; to contribute to the advancement of the professions of speech-language pathology and audiology through research, clinical practice, and professional development; to contribute to the development of Ball State University and the state of Indiana. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctoral Degree in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | This program is a cognate program. A cognate is a sequence of courses that are related to each other, but may not be in the same department. Cognates add depth to the doctoral program. Students can choose a cognate that is similar to what other students are doing, or create their own. This cognate program depends upon students own interests and needs. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university An overall grade point average of at least 2.75, or at least 3.0 in the last half of undergraduate studies. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science, RB 455, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8641 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctoral Program - Science Education Doctorate in Physics and Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program is knowledgeable in theory and skilled at solving practical problems. Physics majors may work in engineering positions such as product development involving computer hardware and software, environmental or industrial management. An initial advisor is assigned to each new student to begin mentoring them through the program. During the first year of study the student's advising committee will be appointed. Often the initial advisor chairs the student's advising and dissertation committee, but this is not always the case. The advising committee approves the student's academic program. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Doctorate Program - Science Doctorate in Physics and Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program is knowledgeable in theory and skilled at solving practical problems. Physics majors may work in engineering positions such as product development involving computer hardware and software, environmental or industrial management. An initial advisor is assigned to each new student to begin mentoring them through the program. During the first year of study the student's advising committee will be appointed. Often the initial advisor chairs the student's advising and dissertation committee, but this is not always the case. The advising committee approves the student's academic program. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Double Major in Political Science and Economics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: POLS 280 Compar Systm, POLS 281 Prob Em Nats, POLS 290 Am Fr Policy, POLS 293 Intl Relatns, POLS 312 Early W Thot, POLS 345 Nat Def Poly, POLS 382 Westn Europe, POLS 384 Brit Gov Pol, POLS 385 Euro Union, POLS 386 Pol Rus, POLS 392 Un Intl Org, POLS 394 Int Rln Asia, POLS 488 Gv Pol China, POLS 490 Intrnatl Law, POLS 493 Wrld Politcs, POLS 495 F Pol China, POLS 369 Prof Exp, EURO 369 Prof Exp, POLS 404 Senior Thes, POLS 479 Pract Exp, EURO 479 Pract Exp, POLS 499 Senior Sem. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science, NQ 240, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8780 | This department prides itself on teaching excellence. Most of its faculty members have received teaching awards. Likewise, in public service, its professors have contributed thousands of volunteer hours to various government and not-for-profit boards and commissions, many faculty members have sought elective office and are active in both major political parties. This department is home to the Bowen Center for Public Affairs. The Center, named after former Governor Otis R. Bowen, holds civic education seminars throughout the state through the Bowen Institute on Political Participation, conducts training for public officials to ensure effective and efficient government administration, and helps establish best practices in public administration through original research and surveys of Hoosier citizens. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | EdD in Adult, Higher, and Community Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | This program prepares graduate students for professions in a variety of educational, governmental, community, business, and industrial settings. The adult/community education track emphasizes developing skills in management, planning, personnel and program development, teaching, and evaluation. The higher education track emphasizes developing skills in administration, organizational and policy development, teaching, curriculum, and social justice advocacy related to postsecondary institutions. Students choose from two tracks: The adult/community education track emphasizes developing skills in management, planning, personnel and program development, teaching, and evaluation. The higher education track emphasizes developing skills in administration, organizational and policy development, teaching curriculum, and social justice advocacy related to postsecondary institutions. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies, Teachers College 829 Ball State University, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5461 | The Department of Educational Studies is a learning community engaged in the preparation of educators, the discovery of knowledge, and the promotion of social justice. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Educational Specialist (Ed.S.) in School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | This program is structured to educate student in accordance with Indiana school psychology licensure requirements and National Association of School Psychologists standards. Through the program, students will develop competencies in assessment, consultation, intervention, and prevention through course work, clinic- and field-based practical, and an internship. The course sequence also includes the study of human development, individual differences, learning, curriculum, research methods, and statistics. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology, Teachers College TC 1008, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5252 | The Department is the academic home of the Psychoeducational, Diagnostic, and Intervention Clinic and the Neuropsychology Lab. The research interests are wide-ranging, but include cognition and learning, human development, assessment and measurement, gifted studies, neuropsychology and program evaluation, among others. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Exercise Science Major in Physical Education | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is designed to prepare students for entry level positions in the exercise and fitness field, or for post-graduate study in exercise science or other health-related disciplines. The program is also designed to prepare students for appropriate professional organization certifications. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Exercise Science Major in Physical Education - Aquatics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is the most comprehensive aquatic degree in the country. This courses utilize multiple facilities due to the variety of curriculum. Physical assets include a 25 yard x 40 competition/recreation pool, 25 yard, 8 lane competition pool, 3 meter and 1 meter spring boards over a diving well with underwater observatory. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: PEP 155 Cmptr PE Sp, PEP 190 Intr to Aqua, EXSCI 479 Ex Sc Int, EXSCI 292 Anatomy, EXSCI 294 Anat Kines, PEP 216 Lifegrd Trng, PEP 260 Emerg Respon, PEP 313 Biome of Aqu, PEP 315 W S I, PEP 316 Aqua Fit Inst ,PEP 404 Lifegrd Inst, PEP 454 Pool Op Main, PEP 455 Aq Fac Man, PEP 457 Aq Fac Desgn, PEP 458 Cam Ldr Dev, SPTAD 345 Spt Comm. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Honors Program in Music | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program recognizes students with high scholastic achievement. An Honors Thesis or Creative Project (ID 499) for three hours is required. Each student accepted in the School of Music Honors Program will be assigned to a faculty advisor who will serve as the student's mentor and guide the student through the program. 2. To graduate with School of Music Honors, a student must complete an Honors Thesis or Creative Project. The student must attain a 3.75 GPA in music relevant to his/her specific program, and attain an overall GPA of 3.5. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. Students applying for this program must have at least a 3.5 average in music and an overall GPA of 3.25. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Honors in Biology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. To enter this program students must complete 3 credit hours of BIO 498 (Undergraduate Research), HONRS 490 or HONRS 499, have a minimum GPA of 3.5 or higher. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Honors in Family and Consumer Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is designed to foster and rewards academic excellence in FCS. To receive the distinction in this program students must earn an A and departmental honors credit in a minimum of 4 upper division courses in their major area, complete the approved thesis or project. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. Those who are wishing to enroll in this program must have an overall GPA of 3.25 or higher in Family and Consumer Sciences, include sophomore standings. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Honors in History | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | This program is designed to recognize outstanding history majors. Such students are prepared to supplement their course work with reading, writing, or other projects that reflect their commitment to understanding and mastering the basic assumptions and methods of history as a humanistic discipline. To demonstrate this level of achievement, students shall graduate with a 3.5 GPA in history courses, seek additional work in at least two courses and write at least one research paper on a historical topic. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History, Ball State University, Burkhardt Room 200, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8700 | This department's students who take courses in the Department, including many who major in one of its programs, will pursue careers with no direct relationship to the field. The Department already vitally serves the needs of these students, but it can do even more. It can better serve these constituencies by providing direct instruction in the way that history courses can prepare them for other professions and by linking the curriculum more closely to such pursuits. The benefits of this change can be multiplied, moreover, by making a special effort to apprise the University and the larger community of this aspect of the Department's programs. Turning in this direction will be a special mission of the Department as the new century begins. In the twenty-first century, college graduates need to be prepared to live as global citizens. They need to acquire knowledge of the diverse people with whom they share this world. Moreover, as the world is experiencing a virtual revolution in information and communication technologies, college students need to be trained to acquire and critically evaluate the abundance of information. Finally, they need to acquire skills that allow them to communicate their knowledge and ideas. Studies in history at the university level are especially well suited to the preparation of students for this kind of world. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Honors in Physics and Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. Students entering this program must have a minimum of 3.5 GPA or higher in physics and astronomy and based on departmental regulations, they may take upper division courses. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Joint Masters Degree in Journalism/Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | This program is offered by Department of Journalism and the Center for Information and Communication Sciences have created a joint master’s degree for students who want to obtain a specialization in journalism or public relations along with a background in information management and technology. Graduate advisors from both disciplines create an individualized program for students, based on their interests and needs. Students choose one program as the lead program, and that choice will determine whether the result will be a master of arts degree in journalism or public relations or a master of science degree in information and communication sciences. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in Actuarial Science | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program provides training for careers that involve analyzing and solving financial, business, and social problems related to economic risk. The program includes course work that prepares students for the professional examinations given by the Society of Actuaries and the Casualty Actuary Society. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MATHS 551 Mathematics of Finance, 552 Mathematics of Life Contingencies, RMI 597 Independent Study Insurance, MATHS 620 Mathematical Theory of Statistics, 659 Research in Actuarial Science, MATHS 528 Regression and Time Series Models (3), 553 Mathematics of Life Contingencies 2 (4), 557 Loss Distributions (4), 621 Mathematical Theory of Statistics 2 (4), 655 Topics in Actuarial Science (4), 657 Survival Models (4), 658 Risk Theory (4). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in English (General) | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program designed to serve students wishing to prepare for doctoral work, satisfy requirements for teaching licensing, or take a terminal degree, the MA offers maximal flexibility within the varied areas of English. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in English (Literature) | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program includes training in research methods and literary theory and culminates in a research project or thesis, the M.A. in English (Literature) prepares students for doctoral work in the field. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in English(Rhetoric and Composition) | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program is one of the oldest established programs in the United States. Vital and evolving, this disciplinary focus is both a necessary cultural practice and an important intellectual discipline, central to literacy studies, creative writing, and linguistics, as well as reading-writing education. Focusing on the inclusive nature of rhetoric and composition, Ball State’s unique course of study explores the production, interpretation, and analysis of discourse across genres, media, and historical eras. Central to the program is the belief that rhetoric and composition as a discipline provides the necessary framework for understanding the creation of all discourse—socio-political, private, and literary—in whatever medium: oral, print, visual, and hypermedia. As a result, this multifaceted course of study introduces students to a range of research methodologies and methods, inviting candidates to pursue dissertation topics ranging over traditional and nontraditional areas. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENG 604 Technology and English Studies 3, ENG 620 Linguistics and the Study of English 3, ENG 690 Seminar in Composition 3, ENG 691 Advanced Composition OR ENG 693 Writing in the Profession 3, ENG 694 The Classical Rhetoric of Composition 3, ENG 699 Contemporary Composition 3, ENG 697 Research Paper (3) OR ENG 698 Thesis (6). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program offer small classes, award-winning graduate faculty, opportunities for professional development, and a wide range of courses in all areas of English. Graduate assistants receive extensive training and mentoring in teaching first-year college composition and teaching English to speakers of other languages Doctoral students have consistently earned teaching and administrative positions in higher education upon graduation. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENG 601 Research in English Studies (linguistics) 3, 621 Approaches to Modern English Grammar 3, 622 or 631 History of the English Language (3), History of Linguistics (3) 3, 623 Linguistic Phonetics 3, 625 Phonology 3, 626 Syntax 3, 627 Sociolinguistics 3, 628 Language and Culture 3, 632 Discourse Analysis. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program provides students with a broad graduate level mathematical background suitable for pursuing a Ph.D. degree in the mathematical science or for seeking employment in business, industry, or government. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: Algebra MATHS 511 Abstract Algebra, 512 Abstract Algebra 2, MATHS 516 Theory of Numbers (3), 619 Special Studies in Algebra (3), MATHS 571 Real Analysis 1 (3), 572 Real Analysis 2 (3), MATHS 675 Theory of Functions of Real Variable 1 (3), MATHS 677 Complex Variables 1 (3), 678 Complex Variables 2 (3). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in Mathematics Education - Elementary and Middle School Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program provides opportunities for elementary, middle school, and high school teachers to examine various issues related to the teaching and learning of mathematics while continuing to develop their own mathematical content knowledge. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MATHS 514 Algebra and Functions for Elementary and Middle School Teachers, MATHS 517 Number Systems and Number Theory for Elementary and Middle School Teachers, MATHS 542 Geometry and Measurement for Elementary and Middle School Teachers, MATHS 623 Data Analysis and Probability for Teachers, MATHS 690 Curriculum and Instruction in Mathematics Education, MATHS 694 Research Methods in Mathematics Education, MATHS 696 Action Research in Mathematics Education. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in Mathematics Education - Secondary Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program provides opportunities for elementary, middle school, and high school teachers to examine various issues related to the teaching and learning of mathematics while continuing to develop their own mathematical content knowledge. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MATHS 641 Topics in Geometry, MATHS 511 Abstract Algebra 1, MATHS 571 Real Analysis 1, 6-12 hours (as approved by advisor) from (If undergraduate equivalent is not completed), MATHS 512 Abstract Algebra 2, MATHS 516 Theory of Numbers, MATHS 560 History of Mathematics, MATHS 572 Real Analysis 2, MATHS 620 Mathematical Theory of Statistics 1, MATHS 621 Mathematical Theory of Statistics 2, MATHS 623 Data Analysis and Probability for Teachers, MATHS 645 Topology 1, MATHS 675 Theory of Functions of Real Variables, MATHS 677 Complex Variables 1. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in Natural Resources and Environmental Management | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program includes: Customized course of study tailored to student's academic and career objectives Balance between basic science and human aspects of resource management. Preparation for a variety of environmental careers. Excellent record of job placement. Outstanding faculty, including Ball State 2000 Researcher of the Year Thad Godish. Comprehensive lab facilities that include HPLC, ion chromatography, atomic absorption spectrometer, etc. Participation in the Field Station and Environmental Education Center. Focus on campus and global sustainability issues Networking with NREM Alumni Society. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: NREM 507 - Environmental Management in Developing Countries, NREM 509 - Sociopolitical Dimensions of Global Environmental Change, NREM 511 - Water Resources, NREM 521 - Soil Resources, NREM 524 - Soil Classification and Interpretation, NREM 531 - Energy and Mineral Resources: Issues and Choices, NREM 541 - Air Quality, NREM 546 - Indoor Environmental Quality, NREM 571 - Outdoor Recreation and Society, NREM 577 - Wilderness and Society, NREM 585 - Wastewater Management, NREM 587 - Solid and Hazardous Waste Management, NREM 589 - Emergency Response to Biological, Chemical, and Nuclear Hazards, NREM 608 - Research Methodologies in Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program provides students with the background suitable for employment as a statistician in business, industry, or government. The degree also provide suitable preparation for pursuing a Ph.D. degree in Statistics. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MATHS 522 Theory of Sampling and Surveys 3, 528 Regression and Time Series Models 3, 529 Analysis of Variance in Experimental Design Models 3, 620 Mathematical Theory of Statistics 1 4, 621 S158 Mathematical Theory of Statistics 2 4, 625 Probability Theory and Applications 3, 626 Probability and Stochastic Processes 3, 628 Monte Carlo Methods 4, 689 Research Methods in Mathematics and Statistics 3. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in TESOL | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program offer small classes, award-winning graduate faculty, opportunities for professional development, and a wide range of courses in all areas of English. Graduate assistants receive extensive training and mentoring in teaching first-year college composition and teaching English to speakers of other languages Doctoral students have consistently earned teaching and administrative positions in higher education upon graduation. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENG 536 Theory and Research in TESOL 3, 537 Methods and Materials in TESOL (I) 6, 624 Second Language Acquisition 3, ENG 627 Sociolinguistics (3), 628 Language and Culture (3), 632 Discourse Analysis (3), ENG 621 Modern English Grammar (3), 623 Linguistic Phonetics (3), 630 Contrastive Analysis (3). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.A. in TESOL and Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program offer small classes, award-winning graduate faculty, opportunities for professional development, and a wide range of courses in all areas of English. Graduate assistants receive extensive training and mentoring in teaching first-year college composition and teaching English to speakers of other languages Doctoral students have consistently earned teaching and administrative positions in higher education upon graduation. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENG 536 Theory and Research in TESOL 3, 537 Methods and Materials in TESOL (I) 6, 624 Second Language Acquisition 3, ENG 627 Sociolinguistics (3), 628 Language and Culture (3), 632 Discourse Analysis (3), ENG 621 Modern English Grammar (3), 623 Linguistic Phonetics (3), 630 Contrastive Analysis (3). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.S in Natural Resources and Environmental Management | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program includes: Customized course of study tailored to student's academic and career objectives Balance between basic science and human aspects of resource management. Preparation for a variety of environmental careers. Excellent record of job placement. Outstanding faculty, including Ball State 2000 Researcher of the Year Thad Godish. Comprehensive lab facilities that include HPLC, ion chromatography, atomic absorption spectrometer, etc. Participation in the Field Station and Environmental Education Center. Focus on campus and global sustainability issues Networking with NREM Alumni Society. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: NREM 507 - Environmental Management in Developing Countries, NREM 509 - Sociopolitical Dimensions of Global Environmental Change, NREM 511 - Water Resources, NREM 521 - Soil Resources, NREM 524 - Soil Classification and Interpretation, NREM 531 - Energy and Mineral Resources: Issues and Choices, NREM 541 - Air Quality, NREM 546 - Indoor Environmental Quality, NREM 571 - Outdoor Recreation and Society, NREM 577 - Wilderness and Society, NREM 585 - Wastewater Management, NREM 587 - Solid and Hazardous Waste Management, NREM 589 - Emergency Response to Biological, Chemical, and Nuclear Hazards, NREM 608 - Research Methodologies in Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | M.S. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program provides students with a broad graduate level mathematical background suitable for pursuing a Ph.D. degree in the mathematical science or for seeking employment in business, industry, or government. Students pursuing the master of science degree will be required to write a 6-hour thesis. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: Algebra MATHS 511 Abstract Algebra, 512 Abstract Algebra 2, MATHS 516 Theory of Numbers (3), 619 Special Studies in Algebra (3), MATHS 571 Real Analysis 1 (3), 572 Real Analysis 2 (3), MATHS 675 Theory of Functions of Real Variable 1 (3), MATHS 677 Complex Variables 1 (3), 678 Complex Variables 2 (3). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | MA in Adult and Community Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | This program provides students with enhanced concepts and competencies in designing, implementing, and evaluating educational programs for adults in a variety of public and private educational settings. The program provides students with an understanding of how educational, social, political, and economic systems interface within communities. The program seeks to develop individuals who are committed to fostering learning as a lifelong process and in creating learning organizations and societies. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies, Teachers College 829 Ball State University, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5461 | The Department of Educational Studies is a learning community engaged in the preparation of educators, the discovery of knowledge, and the promotion of social justice. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MA in Apparel Design | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program will teach advanced skills in fashion illustration and pattern making and modification, including using CAD and other computer-aided design programs to produce patterns for original garments designed. Students also learn contemporary sewing, draping, and tailoring techniques and study current trends in fashion. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MA in Curriculum and Educational Technology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | This program recognizes the importance of integrating curriculum with innovative technology. In addition to core training in both areas, specialty tracks develop K-12 technology coordinators and master teachers who integrate learning technologies into the K-12 curriculum (educational technology track) and curriculum specialists who direct curricular design, implementation, and evaluation in K-12 schools (curriculum track). | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies, Teachers College 829 Ball State University, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5461 | The Department of Educational Studies is a learning community engaged in the preparation of educators, the discovery of knowledge, and the promotion of social justice. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MA in Fashion Merchandising | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepare students for a career as a store manager, retail buyer, merchandise manager, visual merchandiser, and other advanced positions in the industry. In this program, students will build the knowledge that need to make sound buying and merchandising decisions by learning about today's fashion markets, fashion forecasting, and current trends in fashion merchandising and the international apparel marketplace. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MA in Nutrition | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program will pursue advanced study of carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, vitamins, and minerals and learn their relationship to health and disease while conducting research in nutrition assessment and experimental foods labs or in the local community. This program will prepare students to help people of all ages gain and maintain good health. In the programs, students will learn to assess the current nutrition level of patients, study obesity and weight control, and learn to develop appropriate diets and therapies. Courses will also cover the nutritional needs of athletes, pregnant women, infants, children, and older adults. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MA in Physiology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program is designed for students seeking in-depth coverage of physiological principles pertaining to the human organism, endocrinology, renal function, cardiovascular dynamics, and Pathophysiology. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with an academic major or minor in biology, the life sciences, or equivalent science fields. For students applying for graduate teaching assistantships, a grade point average of at least 3.0 on a scale of 4.0 is required. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MA in Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | This program provides students with intensive professional preparation in six core areas: Pedagogy, Curriculum, Educational Foundations, Educational Technology, Multicultural Education, as well as Educational Research. The program enables practicing teachers to explore theoretical concepts that relate directly to their instruction to improve instructional effectiveness. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies, Teachers College 829 Ball State University, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5461 | The Department of Educational Studies is a learning community engaged in the preparation of educators, the discovery of knowledge, and the promotion of social justice. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MS in Apparel Design | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program will teach advanced skills in fashion illustration and pattern making and modification, including using CAD and other computer-aided design programs to produce patterns for original garments designed. Students also learn contemporary sewing, draping, and tailoring techniques and study current trends in fashion. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MS in Dietetics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program will prepare students to help people of all ages gain and maintain good health. In the programs, students will learn to assess the current nutrition level of patients, study obesity and weight control, and learn to develop appropriate diets and therapies. Courses will also cover the nutritional needs of athletes, pregnant women, infants, children, and older adults. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MS in Fashion Merchandising | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepare students for a career as a store manager, retail buyer, merchandise manager, visual merchandiser, and other advanced positions in the industry. In this program, students will build the knowledge that need to make sound buying and merchandising decisions by learning about today's fashion markets, fashion forecasting, and current trends in fashion merchandising and the international apparel marketplace. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | MS in Physiology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program is designed for students seeking in-depth coverage of physiological principles pertaining to the human organism, endocrinology, renal function, cardiovascular dynamics, and pathophysiology. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with an academic major or minor in biology, the life sciences, or equivalent science fields. For students applying for graduate teaching assistantships, a grade point average of at least 3.0 on a scale of 4.0 is required. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Anthropology | This program build a strong foundation in critical thinking and analytical skills that applies to many academic and professional fields. Anthropologists work well with people from diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds in addition to performing a number of specialized tasks, including market research and program analysis - skills and characteristics valuable to employers worldwide. As a science, anthropology is divided into four subfields: archaeology, cultural anthropology, biological anthropology, linguistics. Career opportunities for anthropology graduates may include: management, public relations, public affairs, legal services, marketing, communications, fund-raising, personnel, federal public service. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: ANTH 101 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 103 - Archaeology and Culture, ANTH 200 - Sophomore Seminar, ANTH 206 - Fundamentals of Biological Anthropology, ANTH 301 - History of Method and Theory in Anthropology, ANTH 308 - Introduction to Anthropological Linguistics, ANTH 370 - Topics in Old World Cultures, ANTH 491 - Senior Seminar in Anthropology, ANTH 329 - Laboratory Methods in Material Culture, ANTH 377 - Topics in Museum Operations, ANTH 416 - Human Osteology, ANTH 459 - Ethnographic Methods, ANTH 471 - Ethnohistory, ANTH 307 - Applied Anthropology, ANTH 311 - Ethnicity and Race, ANTH 312 - Ecological Dimensions of Culture, ANTH 321 - Social Organization, ANTH 331 - Native Americans of North America, ANTH 332 - Native Americans of the Great Lakes, ANTH 341 - Anthropology and Women, ANTH 342 - American Culture, ANTH 427 - Culture and Medicine, ANTH 481 - Culture, Economy, and Development, ANTH 482 - Native Americans of the American Southwest, ANTH 204 - Fundamentals of Archaeology, ANTH 310 - Topics in Old World Prehistory, ANTH 320 - Topics in New World Archaeology, ANTH 334 - Midwestern Archaeology, ANTH 343 - Historical Archaeology of Eastern United States, ANTH 364 - European Prehistory, ANTH 457 - Applied Archaeology, ANTH 463 - Theory and Method in Historical Archaeology, ANTH 305 - Human Biological Variation, ANTH 306 - The Anthropology of Physical Growth and Development, ANTH 315 - Human Paleontology, ANTH 416 - Human Osteology, ANTH 455 - Primatology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Anthropology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Anthropology, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1575 | The Department of Anthropology is committed to providing students with opportunities to apply what they have learned. The department offers cultural field trips among the Native Americans of the southwestern United States; a cultural field school in Jamaica, Romania, and Vietnam; prehistoric and historic archaeological field schools in Indiana; consulting work through Ball State's Archaeological Resources Management Service; and an internship program. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Classic Culture | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | In this program students learn about the history, art, literature, and mythology of these people as well as how they loved, fought, worshiped, worked, played, lived, and died. They will also learn and come to realize how important they are as founders of its own culture in the twenty-first century. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: CC 201 - Cultural Life of Ancient Greece, CC 202 - Cultural Life of Ancient Rome, CC 301 - Classical Literature in English Translation, CC 305 - Classical Myth and Theory, HIST 461 - Development of Greek Civilization, HIST 462 - Development of Roman Civilization, COMM 420 - Classical Rhetorical Theory, PHIL 300 - History of Ancient Philosophy, POLS 312 - Early Western Political Thought. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Classical Language | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | In this program students learn about the history, art, literature, and mythology of these people as well as how they loved, fought, worshiped, worked, played, lived, and died. They will also learn and come to realize how important they are as founders of its own culture in the twenty-first century. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: LAT 201 - Intermediate Latin 1, LAT 202 - Intermediate Latin 2, LAT 305 - Prose Composition, GRK 101 - Beginning Greek 1, GRK 102 - Beginning Greek 2, GRK 201 - Intermediate Greek 1, GRK 202 - Intermediate Greek 2, GRK 305 - Homer. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Dietetics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepares students for opportunities in nutrition, food service systems management, and administration of community nutrition programs. New graduates are prepared to work as entry level registered dietitians after obtaining and completing an ADA supervised practice. The supervised practice follows graduation and entry is based on GPA, work experience, and faculty recommendations. After completion of this work-related experience, the individual is eligible for the national registration exam to become a registered dietitian (RD). | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCSFN 110 Fd Prep Sci, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, FCSFN 101 Intro Dietet, BIOL 111 Princ Bio 1, CHEM 112 Gen Chem 2, FCS 103 Intro FCS, FCSFN 275 Personal Ntr, COMM 210 Fund Pub Com, FCSFN 220 Meal Des Pre, PSYSC 100 General, CHEM 231 Organic, PHYSL 299 Human Phys, CHEM 360 Essen Biochem, FCSFN 371 Comp Diet HFM, FCSFN 345 Macro Nutr, FCSFN 363 Instit Admin, FCSFN 330 Exp Foods, MGT 300 MGT Beh Org, FCSFN 346 Micro Nutr, FCSFN 390 Practicum, BIOL 213 Microbiol, FCSFN 247 Sanit Purch, FCSFN 446 Med Ntr Th 1, FCSFN 400 Qt Food Prod, FCSFN 455 Lifecycle, FCS 403 FCS Practice, FCSFN 447 Med Ntr Th 2, FCSFN 456 Community. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is combined with an approved minor in another area of study or an associate degree. The student with a degree in this area may find careers in areas such as business, community and public agencies, government, and communications. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCS 103 (Intro FCS), FCSFN 110 (Fd Prep Sci), FCSFC 202 (Family Welln), FCSFA 101 (Dim Clothing), FCSFC 265 (Inf/Tod Dvlt), FCSFC 275 (Child Dvlpmt), FCSFN 275 (Personal Ntr), FCSPM 104 (Hous Decis), FCSPM 123 (ID Basics), FCSFC 250 (Family Relat), FCSFC 475 (Marriage), FCSFC 340 ( Life Wrk Mgt), FCSFC 393 (Pres Tech), FCSFC 450 (Consumer Ed), FCSFN 310 (Cust Service), FCS 403 (FCS Practice), FCS 369 (Internship). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences - Apparel Design | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepares the students for positions in the ever changing, but exciting fashion global marketplace as designers, illustrators, pattern makers, textile designers, fabric and notions buyers, sample makers, apparel manufacturers' managers, sewers, retail custom clothiers, and other related positions in the fashion industry. Students selecting the Apparel Design Option in Family and Consumer Sciences will complete the FCS common core. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCS 103 (Intro FCS), FCSFA 101 (Dim Clothing), CHEM 100 (People Chem), FCSFA 102 (Fund Ap Cons), FCSFA 230 (Tex Apparel), FCSFA 270 (Fashion Indy), FCSFA 202 (Intrm Const), FCSFA 298 (Fash Prod Anl), ECON 116 (Survey Ideas) or ECON 201 (Elem Micro), FCSFA 300 (Flat Pattern), FCSFA 360 (Hist Costume), FCSFA 265 (Fas Illust), FCSFA 301 (Tailoring), FCSFA 304 (Grade and Mark), MKG 300 (Prin Marketing), FCSFA 303 (Draping), FCSFA 365 (Designers), FCSFA 401 (CAD Apparel), MGT 300 (Mgt Beh Org), FCSFA 480 (Studio), FCSFA 388 (Ap Mfg Wsale), FCS 369 (Internship), FCS 403 (FCS Practice), FCSFA 481 (Fash Promo), FCSFA 497 (Portfolio FA). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences - Child Development | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepares students to work with young children (ages birth to eight) and their families. Many of its graduates work as teachers or administrators in early care and education programs, such as a child care center, Head Start or a family child care home. Others work as home visitors or developmental therapists. Each is qualified to work in more generalized positions in this rapidly expanding field. Students gain many experiential learning opportunities at the Ball State Child Study Center, a nationally accredited infant/toddler and preschool facility located on campus, supervised by faculty in the Child Development program. In addition to in-depth course work, each student has the opportunity take part in both a practicum experience and an internship, cementing his or her knowledge and skills in working with young children. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCS 103 Intro FCS, FCSFC 202 Family Welln, PSYSC 100 General, FCSFC 100 Intro FC, FCSFC 265 Inf/Tod Dvlt, EDEL 220 E C Dis/Guid, FCSFC 250 Family Relat, FCSFN 240 Ntr Educators, SOCWK 100 Intro S W, SPCED 210 T and P ECSE, FCSFC 275 Child Dvlpmt, EDEL 260 E C C and I, SOCWK 230 Behav Envr 1, SCOWK 330 Behav Envr 2, FCSFC 484 Fam Stress, FCSFC 380 Parenting, FCSFC 320 EC Lead Mngt, FCSFC 393 Pres Tech, FCSFC 490 Child Pract, FCSFC 425 Grant Wrtg, FCS 369 Internship, FCS 403 FCS Practice, FCSFC 485 Fam Pol. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences - Child Life Specialist | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program's graduates will work with children from infancy to adolescence in a hospital setting to provide support and assistance to families and their hospitalized child. CLS work along side doctors, nurses, and other pediatric therapists. Course work includes classes from multiple disciplines to provide the student with a solid academic background and one-on-one experiences with young children. Following their internship, with 480 hours experience, students are eligible to sit for the Certified Child Life Specialist Exam. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCS 103 Intro FCS, FCSSC 100 Intro Fam/Child, PSYSC 100 General, FCSFC 265 Inf/Tod Dvlt, BIO 100 Life Sci, NUR 101 Terminology, FCSFC 250 Family Relat, FCSFN 240 Ntr Educators, SOCWK 100 Intro S W, NUR 103 Hlth Behav, HSC 261 Health Sex, FCSFC 275 Child Dvlpmt, BIO 254 Bio Soc Cont, SOCWK 230 Behav Envr 1, FCSFC 393 Pres Tech, FCSFC 425 Grnt Wrt/ResMeth, EDPSY 351 Adoles Psych, FCSFC 380 Parenting, SOCWK 330 Behav Envr 2, FCSFC Fam Policy, FCSFC 490 Child Pract, HSC 471 Death Dying, FCSFC 484 Fam Str Crs, FCS 369 Internship, FCS 403 FCS Practice. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences - Family Studies | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepares students for careers which focus on the well-being and healthy development of individuals and families across the life-span recognizing that individuals and families are influenced by the larger society and the time period in which they live. Its curriculum has been developed to meet the academic requirements to become a Certified Family Life Educator, a national certification program sponsored by the National Council on Family Relations. Family Life Education incorporates a preventative and educational approach to individual and family issues, such as communication and relationship skills, parenting education, marriage education, diversity and social issues as they relate to the family. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCS 103 (Intro FCS), PSYSC 100 General, FCSFC 100, FCSFC 250 Family Relat, SOCWK 100 Intro Social Work, FCSFC 265 Inf/Tod Development, FCSFN 240 Nutrition Educators, FCSFN 275 Personal Nutrition, FCSFC 275 Child Development, SOCWK 230 Human Behav Soc Envr 1, HCS 261 Health Sex, PSYSC 277 Psych Sexual Behavior, EDPSY 351 Adolescent Psychology, FCSFC 340 Life Work Mgt, FCSFC 425 Grant Wrt/Res Meth, CPSY 470 Cul Coun, FCSFC 380Parenting, FCSFC 393 Present Techniques for FLE, FCSFC 475 Marriage, SOCWK 330 Human Behav Soc Envr 2, FCS 403 FCS Practice, FCSFC 484 Family Stress, SOC 431 Aging and Life Course, FCS 369 Internship, FCSFC 485 Family Policy. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences - Fashion Merchandising | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program focuses on preparing students for the ever-changing retail industry as well as manufacturing, distribution, and other related fashion areas. Study includes courses in dimensions of clothing, textiles, clothing construction (including the use of CAD), evolution of costume, visual merchandising, fashion product analysis, designers and forecasting, fashion buying and merchandising, apparel manufacturing and wholesaling, international apparel markets and fashion promotion. Students selecting Fashion Merchandising complete the FCS common core and a marketing minor. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCS 103 (Intro FCS), FCSFA 101 (Dim Clothing), CHEM 100 (People Chem), FCSFA 102 (Fund Ap Cons), FCSFA 230 (Tex Apparel), FCSFA 270 (Fashion Indy), FCSFA 202 (Intrm const), FCSFA 298 (Fash Prod Anl), ECON 116 (Survey Ideas) or ECON 201 (Elem Micro), ISOM 125 (Micro App), FCSFA 280 (Merch Math), FCSFA 300 (Flat Pattern), FCSFA 365 (Designers), MGT 300 (Mgt Beh Org), MKG 300 (Prin Marketing), FCSFA 345 (Visual Mdse), FCSFA 360 (Hist Costume), FCSFA 388 (Ap Mfg Wsale), FCSFA 488 (Fash Buy Mrc), FCS 369 (Internship), FCS 403 (FCS Practice), FCSFA 475 (Int Fash Mkt), FCSFA 481 (Fash Promo). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences - Hospitality and Food Management | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program provides an efficient and effective pathway to upper-level management positions in hospitality and the food industry. The degree offers students a blend of theory of management practices and experiential learning. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCS 103 (Intro FCS), FCSFN 105 (Fs Hosp Ind), FCSFN 110 (Fd Prep Sci), FCSFN 220 (Meal Des Pre), FCSFN 247 (Fd San Purch), FCSFN 262 (Fd Svc Plng), FCSFN 371 (Com Ntr Fm) or ISOM 125 (Micro App), FCSFN 250 (Lodging), FCSFN 310 (Customer Rel), ACC 201 (Prin Acct 1), FCSFN 300 (Cost Control), FCSFN 363 (Instit Admin), FCSFN 400 (Qt Food Prod), MGT 300 (Mgt Beh Org), ANTH 111 (Global Div) or GEOG 261 (Tourism Syst) or HSC 250 (Emergency HC) or SOC 242 (Problems), FCSFN 395 (Ntr Fd Cust) or FCS 400 (Field Study), FCSFN 476 (Event Mgt), MGT 361 (Mgt Hman Res), ECON 116 (Survey Idear) or ECON 201 (Elem Micro), MKG 300 (Prin Market), FCS 403 (FCS Practice), FCSFN 475 (Cater Profit) or FCSFN 477 (Ad Even Mgt), FCS 369 (Internship). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences - Interior Design | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepares students for entry level positions in a variety of firms and organizations such as entertainment design, facilities management, government/institutional design, health care facility design, hospitality design, store planning and residential design. The curriculum is designed to provide experience in the range of concepts, theories, knowledge, and practices required by the profession. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Family and Consumer Sciences - Residential Property Management | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This option combines aspects of housing and business, preparing students for the challenges involved in the management, marketing, and design of multifamily living environments. The program is approved by the National Apartment Association, allowing students to sit for the National Apartment Leasing Professional (NALP) and Certified Apartment Manager (CAM) exams. An RPM minor is also available. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FCS 369 Internship, FCSPM 104 Hous Decis, FCSPM 123 I D Basics, FCSPM 235 Intro R P M, FCSPM 275 Mkt Res Prop, FCSPM 305 Maintenance, FCSPM 315 Sr Housing, FCSPM 330 Apt Fin Mgmt, FCSPM 350 Resid Tech, FCSPM 375 Simulate RPM, FCSPM 405 Mgt Gov Hous, FCSPM 425 RPM Project, FCSPM 435 T and I in RPM, FCSFN 310 Cust Service, ACC 201 Prin Acct, ECON 116 Survey Ideas or ECON 201 Elem Micro, ITDPT 154 Gr Com In De, ITDPT 213 Pr In Design, MKG 300 Prin Market, MGT 300 Mgt Beh Org, RE 230 Real Estate. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in French | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | This program encourages study and residence in a French-speaking country. One-half of the majors in French receive full academic credit through Ball State's International Student Exchange Program for one or two semesters. By successfully completing its study abroad program, the student may apply for one of the exchange programs with the University of Nancy or the French government. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FR 201 - Intermediate French 1, FR 202 - Intermediate French 2, FR 301 - Conversation, FR 302 - Composition, FR 360 - Introduction to French Literary Readings. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in German | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | In this program students learn to understand, speak, read, and write German while exploring German culture, including works of art, architecture, music, and significant historical, political, social, and economic developments. They will also become acquainted with major German writers, literary works, movements, and periods; analyze written German works; and gain familiarity with business German. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: GER 201 - Intermediate German 1, GER 202 - Intermediate German 2, GER 301 - Conversation, GER 302 - Composition. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Health Science | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program's focus is to prepare students for entry-level jobs as community health educators. In addition to the basic courses that all majors must take, each student must select four additional courses that will help him or her prepare for a specific career setting. It is also a SABPAC approved program of study. The primary career settings in which most students are placed include health agencies, health care facilities (hospitals, clinics, nursing homes), health insurance agencies (HMO/managed care), and business/industry work sites. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: HSC 160 Human Health, HSC 180 Prn Com Hlth, HSC 200 Intro Health, HSC 300 Hth Prom Pro, HSC 385 Com Hl Mthds, HSC 387 Qua Meth Epi, HSC 394 Hlth Ed Comm, HSC 396 Hlth Com Med, HSC 444 Dis Mgt Hp, HSC 479 Prac Exp, HSC 480 Prof Exp, HSC 499 Sr Seminar, ANAT 201 Fund Hum Ana, PHYSL 205 Fund Physl, HSC 363 CSHP:Org Iss, HSC 462 Hl Pro Wkste, HSC 464 H Ed Clinic, HSC 250 Emergncy H C, HSC 261 Health Sex, HSC 465 Alcohol Prob, HSC 467 Drug Depn Ab, HSC 468 Con Hlth Iss, HSC 469 Health Aging, HSC 471 Death Dying, HSC 472 Women Health, HSC 481 Stress Mang, HSC 482 Environ Hlth, HSC 496 Ad Hlt Comm, BIO 113 Microbio HSc, CPSY 360 Intrelat Sxl, ECON 348 Health Econ, FCSFN 240 Ntr Educatrs, MGT 200 Mngnt Prin, MGT 261 Persnel Supr, MGT 271 Intr Org Beh, NUR 101 Terminology, PSYSC 301 Psych Health. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in History | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | This program provides students with generalist training in history, and thereby the fundamental ability to analyze and contextualize bodies of social, cultural, and political data. This program can be completed with or without internship. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: HIST151 World Civ 1, HIST152 World Civ 2, HIST 201 US 1492-1876, HIST 202 US 1877-Pres. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History, Ball State University, Burkhardt Room 200, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8700 | This department's students who take courses in the Department, including many who major in one of its programs, will pursue careers with no direct relationship to the field. The Department already vitally serves the needs of these students, but it can do even more. It can better serve these constituencies by providing direct instruction in the way that history courses can prepare them for other professions and by linking the curriculum more closely to such pursuits. The benefits of this change can be multiplied, moreover, by making a special effort to apprise the University and the larger community of this aspect of the Department's programs. Turning in this direction will be a special mission of the Department as the new century begins. In the twenty-first century, college graduates need to be prepared to live as global citizens. They need to acquire knowledge of the diverse people with whom they share this world. Moreover, as the world is experiencing a virtual revolution in information and communication technologies, college students need to be trained to acquire and critically evaluate the abundance of information. Finally, they need to acquire skills that allow them to communicate their knowledge and ideas. Studies in history at the university level are especially well suited to the preparation of students for this kind of world. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Japanese | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: JAPAN 201 Intermed 1, JAPAN 202 Intermed 2, JAPAN 301 Advan 1, JAPAN 302 Advan 2, JAPAN 303 Rdg Skills, JAPAN 304 Composition, JAPAN 334 Culture Civ, JAPAN 337 Linguistics, JAPAN 338 Business Jpn, JAPAN 401 Contemp Lit, JAPAN 402 Classic Lit (3), JAPAN 403 Adv Rdg Writ. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Mathematical Economics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program helps students understand the mathematical basis of economics. It prepares students for careers as economic analysts and for rigorous graduate work. It is a convenient double major for Actuarial Science majors. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: ECON 201 Elem Micro, ECON 202 Elem Macro, ECON 301 Intrmd Micro, ECON 302 Intrmd Macro, ECON 221 Bus Stats, MATHS 221 Pbty Stats, MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 351 Math Finance, MATHS 267 Calculus 3, MATHS 456 Intro Op Res, CS 120 Comp Sci, ECON 421 Math Econ, ECON 424 Econometrics. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Mathematical Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program is ideal for students who enjoy learning mathematics as a basic intellectual discipline, and whose plan to work in science, industry or government; professional school (e.g. law or medicine); or graduate studies in mathematics. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 215 Discrete Sys, 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 267 Calculus 3, MATHS 374 Dif Equation, MATHS 498 Senior Sem, CS 120 Comp Sci 1, MATHS 320 Probability, MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 362 Numer Anls 1, MATHS 411 Abstr Alg 1, MATHS 471 Real Anls 1, MATHS 473 Bdry Val Pbm, MATHS 475 P D E (3), MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 335 Math Models, MATHS 345 Survey Geom, MATHS 362 Numer Anls 1, MATHS 363 Numer Anls 2, MATHS 377 Complex Anl, MATHS 390 Hnrs Colloqm, MATHS 411 Abstr Alg 1, MATHS 412 Abstr Alg 2, MATHS 415 Mth Code Com. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Mathematical Sciences - Applied Mathematics-Physics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program is intended for students who are interested in studying both physics and mathematics, with more emphasis on the mathematics. It is a good preparation for work in industry or national laboratories, and for graduate school in such areas as applied mathematics, physics, or engineering. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 215 Discrete Sys, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 267 Calculus 3, MATHS 374 Dif Equation, MATHS 498 Senior Sem, CS 120 Comp Sci 1, MATHS 320 Probability, MATHS 335 Math Models, MATHS 362 Numer Anls 1, MATHS 363 Numer Anls 2, PHYCS 120 Gen Phycs 1, PHYCS 122 Gen Phycs 2, MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 368 Unpd Intship, MATHS 369 Paid Intship, MATHS 371 Int Anls, MATHS 377 Complex Anl, MATHS 445 Diff Geom, MATHS 471 Real Anls 1, MATHS 473 Bdry Val Pbm, MATHS 475 P D E, PHYCS 260 Intro Modern, PHYCS 330 Mechanics, PHYCS 340 Physcl Optic, PHYCS 346 Acoustics, PHYCS 354 Electronic 1, PHYCS 356 Electronic 2, PHYCS 450 Elect Magnet. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Mathematical Sciences - Financial Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program is designed to prepare students in advanced analytical and numerical techniques used in the analysis of financial instruments such as options and other financial derivatives. It will provide solid understanding of the mathematics used in pricing financial derivatives, the probabilistic and statistical tools needed to summarize financial data, the computational skills needed to implement mathematical models, and background in basic principles of economics and finance. Program graduates, with strong computational and analytical skills, will find a wide range of career opportunities in the financial industry. Typical employers are investment banks, financial firms, money management firms, and insurance companies. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 215 Discrete Sys, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 267 Calculus 3, MATHS 374 Dif Equation, MATHS 498 Senior Sem, CS 120 Comp Sci 1, MATHS 320 Probability, MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 351 Math Finance, MATHS 362 Numer Anls 1, MATHS 363 Numer Anls 2, MATHS 428 Reg Time Ser, MATHS 465 Comp Tech, ACC 201 Prin Acct 1, ECON 201 Elem Micro, ECON 202 Elem Macro, FIN 300 Bus Fin 1. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Mathematical Sciences - Statistics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program is designed to prepare students for certain entry-level positions in statistics. As such, employers are typically smaller companies that have their employees work on a wide variety of projects. Some government positions are available at the bachelor's level as well. The more common entry mechanism into a statistics position is a graduate degree. It provides an excellent overview of statistics, which in turn provides strong preparation for entry into a graduate program in statistics. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 215 Discrete Sys, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 267 Calculus 3, MATHS 374 Dif Equation, MATHS 498 Senior Sem, CS 120 Comp Sci 1, MATHS 311 Alg Struct, MATHS 320 Probability, MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 422 Sampling, MATHS 428 Reg Time Ser, MATHS 429 Exp Designs, MATHS 456 Intro Op Res. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Mathematics Teaching - Middle School | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program prepares graduates for licensure in Indiana to teach mathematics in middle school. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 215 Discrete Sys, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 221 Pbty Stats, MATHS 222 Stat Studies, MATHS 250 Precoll Math, MATHS 498 Senior Sem, MATHS 201 Num Alg Prob, MATHS 202 Dat Geo Meas, MATHS 310 Top Alg EMST, MATHS 316 Num Thy EMST, MATHS 360 Top Geo EMST, MATHS 267 Calculus 3 (4), MATHS 311 Alg Struct (3), MATHS 335 Math Models (3), MATHS 345 Survey Geom (4), MATHS 371 Int Anls (3), MATHS 416 Thry Numbers (3), MATHS 460 Hist of Math. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Mathematics Teaching - Secondary School | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program prepares graduates for licensure in Indiana to teach mathematics in middle and high school | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, MATHS 215 Discrete Sys, MATHS 217 Lin Algebra, MATHS 221 Pbty Stats, MATHS 222 Stat Studies, MATHS 250 Precoll Math, MATHS 498 Senior Sem, MATHS 267 Calculus, MATHS 311 Alg Struct, MATHS 335 Math Models, MATHS 345 Survey Geom, MATHS 460 Hist of Math, MATHS 320 Probability, MATHS 321 Math Stat, MATHS 351 Math Finance, MATHS 362 Numer Anls 1, MATHS 363 Numer Anls 2, MATHS 371 Int Anls, MATHS 374 Dif Equation, MATHS 377 Complex Anl, MATHS 411 Abstr Alg 1, MATHS 412 Abstr Alg 2, MATHS 415 Mth Code Com, MATHS 416 Thry Numbers, MATHS 441 Geom Topol, MATHS 445 Diff Geom, MATHS 456 Intro Op Res, MATHS 471 Real Anls 1, MATHS 472 Real Anls 2, MATHS 473 Bdry Val Pbm, MATHS 475 P D E, MATHS 497 Stu-Fac Col. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8640 | The primary role of the Department is to provide outstanding undergraduate and graduate education in selected fields within the mathematical sciences, including pure and applied mathematics, mathematics teaching, statistics, actuarial science, and financial mathematics. The Department is strongly committed to providing high quality mathematics courses for other majors and the University Core Curriculum, as well. Faculty in the Department will contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the mathematical sciences and will serve the needs of the profession, both inside and outside Ball State University. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Music Composition, B.M. | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program gives students a solid foundation in the craft of composing classical music and creates opportunities for aspiring composers. Students learn to write for traditional instruments in solo, chamber music, and large ensemble settings, as well as create sound using computers and synthesizers. It balances academic coursework with creative projects. Composition majors study music theory and music history in order to learn about the music and the compositional techniques of the past and present. Composition majors also take instrumental or voice lessons and participate in university ensembles. A weekly composition seminar brings together undergraduate and graduate composers with the composition faculty. Beginning in the sophomore year, students in the program begin taking one-on-one composition lessons with a composition instructor. Composers have the opportunity to present their compositions in public concerts every semester, and every composer presents a senior recital of her or his music. Students who graduate with a liberal arts degree in composition will have the necessary skills to enter graduate school, to work in the business of commercial music, to work as a music copyist or music arranger, or to pursue a variety of careers outside of the field of music. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSTH 101 Sight Ear, MUSTH 111 Music Theory, MUSTH 112 Music Theory, MUSTH 201 Sight Ear, MUSTH 202 Sight Ear, MUSTH 211 Music Theory, MUSTH 212 Music Theory, MUSTH 221 Mus Comp 1, MUSTH 222 Mus Comp 2, MUSTH 311 Form Analys, MUSTH 312 18 Cent Ctp, MUSTH 321 Composition, MUSTH 322 Composition, MUSTH 410 Choral Arrng, MUSTH 411 Instr Orchra, MUSTH 413 Band Arrange, MUSTH 417 20th Century, MUSTH 420 16 Cn Cntrpt, MUSTH 431 Composition, MUSTH 432 Composition, MUSTH 495 Compos Recit, MUHIS 200 Music Lit, MUHIS 330 Music Histry, MUHIS 331 Music Histry, MUMET 125 Acoustics, MUMET 140 Comp Mus 1, MUMET 241 Comp Mus 2, MUMET 350 Elec Comp (2-4), MUSCH 499 Recital, MUSCH 340 Lrg Inst Ens, MUSCH 341 Lrg Inst Ens, MUSCH 350 Lrg Vocl Ens, MUSCH 351 Lrg Vocl Ens, MUSPE 436 Ensmb New Mu, MUSPE 325 Sec Piano, MUSPE 326 Group Piano (1), MUMET 242 Comp Mus 3, MUMET 329 Comp Elec Mu, MUMET 429 Music Percep (3), MUSTH 412 17 18 Centur, MUSTH 414 Comm Arr, MUSTH 416 19th Century, MUSTH 421 Analytl Tech. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Music Composition: Guitar, B.M. | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | In this program students receive weekly private lessons, and most receive additional instruction in their teacher's weekly studio class. Chamber music coaching and participation in large ensemble rehearsals give students valuable hands-on training. Master classes, workshops, and lectures by visiting artists further enhance the learning experience. The School of Music is taking a leadership role in the integration of technology in the educational process as school develop distance learning collaborative projects with prestigious music conservatories and universities in the United States and Korea. Performance students will soon be able to receive instruction from some of the world's finest teachers without leaving its campus. It also provide numerous performance opportunities for students at the weekly General and/or Area Recital Hour. Students also may book full-length recitals in the program's state-of-the-art performance venues and have them recorded professionally. Ball State's performance-rich environment offers many concerts by faculty members, visiting artists, and student ensembles. For information on degree programs in music performance contact Jeffrey Carter, undergraduate music coordinator; or Kirby Koriath, graduate music coordinator. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSPE 290 - Introduction to Conducting, MUSPE 427 - Guitar Literature and Pedagogy, MUSPE 498 - Senior Recital, MUSTH 101 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 102 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 111 - Music Theory, MUSTH 112 - Music Theory, MUSTH 201 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 202 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 211 - Music Theory, MUSTH 212 - Music Theory, MUSTH 311 - Music Theory: Form and Analysis, MUSTH 312 - Music Theory: Eighteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUHIS 200 - Survey of Music Literature, MUHIS 330 - Music History, MUHIS 331 - Music History, MUSCH 499 - Recital, MUSPE 325 - Secondary Study (Piano), MUSPE 326 - Group Piano, MUSPE 439 - Small Ensemble (Guitar), MUSTH 414 - Commercial Arranging, MUSTH 412 - Compositional Practices of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, MUSTH 416 - Theory of Nineteenth-Century Music, MUSTH 417 - Theory of Twentieth-Century Music, MUSTH 420 - Sixteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUSTH 421 - Analytical Technique, MUSTH 491 - Independent Study in Music Theory, MUHIS 435 - Music in the Baroque Era, MUHIS 436 - Music in Preclassic and Classic Eras, MUHIS 437 - Music in the Romantic Era, MUHIS 438 - Opera History from 1780 to 1980, MUHIS 492 - Special Topics in Musicology, MUHIS 491 - Independent Study in Music History, MUHIS 440 - Jazz History 2 or MUHIS 439 - Jazz History 1. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Music Composition: Organ, B.M. | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | In this program students receive weekly private lessons, and most receive additional instruction in their teacher's weekly studio class. Chamber music coaching and participation in large ensemble rehearsals give students valuable hands-on training. Master classes, workshops, and lectures by visiting artists further enhance the learning experience. The School of Music is taking a leadership role in the integration of technology in the educational process as school develop distance learning collaborative projects with prestigious music conservatories and universities in the United States and Korea. Performance students will soon be able to receive instruction from some of the world's finest teachers without leaving its campus. It also provide numerous performance opportunities for students at the weekly General and/or Area Recital Hour. Students also may book full-length recitals in the program's state-of-the-art performance venues and have them recorded professionally. Ball State's performance-rich environment offers many concerts by faculty members, visiting artists, and student ensembles. For information on degree programs in music performance contact Jeffrey Carter, undergraduate music coordinator; or Kirby Koriath, graduate music coordinator. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSPE 290 - Introduction to Conducting, MUSPE 377 - Service Playing and Church Music Administration, MUSPE 391 - Choral Conducting and Rehearsal Techniques, MUSPE 425 - Elementary Piano Pedagogy and Literature, MUSPE 437 - Small Ensemble (Organ and Church Music), MUSPE 477 - Continuo Playing and Keyboard Improvisation, MUSPE 498 - Senior Recital, MUSTH 101 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 102 - Sight Singing and Ear Training,MUSTH 111 - Music Theory, MUSTH 112 - Music Theory, MUSTH 201 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 202 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 211 - Music Theory, MUSTH 212 - Music Theory, MUSTH 311 - Music Theory: Form and Analysis, MUSTH 312 - Music Theory: Eighteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUHIS 200 - Survey of Music Literature, MUHIS 330 - Music History, MUHIS 331 - Music History, MUHIS 496 - History of Organ Literature and Design, MUHIS 498 - Choral Music and Hymnody of the Church, MUSED 458 - Methods of Organ Teaching, MUSCH 499 - Recital, MUSPE 327 - Secondary Study (Organ/Harpsichord), MUSCH 350 - Large Vocal Ensemble, MUSCH 351 - Large Vocal Ensemble, MUSTH 321 - Composition, MUMET 329 - Compositional Practices in Electro-Acoustic Music, MUHIS 435 - Music in the Baroque Era, MUHIS 436 - Music in Preclassic and Classic Eras, MUHIS 437 - Music in the Romantic Era, MUHIS 488 - History of Harpsichord Literature and Design, MUSTH 421 - Analytical Technique. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Music Composition: Piano, B.M. | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | In this program students receive weekly private lessons, and most receive additional instruction in their teacher's weekly studio class. Chamber music coaching and participation in large ensemble rehearsals give students valuable hands-on training. Master classes, workshops, and lectures by visiting artists further enhance the learning experience. The School of Music is taking a leadership role in the integration of technology in the educational process as school develop distance learning collaborative projects with prestigious music conservatories and universities in the United States and Korea. Performance students will soon be able to receive instruction from some of the world's finest teachers without leaving its campus. It also provide numerous performance opportunities for students at the weekly General and/or Area Recital Hour. Students also may book full-length recitals in the program's state-of-the-art performance venues and have them recorded professionally. Ball State's performance-rich environment offers many concerts by faculty members, visiting artists, and student ensembles. For information on degree programs in music performance contact Jeffrey Carter, undergraduate music coordinator; or Kirby Koriath, graduate music coordinator. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSPE 206 - Piano Accompanying, MUSPE 290 - Introduction to Conducting, MUSPE 306 - Piano Accompanying, MUSPE 425 - Elementary Piano Pedagogy and Literature, MUSPE 498 - Senior Recital, MUSTH 101 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 102 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 111 - Music Theory, MUSTH 112 - Music Theory, MUSTH 201 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 202 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 211 - Music Theory, MUSTH 212 - Music Theory, MUSTH 311 - Music Theory: Form and Analysis, MUSTH 312 - Music Theory: Eighteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUSCH 499 - Recital, MUSPE 327 - Secondary Study (Organ/Harpsichord), MUSPE 435 - Small Ensemble (Piano), MUSPE 430 - Small Ensemble (Woodwinds), MUSPE 431 - Small Ensemble (Brass), MUSPE 432 - Small Ensemble (Percussion), MUSPE 433 - Small Ensemble (Strings), MUSPE 434 - Small Ensemble (Harp), MUSCH 340 - Large Instrumental Ensemble, MUSCH 341 - Large Instrumental Ensemble, MUSCH 350 - Large Vocal Ensemble, MUSCH 351 - Large Vocal Ensemble. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Music Composition: Symphonic Instruments, B.M. | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | In this program students receive weekly private lessons, and most receive additional instruction in their teacher's weekly studio class. Chamber music coaching and participation in large ensemble rehearsals give students valuable hands-on training. Master classes, workshops, and lectures by visiting artists further enhance the learning experience. The School of Music is taking a leadership role in the integration of technology in the educational process as school develop distance learning collaborative projects with prestigious music conservatories and universities in the United States and Korea. Performance students will soon be able to receive instruction from some of the world's finest teachers without leaving its campus. It also provide numerous performance opportunities for students at the weekly General and/or Area Recital Hour. Students also may book full-length recitals in the program's state-of-the-art performance venues and have them recorded professionally. Ball State's performance-rich environment offers many concerts by faculty members, visiting artists, and student ensembles. For information on degree programs in music performance contact Jeffrey Carter, undergraduate music coordinator; or Kirby Koriath, graduate music coordinator. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSPE 290 - Introduction to Conducting, MUSPE 420 - Wind and Percussion Literature and Pedagogy, MUSPE 423 - String and Harp Literature and Pedagogy, MUSPE 498 - Senior Recital, MUSTH 101 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 102 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 111 - Music Theory, MUSTH 112 - Music Theory, MUSTH 201 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 202 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 211 - Music Theory, MUSTH 212 - Music Theory, MUSTH 311 - Music Theory: Form and Analysis, MUSTH 312 - Music Theory: Eighteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUHIS 200 - Survey of Music Literature, MUHIS 330 - Music History, MUHIS 331 - Music History, MUSCH 499 - Recital, MUSCH 340 - Large Instrumental Ensemble, MUSCH 341 - Large Instrumental Ensemble, MUSPE 430 - Small Ensemble (Woodwinds), MUSPE 431 - Small Ensemble (Brass), MUSPE 432 - Small Ensemble (Percussion), MUSPE 433 - Small Ensemble (Strings), MUSPE 434 - Small Ensemble (Harp), MUSTH 411 - Instrumentation and Orchestration, MUSTH 413 - Band Arranging, MUSTH 321 - Composition, MUSTH 412 - Compositional Practices of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, MUSTH 414 - Commercial Arranging, MUSTH 416 - Theory of Nineteenth-Century Music, MUSTH 417 - Theory of Twentieth-Century Music, MUSTH 420 - Sixteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUSTH 421 - Analytical Technique, MUSTH 491 - Independent Study in Music Theory. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Music Composition: Voice, B.M. | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | In this program students receive weekly private lessons, and most receive additional instruction in their teacher's weekly studio class. Chamber music coaching and participation in large ensemble rehearsals give students valuable hands-on training. Master classes, workshops, and lectures by visiting artists further enhance the learning experience. The School of Music is taking a leadership role in the integration of technology in the educational process as school develop distance learning collaborative projects with prestigious music conservatories and universities in the United States and Korea. Performance students will soon be able to receive instruction from some of the world's finest teachers without leaving its campus. It also provide numerous performance opportunities for students at the weekly General and/or Area Recital Hour. Students also may book full-length recitals in the program's state-of-the-art performance venues and have them recorded professionally. Ball State's performance-rich environment offers many concerts by faculty members, visiting artists, and student ensembles. For information on degree programs in music performance contact Jeffrey Carter, undergraduate music coordinator; or Kirby Koriath, graduate music coordinator. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSPE 290 - Introduction to Conducting, MUSPE 348 - Opera Workshop, MUSPE 398 - Diction for Singers, MUSTH 111 - Music Theory, MUSTH 112 - Music Theory, MUSTH 201 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 202 - Sight Singing and Ear Training, MUSTH 211 - Music Theory, MUSTH 212 - Music Theory, MUSTH 311 - Music Theory: Form and Analysis, MUSTH 312 - Music Theory: Eighteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUHIS 200 - Survey of Music Literature, MUHIS 330 - Music History, MUHIS 331 - Music History, MUSCH 499 - Recital, FR 101 - Beginning French 1, FR 102 - Beginning French 2, GER 101 - Beginning German 1, GER 102 - Beginning German 2, MUSPE 325 - Secondary Study (Piano), MUSCH 350 - Large Vocal Ensemble, MUSCH 351 - Large Vocal Ensemble, MUSPE 438 - Small Ensemble (Vocal), MUSPE 348 - Opera Workshop, MUHIS 438 - Opera History from 1780 to 1980, DANCE 121 - Modern 2, DANCE 130 - Introduction to Luigi: Jazz Dance Technique and Philosophy of Movement, DANCE 131 - Introduction to Musical Theatre Tap Styles, DANCE 232 - Musical Theatre Dance Styles, MUSTH 420 - Sixteenth-Century Counterpoint. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Music Technology, B.M. | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program encompasses aspects of audio production, sound design and music creation. In addition, as a music major, students will be required to take traditional classes covering music theory, history, arranging and performance. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSTH 101-102 Sight Ear, MUSTH 111 Music Theory, MUSTH 112 Music Theory, MUSTH 201 Sight Ear, MUSTH 202 Sight Ear, MUSTH 211 Music Theory, MUSTH 212 Music Theory, MUSTH 221 Mus Comp 1, MUSTH 222 Mus Comp 2, MUSTH 311 Form Analys, MUSTH 312 18 Cent Ctp, MUSTH 411 Instr Orchra, MUHIS 200 Music Lit, MUHIS 330-331 Music Histry, MUMET 125 Acoustics, MUMET 140 Comp Mus 1, MUMET 235 Rec Tech 1, MUMET 236 Rec Tech 2, MUMET 241 Comp Mus 2, MUMET 242 Comp Mus 3, MUMET 330 Record Wkshp (1-2), MUMET 350 Elec Comp (2-4), MUMET 495 MET Proj/Rec, MUSCH 499 Recital, MUMET 220 Int Elec Stu, MUSPE 325 Sec Piano, MUSPE applied principal, MUSCH and MUSPE ensembles, MUMET 329 Comp Elec Mu, MUMET 350 Elec Comp, MUMET 429 Music Percep, MUMET 430 Prod Workshp, MUMET 440 Adv Top Com, MUMET 450 Adv Elec Com, MUMET 491 Ind Stud/MET, MUSTH 321-322 Composition. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Natural Resources and Environmental Management - Environmental Communication/Interpretation | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program is designed for students who desire a career which focuses on communicating environmental knowledge to the public. Those selecting this option should have a strong interest in nature and a willingness to share this comprehension with others as a professional, e.g., as a journalist, public relations specialist, or naturalist/interpreter. Opportunities exist with federal, state, county, or private environmental organizations in park, forest and other natural settings. This option requires the University Core Curriculum, the department core curriculum and courses which are tailored to this option. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: NREM 101 Env and Socy, NREM 201 Ug Seminar, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, MATHS 108 Intermed Alg, NREM 211 Water Resour, NREM 221 Soil Resourc, NREM 286 Comp Applic, NREM 331 Enrg Min Res, NREM 341 Air Quality, NREM 405 Int Res Mgt, NREM 371 Outd Rec Soc, NREM 372 App Res Meth, NREM 392 Env Interp, NREM 395 Tch Env Ed, NREM 369 Pro Prac Exp, BIO 112 Princ Bio, BIO 216 Ecology, NREM 204 Am Env Hist, NREM 402 Field Study, NREM 477 Wildrnes Soc, NREM 497 Spec Studies, COMM 251 Bus Prof Com, COMM 320 Persuasion, COMM 375 Presen Comm, GEOG 261 Tourism Syst, GEOG 262 Tourism Reg, ITGRA 180 Intro Gr Art, PHIL 230 Envir Ethics, SOC 312 Leisure, TCOM 101 Foundations. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Natural Resources and Environmental Management - Environmental Management | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program is designed for students who are interested in careers such as air and water pollution control, and solid and hazardous waste management. Career opportunities exist within local, state and federal environmental protection and/or public health agencies, such as with the Indiana Department of Environmental Management; public and private water and wastewater treatment facilities; industrial corporations; and consulting firms. This option requires the University Core Curriculum, the department core courses and courses which are tailored to this option. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: NREM 101 Env and Socy, NREM 201 Ug Seminar, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, MATHS 108 Intermed Alg, NREM 211 Water Resour, NREM 221 Soil Resourc, NREM 286 Comp Applic, NREM 331 Enrg Min Res, NREM 341 Air Quality, NREM 405 Int Res Mgt, BIO 111 Princ Bio 1, BIO 313 Microbiology, CHEM 112 Gen Chem 2, NREM 315 Wat Qual Mgt, NREM 346 In Env Qual, NREM 347 Occ Ind Hyg, NREM 385 Wastewtr Mgt, NREM 387 Waste Manage, NREM 481 Site Remed, NREM 488 Env Analysis. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Natural Resources and Environmental Management - Land Management | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program focuses on soil conservation, land use planning, and reclaiming mined lands, sanitary landfills, and other disturbed sites. Student's course work will center on soil science, resource management, related applications such as Geographical Information Systems, planning, and policy. There are career opportunities in federal and state agencies, county soil conservation districts, the Bureau of Land Management, mined land reclamation, and consulting companies. This option requires the University Core Curriculum, the department core courses and courses which are tailored to this option. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: NREM 101 Env and Socy, NREM 201 Ug Seminar, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, MATHS 108 Intermed Alg, NREM 211 Water Resour, NREM 221 Soil Resourc, NREM 286 Comp Applic, NREM 331 Enrg Min Res, NREM 341Air Quality, NREM 405 Int Res Mgt, BIO 112 Princ Bio, NREM 304 Sust Agric, NREM 322 Soil Quality, NREM 324 Soil Classif, NREM 327 Soil Cnv Mgt, NREM 357 Intl Rur Dev, NREM 385 Wastewtr Mgt, NREM 481 Site Remed, NREM 488 Env Analysis, NREM 309 Envir Change, NREM 320 Wetland, NREM 335 Renew Energy, NREM 369 Pro Prac Exp, NREM 387 Waste Manage, NREM 402 Field Study, NREM 497 Spec Studies, BIO 216 Ecology, BIO 217 Ecology Meth, BIO 448 Biometry, BOT 380 Forestry, CHEM 112 Gen Chem 2, GEOG 265 Intro G I S, GEOG 340 Cart Vis 1, GEOG 342 Intr Rem Sen, GEOG 344 Adv GIS Anly, GEOG 445 GIS App Desg, GEOG 101 Planet Earth, GEOL 207 Envir Geol, GEOL 240 Geomorpholgy, GEOL 460 Hydrogeology, ID 400 Sust Future, LA 471 Sust Land. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Natural Resources and Environmental Management - Natural Resources Studies | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program designed for students who desire a broad and flexible program in the major. It can serve as preparation for students who may pursue a law or other graduate degree. Students interested in conservation enforcement should choose this option and minor in criminal justice and criminology. This option requires the University Core Curriculum, the department core courses and courses which are tailored to this option. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: NREM 101 Env and Socy, NREM 201 Ug Seminar, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, MATHS 108 Intermed Alg, NREM 211 Water Resour, NREM 221 Soil Resourc, NREM 286 Comp Applic, NREM 331 Enrg Min Res, NREM 341 Air Quality, NREM 405 Int Res Mgt, BIO 112 Princ Bio, BIO 216 Ecology, NREM 204 Am Env Hist, NREM 205 Intl NR Cons, NREM 309 Envir Change, NREM 357 Intl Rur Dev, BIO 480 Limnology, BOT 380 Forestry, BOT 470 Dendrology, ECON 201 Elem Micro, GEOL 207 Envir Geol, PHIL 230 Envir Ethics, POLS 347 Env Law Poly, ZOOL 444 Ichthyology, ZOOL 483 Wildlife Bio. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Natural Resources and Environmental Management - Occupational and Industrial Hygiene | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program trains students to evaluate and control occupational hazards and health risks in industrial facilities, hospitals, office buildings, etc. The demand for trained individuals is strong and salaries are typically higher than in other environmental fields. The program provides instruction leading to careers in occupational health and safety and certification as an industrial hygienist (CIH) and/or safety specialist (CSP). This option requires the University Core Curriculum, the department core courses and courses which are tailored to this option. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: NREM 101 Env and Socy, NREM 201 Ug Seminar, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, MATHS 108 Intermed Alg, NREM 211 Water Resour, NREM 221 Soil Resourc, NREM 286 Comp Applic, NREM 331 Enrg Min Res, NREM 341 Air Quality, NREM 405 Int Res Mgt, CHEM 112 Gen Chem 2, CHEM 231 Organic 1, ITDPT 360 Indust Safety, NREM 346 In Env Qual, NREM 347 Occ Ind Hyg, NREM 348 Asbest Lead, NREM 350 Hazmat Safe, NREM 369 Pro Prac Exp, NREM 389 Em Resp Haz, PHYCS 110 Gen Phycs 1, PHYSL 205 Fund Physl, PHYSL 416 Human Tox. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Natural Resources and Environmental Management - Park and Recreation Management | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | This program provides students with basic understandings, attitudes, and skills that are needed to qualify for park and outdoor recreation management positions available in federal, state, county and local systems and in private outdoor recreation enterprises. This option requires the University Core Curriculum, the department core courses and courses which are tailored to this option. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: NREM 101 Env and Socy, NREM 201 Ug Seminar, CHEM 111 Gen Chem 1, MATHS 108 Intermed Alg, NREM 211 Water Resour, NREM 221 Soil Resourc, NREM 286 Comp Applic, NREM 331 Enrg Min Res, NREM 341 Air Quality, NREM 405 Int Res Mgt, NREM 371 Outd Rec Soc, NREM 372 App Res Meth, NREM 473 Rec Plan Adm, NREM 392 Env Interp, NREM 395 Tch Env Ed, NREM 369 Pro Prac Exp, BIO 112 Princ Bio 2, BIO 216 Ecology, NREM 204 Am Env Hist, NREM 320 Wetland, NREM 327 Soil Cnv Mgt, NREM 385 Wastewtr Mgt, NREM 387 Waste Manage, NREM 402 Field Study, NREM 477 Wildrnes Soc, NREM 497 Spec Studies, BUSAD 101 Intro Busins, GEOG 261 Tourism Syst, GEOG 262 Tourism Reg, LA 100 Intro L A, LA 220 L A Hist 1, LA 471 Sust Land, MGT 200 Mngnt Prin, MGT 261 Persnel Supr, POLS 347 Env Law Poly, SOC 312 Leisure. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, West Quad Room 110, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5780 | This department is found in the West Quadrangle Building, includes classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and seven research laboratories. There are also graduate assistants, a seminar room, a computer classroom with 32 computers, and a computer facility with digital equipment for instructional uses. The department has standard water and soil sampling instruments available for field work along with standard air quality instruments. Bracken Library, a science library, and a departmental library are also available to students and faculty. Ball State University has five natural areas totaling more than 300 acres which are managed as part of the Field Station and Environmental Education Center (FSEEC): Christy Woods, Cooper-Skinner Field Area, Ginn Woods, Hults Environmental Learning Center and the Miller Wildlife Area. The Hults Environmental Learning Center is often used for environmental education programs with local elementary schools led by department graduate students and undergraduate volunteers. Classes also visit quarries, farms, water and wastewater treatment plants, industries, sanitary landfills, Prairie Creek Reservoir, and the White River for field trip activities. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies | This program results in the ability to understand and think critically and ethically about complex issues. Studying Philosophy empowers individuals to find or produce reasoned, creative solutions and truths regarding the problems. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, NQ 211, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1244 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | This program's curriculum incorporates a progression of required, core, elective, and capstone courses. Students are expected to have a foundation of required and core courses before taking elective and capstone courses, including internships. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: POLS 130 Amer Nat Gov, POLS 210 Int Politics, POLS 237 Stat Loc Pol, POLS 280 Compar Systm, POLS 293 Intl Relatns, POLS 312 Early W Thot, POLS 342 Publc Policy, POLS 350 Pub Administ, POLS 369 Prof Exp, POLS 404 Senior Thes, POLS 479 Pract Exp, POLS 499 Senior Sem. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science, NQ 240, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8780 | This department prides itself on teaching excellence. Most of its faculty members have received teaching awards. Likewise, in public service, its professors have contributed thousands of volunteer hours to various government and not-for-profit boards and commissions, many faculty members have sought elective office and are active in both major political parties. This department is home to the Bowen Center for Public Affairs. The Center, named after former Governor Otis R. Bowen, holds civic education seminars throughout the state through the Bowen Institute on Political Participation, conducts training for public officials to ensure effective and efficient government administration, and helps establish best practices in public administration through original research and surveys of Hoosier citizens. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Political Science - Economics | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | This program's curriculum incorporates a progression of required, core, elective, and capstone courses. Students are expected to have a foundation of required and core courses before taking elective and capstone courses, including internships. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: POLS 130 Amer Nat Gov, POLS 210 Int Politics, POLS 237 Stat Loc Pol, POLS 280 Compar Systm, POLS 293 Intl Relatns, POLS 312 Early W Thot, POLS 342 Publc Policy, POLS 350 Pub Administ, POLS 369 Prof Exp, POLS 404 Senior Thes, POLS 479 Pract Exp, POLS 499 Senior Sem, ECON 332 Labr Rel Law, ECON 345 Gov Budgets, ECON 346 Law Econ, ECON 370 Indust Organ. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science, NQ 240, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8780 | This department prides itself on teaching excellence. Most of its faculty members have received teaching awards. Likewise, in public service, its professors have contributed thousands of volunteer hours to various government and not-for-profit boards and commissions, many faculty members have sought elective office and are active in both major political parties. This department is home to the Bowen Center for Public Affairs. The Center, named after former Governor Otis R. Bowen, holds civic education seminars throughout the state through the Bowen Institute on Political Participation, conducts training for public officials to ensure effective and efficient government administration, and helps establish best practices in public administration through original research and surveys of Hoosier citizens. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science | This program prepares the students to attend graduate school or to seek employment in various settings. As a psychology major, students will gain skills and knowledge relevant to and useful in many jobs, including the ones employers typically look for when considering candidates with an undergraduate degree: good oral and written communication skills, good interpersonal and teamwork skills, strong analytical abilities, flexibility, proficiency in field of study, computer skills. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: PSYSC 100 General, PSYSC 241 Statistics, PSYSC 284 Res Methods, PSYSC 295 Orient Psych, PSYSC 491 Hist Systems, PSYSC 362 Motiva Emotn, PSYSC 364 Learning, PSYSC 416 Cognition, PSYSC 468 Physiologcal, PSYSC 316 Social Psysc, PSYSC 317 Personality, PSYSC 321 Develop Psy, PSYSC 432 Abnormal, PSYSC 324 Psych Women, PSYSC 325 Prej and Discrim, PSYSC 424 Diversity. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1690 | This department's mission is to promote preprofessional and liberal learning in psychological science at the undergraduate level while emphasizing the development of critical thinking, technological competency, communication competency, diversity competency, personal and professional ethics, a basic understanding of psychological science in both laboratory and experiential settings. Faculties are expected to contribute to the functioning of the department as teacher, scholar, and citizen. Excellence in teaching and scholarship is central to the department's mission, and service to the university, profession, and community are expected. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Public History with Internship | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | This program is designed to prepare students for history-related careers in public agencies, private nonprofit organizations, and private for-profit firms, organizations, and agencies. The Public History major combines academic training with practical work experience. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History, Ball State University, Burkhardt Room 200, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8700 | This department's students who take courses in the Department, including many who major in one of its programs, will pursue careers with no direct relationship to the field. The Department already vitally serves the needs of these students, but it can do even more. It can better serve these constituencies by providing direct instruction in the way that history courses can prepare them for other professions and by linking the curriculum more closely to such pursuits. The benefits of this change can be multiplied, moreover, by making a special effort to apprise the University and the larger community of this aspect of the Department's programs. Turning in this direction will be a special mission of the Department as the new century begins. In the twenty-first century, college graduates need to be prepared to live as global citizens. They need to acquire knowledge of the diverse people with whom they share this world. Moreover, as the world is experiencing a virtual revolution in information and communication technologies, college students need to be trained to acquire and critically evaluate the abundance of information. Finally, they need to acquire skills that allow them to communicate their knowledge and ideas. Studies in history at the university level are especially well suited to the preparation of students for this kind of world. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies | The academic study of religion addresses many dimensions and functions of religion in the world's cultures. Among these are sacred scripture, symbols, beliefs, rituals and ethics. It also examines the dynamic relationship between religion and other social, economic, and political institutions. The academic study of religion fosters a critical understanding of religious traditions, issues, questions, and values. In addition, it cultivates awareness of religion's influence within the world and promotes appreciation for the diversity of religious beliefs and practices. The department's programs in philosophy and religious studies offer excellent preparation for professional work in education, law, public service, government, writing, and religion. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: 251 Hebrew Scrpt, 252 Chr New Test, 280 Top Amer Rel, 290 Top Asia Rel, 340 Ad West Rel, 375 Ad Stu Bible, 380 Rel and Ethics, 390 Ad Asian Rel, 403 Rdg Sp Study, 420 Themes Rel, 450 Crit Issues, 470 Perspecs Rel. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, NQ 211, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1244 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology | This program deals with the systematic study of human society - a community, nation, or broad grouping of people who have common traditions, institutions, and collective activities and interests - and social interaction. Sociologists study the effects of groups on the individual, interactions among groups and organizations, and cultural beliefs that direct human behavior within a local and global context. Sociological research involves collecting information about social processes, which is used to examine the accuracy of sociological theories. Through studying sociology students will learn how to consider social issues within the context of society as a whole and in relation to complex social systems. Sociology majors develop practical skills that are valued and sought after in the job market, such as writing, analytical and critical thinking, problem solving, data analysis, research methods. Sociology majors find employment in business, nonprofit, and government organizations. Most of its students pursue advanced degrees in sociology while others find themselves well prepared for graduate study in social work, counseling, law, and business. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: SOC 100 Principles, SOC 380 Research, SOC 382 Statistics, SOC 402 Theory, SOC 492 Capstone. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology, 205 North Quad, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5977 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Major in Spanish | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: SP 201 - Intermediate Spanish 1, SP 202 - Intermediate Spanish 2, SP 301 - Conversation, SP 302 - Composition, SP 360 - Introduction to Hispanic Literary Readings. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master (MA) of Arts in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program is designed for students choosing a profession in public school teaching. Candidates must possess a valid physics teaching license or be in the process of securing certification in physical science/physics teaching. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master in Public Administration With Criminal Justice and Criminology Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology | This program provides graduate professional education to men and women who wish to prepare for administrative or research careers in public management. They may also work with non-profit organizations or private sector corporations that extensively engage in government. The flexibility of the program allows students to tailor an interdisciplinary curriculum around their needs, objectives, and goals. | Applicants must meet the following minimum criteria to be admitted to graduate study: Bachelor’s degree from a college or university that is accredited by its regional accrediting association. Normally, a cumulative grade point average of 2.8 overall on a 4.0 scale. A Graduate Record Exam (GRE) score and two letters of recommendation. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: POLS 625 - Research Methods in Political Science, POLS 626 - Research Seminar, POLS 633 - The American Judicial System, POLS 642 - Problems in Public Policy, POLS 648 - Policy Analysis, POLS 650 - Public Administration, POLS 651 - Administrative Organization and Management, POLS 652 - Personnel Administration in Government, POLS 653 - Public Financial Administration, POLS 669 - Paid Internship in American Government, POLS 679 - Practical Experience in Government, CJC 650 - Criminal Justice Administration, CJC 651 - Interpersonal Relations in Criminal Justice, CJC 652 - Philosophical Aspects of Criminal Justice Practice, CJC 690 - Independent Study in Criminal Justice. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Ball State University, North Quad 248, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5979 | The Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology offers a variety of courses that help students understand the dimensions and causes of crime and delinquency and the theories of crime prevention and control. Courses examine the structure and philosophy of the American criminal justice system; the operation of criminal courts at the local, state, and federal levels; techniques and theories of law enforcement; and the philosophies and practices of various correctional programs. Students are prepared for entry-level professional positions in the criminal justice system as well as for graduate study in related subjects. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Architecture | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | This program is now the second component of architectural education at Ball State University for students who seek licensure in the profession. The program is accredited by the National Architecture Accrediting Board (NAAB). The core of the professional graduate architecture curriculum is a sequence of courses in interdisciplinary design, research, history and theory, historic preservation, environmental systems, and professional practice. | Applicants must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited program in architecture or equivalent or may be required to take additional course work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: Architectural Design 1 (ARCH 501) 6, Architectural Design 2 (ARCH 502) 6, Fundamentals of Historic Preservation for Architects (ARCH 526) 3, Architectural History, Theory, Criticism (ARCH 529) 3, Human and Cultural Factors of Design (ARCH 552) 3, Practicum Reflection (ARCH 558) 3, Professional Practice (ARCH 559) 3, Architectural Design 3 (ARCH 601) 6, Architectural Theory (ARCH 629) 3, Research Methods (ARCH 652) 3, Thesis (THES 698). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture, Architecture Building 402, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1900 | The Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology offers a variety of courses that help students understand the dimensions and causes of crime and delinquency and the theories of crime prevention and control. Courses examine the structure and philosophy of the American criminal justice system; the operation of criminal courts at the local, state, and federal levels; techniques and theories of law enforcement; and the philosophies and practices of various correctional programs. Students are prepared for entry-level professional positions in the criminal justice system as well as for graduate study in related subjects. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Architecture II | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | This program offers advanced education and specialization for individuals who already have a professional degree in architecture. It is not a professionally accredited degree and is not applicable toward state licensing. This program has a global focus for the students and faculty engage societies and peoples around the world and in the United States. To address problems facing society, they seek new uses for what they know about architecture while developing new knowledge for themselves and other architectural teachers, researchers, and practitioners. | Applicants must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited program in architecture or equivalent or may be required to take additional course work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: Architectural Design 1 (ARCH 501) 6, Architectural Design 2 (ARCH 502) 6, Fundamentals of Historic Preservation for Architects (ARCH 526) 3, Architectural History, Theory, Criticism (ARCH 529) 3, Human and Cultural Factors of Design (ARCH 552) 3, Practicum Reflection (ARCH 558) 3, Professional Practice (ARCH 559) 3, Architectural Design 3 (ARCH 601) 6, Architectural Theory (ARCH 629) 3, Research Methods (ARCH 652) 3, Thesis (THES 698). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture, Architecture Building 402, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1900 | The Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology offers a variety of courses that help students understand the dimensions and causes of crime and delinquency and the theories of crime prevention and control. Courses examine the structure and philosophy of the American criminal justice system; the operation of criminal courts at the local, state, and federal levels; techniques and theories of law enforcement; and the philosophies and practices of various correctional programs. Students are prepared for entry-level professional positions in the criminal justice system as well as for graduate study in related subjects. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | This program provide an important step for a professional in education. This degree program is ideal for educators who wish to pursue professional development opportunities as a condition for licensure. Because of its flexibility, it permits students to specialize in numerous areas included gifted and talented studies, human development, and research methods. The degree is also ideal for those who wish to earn certification in other fields and for those who are interested in pursuing doctoral studies on psychology or education. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology, Teachers College TC 1008, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5252 | The Department is the academic home of the Psychoeducational, Diagnostic, and Intervention Clinic and the Neuropsychology Lab. The research interests are wide-ranging, but include cognition and learning, human development, assessment and measurement, gifted studies, neuropsychology and program evaluation, among others. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts (M.A.) in School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | This program is structured to educate student in accordance with Indiana school psychology licensure requirements and National Association of School Psychologists standards. Through the program, students will develop competencies in assessment, consultation, intervention, and prevention through course work, clinic- and field-based practical, and an internship. The course sequence also includes the study of human development, individual differences, learning, curriculum, research methods, and statistics. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology, Teachers College TC 1008, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5252 | The Department is the academic home of the Psychoeducational, Diagnostic, and Intervention Clinic and the Neuropsychology Lab. The research interests are wide-ranging, but include cognition and learning, human development, assessment and measurement, gifted studies, neuropsychology and program evaluation, among others. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Social Psychology with Double Major in Social Psychology and Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | This program allows to earn a master's degree in social psychology and counseling at the same time. For the counseling part of the double major, students may choose the community counseling track or the mental health counseling track. The double major is particularly useful to students who wish to combine social psychology and counseling in practice or research. The double major provides an integration of the group and societal orientation of social psychology with the applied individual focus of counseling. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services, Teachers College Room 622, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8040 | The department was ranked 11th for scholarly productivity in four esteemed psychology journals, according to a study published in The Counseling Psychologist in 2005. Further, the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students recognized the department as the 2005 Department of the Year. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts (MA) in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program offer challenging and relevant courses, great opportunities for research experience excellent research facilities and instrumentation, camaraderie and collaboration among students and faculty, enthusiastic, knowledgeable faculty. | Students should have a bachelor's degree in chemistry or in a field with substantial chemistry background. A cumulative undergraduate GPA of 2.75 on a 4.0 scale. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts (MA) in Chemistry - Chemical Education Option | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program offer challenging and relevant courses, great opportunities for research experience excellent research facilities and instrumentation, camaraderie and collaboration among students and faculty, enthusiastic, knowledgeable faculty. | Students should have a bachelor's degree in chemistry or in a field with substantial chemistry background. A cumulative undergraduate GPA of 2.75 on a 4.0 scale. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Adapted Physical Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | The goal of this program is to provide students with the most enriching learning experiences possible by combining theory with lecture and practical coursework. The graduate program seeks to provide students with leadership responsibilities supported by coursework and research experiences with special populations. Students at both levels of study will receive extensive contact hours in the public schools and on-campus programs working with students with disabilities. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Biology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program prepare for further education or a career in biomedical laboratories, natural resource management agencies, scientific supply firms, environmental consulting firms, or scientific publishing firms with this Masters of Arts program—without having to complete a research thesis. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Business Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | This program's course work includes coordinating cooperative education; improving instruction in business technology, accounting, marketing and basic business; investigating educational sociology; managing classroom dynamics; testing and measuring student progress; conducting educational research; and electives. The program requires work experience related to student's teaching areas as well as full-time teaching experience before completion of the program. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management, Whitinger Business Building room 203, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5300 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science | This program provides training consistent with the scientist-practioner model and includes a foundation in abnormal psychology, psychotherapy, and assessment. The primary mission is to prepare students for doctoral study by offering quality instruction in the science of psychology and opportunities to conduct psychological research. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1690 | This department's mission is to promote preprofessional and liberal learning in psychological science at the undergraduate level while emphasizing the development of critical thinking, technological competency, communication competency, diversity competency, personal and professional ethics, a basic understanding of psychological science in both laboratory and experiential settings. Faculties are expected to contribute to the functioning of the department as teacher, scholar, and citizen. Excellence in teaching and scholarship is central to the department's mission, and service to the university, profession, and community are expected. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Cognitive and Social Processes | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science | This program provides extensive training in cognitive psychology, social psychology, statistics, and research methods. Students are strongly encouraged to complete a thesis or other independent research project. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1690 | This department's mission is to promote preprofessional and liberal learning in psychological science at the undergraduate level while emphasizing the development of critical thinking, technological competency, communication competency, diversity competency, personal and professional ethics, a basic understanding of psychological science in both laboratory and experiential settings. Faculties are expected to contribute to the functioning of the department as teacher, scholar, and citizen. Excellence in teaching and scholarship is central to the department's mission, and service to the university, profession, and community are expected. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Counseling - Community Counseling Track | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | This program is designed with two major emphases: to serve as a predoctoral study program and counselor education in counseling psychology, to train students for employment in community-service agencies. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are; CPSY 605 - Introduction to Community and Mental Health Counseling, CPSY 606 - Pre-Practicum Interviewing Skills, CPSY 607 - Appraisal Methods in Counseling, CPSY 610 - Career Theories and Realities, CPSY 621 - Theories and Techniques of Counseling, CPSY 644 - Practicum in Counseling, | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services, Teachers College Room 622, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8040 | The department was ranked 11th for scholarly productivity in four esteemed psychology journals, according to a study published in The Counseling Psychologist in 2005. Further, the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students recognized the department as the 2005 Department of the Year. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Counseling - Mental Health Counseling Track | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | This program prepares students to be a licensed mental health counselor. Students will learn about current trends in mental health counseling, roles and professional identity of mental health counselors, structures and operations of professional organizations, ethical and legal considerations related to counseling, and multicultural issues in mental health counseling. Further, students will gain knowledge and skills in diagnosis, assessment, treatment, referral, and prevention related to mental health issues. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are; CPSY 605 - Introduction to Community and Mental Health Counseling, CPSY 606 - Pre-Practicum Interviewing Skills, CPSY 607 - Appraisal Methods in Counseling, CPSY 610 - Career Theories and Realities, CPSY 621 - Theories and Techniques of Counseling, CPSY 644 - Practicum in Counseling, | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services, Teachers College Room 622, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8040 | The department was ranked 11th for scholarly productivity in four esteemed psychology journals, according to a study published in The Counseling Psychologist in 2005. Further, the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students recognized the department as the 2005 Department of the Year. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Counseling - Rehabilitation Counseling Track | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | This program prepare for a career in the rapidly growing field of rehabilitation counseling. The program is also designed as a predoctoral study program in counseling psychology. In the program, students will learn to foster independent living skills and improve employment opportunities for people with physical, psychological, emotional, mental, or educational disabilities. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses: CPSY 603 - Introduction to Vocational Rehabilitation Counseling, CPSY 606 - Pre-Practicum Interviewing Skills, CPSY 607 - Appraisal Methods in Counseling, CPSY 608 - Psychosocial Aspects of Rehabilitation, CPSY 610 - Career Theories and Realities, CPSY 621 - Theories and Techniques of Counseling. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services, Teachers College Room 622, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8040 | The department was ranked 11th for scholarly productivity in four esteemed psychology journals, according to a study published in The Counseling Psychologist in 2005. Further, the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students recognized the department as the 2005 Department of the Year. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Counseling - School Counseling Track | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | This program is designed to prepare for licensure as a school counselor at all grade levels. The program is accredited by the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP). | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses: CPSY 600 - Introduction to School Counseling, CPSY 606 - Pre-Practicum Interviewing Skills, CPSY 607 - Appraisal Methods in Counseling, CPSY 610 - Career Theories and Realities, CPSY 621 - Theories and Techniques of Counseling, CPSY 644 - Practicum in Counseling, CPSY 646 - Advanced Practicum in Counseling. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services, Teachers College Room 622, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8040 | The department was ranked 11th for scholarly productivity in four esteemed psychology journals, according to a study published in The Counseling Psychologist in 2005. Further, the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students recognized the department as the 2005 Department of the Year. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Education (MAE) Degree in Business Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | This program builds on a candidate's teaching experience gained at the middle or high school levels, and provides a vocational endorsement, which prepares teachers for career/technical programs at the secondary and post-secondary levels. Coursework in business education with vocational certification includes coordinating cooperative education; improvement of instruction in business technology, accounting, marketing and basic business; investigating educational sociology; managing classroom dynamics; testing and measuring student progress; conducting educational research; and electives. The program requires work experience related to a candidate's teaching areas as well as full-time teaching experience before completion of the program. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Information Systems and Operations Management, Whitinger Business Building room 203, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5300 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Education (MAE) in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | This program is designed to provide expertise for the master teacher in a 9-12 semester hour focus area of the candidate's choice. The degree does not meet all standards for an initial teaching license. In-service elementary teachers may select focus areas in reading, early childhood, or elementary education. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Education in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program is designed for students choosing a profession in public school teaching. Candidates must possess a valid physics teaching license or be in the process of securing certification in physical science/physics teaching. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EDFON 631 Philosophy Ed, 641 Hist Amer Ed 3, 651 Ed Sociology 3, 660 Comparative Ed 3, EDPSY 600 Adv Ed Psy 3, 603 Human Devel, CPSY 653 Res Cpy Guld 3, EDEL 676 Res Elem Edu 3, EDJHM 676 Res JR/MS Ed 3, EDPSY 640 Methodology 3, 641 Statist Meth 3, 646 Tests Meas 3, EDSEC 676 Res Sec Ed 3, SPCED 636 Res Spec Ed. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Education in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Special Education | This program includes the following specializations: deaf education, mild interventions, severe/intense interventions, early childhood special education, general special education visual impairment (pending). | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Special Education | Teachers College, Department of Special Education, TC 722, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5700 | This department's teach lab is an adaptive computer lab, it provides adaptive computer experiences for education students in the Department of Special Education, provides a resource center for Indiana special educators, assists educators in assessing the computing needs of children with special needs. The lab is equipped with 15 Macintosh computers with adjustable tables and contains various computer adaptations - both software and hardware. Its students have access to the fastest wireless network available and are using technology in innovative ways. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Educational Administration and Supervision | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership | This program offers training leading to an initial license as a principal and is focused primarily on building-level leadership. The master’s degree and license requirements are compatible. The program incorporates the Indiana Professional Standards Board mandated Interstate School Leaders Licensure Consortium standards and the Teachers College conceptual framework. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership, Teachers College 918, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8488 | The Department of Educational Leadership offers outstanding graduate programs designed to help to succeed in myriad educational leadership roles in both school and community settings. Specific degree programs based on high standards of excellence, innovation, applied research, and service lay the groundwork for careers as school principals, administrators, and superintendents. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in English (Creative Writing) | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This growing program is a vibrant place where students and faculty work together closely both within the classroom and one-on-one in thesis conferences. Together, we read, write, and talk about reading and writing, with the collective goal of creating good writing. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Executive Development for Public Service | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | This program prepares graduates to provide educational services in a variety of social, industrial, health and human services, military, and governmental settings. A broad range of courses related to management and public agency administration are offered to prepare students to function in an executive, managerial, or supervisory capacity within government or not-for-profit agencies. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies, Teachers College 829 Ball State University, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5461 | The Department of Educational Studies is a learning community engaged in the preparation of educators, the discovery of knowledge, and the promotion of social justice. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Exercise Science - Adult Fitness/Cardiac Rehabilitation | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program provides students with the necessary knowledge and skills to obtain careers as directors of preventive and rehabilitation exercise programs. The students within this program are trained at both the laboratory facilities of the AF/CR (described below) and Ball Memorial Hospital, in what can only be described as an extensive hands on experience. They learn every aspect of testing and training and will perfect their skills in work related duties. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 603. Advanced Physiology of Human Performance (4 hrs), EXSCI 611. Research Design (3 hrs), EXSCI 622. Found Adult Physical Fitness (3 hrs), EXSCI 623. Principles of Exercise Testing (3 hrs), EXSCI 630. Metabolic Adaptation to Physical Stress (3 hrs), EXSCI 637. Human Dynamics (5 hrs), EXSCI 638. Electrocardiography (3 hrs), RES 697. Research Paper (3 hrs), EXSCI 639. Seminar in Cardiac (3 hrs), EXSCI 640. Exercise Prevention/ Rehabilitation (3 hrs), CPSY 634. Behavioral Medicine (3 hrs), FCSFN 644.Nutritional Exercise and Sport, PHYSL 514. Cardiovascular Physiology (3 hrs), BIO 548 Biometry (statistics) (3 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Exercise Science - Sport Performance | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program provides the student with a board scientific background for coaching and conditioning of athletic populations, and is a cross discipline approach between Exercise Science and Physical Education. This degree is a terminal degree that emphasizes the application of training modalities. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 603. Advanced Physiology of Human Performance (4 hrs), EXSCI 604.Essentials of Resistance Training (3 hrs), EXCSI, 4.Mechanical Analysis (3 hrs), PEP 696 Athletic Training (3 hrs), PEP 609 Introduction to Sports Exercise Psychology (3 hrs), PEP 600 Internship (1-3), FCS 644 Nutrition (3 hrs), SPTAD 601 Research Procedures (3 hrs), EDPSY 641 Statistics (3 hrs), RES 697 Research Paper (3 hrs), PEP 601 Found PE Research (3 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Exercise Science - Sport Performance Non Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program provides the student with a board scientific background for coaching and conditioning of athletic populations, and is a cross discipline approach between Exercise Science and Physical Education. This degree is a terminal degree that emphasizes the application of training modalities. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 603. Advanced Physiology of Human Performance (4 hrs), EXSCI 604.Essentials of Resistance Training (3 hrs), EXCSI, 4.Mechanical Analysis (3 hrs), PEP 696 Athletic Training (3 hrs), PEP 609 Introduction to Sports Exercise Psychology (3 hrs), PEP 600 Internship (1-3), FCS 644 Nutrition (3 hrs), SPTAD 601 Research Procedures (3 hrs), EDPSY 641 Statistics (3 hrs), RES 697 Research Paper (3 hrs), PEP 601 Found PE Research (3 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in General Science | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program is designed for students choosing a profession in public school teaching. While increasing their knowledge in the general sciences, students may also earn credits which can be applied to license renewal. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Geology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | This program leading to professional work in all specialties of geology. Geologists study the composition of earth, and how best to find, use and protect its mineral, energy and water resources. Geologists also use their knowledge of the earth's processes to explain threatening events, such as earthquakes, landslides, floods, tidal waves, and volcanic eruptions, and to predict when they may happen again. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences, Ball State University, Fine Arts Building (AR) room 117, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8270 | This department's classes are small, which means students get more one-on-one time with professors and a stronger bond with their fellow classmates. Its faculties are knowledgeable about geology and its subfields including minerals, igneous and metamorphic rock, fossils, and petroleum. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Health Science | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program is designed for students seeking a comprehensive background in educational planning (including program development, implementation, and evaluation) relating to health promotion and disease prevention activities in community health agencies, wellness centers, health-care facilities, and business and industrial settings. Special course work in advanced health and safety methodology is offered for students seeking professionalization of their secondary teaching licenses in health and safety. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with at least a academic minor in health education, health and safety education, health science, or an equivalent subject. A student applying for a graduate teaching assistantship must have a grade point average of at least 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | This program examines the attempts of individuals and groups to direct, control, or resist these forces through political campaigns, public discussions and private negotiations, struggles for independence, mass movements, and other efforts. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History, Ball State University, Burkhardt Room 200, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8700 | This department's students who take courses in the Department, including many who major in one of its programs, will pursue careers with no direct relationship to the field. The Department already vitally serves the needs of these students, but it can do even more. It can better serve these constituencies by providing direct instruction in the way that history courses can prepare them for other professions and by linking the curriculum more closely to such pursuits. The benefits of this change can be multiplied, moreover, by making a special effort to apprise the University and the larger community of this aspect of the Department's programs. Turning in this direction will be a special mission of the Department as the new century begins. In the twenty-first century, college graduates need to be prepared to live as global citizens. They need to acquire knowledge of the diverse people with whom they share this world. Moreover, as the world is experiencing a virtual revolution in information and communication technologies, college students need to be trained to acquire and critically evaluate the abundance of information. Finally, they need to acquire skills that allow them to communicate their knowledge and ideas. Studies in history at the university level are especially well suited to the preparation of students for this kind of world. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Journalism | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | This program offerings include room for specialization and benefit from a healthy mix of theory and hands-on practice. The master’s degree in journalism requires a minimum of 30 graduate credit hours (in addition to any undergraduate course work that may be required of students who don’t already have an undergraduate degree in journalism). Required course work covers such topics as writing, literary journalism, investigative reporting, research methods, and communication theories, plus a variety of electives. Students also must complete 3 to 6 credit hours of graduate research or thesis work and may participate in a practicum or internship for further hands-on experience. In addition to the core curriculum, the master of arts in journalism program offers specializations in literary journalism and business journalism. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Music | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are interested in securing a broad coverage of the discipline of music at the graduate level. This program is a general degree in music with a core of studies in music performance, music history and musicology, music theory, and music education. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Political Science (MA) | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | This program gives students opportunities to broaden and strengthen their understanding of political science. The master of arts in political science prepares students for a variety of goals. Some students may wish to pursue doctoral work at another university after earning the MA degree at Ball State University. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science, NQ 240, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8780 | This department prides itself on teaching excellence. Most of its faculty members have received teaching awards. Likewise, in public service, its professors have contributed thousands of volunteer hours to various government and not-for-profit boards and commissions, many faculty members have sought elective office and are active in both major political parties. This department is home to the Bowen Center for Public Affairs. The Center, named after former Governor Otis R. Bowen, holds civic education seminars throughout the state through the Bowen Institute on Political Participation, conducts training for public officials to ensure effective and efficient government administration, and helps establish best practices in public administration through original research and surveys of Hoosier citizens. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | This program includes background in communication theories and public relations theories, along with studies of PR campaigns and case studies, communication research methods, and PR management. Specializations in a variety of subject areas, including business, communication studies, public affairs, and sport communication. For example, the degree in sport communication includes course work in professional physical education, such as sport sociology and administration of athletics. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Journalism, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) Room 300, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8200 | This department is a part of Ball State's College of Communication, Information, and Media, one the largest communications colleges in the nation. Since 1979, it has been accredited by the international journalism accrediting body, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). Its public relations major is certified by the Public Relations Society of America, its innovative approach to journalism education has earned the department significant acclaim and respect in the various industries the department serve. Students, faculty, and alumni are regular recipients of academic and industry honors. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Social Psychology - Applied | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | This program examines the application of social psychology to organizational contexts, such as organizations and businesses. In this program, students will principally study social psychology, but they will also consider issues in management, testing, or personnel. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: SOPSY 610 - Social Psychology, SOPSY 615 - Social Cognition, SOPSY 620 - Group Dynamics, SOPSY 640 - Social Psychology of Attitudes, SOPSY 655 - Counseling Applications of Social Psychology, SOPSY 660 - Contemporary Social Psychology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services, Teachers College Room 622, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8040 | The department was ranked 11th for scholarly productivity in four esteemed psychology journals, according to a study published in The Counseling Psychologist in 2005. Further, the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students recognized the department as the 2005 Department of the Year. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Social Psychology - General | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | This program offers a comprehensive overview of social psychology. It is the most broadly defined program and permits to take electives from areas such as criminal justice, sociology, health, and education. Students may study topics in social cognition (e.g., attributions, stereotyping, and decision making), group behavior, attitudes, and various applications of social psychology. A variety of other areas are also addressed. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: SOPSY 610 - Social Psychology, SOPSY 615 - Social Cognition, SOPSY 620 - Group Dynamics, SOPSY 640 - Social Psychology of Attitudes, SOPSY 655 - Counseling Applications of Social Psychology, SOPSY 660 - Contemporary Social Psychology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services, Teachers College Room 622, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8040 | The department was ranked 11th for scholarly productivity in four esteemed psychology journals, according to a study published in The Counseling Psychologist in 2005. Further, the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students recognized the department as the 2005 Department of the Year. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Social Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | This program offers a challenging and productive course of study in American, European, and world history. The department addresses a wide variety of methods and approaches to history and a broad range of historical themes, time periods, and societies, and provides particularly fine training in American society, politics, and culture, women's history, British history, and the history of the early modern world. The graduate program prepares students for the further study of history or social science at the doctoral level and serves as a useful terminal degree program for those not intending to pursue a doctorate and for those seeking to professionalize the secondary school teaching license. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History, Ball State University, Burkhardt Room 200, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8700 | This department's students who take courses in the Department, including many who major in one of its programs, will pursue careers with no direct relationship to the field. The Department already vitally serves the needs of these students, but it can do even more. It can better serve these constituencies by providing direct instruction in the way that history courses can prepare them for other professions and by linking the curriculum more closely to such pursuits. The benefits of this change can be multiplied, moreover, by making a special effort to apprise the University and the larger community of this aspect of the Department's programs. Turning in this direction will be a special mission of the Department as the new century begins. In the twenty-first century, college graduates need to be prepared to live as global citizens. They need to acquire knowledge of the diverse people with whom they share this world. Moreover, as the world is experiencing a virtual revolution in information and communication technologies, college students need to be trained to acquire and critically evaluate the abundance of information. Finally, they need to acquire skills that allow them to communicate their knowledge and ideas. Studies in history at the university level are especially well suited to the preparation of students for this kind of world. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Sociology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology | This program is designed to prepare for professional employment in which students can use their analytical and research skills or for further education in PhD programs in sociology. This program emphasize research methods, research experience, and analytical skills--skills that enable MA graduates to find employment in government, nonprofit, and corporate organizations. This program encourage graduate students to write a masters thesis, which will require to work closely with a faculty member on a project of original research. Students may earn up to six credit hours for thesis work. Most students write a thesis during the second year of graduate work. They also have the option of taking additional course work in place of writing a thesis. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology, 205 North Quad, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5977 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Special Education | This program to strengthen their bachelor's degree preparation or to acquire another area of special education licensure. Areas of specialization include: deaf education, mild interventions, severe/intense interventions, early childhood special education, general special education, visual impairment, behavior disorders, director of special education/exceptional needs. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Special Education | Teachers College, Department of Special Education, TC 722, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5700 | This department's teach lab is an adaptive computer lab, it provides adaptive computer experiences for education students in the Department of Special Education, provides a resource center for Indiana special educators, assists educators in assessing the computing needs of children with special needs. The lab is equipped with 15 Macintosh computers with adjustable tables and contains various computer adaptations - both software and hardware. Its students have access to the fastest wireless network available and are using technology in innovative ways. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Sport Management | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is designed to prepare individuals to administer intercollegiate athletic programs and professional sport organizations. This program is open to graduate physical education majors and to graduates with majors in fields other than physical education. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Sport and Exercise Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | The purpose of this program is to develop a thorough understanding of the psychological principles related to sport and motor performance. This objective is achieved through classroom study, research and practicum experiences. | Applicants must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution in education, physical education, biology, or other appropriate majors; have a grade point average (GPA) of at least 2.75 on a scale of 4.0; A student with a GPA of less than 2.75 on a 4.0 scale must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test. Students with satisfactory scores on the GRE will be considered for admission to the program under probationary admission. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: PEP 609 - Introduction to Sport and Exercise Psychology, PEP 644 - Psycho-Social Processes of Sport and Physical Activity, PEP 660 - Psychology of Exercise and Health, PEP 690 - Sport Sociology, AT 577 - Psychology of Injury Rehabilitation, PEP 601 - Research Methods in Sport and Physical Education, EDPSY 641 - Statistical Methods in Educational and Psychological Research, RES 697 - Research Paper, NTH 559 - Ethnographic Methods, CPSY 621 - Theories and Techniques of Counseling, EDPSY 603 - Psychology of Human Development, EDPSY 640 - Methodology of Educational and Psychological Research, EDPSY 642 - Intermediate Statistics, EDPSY 646 - Tests and Measurements, EDPSY 742 - Multivariate Statistical Techniques, EXSCI 603 - Exercise Physiology 1, PEP 600 - Internship in Sport and Physical Education. |
Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Sports Administration - Higher Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is designed to prepare individuals to administer physical education programs and/or interscholastic/intercollegiate athletics programs. The Higher Education Option is for those students who wish to administer college/university physical education programs and/or intercollegiate athletic programs. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Sports Administration - Public School | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is for those students who wish to pursue administration of elementary, middle, junior and senior high school physical education and/or interscholastic athletic programs. This program is designed to prepare individuals to administer physical education programs and/or interscholastic/intercollegiate athletics programs. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Student Affairs Administration in Higher Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | This program designed for those interested in student affairs administration in colleges, universities, and junior and community (two-year) colleges. The program prepares students to work in such student affairs positions as admissions, financial aid, student activities and programs, and housing and residence hall programs. The student affairs administration program is jointly sponsored by the Department of Educational Studies and the Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies, Teachers College 829 Ball State University, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5461 | The Department of Educational Studies is a learning community engaged in the preparation of educators, the discovery of knowledge, and the promotion of social justice. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Teacher Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is designed to improve teaching of physical education in schools (K-12) and to prepare graduate students for further graduate study in the areas of sport pedagogy and/or curriculum and instruction in physical education. The program is sensitive to the needs of in-service teachers. Many of the courses are offered during the summer in a one-week workshop format which maintains the rigor expected of graduate level courses while allowing teachers to complete the program in a timely manner. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Telecommunications With a Digital Storytelling Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | This program will gain: proficiency in digital and convergence-based media design and production, an understanding of the nuances of narrative substance and structure an understanding of the functions of storytelling, an understanding of the challenges, implications, and ethics of storytelling. | Students should have a bachelors degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Telecommunications, Ball Communications Building (BC) 201, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1480 | This department was originally established as the Center for Radio and Television in 1966. The academic program led graduates into a career in either teaching or commercial broadcasting. Ahead of its time, the center had an emphasis on practical experience over traditional textbook learning. Back then, students could serve as staff members at the 10-watt radio station WBST (now part of Indiana Public Radio) or could work on closed-circuit instructional TV programs. As a decade passed, the degree program evolved into its own academic unit called Radio/Television/Motion Pictures, or R-T-M. The first student organization was the Broadcast Guild which, through the work of Professor Dave Smith, became an official chapter of the National Broadcasting Society, or Alpha Epsilon Rho. The national president of Alpha Epsilon Rho, John Kurtz, became the new department chair in 1980, and the current name of telecommunications (TCOM) was adopted. In the mid-1980s personal computers began appearing on desktops, allotted to faculty members by seniority. Wible worked with David Letterman to start a carrier current student radio station called WCRD. In 1988, the department moved from the Arts and Communication Building to the then new Edmund F. Ball Communications Building. TCOM has grown to serve nearly 1,200 majors and minors with 21 full-time professors. Nine student-run television programs air on WIPB, cable, or closed-circuit television. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Visual Arts with Emphasis in Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | This program offers concentrations in the visual arts through studio/education seminars, art history, and advanced studio—ceramics, drawing, electronic art, metals, painting, photography, printmaking, and sculpture. Interdisciplinary programs of study are possible. Students are expected to develop and refine studio skills, education skills, and academic scholarship to a level of professional excellence. The program enables the student to work closely with studio faculty in well-designed facilities, become an ambassador of the visual arts in school systems and communities, and enrich their lives with the traditions of the visual arts. | Applicants must have an undergraduate degree in art and grade point averages in art courses of at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale and must pass review by the Department of Art graduate committee. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Arts in Wellness Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology | This program focuses on the strong health and wellness resources of the university, offering comprehensive graduate training. The goal of the program is to prepare students to be wellness managers, capable of having a significant effect on the health and well-being of numerous constituencies and knowledgeable of the principles of sound management, cost containment, and accountability. A degree in wellness management prepares students to work as professionals in an expanding, exciting field. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: WELNS 605 - Wellness Management Administration, WELNS 630 - Wellness Programming for Health and Productivity Management, WELNS 650 - Foundations of Wellness, WELNS 660 - Critical Issues in Worksite Wellness, WELNS 670 - Interdisciplinary Wellness Research Design, WELNS 698 - Internship in Wellness Management, RES 697 - Research Paper, EDPSY 641 - Statistical Methods in Educational and Psychological Research, THES 698 - Thesis, WELNS 625 - Community Collaboration and Service Learning in Wellness Management, WELNS 635 - Wellness Coaching, WELNS 640 - Survey of Wellness Policy, Advocacy and Ethics, WELNS 645 - Social Marketing in Wellness Management Practice, WELNS 655 - Practical Applications for Worksite Wellness, WELNS 665 - Technology and Media for Wellness Managers, WELNS 675 - Alternative and Complementary Therapies, WELNS 680 - Evaluating Health and Wellness Initiatives, GERON 515 - Technology in Aging. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology, HP PL 225, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $30,719 a year | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | This program provides with a foundation for a wide range of business management opportunities—from small, entrepreneurial operations to multinational corporations. As a business administration major, students will benefit from a broad-based curriculum, opportunities to customize their degree to meet specific needs and interests, the flexibility to choose classes from each of three areas: managing financial resources, understanding the marketplace, and organizational processes. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | MBA | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management | Miller College of Business, Department of Marketing and Management, Whitinger Business Building room 100, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5200 | The Miller College of Business will be nationally recognized for its significant contributions to the academic and business communities. Miller College graduates will be distinguished for professional competence, social responsibility, personal accountability, and commitment to a lifetime of learning. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Landscape Architecture | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Landscape Architecture | This program helps students build a career in one of the most diversified of the design professions. The distinctive blend of hands-on learning, research, and practice prepares students from diverse disciplines to become landscape professionals who can integrate the needs of people and natural systems. This degree is fully accredited by the Landscape Architecture Accreditation Board of the American Society of Landscape Architects, qualifying graduates to sit for the professional examination required to practice landscape architecture. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: Community and Urban Space Design (LA 603) 4, Landscape Architecture Methods (LA 635) 3, Readings in Landscape Architecture (LA 653) 3, Landscape Plants 1 (LA 341) 4, Site Design (LA 602) 4, Landscape Architectural History (LA 622) 3, Planting Design (LA 645) 3, Elective 3, Environmental Systems and Structures (LA 573) 3, Landscape Architectural Engineering 1 (LA 311) 4. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Landscape Architecture | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Landscape Architecture, Architecture Building 226, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1971 | This college has innovative facilities and technology support the diverse learning, research, and service activities that take place daily in Ball State University. In addition to classrooms and conference rooms, the building includes an auditorium, an exhibit gallery, a variety of labs and libraries, and a wireless network. Twenty-five studios provide students with their own personal work space for design and graphics courses. A five-level, glass-walled atrium offers settings for exhibits, special events, and informal meetings in a comfortable lounge atmosphere. The college also maintains satellite facilities in downtown Muncie and Indianapolis for urban design studio work and off-campus educational programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Composition | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MUSTH 621 - Analytical Technique, MUHIS 600 - Methodology and Bibliography in Musicology, MUSED 668 - Research in Music Education, MUSTH 520 - Sixteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUSTH 623 - Twentieth-Century Counterpoint, MUSTH 625 - Electronic Music Studio 1, MUSTH 626 - Electronic Music Studio 2, MUHIS 501 - Piano Literature, MUHIS 535 - Music in the Baroque Era, MUHIS 536 - Music in the Preclassical and Classical Eras, MUHIS 537 - Music in the Romantic Era, MUHIS 538 - Opera History from 1780 to 1980, MUHIS 603 - Chamber Music Literature, MUHIS 605 - Vocal Literature, MUHIS 632 - Music in the Renaissance, MUHIS 633 - Music in the Twentieth Century, MUHIS 680 - Symphonic Literature. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Conducting | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Conducting Courses: MUSPE 690 - Advanced Conducting, MUSPE 691 - Lessons in Advanced Conducting, MUSED 651 - Band Administration, MUSED 673 - Band Rehearsal Laboratory, MUSED 674 - Orchestra Rehearsal Laboratory, MUSED 675 - Choral Rehearsal Laboratory, MUSPE 593 - Workshop in Music Performance, MUHIS 600 - Methodology and Bibliography in Musicology, MUSED 668 - Research in Music Education. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program especially designed for the public school music educator. The degree offers flexibility to allow students to structure their program in a manner that best suits their own particular interests and needs. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses (12 semester hours): MUSED 600 -- History and Philosophy of Music Education, MUSED 610 - Music Teaching and Learning, MUSED 620 - Assessment Techniques in Music Education, MUSED 668 - Research in Music Education. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Music Education: Four Summers Option | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students have the option of completing the degree in four summer sessions. Required courses are offered in a rotation that allows for completion of the program during summer sessions only. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses (12 semester hours): MUSED 600 -- History and Philosophy of Music Education, MUSED 610 - Music Teaching and Learning, MUSED 620 - Assessment Techniques in Music Education, MUSED 668 - Research in Music Education. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Music Education: Master's Plus License Option | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program especially designed for the public school music educator. The degree offers flexibility to allow students to structure their program in a manner that best suits their own particular interests and needs. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses (12 semester hours): MUSED 600 -- History and Philosophy of Music Education, MUSED 610 - Music Teaching and Learning, MUSED 620 - Assessment Techniques in Music Education, MUSED 668 - Research in Music Education. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Music History and Musicology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MUHIS 535 - Music in the Baroque Era, MUHIS 536 - Music in the Preclassical and Classical Eras, MUHIS 537 - Music in the Romantic Era, MUHIS 538 - Opera History from 1780 to 1980, MUHIS 631 - Music in the Middle Ages, MUHIS 632 - Music in the Renaissance, MUHIS 600 - Methodology and Bibliography in Musicology, Research Project (3-6 hours), RES 697 - Research Paper, THES 698 - Thesis, Music Theory (4-6 hours), MUSTH 520 - Sixteenth-Century Counterpoint, MUSTH 612 - Compositional Practices of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, MUSTH 616 - Theory of Nineteenth-Century Music, MUSTH 617 - Theory of Twentieth-Century Music, MUSTH 621 - Analytical Technique, MUSTH 692 - Special Topics in Music Theory and Composition. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Music Theory | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MUSTH 621 - Analytical Technique, MUHIS 600 - Methodology and Bibliography in Musicology, THES 698 - Thesis, MUSTH 510 - Choral Arranging, MUSTH 511 - Instrumentation and Orchestration, MUSTH 513 - Band Arranging, MUSTH 514 - Commercial Arranging, MUSTH 625 - Electronic Music Studio 1, MUSTH 626 - Electronic Music Studio 2, MUSTH 628 - Composition, MUSTH 612 - Compositional Practices of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, MUSTH 616 - Theory of Nineteenth-Century Music, MUSTH 617 - Theory of Twentieth-Century Music, MUSTH 692 - Special Topics in Music Theory and Composition. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Performance | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses: MUSED 668 - Research in Music Education, MUHIS 600 - Methodology and Bibliography in Musicology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Performance (Woodwinds Emphasis) | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Piano Chamber Music/Accompanying | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MUHIS 501 - Piano Literature, MUHIS 537 - Music in the Romantic Era, MUHIS 603 - Chamber Music Literature, MUHIS 605 - Vocal Literature, Research (3 hours), MUHIS 600 - Methodology and Bibliography in Musicology, MUSED 668 - Research in Music Education. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Music in Piano Performance and Pedagogy | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program is designed for students who are certified to teach as well as for those who do not have and do not seek such certification. A faculty-approved creative project, recital, or thesis is required of all students. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college or university and must satisfy one of the following requirements: have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale, have a 3.0 GPA (on a 4.0 scale) during the last two years of undergraduate work. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MUHIS 501 - Piano Literature, Piano Pedagogy (12 credit hours), MUSPE 525 - Elementary Piano Pedagogy and Literature, MUSPE 526 - Intermediate Piano Pedagogy and Literature, MUSPE 692 - Special Topics in Music Performance, RES 697 - Research Paper. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Public Administration (MPA) | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | This program provides graduate professional education to students who wish to prepare for administrative or research careers in public management at the federal, state, or local government level with nonprofit organizations or private sector corporations extensively involved with government. The flexibility of the program allows students to tailor an interdisciplinary curriculum to their needs, objectives, and goals. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Political Science, NQ 240, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8780 | This department prides itself on teaching excellence. Most of its faculty members have received teaching awards. Likewise, in public service, its professors have contributed thousands of volunteer hours to various government and not-for-profit boards and commissions, many faculty members have sought elective office and are active in both major political parties. This department is home to the Bowen Center for Public Affairs. The Center, named after former Governor Otis R. Bowen, holds civic education seminars throughout the state through the Bowen Institute on Political Participation, conducts training for public officials to ensure effective and efficient government administration, and helps establish best practices in public administration through original research and surveys of Hoosier citizens. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science (MS) in Chemistry - Chemical Education Option | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program offer challenging and relevant courses, great opportunities for research experience excellent research facilities and instrumentation, camaraderie and collaboration among students and faculty, enthusiastic, knowledgeable faculty. | Students should have a bachelor's degree in chemistry or in a field with substantial chemistry background. A cumulative undergraduate GPA of 2.75 on a 4.0 scale. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science (MS) in Chemistry - Chemistry Option | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program offer challenging and relevant courses, great opportunities for research experience excellent research facilities and instrumentation, camaraderie and collaboration among students and faculty, enthusiastic, knowledgeable faculty. | Students should have a bachelor's degree in chemistry or in a field with substantial chemistry background. A cumulative undergraduate GPA of 2.75 on a 4.0 scale. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science (MS) in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program is designed for students choosing a profession in public school teaching. Candidates must possess a valid physics teaching license or be in the process of securing certification in physical science/physics teaching. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Miller College of Business, Department of Accounting | This program designed for accounting or business students who want added depth and breadth in their professional preparation or who wish to meet the statutory requirements to sit for the Uniform CPA Examination. The Department of Accounting recommends that students who intend to sit for the CPA exam complete the master of science in accounting rather than simply pursuing additional hours of undergraduate coursework beyond the bachelor's degree. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses: ACC 625 Tax Planning and Research, ACC 650 Attestation Principles and Practices, ACC 675 Seminar in Financial Accounting, ACC 695 Accounting Capstone, ACC 630 Accounting Information Systems (3 credits), ACC 655 Selected Topics in Accounting (3 credits), ACC 660 International Accounting (3 credits), ACC 665 Seminar in Management Accounting (3 credits), ACC 690 Seminar in Professional Issues (3 credits). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Miller College of Business, Department of Accounting | Miller College of Business, Department of Accounting, Whitinger Business Building room 303, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5100 | The mission of the Department of Accounting supports the missions of the Miller College of Business and Ball State University by: maintaining separate Association to Advance College Schools of Business (AACSB International) accreditation as evidence of the department's commitment to quality education and continuous improvement; providing high quality accounting education to the department's students with ample opportunities for them to learn to effectively operate in a competitive business environment; making intellectual contributions through a mix of discipline-based, contributions to practice, and learning and pedagogical research that can be applied to the business environment and classroom instruction; maintaining strong ties with the business community, especially the accounting profession; providing strong support of student organizations to foster students' acculturation to the accounting profession; providing responsible service to the accounting profession, the college, the university, and academic organizations. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Adapted Physical Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | The goal of this program is to provide students with the most enriching learning experiences possible by combining theory with lecture and practical coursework. The graduate program seeks to provide students with leadership responsibilities supported by coursework and research experiences with special populations. Students at both levels of study will receive extensive contact hours in the public schools and on-campus programs working with students with disabilities. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Biology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program strengthen students background in biological sciences and related disciplines through coursework and conduct extensive research that culminates into a research thesis in this master of science program. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Exercise Physiology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program has fostered a variety of research projects that include carbohydrate metabolism, heat stress, fluid balance, over-training and tapering in runners, swimmers, and cyclists. This program is housed in the Human Performance Laboratory and began training graduate students in the area of applied and exercise physiology at the masters level in 1965. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 603. Advance Exercise Physiology (4 hrs), EXSCI 611. Research Design (3 hrs), EXSCI 630. Metabolic Adaptation (3 hrs), EXSCI 637.Human Dynamics (5 hrs), EXSCI 633. Seminar (2-6 hrs), CHEM 563. Principles of Biochemistry I (3 hrs), CHEM 564. Principles of Biochemistry 2 (3 hrs), EXCSI 634.Mechanical Analysis (3 hrs), EDPSY 641.Statistical I Methods or (3 hrs), EDPSY 642.Statistical Methods II (3 hrs), BIO 524. Biophysics (3 hrs), BIO 557. Molecular (4 hrs), BIO 558. Advanced Cell Mol (4 hrs), BIO 559. Bioenergetics (4 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Exercise Science - Adult Fitness/Cardiac Rehabilitation | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program provides students with the necessary knowledge and skills to obtain careers as directors of preventive and rehabilitation exercise programs. The students within this program are trained at both the laboratory facilities of the AF/CR (described below) and Ball Memorial Hospital, in what can only be described as an extensive hands on experience. They learn every aspect of testing and training and will perfect their skills in work related duties. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 603. Advanced Physiology of Human Performance (4 hrs), EXSCI 611. Research Design (3 hrs), EXSCI 622. Found Adult Physical Fitness (3 hrs), EXSCI 623. Principles of Exercise Testing (3 hrs), EXSCI 630. Metabolic Adaptation to Physical Stress (3 hrs), EXSCI 637. Human Dynamics (5 hrs), EXSCI 638. Electrocardiography (3 hrs), RES 697. Research Paper (3 hrs), EXSCI 639. Seminar in Cardiac (3 hrs), EXSCI 640. Exercise Prevention/ Rehabilitation (3 hrs), CPSY 634. Behavioral Medicine (3 hrs), FCSFN 644.Nutritional Exercise and Sport, PHYSL 514. Cardiovascular Physiology (3 hrs), BIO 548 Biometry (statistics) (3 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Exercise Science - Biomechanics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program conducts research in clinical and sports biomechanics. Clinical research has centered on gait analysis and falls prevention in the elderly to tendinitis rehabilitation, while sports research has focused on strength and conditioning to technique analysis. The laboratory is fully equipped to quantify all types of musculo-skeletal experimental data including force measurements, accelerometry, motion analysis with computer simulation, and EMG. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 611 Research Design (3 hrs, EXSCI 634Mechanical Analysis (3 hrs), EXSCI 651 Topics Biomechanics (3 hrs), EDPSY 641 Statistical Methods (3 hrs), EXSCI 603 Advanced Physiology of Human Performance (4 hrs), EXSCI 604 Essentials of Resistance Training (3 hrs), PUMET 111Statics (3 hrs), PUMET 213Dynamics (3 hrs), BIO 548 Biometry (3 hrs), EDPSY 642 Statistical Methods (3 hrs), CS 699 Read Honor (3 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Exercise Science - Sport Performance | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program provides the student with a board scientific background for coaching and conditioning of athletic populations, and is a cross discipline approach between Exercise Science and Physical Education. This degree is a terminal degree that emphasizes the application of training modalities. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 603. Advanced Physiology of Human Performance (4 hrs), EXSCI 604.Essentials of Resistance Training (3 hrs), EXCSI, 4.Mechanical Analysis (3 hrs), PEP 696 Athletic Training (3 hrs), PEP 609 Introduction to Sports Exercise Psychology (3 hrs), PEP 600 Internship (1-3), FCS 644 Nutrition (3 hrs), SPTAD 601 Research Procedures (3 hrs), EDPSY 641 Statistics (3 hrs), RES 697 Research Paper (3 hrs), PEP 601 Found PE Research (3 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Exercise Science - Sport Performance Non Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program provides the student with a board scientific background for coaching and conditioning of athletic populations, and is a cross discipline approach between Exercise Science and Physical Education. This degree is a terminal degree that emphasizes the application of training modalities. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EXSCI 603. Advanced Physiology of Human Performance (4 hrs), EXSCI 604.Essentials of Resistance Training (3 hrs), EXCSI, 4.Mechanical Analysis (3 hrs), PEP 696 Athletic Training (3 hrs), PEP 609 Introduction to Sports Exercise Psychology (3 hrs), PEP 600 Internship (1-3), FCS 644 Nutrition (3 hrs), SPTAD 601 Research Procedures (3 hrs), EDPSY 641 Statistics (3 hrs), RES 697 Research Paper (3 hrs), PEP 601 Found PE Research (3 hrs). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Geology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | This program leading to professional work in all specialties of geology. Geologists study the composition of earth, and how best to find, use and protect its mineral, energy and water resources. Geologists also use their knowledge of the earth's processes to explain threatening events, such as earthquakes, landslides, floods, tidal waves, and volcanic eruptions, and to predict when they may happen again. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences, Ball State University, Fine Arts Building (AR) room 117, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8270 | This department's classes are small, which means students get more one-on-one time with professors and a stronger bond with their fellow classmates. Its faculties are knowledgeable about geology and its subfields including minerals, igneous and metamorphic rock, fossils, and petroleum. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Health Science | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program is designed for students seeking a comprehensive background in educational planning (including program development, implementation, and evaluation) relating to health promotion and disease prevention activities in community health agencies, wellness centers, health-care facilities, and business and industrial settings. Special course work in advanced health and safety methodology is offered for students seeking professionalization of their secondary teaching licenses in health and safety. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with at least a academic minor in health education, health and safety education, health science, or an equivalent subject. A student applying for a graduate teaching assistantship must have a grade point average of at least 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Historic Preservation | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | This program gives individuals a solid foundation to build a career in the modern preservation profession. This two-year course of study prepares students from varied undergraduate backgrounds to deal with the complex challenges of rejuvenating the historic Main Streets of cities and towns, revitalizing neighborhoods, preserving rural areas, and finding new uses for historic landmarks and landscapes. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required. Admission is determined on the basis of the applicant's qualifications. Normally, admission to this program requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: History of American Architecture (ARCH 528) 3, Introduction to Historic Preservation (ARCH 540) 3, Documentation and Registration of Historic Properties 1 (ARCH 542) taken first half of semester 2, Historic Preservation Technology 1 (ARCh 547) taken second half of semester 2, Design and Presentation Techniques (PLAN 605) taken first five weeks of semester 1, Directed Research (ARCH 573) taken second eleven weeks of semester, History of Architecture, Planning, and Engineering in the Midwest (ARCH 530) emphasizes vernacular architecture 3, Preservation Law and Planning (ARCH 541) 2, Economics of Historic Preservation (ARCH 544) 2, Documentation and Registration of Historic Properties 2 (ARCH 545) taken first half of semester 2, Historic Preservation Technology 2 (ARCH 549) taken second half of semester 2, Thesis/Creative Project Proposal (ARCH 674) 1, Elective in History of Architecture, Landscape Preservation, or History of Urban Form. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture, Architecture Building 402, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1900 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Information and Communication Sciences | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Center for Information and Communication Sciences | This program is intended as a fast track to management positions within information and communication technology (ICT). This interdisciplinary program offers a wealth of background about pertinent technologies, but also the insight needed to put those technologies to good use in the real world. An ICT company may have plenty of employees with technical background—what the company really needs is someone who can blend that technological understanding with management skills and analytical, problem-solving insight. An information and communication sciences degree can help step up a few rungs on an exciting but crowded career ladder. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Core Courses are: ICS 600, Survey of Management, ICS 601, Problems in Information and Communication Sciences and Lab, ICS 602, Human Communication: Process and Theory, ICS 620, Telecom Technologies, Standards, and Lab, ICS 621, Information Movement, Management, Storage Technologies, Standards, and Lab, ICS 630, Research Methodologies and Problems Seminar, ICS 640, Information and Communication Industry, ICS 642, Regulatory Research in Context/Problems in Information Communication, ICS 660, Human Factors, Needs-Assessment, and User-Driven Design. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Center for Information and Communication Sciences | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Center for Information and Communication Sciences, Ball State University, Ball Communication Building room 221, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1889 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Sport Management | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is designed to prepare individuals to administer intercollegiate athletic programs and professional sport organizations. This program is open to graduate physical education majors and to graduates with majors in fields other than physical education. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Sport and Exercise Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | The purpose of this program is to develop a thorough understanding of the psychological principles related to sport and motor performance. This objective is achieved through classroom study, research and practicum experiences. | Applicants must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution in education, physical education, biology, or other appropriate majors; have a grade point average (GPA) of at least 2.75 on a scale of 4.0; A student with a GPA of less than 2.75 on a 4.0 scale must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test. Students with satisfactory scores on the GRE will be considered for admission to the program under probationary admission. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: PEP 609 - Introduction to Sport and Exercise Psychology, PEP 644 - Psycho-Social Processes of Sport and Physical Activity, PEP 660 - Psychology of Exercise and Health, PEP 690 - Sport Sociology, AT 577 - Psychology of Injury Rehabilitation, PEP 601 - Research Methods in Sport and Physical Education, EDPSY 641 - Statistical Methods in Educational and Psychological Research, RES 697 - Research Paper, NTH 559 - Ethnographic Methods, CPSY 621 - Theories and Techniques of Counseling, EDPSY 603 - Psychology of Human Development, EDPSY 640 - Methodology of Educational and Psychological Research, EDPSY 642 - Intermediate Statistics, EDPSY 646 - Tests and Measurements, EDPSY 742 - Multivariate Statistical Techniques, EXSCI 603 - Exercise Physiology 1, PEP 600 - Internship in Sport and Physical Education. |
Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Sports Administration - Higher Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is designed to prepare individuals to administer physical education programs and/or interscholastic/intercollegiate athletics programs. The Higher Education Option is for those students who wish to administer college/university physical education programs and/or intercollegiate athletic programs. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Sports Administration - Public School | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is for those students who wish to pursue administration of elementary, middle, junior and senior high school physical education and/or interscholastic athletic programs. This program is designed to prepare individuals to administer physical education programs and/or interscholastic/intercollegiate athletics programs. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Teacher Education | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is designed to improve teaching of physical education in schools (K-12) and to prepare graduate students for further graduate study in the areas of sport pedagogy and/or curriculum and instruction in physical education. The program is sensitive to the needs of in-service teachers. Many of the courses are offered during the summer in a one-week workshop format which maintains the rigor expected of graduate level courses while allowing teachers to complete the program in a timely manner. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Science in Wellness Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology | This program focuses on the strong health and wellness resources of the university, offering comprehensive graduate training. The goal of the program is to prepare students to be wellness managers, capable of having a significant effect on the health and well-being of numerous constituencies and knowledgeable of the principles of sound management, cost containment, and accountability. A degree in wellness management prepares students to work as professionals in an expanding, exciting field. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: WELNS 605 - Wellness Management Administration, WELNS 630 - Wellness Programming for Health and Productivity Management, WELNS 650 - Foundations of Wellness, WELNS 660 - Critical Issues in Worksite Wellness, WELNS 670 - Interdisciplinary Wellness Research Design, WELNS 698 - Internship in Wellness Management, RES 697 - Research Paper, EDPSY 641 - Statistical Methods in Educational and Psychological Research, THES 698 - Thesis, WELNS 625 - Community Collaboration and Service Learning in Wellness Management, WELNS 635 - Wellness Coaching, WELNS 640 - Survey of Wellness Policy, Advocacy and Ethics, WELNS 645 - Social Marketing in Wellness Management Practice, WELNS 655 - Practical Applications for Worksite Wellness, WELNS 665 - Technology and Media for Wellness Managers, WELNS 675 - Alternative and Complementary Therapies, WELNS 680 - Evaluating Health and Wellness Initiatives, GERON 515 - Technology in Aging. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology, HP PL 225, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Urban Design | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning | This program is offered by the College of Architecture and Planning, home to accredited and nationally-ranked undergraduate and graduate programs in architecture, landscape architecture, urban planning and historic preservation as well as a nationally-recognized history of community-based learning. The 30 credit, post-professional degree program is offered in downtown Indianapolis through a modular, executive-style format designed to accommodate working professionals. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning, Architecture Building 327, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1963 | This college has innovative facilities and technology support the diverse learning, research, and service activities that take place daily in Ball State University. In addition to classrooms and conference rooms, the building includes an auditorium, an exhibit gallery, a variety of labs and libraries, and a wireless network. Twenty-five studios provide students with their own personal work space for design and graphics courses. A five-level, glass-walled atrium offers settings for exhibits, special events, and informal meetings in a comfortable lounge atmosphere. The college also maintains satellite facilities in downtown Muncie and Indianapolis for urban design studio work and off-campus educational programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Master of Urban and Regional Planning | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning | This program helps students build careers and emerge as leaders in an expanding profession that focuses on effective development in the public interest. This rigorous program leads to professional certification by the American Institute of Certified Planners. Certification requires a prescribed combination of planning education, professional practice, and a nationally administered examination. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning | College of Architecture and Planning, Department of Urban Planning, Architecture Building 327, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1963 | This college has innovative facilities and technology support the diverse learning, research, and service activities that take place daily in Ball State University. In addition to classrooms and conference rooms, the building includes an auditorium, an exhibit gallery, a variety of labs and libraries, and a wireless network. Twenty-five studios provide students with their own personal work space for design and graphics courses. A five-level, glass-walled atrium offers settings for exhibits, special events, and informal meetings in a comfortable lounge atmosphere. The college also maintains satellite facilities in downtown Muncie and Indianapolis for urban design studio work and off-campus educational programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Masters Degree in Applied Gerontology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology | This program is dedicated to the promotion of multidimensional wellness over the life-span, serves as a resource center for students and faculty who are interested in aging studies. This program is flexible; students may undertake a double major with another degree program or may individualize a gerontology degree to personal and professional goals and interests. The annual Kirkpatrick Memorial Conference on Aging invites leading gerontologists to the Ball State campus to report on recent developments in the field. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: GERON 592 - Workshop in Applied Gerontology, GERON 598 - Topical Seminar in Applied Gerontology, GERON 605 - Aging Well: A Systems Approach, GERON 699 - Internship in Gerontology, EDAC 540 - Educational Gerontology, CPSY 653 - Research in Counseling Psychology and Guidance, CPSY 676 - Principles and Practices of Counseling the Older Adult, EDPSY 625 - Models and Strategies for Gifted Learners, HSC 569 - Health and Aging.OC 531 - Social Gerontology. WELNS 670 - Interdisciplinary Wellness Research Design. |
Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, John and Janice Fisher Institute for Wellness and Gerontology, HP PL 225, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Masters Degree in Communication Liberal Arts and Sciences | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | This program teaches about Introduction to Communication Studies, Quantitative Research in Communication, Qualitative Research in Communication, and Studies in Communication Theory. The Communications Liberal Arts and Sciences option master’s degree from the Department of Communication Studies is a great place to start. It’s also a useful foundation for a professional communication career. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies, David Letterman Communication and Media Building Room 351, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1882 | This department was first recognized in the mid-1960s as a separate entity at Ball State, but the beginnings of this type of course work can be found a few decades earlier within the English department. Through its history, the department and its offerings have evolved from a small collection of courses into a vibrant discipline useful to students with wide-ranging career aspirations. It is in the David Letterman Communication and Media Building, packed with advanced technology - the same kind found in communication workplaces - ready to provide the students with hands-on experiences. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Masters Degree in Organizational and Professional Communication and Development | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | This program perhaps as a consultant, trainer, or development specialist, graduate work through the Organizational and Professional Communication and Development. It’s also a good building block for doctoral studies. The degree requires completion of four core courses totaling 12 credit hours: Introduction to Communication Studies, Quantitative Research in Communication, Qualitative Research in Communication, and Studies in Communication Theory. | Students should have a bachelor's degree or equivalent from an accredited college or university is required for admission to Ball State University's master of landscape architecture (M.L.A.) program. Most undergraduate degrees are accepted. Admission is determined on the basis of individual qualifications and satisfactory performance on all required materials. The Department of Landscape Architecture requires an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies | College of Communication, Information, and Media, Department of Communication Studies, David Letterman Communication and Media Building Room 351, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1882 | This department was first recognized in the mid-1960s as a separate entity at Ball State, but the beginnings of this type of course work can be found a few decades earlier within the English department. Through its history, the department and its offerings have evolved from a small collection of courses into a vibrant discipline useful to students with wide-ranging career aspirations. It is in the David Letterman Communication and Media Building, packed with advanced technology - the same kind found in communication workplaces - ready to provide the students with hands-on experiences. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Masters Degree in Speech-Language Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology | This program will prepare the students to become a certified, licensed speech-language pathologist. Students learn the knowledge and practice the skills that will prepare them to work in all clinical settings and with all client populations across the lifespan in speech-language pathology. | Students should have already received a bachelors degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelors degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: SPAA 601 - Introduction to Research in Speech Pathology and Audiology, SPAA 610 - Child Language: Birth to Five, SPAA 611 - Child Language: School Age to Adolescent, SPAA 620 - Diagnostic Clinical Practicum, SPAA 621 - Disorders of Articulation and Phonology 2, SPAA 622 - Fluency, SPAA 624 - Diagnosis and Appraisal 2, SPAA 625 - Voice Disorders, SPAA 628 - Advanced Clinical Practice, SPAA 629 - Professional Issues in Speech-Language Pathology, SPAA 631 - Augmentative/Alternative Communication and the Nonvocal Individual, SPAA 632 - Neurogenic Disorders 1, SPAA 633 - Neurogenic Disorders 2, SPAA 635 - Cultural and Diversity Issues in SLP. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, Art and Communication Building AC 104, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8161 | This department has a primary mission to prepare outstanding speech-language pathologists and audiologists. Its supporting and secondary missions include: to provide an educational experience which assists students in acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to deliver high-quality clinical services as well as stimulate the students' intellectual curiosity; to provide high-quality diagnostic and therapeutic audiology and speech-language pathology services to residents of East Central Indiana and surrounding areas; to provide continuing education and serve as a resource center for practicing speech-language pathologists and audiologists; to contribute to the advancement of the professions of speech-language pathology and audiology through research, clinical practice, and professional development; to contribute to the development of Ball State University and the state of Indiana. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Masters Program in Computer Science Non-Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | The strengths of this program include: students with a strong background in classical computer science and software development, strong commitment to teaching, strong ties to industry, Host department for the NSF-sponsored Software Engineering Research Center, current major research projects include $936,000 Army Research Lab project using software engineering techniques to enhance security and reliability of software. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university n overall grade point average of at least 2.75, or at least 3.0 in the last half of undergraduate studies. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. |
Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science, RB 455, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8641 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Masters Program in Computer Science Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | The strengths of this program include: students with a strong background in classical computer science and software development, strong commitment to teaching, strong ties to industry, Host department for the NSF-sponsored Software Engineering Research Center, current major research projects include $936,000 Army Research Lab project using software engineering techniques to enhance security and reliability of software. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university n overall grade point average of at least 2.75, or at least 3.0 in the last half of undergraduate studies. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. |
Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Computer Science, RB 455, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8641 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Masters in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Anthropology | This program provides graduate students with a broad foundation in anthropology while allowing individuals to specialize in a particular area of anthropology | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Anthropology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Anthropology, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1575 | The Department of Anthropology is committed to providing students with opportunities to apply what they have learned. The department offers cultural field trips among the Native Americans of the southwestern United States; a cultural field school in Jamaica, Romania, and Vietnam; prehistoric and historic archaeological field schools in Indiana; consulting work through Ball State's Archaeological Resources Management Service; and an internship program. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Ph.D in Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | The objective of this program is to train research scholars who will contribute to the understanding of teaching, learning and development; educational accountability and program evaluation; and individual differences in learning and adjustment in educational settings. The program features areas of study common to degree programs in Educational Psychology, including learning, human development, statistics, measurement and research methods. In addition the program affords a unique opportunity to pursue advanced training in gifted studies, educational program evaluation, educational technology, and neuropsychology. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology | Teachers College, Department of Educational Psychology, Teachers College TC 1008, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5252 | The Department is the academic home of the Psychoeducational, Diagnostic, and Intervention Clinic and the Neuropsychology Lab. The research interests are wide-ranging, but include cognition and learning, human development, assessment and measurement, gifted studies, neuropsychology and program evaluation, among others. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Ph.D. Program in Counseling Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | This program trains psychologists capable of working in a variety of settings. The program prepares scientist-practitioners who demonstrate a strong integration of theory, research, and intervention strategies. This emphasis is reflected in faculties expertise in behavioral medicine, family psychology, gifted and talented populations, and multicultural counseling among other areas. Counseling psychologists are concerned with normal human development throughout a broad range of personal, vocational, and interpersonal contexts. They have been described as the generalists of applied psychology. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services | Teachers College, Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services, Teachers College Room 622, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8040 | The department was ranked 11th for scholarly productivity in four esteemed psychology journals, according to a study published in The Counseling Psychologist in 2005. Further, the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students recognized the department as the 2005 Department of the Year. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Ph.D. in English with Concentration in Applied Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program offer small classes, award-winning graduate faculty, opportunities for professional development, and a wide range of courses in all areas of English. Graduate assistants receive extensive training and mentoring in teaching first-year college composition and teaching English to speakers of other languages Doctoral students have consistently earned teaching and administrative positions in higher education upon graduation. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENG 601 Research in English Studies (linguistics) 3, 621 Approaches to Modern English Grammar 3, 622 or 631 History of the English Language (3), History of Linguistics (3) 3, 623 Linguistic Phonetics 3, 625 Phonology 3, 626 Syntax 3, 627 Sociolinguistics 3, 628 Language and Culture 3, 632 Discourse Analysis. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Ph.D. in English with Concentration in Literature | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program prepares mature scholar/teachers to enter college or university teaching or to accept professional positions in business, industry, or allied fields where the highest levels of analytical and communications skills are required. Relevant MA coursework may be transferred to the degree. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Ph.D. in English with Concentration in Rhetoric and Composition | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program is one of the oldest established programs in the United States. Vital and evolving, this disciplinary focus is both a necessary cultural practice and an important intellectual discipline, central to literacy studies, creative writing, and linguistics, as well as reading-writing education. Focusing on the inclusive nature of rhetoric and composition, Ball State’s unique course of study explores the production, interpretation, and analysis of discourse across genres, media, and historical eras. Central to the program is the belief that rhetoric and composition as a discipline provides the necessary framework for understanding the creation of all discourse—socio-political, private, and literary—in whatever medium: oral, print, visual, and hypermedia. As a result, this multifaceted course of study introduces students to a range of research methodologies and methods, inviting candidates to pursue dissertation topics ranging over traditional and nontraditional areas. | Students should have a master's degree in a science, science education, or a related field from an accredited institution with a grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale. At least two years successful professional experience in teaching or the equivalent and teacher certification in field relevant to their intended major. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: ENG 604 Technology and English Studies 3, ENG 620 Linguistics and the Study of English 3, ENG 690 Seminar in Composition 3, ENG 691 Advanced Composition OR ENG 693 Writing in the Profession 3, ENG 694 The Classical Rhetoric of Composition 3, ENG 699 Contemporary Composition 3, ENG 697 Research Paper (3) OR ENG 698 Thesis (6). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | PhD Educational Studies | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | This program addresses changes in the character and delivery of public education, teacher education, and educational research through the study of three related disciplines in educational technology, curriculum, and social foundations/multicultural education (i.e., history, philosophy, sociology, anthropology, etc.). | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies | Teachers College, Department of Educational Studies, Teachers College 829 Ball State University, 2000 University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5461 | The Department of Educational Studies is a learning community engaged in the preparation of educators, the discovery of knowledge, and the promotion of social justice. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Pre Graduate School History Major | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | This program is designed to provide students with a solid foundation in history and languages necessary for entrance into graduate school. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: HIST 151 World Civ 1, HIST 152 World Civ 2, HIST 201 US 1492-1876, HIST 202 US 1877-Pres, HIST 320 Lab American, HIST 445 Hist History. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History, Ball State University, Burkhardt Room 200, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8700 | This department's students who take courses in the Department, including many who major in one of its programs, will pursue careers with no direct relationship to the field. The Department already vitally serves the needs of these students, but it can do even more. It can better serve these constituencies by providing direct instruction in the way that history courses can prepare them for other professions and by linking the curriculum more closely to such pursuits. The benefits of this change can be multiplied, moreover, by making a special effort to apprise the University and the larger community of this aspect of the Department's programs. Turning in this direction will be a special mission of the Department as the new century begins. In the twenty-first century, college graduates need to be prepared to live as global citizens. They need to acquire knowledge of the diverse people with whom they share this world. Moreover, as the world is experiencing a virtual revolution in information and communication technologies, college students need to be trained to acquire and critically evaluate the abundance of information. Finally, they need to acquire skills that allow them to communicate their knowledge and ideas. Studies in history at the university level are especially well suited to the preparation of students for this kind of world. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Pre-Dental Hygiene Preparation | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program will prepare students for a dental hygiene program. Depending on their high school background, they can complete this program in one year. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Pre-professional | Ball State University | The modules are: ENG 103 - English Comp 1 or ENG 104 - English Comp, CHEM 101 - General, Organic, and Biochemistry for the Health Sciences, ANAT 201 - Fundamentals of Human Anatomy, PSYSC 100 - General Psychology, SOC 100 - Principles of Sociology, COMM 210 - Fundamentals of Public Communication, BIO 113 - Microbiology, PHYSL 205 - Fundamentals of Human Physiology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Pre-Dentistry Preparation | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program will prepare the students for early or regular entry. Early entry is considered after only three years of undergraduate work; and they must have outstanding qualifications to be eligible. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Pre-professional | Ball State University | The modules are: BIO 111 - Principles of Biology 1, BIO 112 - Principles of Biology 2, BIO 214 - Genetics, CHEM 111 - General Chemistry 1, CHEM 112 - General Chemistry 2, CHEM 231 - Organic Chemistry 1, PHYCS 110 - General Physics 1, PHYCS 112 - General Physics 2, ZOOL 330 - Structure and Development of Vertebrates, MGT 300 - Business Administration, FIN 110 - Personal Finance, SP 101 - Spanish, or higher, ANTH 101 and ANTH 111 - Anthropology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Pre-Medicine | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program encourages the students to learn systematic study habits, and the program's curriculum gives them a rich, strong foundation in the sciences and other academic areas, hands-on research experiences, and clinical opportunities, including opportunities to shadow and observe physicians. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Pre-professional | Ball State University | The modules are: BIO 111 - Principles of Biology 1, BIO 112 - Principles of Biology 2, CHEM 111 - General Chemistry 1, CHEM 112 - General Chemistry 2, CHEM 225 - Chemical Analysis, PHYCS 110 - General Physics 1, PHYCS 112 - General Physics 2, ZOOL 330 - Structure and Development of Vertebrates, CHEM 231 - Organic Chemistry 1, CHEM 232 - Organic Chemistry 2, CHEM 234 - Organic Chemistry 1, CHEM 235 - Organic Chemistry 2, CHEM 360 - Essentials of Biochemistry or CHEM 463 - Principles of Biochemistry, BIO 214 - Genetics, BIO 215 - Cell Biology, BIO 313 - Microbiology, Anat 201 - Fundamentals of Human Anatomy, Physl 215 - Human Physiology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Pre-Optometry Preparation | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program will prepare the students to meet the admission requirements for optometry school. Many of the students decide to apply to the Indiana University School of Optometry, students may, however, explore other schools and should refer to their specific admission requirements. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Pre-professional | Ball State University | The modules are: BIO 111 Principles of Biology 1, ANAT 201 Fundamentals of Human Anatomy, ZOOL 330 Structure and Development of Vertebrates, BIO 214 Genetics, or PHYSL 215 Human Physiology, CHEM 111 General Chemistry 1, CHEM 112 General Chemistry 2, CHEM 231 Organic Chemistry, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 161 and 162 Applied Calculus, PHYCS 110 General Physics 1, PHYCS 112 General Physics 2, PSYSC 241 Statistics, BIO 448 Biometry, PSYSC 100 General Psychology, ENG 103 English Composition 1 and ENG 104 English Composition 2, CHEM 360 Essentials of Biochemistry, ANAT 430 Histology, BIO 498 Undergraduate Research, ECON 116 Survey of Economic Ideas or BUSAD 101 Introduction to Business or MGT 200 or 300 Management Principles. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Pre-Pharmacy Program | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program will prepare the students to meet the pre-professional curricular requirements for Butler University College of Pharmacy and Purdue University School of Pharmacy. The program is designed to be completed in two years, but it does not result in a Ball State degree. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Pre-professional | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Pre-Physical Therapy | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program is not a major or degree program. Students wishing to complete a Physical Therapy degree must complete a 4-year degree (any major) and complete all pre-requisites for the P.T. School of choice. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Pre-professional | Ball State University | The modules are: CHEM 111 - General Chemistry 1, CHEM 112 - General Chemistry 2, PHYCS 110 - General Physics 1, PHYCS 112 - General Physics 2, COMM 210 - Fundamentals of Public Communication, PSYSC 100 - General Psychology, ANAT 201 - Fundamentals of Human Anatomy, PHYSL 210 - Human Physiology, PHYSL 211 - Human Physiology 2, PSYSC 321 - Developmental Psychology, SOC 100 - Principles of Sociology. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Residential Property Management (MA) | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is comprehensive, covering all aspects of housing and property management. Students will learn about the principles that guide the design, marketing, and management of housing for older adults and study government-assisted housing programs and the role of management in meeting the needs of owners, residents, and regulatory agencies. If students do not have an undergraduate background in RPM, they may be required to take a few undergraduate courses in addition to graduate courses to become familiar with the industry. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Residential Property Management (MS) | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is comprehensive, covering all aspects of housing and property management. Students will learn about the principles that guide the design, marketing, and management of housing for older adults and study government-assisted housing programs and the role of management in meeting the needs of owners, residents, and regulatory agencies. If students do not have an undergraduate background in RPM, they may be required to take a few undergraduate courses in addition to graduate courses to become familiar with the industry. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Specialist in Education (Ed.S.) Degree in School Superintendency | Full Time | Variable | $29571 for 2008; $30719 for 2009 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership | This program provides opportunities for specialized study in the school Superintendency. The program assists qualified individuals in developing the knowledge, performances, and disposition essential for success in the day-to-day operation of the school system and develops broad understandings relative to the scope and nature of educational programs. The program schedule will qualify the student for the superintendent license. The program includes appropriate work from the field of educational administration and related fields, such as educational psychology, curriculum, adult and community education, educational foundations, and counseling psychology. | Students should have already received a bachelor's degree that is comparable to the U.S. bachelor's degree of 4 years. Students should have a cumulative grade point average from their first bachelor's degree of at least 2.75 (on a 4.0 grade scale). Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BALL STATE UNIVERSITY | Courses are: EDAD 630 Human Resources Development 3, EDAD 635 Educational Decision Making 3, EDSUP 650 Supervision of Instruction 3, EDAD 684 Educational Finance and Ethics 3, EDAD 686 School Law 3, EDAD 689 (old 610/620) The School Principal 3, EDPSY 640 Methodology of Educational and Psychological Research 3, EDCUR 601 (old 610/620) Principles and Procedures of Curriculum Development 3, EDFON 641 History of American Education (3), EDFON 651 Educational Sociology (3), EDMUL 660 Multi-Cultural and Multi-Ethnic Education in American Schools (3). | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership | Teachers College, Department of Educational Leadership, Teachers College 918, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8488 | The Department of Educational Leadership offers outstanding graduate programs designed to help to succeed in myriad educational leadership roles in both school and community settings. Specific degree programs based on high standards of excellence, innovation, applied research, and service lay the groundwork for careers as school principals, administrators, and superintendents. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major - Middle School Option | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: BIO 111 - Principles of Biology 1, BIO 112 - Principles of Biology 2, CHEM 111 - General Chemistry 1, CHEM 112 - General Chemistry 2, PHYCS 110 - General Physics 1, PHYCS 112 - General Physics 2, GEOL 102 - Earth, Life, and Time, GEOG 230 - Elementary Meteorology, ASTRO 120 - Stars and Stellar Systems, ASTRO 121 - Honors Astronomy Laboratory, MATHS 112 - Precalculus-Trigonometry, GEOL 207 - Environmental Geology - Geological/Geochemical Cycles, GEOL 220 - Earth Materials, GEOL 240 - Geomorphology, GEOL 290 - Computer Applications in the Geosciences, GEOL 308 - Invertebrate Paleontology, GEOL 420 - Geological and Physical Oceanography, GEOG 265 - Introduction to Geographic Information Systems, NREM 221 - Soil Resources, GEOL 460 - Hydrogeology, GEOG 494 - Geographic Research Methods, GEOG 495 - Readings and Special Studies in Geography and Earth Science, GEOL 480 - Special Studies and Field Problems. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences, Ball State University, Fine Arts Building (AR) room 117, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8270 | This department's classes are small, which means students get more one-on-one time with professors and a stronger bond with their fellow classmates. Its faculties are knowledgeable about geology and its subfields including minerals, igneous and metamorphic rock, fossils, and petroleum. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major - Secondary School Option | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: CHEM 111 - General Chemistry 1, BIO 112 - Principles of Biology 2, PHYCS 110 - General Physics 1, PHYCS 112 - General Physics 2, ASTRO 120 - Stars and Stellar Systems, ASTRO 122 - Cosmology and Life in the Universe, GEOL 220 - Earth Materials, GEOL 240 - Geomorphology, GEOL 420 - Geological and Physical Oceanography, GEOL 460 - Hydrogeology, GEOG 230 - Elementary Meteorology, GEOG 265 - Introduction to Geographic Information Systems, GEOL 207 - Environmental Geology - Geological/Geochemical Cycles, NREM 221 - Soil Resources, GEOL 102 - Earth, Life, and Time, GEOL 308 - Invertebrate Paleontology, GEOL 290 - Computer Applications in the Geosciences, MATHS 112 - Precalculus-Trigonometry, GEOG 494 - Geographic Research Methods, GEOG 495 - Readings and Special Studies in Geography and Earth Science, GEOL 480 - Special Studies and Field Problems, BIO 111 - Principles of Biology 1, CHEM 112 - General Chemistry 2. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Geological Sciences, Ball State University, Fine Arts Building (AR) room 117, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8270 | This department's classes are small, which means students get more one-on-one time with professors and a stronger bond with their fellow classmates. Its faculties are knowledgeable about geology and its subfields including minerals, igneous and metamorphic rock, fossils, and petroleum. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Chemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program meets the high school chemistry and physics certification standards of Indiana. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: CHEM 111 General Chemistry 1, SCI 150 Basic Concepts in Science Ed., CHEM 112 General Chemistry 2, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, CHEM 231 Organic Chemistry 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, EDMUL 205 Intro to Multicultural Ed., EDPSY 251 Human Dev. for Secondary Ed., CHEM 232 Organic Chemistry 2, CHEM 225 Chemical Analysis, CHEM 463 Principles of Biochemistry 1, CHEM 470 Independent Study, PHYCS 120 General Physics 1, EDPSY 390 Educational Psychology, CHEM 450 Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM 470 Independent Study, PHYCS 122 General Physics 2, SCI 395 Intro to Teaching Science, EDFON 420 Foundations of Ed., CHEM 344 Physical Chemistry 1, SCI 396 Methods and Materials, EDSEC 380 Principles of Teaching Sec. School, EDJHM 385 Principles of Teaching Mid. School, EDSEC 460 Student Teaching: Sec. School, EDJHM 460 Student Teaching: Mid. School. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Early Childhood | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | This program's graduates develop as an elementary teacher - abilities in management, organization, communication, and human relations; understanding of how children develop; and awareness of how people learn; can be valuable in many other careers if they seek work in a field other than teaching in the future. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: EDRDG 400: Teaching of Reading in Today's Schools, EDEL 301: Teaching in the Pre-K/Kindergarten Program/Practicum, SS 398: Teaching Social Studies in Early Childhood/Kindergarten-Grade 3, MATHS 391: Teaching and Learning Mathematics in the Elementary School, EDEL 381: Interaction Skills for the Young Child, PEP 218: Developmental Aquatics for Preschoolers, PEP 291: Motor Development of Young Children, PEP 361: Dance for Children, SPCED 210: Theory and Practices in Early Childhood Special Education, EDEL 442: Administration of Early Childhood Programs, EDEL 351: Teaching in the Kindergarten/Primary Program/Practicum, SPCED 302: Teaching Students with Disabilities in the General Education Classroom, SCI 398: Teaching Science in the Early and Primary Grades, EDPSY 393: Educational Psychology for Elementary Education, ENG 331: Children's Literature, EDRDG 430: Corrective Reading/Practicum, EDEL 401 Student Teaching: Kindergarten, EDEL 402 Student Teaching: Primary Grades, EDFON 420 Social, Historical, and Philosophical Foundations of Education, EDEL 231 Family and Community Relations, EDEL 400 Student Teaching: Pre-Kindergarten, EDEL 450 Senior Seminar in Early Childhood and Elementary Education. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Elementary Education | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | This program's graduates develop as an elementary teacher - abilities in management, organization, communication, and human relations; understanding of how children develop; and awareness of how people learn; can be valuable in many other careers if they seek work in a field other than teaching in the future. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: EDEL 300: Management, Organization, and Instruction in the Elementary Education Classroom, SCI 397: Teaching Science in the Elementary School, EDRDG 400: Teaching of Reading in Today's School, MATHS 391: Teaching and Learning Mathematics in the Elementary School, EDPSY 393: Educational Psychology for Elementary Education, EDEL 350: Teaching in the Elementary Education Classroom/Practicum, SPCED 302: Teaching Students with Disabilities in the General Education Classroom, ENG 311: The Teaching of Language Arts in the Elementary Grades, SS 397: Teaching Social Studies in the Elementary School, ENG 331: Children's Literature, EDFON 420: Social, Historical, and Philosophical Foundations of Education, EDRDG 430: Corrective Reading/Practicum, EDEL 450: Senior Seminar in Early Childhood and Elementary Education. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education | Teachers College, Department of Elementary Education, Teachers College 216, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8560 | This department offer degrees at the bachelor, master, and doctoral level in this department. Each program prepares to enter the field as an outstanding graduate of a highly recognized department. The faculty in the Department of Elementary Education blends theory and practice to provide with an exceptional, immersive educational experience. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in English / Language Arts | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | This program is designed to prepare students for teaching effectively in middle and high schools. Students will complete a core of courses in English and communication studies so as to meet performance standards for licensure. Students’ progress through the program will be monitored, and students must meet prescribed levels of performance at various checkpoints as listed in the Unit Assessment System (UAS) in order to continue their enrollment in teacher education. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of English, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8580 | This department is dedicated to the scholarship and teaching of literature, linguistics, rhetoric, creative writing, and English education. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Foreign Language: French | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: FR 201 Intermed 1, FR 202 Intermed 2, FR 301 Conversation, FR 302 Composition, FR 334 Civ Cult Old (3), FR 335 Civ Cult Mod (3), FR 360 Int Fr Lit R, FR 401 Hist Lit 1, FR 402 Hist Lit 2. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Foreign Language: German | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: GER 201 Intermed 1, GER 202 Intermed 2, GER 301 Conversation, GER 302 Composition, GER 335 Civ Cult, GER 361 Intro Lit 1, GER 362 Intro Lit 2, GER 363 Intro Lit 3, GER 401 Hist Lit 1, GER 402 Hist Lit 2, GER 403 Hist Lit 3. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Foreign Language: Japanese | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: JAPAN 201 Intermed 1, JAPAN 202 Intermed 2, JAPAN 301 Advan 1, JAPAN 302 Advan 2, JAPAN 334 Culture Civ, JAPAN 337 Linguistics, JAPAN 401 Contemp Lit, HIST 496 Modern Japan. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Foreign Language: Latin | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | In this program students will take courses to develop their expertise in the Latin language and culture as well as education courses to learn how to teach them, such as educational principles, psychology, and methodology. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: LAT 201 - Intermediate Latin 1, LAT 202 - Intermediate Latin 2, LAT 305 - Prose Composition, CC 105 - Introduction to the Classical World, CC 301 - Classical Literature in English Translation. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Foreign Language: Spanish | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: SP 201 Intermed 1, SP 202 Intermed 2, SP 301 Conversation, SP 302 Composition, SP 303 Grammar, SP 334 Civ Cult Sp, SP 335 Civ Cult L A, SP 340 Linguistics, SP 360 In Hisp Read, SP 401 His Span Lit, SP 402 Hist L A Lit. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Modern Languages and Classics, North Quad Room 138, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1361 | The Department of Modern Languages and Classics offers programs in both ancient and modern foreign languages and works closely with other programs and departments to combine foreign language training with other subjects. Classroom instruction in all languages is enhanced by electronic classrooms, multimedia language learning laboratories, and a variety of summer and academic year study abroad and student exchange programs. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Life Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | This program prepares its students to teach at the middle school level, grades 5 through 8, as a science generalist with a life science concentration, or at the high school level, grades 9 through 12, as a science specialist. Those who want to consider grade-level expertise in both options to make themselves more marketable: to add a high school option to the middle school course work, 8 additional hours are required; to add a middle school option to the high school course work, 10 additional hours are required. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Masters | Ball State University | The modules are: Bio 111 Principles of Biology 1, Bio 112 Principles of Biology 2, Chem 111 General Chemistry 1, Chem 112 General Chemistry 2, Phycs 110 General Physics 1, Phycs 112 General Physics 2, Astro 120 Stars and Stellar System, Astro 121 Astronomy Lab, Geol 102 Earth, Life, Time, Geog 230 Elementary Meteorology, Nrem 101 Environmental and Society, Maths 181 Elem.Prob/Stats or Bio 448 Biometry. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Biology, Ball State University, Cooper Life Science Building CL 121, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8820 | This department is located in Cooper Life Science Building. The building is named for Robert H. Cooper, a former professor of biology and coordinator of science and mathematics. It is one of the largest in the College of Sciences and Humanities with more than 600 students. Through small class and lab sizes, its faculty and students are often on a first name basis. In addition, students work alongside faculty on current and innovative research projects, gaining practical experience while earning their degree. The department also use the Field Studies and Environmental Education Center extensively in its programs. The FSEEC includes such properties as Christy Woods, the Cooper/Skinner Farm, Ginn Woods, the Donald E. Miller Wildlife area, the Hults Environmental Learning Center, the Wheeler Orchid Collection and Species Bank, and the Teaching and Research Greenhouse. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Music Education: Instrumental and General | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program's curriculum includes significant observing/teaching opportunities in K-12 music classrooms beginning in the first semester and extending throughout the program. Unlike many programs, this undergraduate music education students participate in teaching situations both inside and outside the university classroom during every semester. As a result, its graduates are better prepared for the complexities of the K-12 classroom and are hired by Indiana schools at nearly twice the rate of any other institution. Many Ball State graduates also are employed outside Indiana. Its curriculum develops musical knowledge and skills, immersing students in practical experience throughout the four-year program. Aspects of the curriculum are quickly becoming models for teacher-training institutions across the country. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSTH 101 Sight Ear, MUSTH 102 Sight Ear, MUSTH 111 Music Theory, MUSTH 112 Music Theory, MUSTH 201 Sight Ear, MUSTH 202 Sight Ear, MUSTH 211 Music Theory, MUSTH 212 Music Theory, MUSTH 311 Form Analys, MUSTH 413 Band Arrange, MUHIS 200 Music Lit, MUHIS 330 Music Histry, MUHIS 331 Music Histry, MUSCH 499 Recital, MUSPE 290 Intro Conduc, MUSPE 390 Inst Con Reh, MUSED 250 Brass Tech, MUSED 252 Woodw Tech 1, MUSED 253 Woodw Tech 2, MUSED 254 Perc Tech, MUSED 256 String Tech, MUSED 360 Adm Mus Prg, MUSED 390 Inst Lab (.5), MUSCH 340 Lrg Inst Ens (1), MUSCH 341 Lrg Inst Ens (.5), MUSPE applied primary instrument, MUSPE 325 Sec Piano, MUSPE 326 Group Piano. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Music Education: Vocal and General | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | This program's curriculum includes significant observing/teaching opportunities in K-12 music classrooms beginning in the first semester and extending throughout the program. Unlike many programs, this undergraduate music education students participate in teaching situations both inside and outside the university classroom during every semester. As a result, its graduates are better prepared for the complexities of the K-12 classroom and are hired by Indiana schools at nearly twice the rate of any other institution. Many Ball State graduates also are employed outside Indiana. Its curriculum develops musical knowledge and skills, immersing students in practical experience throughout the four-year program. Aspects of the curriculum are quickly becoming models for teacher-training institutions across the country. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Bachelor degree | Ball State University | The modules are: MUSTH 101 Sight Ear, MUSTH 102 Sight Ear, MUSTH 111 Music Theory, MUSTH 112 Music Theory, MUSTH 201 Sight Ear, MUSTH 202 Sight Ear, MUSTH 211 Music Theory, MUSTH 212 Music Theory, MUSTH 311 Form Analys, MUSTH 410 Choral Arrng, MUHIS 200 Music Lit, MUHIS 330 Music Histry, MUHIS 331 Music Histry, MUSCH 499 Recital, MUSPE 290 Intro Conduc, MUSPE 391 Chor Con Reh, MUSPE 398 Diction Sing, MUSED 258 Voice Tech, MUSED 259 Inst Voc/Gen, MUSED 360 Adm Mus Prg, MUSED 391 Choral Lab (.5), MUSED 457 Spec Voc/Gen, MUSCH 350 Lrg Vocl Ens (1), MUSCH 351 Lrg Vocl Ens (.5), MUSPE applied voice or piano, MUSPE 325 Sec Piano (1), MUSPE 326 Group Piano. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music | College of Fine Arts, School of Music, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5400 | This department's Music Instruction Building was opened in 2004 which features the 600-seat tunable Sursa Performance Hall, an elite music technology complex, two large band and choir rehearsal halls, and state-of the-art instructional facilities for the music performance area. Across the street, the five-story Hargreaves Music Building includes classrooms, offices, and a computer resource lab for the department's various program areas. The campus library houses a music listening center and significant collections of music books, scores, and CDs. Unique resources include the archives of horn players Max Pottag, John Graas, the TUBA library, and the Hague Sheet Music collection. Ball State's 3,600-seat Emens Auditorium and 720-seat Pruis Hall accommodate student, faculty, and guest performances, and the Shafer Tower features a carillon of 48 French-made, custom-cast bells. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Physical Education | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | This program prepares students to teach physical education from pre-kindergarten through grade 12. It emphasizes such topics as fitness and wellness development and assessment, motor development, anatomy/physiology, scientific techniques in observing and analyzing skill performances, as well as a thorough preparation in teaching methods. Most semesters students participate in practicum experiences with Pre K-12 students. The use of technology in physical education is another area of emphasis. In this program students will learn how risk is managed by individuals and businesses; about life and health insurance, personal insurance, commercial insurance, insurance law, and risk management. More than 2.5 million people in the United States have found awesome careers in the insurance industry. This work is challenging yet satisfying. The insurance industry is thriving as the population ages, wealth grows, and opportunities for risk management increase. Working in insurance involves helping individuals and business manage risk to protect themselves from catastrophic losses and to anticipate potential risk problems. This area is not only personally rewarding but can be financially rewarding as well. It expects them to be engaged in the major while becoming expert teachers at all levels and in all contexts. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: PEP 108 Dance Phy Ed, PEP 150 Intro to Fit, PEP 158 Danc Gym Tum, PEP 161 Found Prin, PEP 194 Obs Analysis, PEP 209 Int Teach PE, PEP 227 Intro APE/PA, PEP 244 Psy Soc P E, PEP 250 First Aid, PEP 291 Motor Dev, PEP 310 Evaluation, PEP 327 Asses APE/PA, PEP 344 Outdoor Ed, PEP 391 Mot Learning, PEP 394 P E Elem Sch, PEP 395 Tch P E MS, PEP 399 Tch P E HS, PEP 400 Curr Des P E, PEP 444 Div Sch P E, EXSCI 292 Anatomy, EXSCI 293 Found Phy Ex, PEP 222 Fd Ct Inv Gm, PEP 232 Net Wall Gm, PEP 242 Lifelong Act, PEP 252 Tch Fit Act. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, School of Physical Education, Sport, and Exercise Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 3206 | This school's Human Performance Laboratory is 20,000 square foot laboratory is connected to the Health and Physical Activity Building. It contains equipment for exercise testing, metabolic measurement, environmental heat stress, cardiovascular measurement, biomechanical analysis, strength testing and biomechanical analysis of body tissue and fluids. The school's Irving Gymnasium Complex consists of several basketball and volleyball courts that are used for classes, intramurals, club sports and athletics. There are three fully mirrored dance studios used for activities such as aerobic classes and dance instruction. The recreation fitness room, which is made up fixed and free weights, cardiovascular machines and handicap accessible machines, is also located in this complex. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Physical Science | Full Time | 4.5 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | This program meets the physical science (middle school science and high school chemistry and physics) standards of Indiana. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: CHEM 111 General Chemistry 1, SCI 150 Basic Concepts in Science Ed., MATHS 165 Calculus 1, CHEM 112 General Chemistry 2, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, BIO 111 Principles of Biology 1, CHEM 231 Organic Chemistry 1, PHYCS 120 General Physics 1, EDMUL 205 Intro to Multicultural Ed., EDPSY 251 Human Dev. for Secondary Ed., CHEM 232 Organic Chemistry 2, CHEM 225 Chemical Analysis, PHYCS 122 General Physics 2, BIO 112 Principles of Biology 2, CHEM 463 Principles of Biochemistry 1, PHYCS 260 Intro to Modern Physics, PHYCS 262 Modern Physics Lab, EDPSY 390 Educational Psychology, CHEM 450 Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM 470 Independent Study, GEOG 230 Elementary Meteorology, SCI 395 Intro to Teaching Science, EDFON 420 Foundations of Ed., CHEM 344 Physical Chemistry 1, SCI 396 Methods and Materials, EDSEC 380 Principles of Teaching Sec. School, EDJHM 385 Principles of Teaching Mid. School, GEOL 102 Earth, Life, and Time, EDSEC 460 Student Teaching: Sec. School, EDJHM 460 Student Teaching: Mid. School, ASTRO 120 Stars and Stellar Systems, ASTRO 121 Astronomy Lab. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Chemistry, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 305, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8060 | This department has a long history of focusing on the department's efforts on giving its undergraduate and graduate students a high-quality learning experience in both the classroom and the laboratory settings. It incorporate problem-solving sessions into many courses, avoid multiple choice exams, have faculty supervision in all laboratories, encourage cooperative learning, and provide numerous opportunities for both formal and informal student-faculty interactions. In fact, what sets us apart from most chemistry departments is the nature and extent of the department's faculty-student interactions. The department provide the following opportunities for students: an active, vibrant, and nationally award-winning chapter of its Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society of more than 66 students who provide science programs to the local community; one of the largest summer undergraduate research programs in the nation; one of the nation’s centers for incorporating authentic science practices in the department's undergraduate education; an expanding, effective, and funded program to increase the number of underrepresented students in science; hands-on, student-used, state-of-the-art instrumentation for laboratory studies; funded scholarships and biannual student award ceremonies; an open house where freshman learn about graduate school and industrial position opportunities; an expert faculty and staff dedicated to serving their students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Physics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program will prepare students to be certified in both high school physics and chemistry. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: PHYCS 120 General Physics 1, PHYCS 122 General Physics 2, PHYCS 260 Intro to Modern Physics, PHYCS 262 Modern Physics Lab, CHEM 111 General Chemistry 1, CHEM 112 General Chemistry 2, MATHS 165 Calculus 1, MATHS 166 Calculus 2, PHYCS 330 Mechanics, PHYCS 340 Physical Optics, PHYCS 354 Electronics 1, PHYCS 434 Thermodynamics, PHYCS 450 Electricity and Magnetism. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Ball State University, Cooper Physical Science Building room 101, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8860 | This department combines two areas of science within a friendly learning environment. Physics and astronomy are housed under one roof in this department, which is pretty distinct. The department's small classes will give students the individual attention they need, advanced classes have 10 to 15 students. Students in this department will work with faculty doing research such as condensed matter, nuclear physics, and physics education to name a few areas. It has found that early involvement in research prepares the students for a challenging career as a technical problem solver. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science | This program prepares students to teach psychology in high school and qualifies them for teacher licensing in Indiana. They will major in secondary education (36 to 66 hours) and social studies. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: PSYSC 100 General, PSYSC 493 Teach Psy 1, PSYSC 494 Teach Psy 2, PSYSC 367 Intro Biopsy, PSYSC 468 Physiologcal, PSYSC 362 Motiva Emotn, PSYSC 364 Learning, PSYSC 416 Cognition, PSYSC 316 Social Psysc, PSYSC 317 Personality, PSYSC 324 Psych Women, PSYSC 432 Abnormal. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychological Science, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 1690 | This department's mission is to promote preprofessional and liberal learning in psychological science at the undergraduate level while emphasizing the development of critical thinking, technological competency, communication competency, diversity competency, personal and professional ethics, a basic understanding of psychological science in both laboratory and experiential settings. Faculties are expected to contribute to the functioning of the department as teacher, scholar, and citizen. Excellence in teaching and scholarship is central to the department's mission, and service to the university, profession, and community are expected. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in School Health Education | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | This program is designed to prepare elementary and secondary teachers who are professionally knowledgeable, effective decision-makers, technically proficient, experientially broad, human relations oriented, socially aware, and future oriented. Coursework and related experiences provide opportunities to relate principles and theories to actual practice in a variety of classrooms and schools. Teaching programs require additional courses in educational methods. The professional education courses are included in this listing. See the Department of Secondary, Higher, and Foundations of Education and Teachers College for the descriptions of these courses and other professional requirements of the teacher education program. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: EDSEC 150 - Basic Concepts of Secondary Education, EDMUL 205 - Introduction to Multicultural Education, EDPSY 251 - Human Growth and Development for Secondary Education, EDPSY 390 - Educational Psychology, EDSEC 380 - Principles of Teaching in the Secondary School, EDJHM 385 - Principles of Teaching in the Middle School, HSC 363 - Coordinated School Health Programs: Organization and Issues, HSC 395 - Methods, Materials, and Curriculum for Teaching Health Education, EDFON 420 - Social, Historical, and Philosophical Foundations of Education, EDSEC 460 - Student Teaching: Secondary School, EDJHM 460 - Student Teaching in the Junior High/Middle School, ANAT 201 - Fundamentals of Human Anatomy, HSC 160 - Fundamentals of Human Health, HSC 200 - Introduction to Health Education, HSC 261 - Health, Sexuality, and Family Life, HSC 290 - Evaluation and Assessment in School Health, HSC 396 - Health Communication Media Production, HSC 467 - Drug Dependency and Abuse, FCSFN 240 - Nutrition for Educators, PHYSL 205 - Fundamentals of Human Physiology, HSC 250 - Emergency Health Care, HSC 468 - Consumer Health Issues. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Physiology and Health Science, Cooper Science Building CL 325, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5961 | This department has research facilities for graduate students and sometimes undergraduates, have the opportunity to assist faculty on important research projects. The department's research facilities include the: Public Health Entomology Lab, Ball State University Micro-Imaging Laboratory, Gastrointestinal Neurophysiology/Neuroimmunology Research Laboratory, Renal and Metabolic Research Laboratory. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Social Studies | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | This program combines courses in history, other social studies fields, and pedagogy, as well as the experience of student teaching, to prepare the teacher to better make national and global citizens of their students. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: PSYSC 100 General, PSYSC 493 Teach Psy 1, PSYSC 494 Teach Psy 2, PSYSC 367 Intro Biopsy, PSYSC 468 Physiologcal, PSYSC 362 Motiva Emotn, PSYSC 364 Learning, PSYSC 416 Cognition, PSYSC 316 Social Psysc, PSYSC 317 Personality, PSYSC 324 Psych Women, PSYSC 432 Abnormal. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of History, Ball State University, Burkhardt Room 200, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8700 | This department's students who take courses in the Department, including many who major in one of its programs, will pursue careers with no direct relationship to the field. The Department already vitally serves the needs of these students, but it can do even more. It can better serve these constituencies by providing direct instruction in the way that history courses can prepare them for other professions and by linking the curriculum more closely to such pursuits. The benefits of this change can be multiplied, moreover, by making a special effort to apprise the University and the larger community of this aspect of the Department's programs. Turning in this direction will be a special mission of the Department as the new century begins. In the twenty-first century, college graduates need to be prepared to live as global citizens. They need to acquire knowledge of the diverse people with whom they share this world. Moreover, as the world is experiencing a virtual revolution in information and communication technologies, college students need to be trained to acquire and critically evaluate the abundance of information. Finally, they need to acquire skills that allow them to communicate their knowledge and ideas. Studies in history at the university level are especially well suited to the preparation of students for this kind of world. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology | This program is for students who wants to teach social studies to junior high/middle or high school students, they must take courses in education and in various disciplines that fall under the area of social studies. The sociology focus area for teaching majors in social studies allows the students to gain mastery of sociology by studying and applying contemporary sociological theory and research to social issues such as globalization, social inequality, diversity, family, religion, or population. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: SOC 100 Principles of Sociology, SOC 235 Sociology of Women, SOC 241 Deviance, SOC 242 Social Problems, SOC 260 Society and the Individual, SOC 228 Globalization and the Third World, SOC 320 Social Inequality, SOC 42 Racial and Cultural Minorities in the United States, SOC 424 Family, SOC 427 Sociology of Religions, SOC 470 Population and Demography. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology | College of Sciences and Humanities, Department of Sociology, 205 North Quad, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5977 | The College of Sciences and Humanities prepares students with the skills and knowledge they will need to be successful in a changing society, enabling them to become responsible and responsive twenty-first century citizens. Through its majors, minors, and delivering the vast majority of courses that form the University Core Curriculum required for all Ball State undergraduates, the college provides students with experiences designed to enhance their ability to analyze situations, think critically, solve problems creatively, and communicate their ideas clearly. These skills, acquired through a liberal education, contribute to life-long learning and earning. The college is a cultural and scientific asset that embraces the teacher-scholar model for its faculty. It encourages and rewards excellent teaching and views teaching as the faculty's primary task while still encouraging and valuing basic and applied research and other creative activities that lead to refereed publication, juried exhibition, and the improvement of life. The college encourages faculty and staff to be models for students by being responsible and responsive citizens who directly engage with local, state, national, and international constituencies that might benefit from the application of their knowledge and expertise. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | |
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: THEAT 103 Aesthetics 1, THEAT 104 Aesthetics 2, THEAT 105 Fresh Exper, THEAT 107 Design Aware, THEAT 220 Stagecraft, THEAT 232 Acting, THEAT 250 Directing, THEAT 280 Theat Pract (0-1), THEAT 317 Pre-Mod Hist, THEAT 319 Modern Theat, THEAT 405 Senior Exp, THEAT 435 Shakespeare. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Fine Arts, Department of Theatre and Dance, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 8740 | This department's programs are supported by quality facilities on campus that provide diverse performance venues and contemporary learning environments for students. Its 410-seat main stage theatre has state-of-the-art technical equipment, including a completely computerized lighting system and acoustically sophisticated recording and reproduction sound systems. This facility hosts the department's Main stage Subscription Series, which features four theatre productions and two dance concerts each year. Cave Theatre is a small laboratory theatre in the Arts and Communications Building is used for classes and student workshop productions. The department has a design lab, sound recording studio, makeup room, and performance studies classroom in the Arts and Communications Building. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Visual Arts (All-Grade) | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | The modules are: ADS 101 Foundation 1, ADS 102 Foundation 2, AFA 101 Drawing 1, AFA 202 Drawing 2, AED 201 Intro Art Ed, AED 304 Currcm Instr, AED 305 Teach Learn, AHS 101 Art Survey 1, AHS 102 Art Survey 2, ART 100 Art Orient, ART 200 Computer Art, AFA 211 Painting 1, AFA 217 Watercolor 1, AFA 221 Sculpture 1, AFA 231 Intr Prtmakg, ACR 211 Ceramics 1, ACR 221 Intro Metals, ART 231 Photo. | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art | College of Fine Arts, Department of Art, Ball State University, Art and Journalism Building (AJ) 401, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5838 | This department's classrooms and studios are organized around a central atrium, connected to the ground floor with major circulation corridors that create two "first floors" and allow students to travel at a diagonal throughout the building. Art education classrooms, photography studios, art history classrooms, visual resources, and computer labs are located on the second floor and are grouped with faculty offices. One of the newer buildings on campus, theArt and Journalism Building provides more than 57,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classroom and studio space for the Department of Art. Visual communication studios as well as electronic art and animation studios are located on the third floor. Two-dimensional art studios are located on the upper floors to optimize the natural lighting scheme. Faculty offices are grouped directly across from the studio spaces, making faculty easily accessible to students. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 150136 | Ball State University | Teaching Major in Vocational Family and Consumer Science | Full Time | Variable | $18804 per semester for 12-18 hours | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepares to teach family and consumer sciences classes in public or private schools. The focus of these classes in schools today is on adult roles, life skills, consumer rights and responsibilities, and contributing to the community. Graduates who complete this major also qualify to become extension educators or work for other public and private agencies. Teaching programs require additional courses in educational methods. See the Department of Secondary, Higher, and Foundations of Education and Teachers College for the descriptions of courses and other professional requirements of the teacher education program. Students seeking employment in occupational family and consumer sciences education may be required to have 4,000 clock hours work experience in the area of their teaching. In occupational family and consumer sciences, four hours of unsupervised work experience are the equivalent of 1.5 clock hours of supervised work. | Students must have completed high school or secondary school (completed a minimum of 12 years of primary and secondary school undertaking a university-preparatory curriculum), have not attended a university or college or other post-secondary institution, and wish to earn a bachelor's or associates degree, have a minimum of 2.0 grade point average (on a 4.0 grade scale), a minimum scores of 79 IBT or 550 PBT in TOEFL or IELTS for international students from non-English speaking country. | Major | Ball State University | Ball State University | 21401 | 2000 West University Avenue, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5422 | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Applied Sciences and Technology, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, 150 Applied Technology Building, Ball State University, MUNCIE, Indiana, 47306, +1 765 285 5931 | The mission of this department is to prepare students who will be uniquely qualified for and committed to improving the quality of life for individuals, families, and their communities. Further, the mission is to empower individuals and families across the life span to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These goals are accomplished through the integration and application of knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors from family and consumer sciences as well as a variety of other disciplines. | Yes | This university's apartment living for Ball State students is located close to campus. On-campus students are also encouraged to learn in the residence halls, as well as in the classroom. With five floor plans to choose from, it offers comfortable, affordable homes for single students and students with families. The apartments are located close to campus, shopping, restaurants, entertainment, and schools. University Apartments offer two communities: Anthony and Scheidler Apartments. Apartments are available in one, two-bedroom styles, and townhomes are available in two- and three-bedroom styles. Utilities (including free cable and Internet) are included in the rates, which can mean real savings. Its services include utilities, except for land phone, are included in the rent; air conditioning is provided in Anthony units; cable service is provided. Premium cable channels are not available, however, most city cable channels are included as well as Ball State channels; residents may use the community room at no charge. Included is a wide-screen television and VCR, stereo sound system, kitchen, and moveable furniture; computer access to the main university computer system (including Internet access) is free, beginning August 1, 2008; a computer lab is available in the community building; parking is available in lots near the apartments; telephone service is provided by the university to the apartments at a low rate; coin Laundromats are available in Anthony and Scheidler communities. The monthly rent varies from $471 (for 1-bedroom) to $643 (3-bedroom). For more information contact: Ball State University Apartments, 3460 N. Tillotson Avenue, Muncie, IN 47304, Phone: +1 765 285 5095, mail - aptoffice@bsu.edu. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Africana Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Africana Studies Program | This program offers an interdisciplinary, comparative approach to the study of the history, politics, cultures, literatures, and experiences of peoples of African origin in Africa and the African Diaspora. In addition to fulfilling the requirements, students focus on a central subject, theme, or set of questions. This program offers training in methodology as well as in the use of primary and critical materials, and lays the foundation for the research and writing of a senior thesis. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include AFRS BC 3004x Introduction to Africana Studies: Africa Past, Present and Future and AFRS BC 3006y Introduction to Africana Studies: The African Diaspora. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Africana Studies Program | Africana Studies Program, Barnard College, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 9850 | The Africana Studies Program at Barnard was founded in 1992 as the site for the multidisciplinary study of Africa and the Black Diaspora. Through the course offerings and extra-curricular programming, Africana studies offers the Barnard community exposure to the experiences of black peoples across the globe and the analytical tools necessary for rigorous and culturally sensitive analyses of these experiences.Faculty who teach in Africana Studies have research and teaching interests in the history of Africa and African descended peoples as well as on the impact of slavery, colonialism, and race and ethnicity in the modern world. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Program in American Studies | This program provides the opportunity to take courses in American history, literature and other related disciplines. In addition to the junior colloquium, students will work with their adviser to devise a four-course concentration organized around a topic (for example: immigration, migration and ethnicity) and a historical period (for example: Civil War and Reconstruction). | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Program in American Studies | Program in American Studies, 413 Barnard Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5649 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Ancient Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies | This program is designed to allow the student to explore various aspects of the ancient Mediterranean and Mesopotamian cultures while concentrating on one of these major civilizations. By studying these cultures in several academic disciplines the student will acquire a general knowledge and a context for her area of specialization. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies, 219 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2597 | The objective of the department is to provide students with knowledge of the language and an understanding of the literature and civilization of the ancient Greeks and Romans.The close co-operation of Barnard and Columbia in planning and implementing the curriculum offers students a wide range of specialties from which to construct a sound and coherent program of studies according to their individual interests. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Anthropology | This program examines how cultures provide frames for the ways people think, act and make sense of their society. Now, with the quickening movement of culture, ideas and people this program seek to examine the forms of life that emerge from this movement and the interactions and conflicts that result. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are ANTH V 1002 The Interpretation of Culture and two of the following: ANTH V 1007 The Origins of Human Society, ANTH V 1008 The Rise of Civilization, ANTH V 1009 Introduction to Language and Culture, EEEB V 1010 The Human Species: Its Place in Nature plus: ANTH V 3040 Anthropological Theory I, ANTH V 3041 Anthropological Theory II. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 9389 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Applied Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Mathematics Department | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are V 2010 Linear Algebra, W 4061 Introduction to Modern Analysis, APMA E 4901 Seminar in Applied Mathematics: Fall, Junior year, APMA E 4903 Seminar in Applied Mathematics: Fall, Senior year, APMA E 3900 Undergraduate Research in Applied Mathematics, V 2500 Analysis and Optimization, V 3007 Complex Variables, V 3027 Ordinary Differential Equations, V 3028 Partial Differential Equations, V 3030 Dynamical Systems, W 4032 Fourier Analysis, SIEO W 3658 Probability, APMA E 4300 Numerical Methods. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Mathematics Department | Mathematics Department, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 3577 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Architecture - History and Theory | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Barnard and Columbia Architecture | This program is geared toward the history and theory of architecture and is more strongly allied with the art history department. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Barnard and Columbia Architecture | Barnard and Columbia Architecture, 310 Barnard Hall, Barnard College3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8430 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Architecture - Studio | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Barnard and Columbia Architecture | This program is recommended for the student who thinks they will continue to do graduate work in architecture or design. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are ARCH V 3101 Architectural Representation: Abstraction, ARCH V 3103 Architectural Representation: Perception, ARCH V 3201, V 3202 Architectural Design I and II. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Barnard and Columbia Architecture | Barnard and Columbia Architecture, 310 Barnard Hall, Barnard College3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8430 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Art History | Art History, which is devoted to the study of the visual arts, is one of the broadest of the humanistic disciplines. It is concerned not only with the nature of works of art-their form, style, and content-but also with the social, political, and cultural circumstances that shape them. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include BC1001 and 1002 Introduction to Art History,BC3970 Methods and Theories of Art History and BC3959 and BC3960 Senior Research Seminar. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Art History | Department of Art History, 301 Barnard Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2118 | The Department, fortunate in being located in New York City, one of the world's great art centers, takes full advantage of the rich resources of the city's museums and galleries. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Art History with a Concentration in the Visual Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Art History | Art History, which is devoted to the study of the visual arts, is one of the broadest of the humanistic disciplines. It is concerned not only with the nature of works of art-their form, style, and content-but also with the social, political, and cultural circumstances that shape them. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Art History | Department of Art History, 301 Barnard Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2118 | The Department, fortunate in being located in New York City, one of the world's great art centers, takes full advantage of the rich resources of the city's museums and galleries. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures - East Asian Track | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are Three years of Chinese, Japanese, or Korean, or the proficiency equivalent, Asian Humanities V 3400 Colloquium on Major Texts and Two of the following survey courses: Asian Civilizations-East Asia V 2002 Introduction to Major Topics in Asian Civilizations: East Asia, Asian Civilizations V 2359 Introduction to the Civilization of China, Asian Civilizations V 2361 Introduction to the Civilization of Japan, Asian Civilizations V 2363 Introduction to the Civilization of Korea, Asian Civilizations V 2365 Introduction to the Civilization of Tibet. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures | Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures, 321 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5417 | The primary aim of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures is to introduce major Asian Civilizations and their works and values as a means of expanding knowledge of the varieties and unities of the human experience.The general courses are designed for all students, whatever their major interests, who wish to include knowledge of Asian life in their education. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures - Middle East or South Asian Track | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include Asian Civ.-Middle East V2001y Introduction to Major Topics in Asian Civ.: The Middle East and India,Asian Civ.-Middle East V2003x Introduction to Islamic Civilizations, Asian Civ.-Middle East V2008y Contemporary Islamic Civilizations, Asian Civ.-Middle East V2357x Introduction to Indian Civilizations. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures | Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures, 321 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5417 | The primary aim of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures is to introduce major Asian Civilizations and their works and values as a means of expanding knowledge of the varieties and unities of the human experience.The general courses are designed for all students, whatever their major interests, who wish to include knowledge of Asian life in their education. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Physics and Astronomy | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are PHY BC 2001: Physics I: Mechanics, PHY BC 2002: Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism, PHY BC 3001: Physics III: Waves and Optics , AST C 2001, 2002: Introduction to Astrophysics I, II , AST C 3101: Stellar Structure and Evolution, AST C 3102: Planetary Dynamics and Physics of the Solar System, AST C 3601: General Relativity, Black Holes, and Cosmology, AST C 3602: Physical Cosmology and Extragalactic Astronomy, AST C 3646: Observational Astronomy. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Physics and Astronomy | Department of Physics and Astronomy, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5262 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Astrophysics | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Physics and Astronomy | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Physics and Astronomy | Department of Physics and Astronomy, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5262 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Chemistry | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are CHEM BC 2001 General Chemistry I, CHEM BC 3328,3230 Organic Chemistry I with Laboratory, CHEM BC 3231 Organic Chemistry II, CHEM BC 3333 Modern Techniques of Organic Chemistry Laboratory, CHEM BC 3338 Quantitative and Instrumental Techniques Laboratory, CHEM BC 3252 Introduction to Thermodynamics and Kinetics, CHEM BC 3253 Structure, Bonding, and Spectroscopy, Mathematics Calculus I and II in any sequence (I and III also accepted), PHYS BC 2001,2002 Calculus-based Physics with Laboratory, BIOL BC 1500,1502 General Biology with at least one semester of Laboratory with 1501or 1503, CHEM BC 3282 Biological Chemistry, BIOL BC 2100 Molecular and Mendelian Genetics, CHEM BC 3355 Biochemistry Laboratory Techniques (5 credits) or CHEM BC 3357 Biochemistry Laboratory Techniques (3 credits), and BIOL BC 3303 Laboratory in Molecular Biology. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Chemistry | Department of Chemistry, 3009 Broadway, Altschul HallFloors 6-8, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8460 | The Barnard College Chemistry Department offers courses for undergraduates who plan to major or minor in the physical and life sciences, as well as for students pursuing other liberal arts degrees. The department offers majors and minors in chemistry and biochemistry, both approved by the American Chemical Society. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Biological Sciences | This program is designed to provide a student with a broad education in the field as well as an opportunity to cover a specific aspect of biology in depth if they desire. The major has a strong research component, with all lab sections at both the introductory and advanced levels limited to 16 students, ensuring ample opportunity for interaction with faculty. Students also have the option of conducting individual research projects under the guidance of a faculty member. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include BIOL BC 3302 Molecular Biology, BIOL BC 3310 Cell Biology, BIOL BC 2100 Mol. and Men. Genetics (previously BIOL BC3200), BIOL BC 3360 Animal Physiology, BIOL BC 3340 Plant Physiology, BIOL BC 3320 Microbiology,BIOL BC 2278 Evolution, BIOL BC 2272 Ecology,BIOL BC 3280 Applied Ecology and Evolution, BIOL BC 2240 Plant Evolution and Diversity. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Biological Sciences | Department of Biological Sciences, 1203 Altschul Hall, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2437 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Chemistry | Chemistry is the study of the nature of substances and their transformations. In a three-year sequence of core courses, a chemistry or biochemistry major gains familiarity with the basic areas of the field: inorganic, organic, physical, analytical, and biological chemistry. In addition, she acquires sufficient skill in laboratory work that she is prepared for research. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are CHEM BC 2001 General Chemistry I, CHEM BC 3328,3230 Organic Chemistry I with Laboratory, CHEM BC 3231 Organic Chemistry II, CHEM BC 3335 Modern Techniques of Organic Chemistry Laboratory, CHEM BC 3340 Quantitative and Instrumental Techniques Laboratory, CHEM BC 3252 Introduction to Thermodynamics and Kinetics, CHEM BC 3253 Structure, Bonding, and Spectroscopy, CHEM BC 3271 Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM BC 3365,3368 Integrated Chemistry Laboratory, Mathematics Calculus I and II in any sequence (I and III also accepted), PHYS BC 2001, 2002 Calculus-based Physics with Laboratory, Elective: one of CHEM BC 3254 Methods and Applications in Physical Chemistry or CHEM BC 3282 Biological Chemistry or CHEM BC 3280 Advanced Organic Chemistry or CHEM G 4103 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Chemistry | Department of Chemistry, 3009 Broadway, Altschul HallFloors 6-8, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8460 | The Barnard College Chemistry Department offers courses for undergraduates who plan to major or minor in the physical and life sciences, as well as for students pursuing other liberal arts degrees. The department offers majors and minors in chemistry and biochemistry, both approved by the American Chemical Society. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Classics - Greek | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies, 219 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2597 | The objective of the department is to provide students with knowledge of the language and an understanding of the literature and civilization of the ancient Greeks and Romans.The close co-operation of Barnard and Columbia in planning and implementing the curriculum offers students a wide range of specialties from which to construct a sound and coherent program of studies according to their individual interests. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Classics - Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies, 219 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2597 | The objective of the department is to provide students with knowledge of the language and an understanding of the literature and civilization of the ancient Greeks and Romans.The close co-operation of Barnard and Columbia in planning and implementing the curriculum offers students a wide range of specialties from which to construct a sound and coherent program of studies according to their individual interests. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Program in Comparative Literature | This program enables the student to pursue the study of at least two literatures in two different languages and to explore the possibilities and methods of literary study comparatively across national boundaries. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Program in Comparative Literature | Program in Comparative Literature, Barnard College, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8312 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Dance | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Dance | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include DNCE BC 2501 Biomechanics for the Dancer: Theory and Practice, DNCE BC 2555 Ensemble Dance Repertory: Modern, DNCE BC 2556 Ensemble Dance Repertory: Ballet,DNCE BC 2557 Evolution of Classic Spanish Dance,DNCE BC 2558 Tap Ensemble,DNCE BC 2561 Applied Anatomy for Human Movement, DNCE BC 2562 Movement Analysis,DNCE BC 2563 Dance Composition: Form / Dance Composition: Form, dance/theater, DNCE BC 2564 Dance Composition: Content, DNCE BC 2565 World Dance History,DNCE BC 2566 Western Theatrical Dance from the Renaissances to the 1960s, DNCE BC 2567 Music for Dance , DNCE BC 2570 Dance in New York City, DNCE BC 2575 Choreography for the American Musical, DNCE BC 2580 Tap as an American Art Form, DNCE BC 3000 From the Page to the Dance Stage, DNCE BC 3099 Independent Study, DNCE BC 3200 Dance in Film, DNCE BC 3565 Group Forms: Advanced Dance Composition, DNCE BC 3567 Dance in Asia, DNCE BC 3570 Latin American and Caribbean Dance: Identities in Motion, DNCE BC 3571 Solo Repertory: Performance Styles, DNCE BC 3572 Dance Production, DNCE BC 3574 Seminar on Contemporary Choreographers and Their Works, DNCE BC 3575 George Balanchine and the Reinvention of Modern Ballet. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Dance | Department of Dance, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5262 | The Barnard College Department of Dance offers an exceptional dance program that is solidly based on the integration of dance as an art form within a liberal arts curriculum. Its core consists of courses designed to link the development of a dancer's artistic skills with techniques of analysis, problem solving, and critical thinking. The faculty, composed of artists and scholars, encourages a dual approach to the art of dance, promoting the development of artistry and personal style through the performance of historical and contemporary dance texts.The Department strives to give students at all levels of expertise the opportunity to study. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Economic History | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Barnard College | This is an interdisciplinary program combining history and economics. It seeks to develop knowledge of the human experience through the record of the past and an understanding of the historical process from an economic perspective. The program combines the discipline of investigation and interpretation of the past with the study of the tools of economic analysis and quantitative skills and their use in historical investigation. Majors in this program will have a broad academic exposure that will prepare them to enter graduate programs in law, business, public policy, or administration as well as economics and history. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are ECON BC 2014 Topics in Economic History, ECON BC 3013 or W 4311 Economic History of the United States, ECON BC 3041 Theoretical Foundations of Political Economy, Two of the following: ECON BC 3033 Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory, ECON BC 3035 Intermediate Microeconomic Theory, ECON BC 2411 Statistics for Economics. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Barnard College | Barnard College, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5262 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad,four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Economics and Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Barnard College | This program provides the student with grounding in economic theory comparable to that provided by the general economics major and exposes the student to rigorous and extensive training in mathematics. The program will be particularly useful for students planning to do graduate work in economics, which frequently demands greater mathematical training than that acquired through the minimum requirements of the basic economics degree. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are ECON BC 3018 Econometrics, ECON BC 3033 Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory, ECON BC 3035 Intermediate Microeconomic Theory, ECON BC 3041 Theoretical Foundations of Political Economy, ECON BC 3062 Senior Thesis (two semesters of the Senior Thesis are optional) or a Senior Seminar in Economics or Mathematics (ECON BC 3063, MATH V 3951, MATH V 3952 or an equivalent approved by the Chairs of the Mathematics and Economic majors), MATH V 1102, 1201 Calculus II, III, MATH V 2010 Linear Algebra, MATH V 2500 Analysis and Optimization or MATH W 4061 Introduction to Modern Analysis), SIEO W 3600 Introduction to Probability and Statistics. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Barnard College | Barnard College, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5262 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad,four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in English - American Literature [self-audit] | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of English | The offering in English is designed to foster good writing, effective speaking, and heightened understanding of culturally significant texts. Students majoring in English are encouraged to develop their responsiveness to the literary imagination and their sensitivity to literary form through disciplined attention to language and to critical and scholarly methods. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of English | Department of English, 417 Barnard HallBarnard College, Columbia University3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2116 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in English - Film | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of English | The offering in English is designed to foster good writing, effective speaking, and heightened understanding of culturally significant texts. Students majoring in English are encouraged to develop their responsiveness to the literary imagination and their sensitivity to literary form through disciplined attention to language and to critical and scholarly methods. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of English | Department of English, 417 Barnard HallBarnard College, Columbia University3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2116 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in English - Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of English | The offering in English is designed to foster good writing, effective speaking, and heightened understanding of culturally significant texts. Students majoring in English are encouraged to develop their responsiveness to the literary imagination and their sensitivity to literary form through disciplined attention to language and to critical and scholarly methods. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of English | Department of English, 417 Barnard HallBarnard College, Columbia University3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2116 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in English - Writing Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of English | The offering in English is designed to foster good writing, effective speaking, and heightened understanding of culturally significant texts. Students majoring in English are encouraged to develop their responsiveness to the literary imagination and their sensitivity to literary form through disciplined attention to language and to critical and scholarly methods. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of English | Department of English, 417 Barnard HallBarnard College, Columbia University3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2116 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Environmental Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Environmental Science | This program provides a strong background for students interested in the intersection of biology and environmental science. The major is suitable for students who intend to pursue a research career in conservation biology, ecology, or environmental biology as well as for students interested in environmental law or policy. Students who elect the environmental biology major will enroll in introductory and advanced courses in biology and environmental science and related fields. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Environmental Science | Department of Environmental Science, Barnard College, 3009 Broadway404 Altschul Hall, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5618 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad,four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Environmental Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Environmental Science | This program is designed to equip students to play effective roles as citizens or career professionals who can actively engage in environmental decision-making and policy. Majors learn to analyze and evaluate environmental, political, and economic systems and public policies in the context of environmental concerns. The major begins with foundations in the natural sciences, social sciences, and quantitative analysis, followed by upper level electives in both the natural and social sciences. Student research at the junior level is required in political science, anthropology or history, and at the senior level in environmental science. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include EESC BC 3017 Data Analysis, CON BC1002 Introduction to Economics, ECON W1105 Principles of Economics, POLS V 1601 International Politics, ANTH V 3004 Introduction to Environmental Anthropology, ANTH V 1010 Human Species-Place in Nature. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Environmental Science | Department of Environmental Science, Barnard College, 3009 Broadway404 Altschul Hall, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5618 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad,four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Environmental Science | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Environmental Science | This program provides a scientific basis for management of earth systems. It focuses on the interaction between human activities, resources, and the environment. As human population grows and technology advances, pressures on earth's natural systems are becoming increasingly intense and complex. Environmental Science is an exciting field where science is used to best serve society. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include EESC V 2100 Earth's Environmental Systems: Climate, EESC V 2200 Earth's Environmental Systems: Solid Earth, CHEM BC 2001 General Chemistry I, BIOL BC 1500Physiology, Ecology, and Evolutionary Biology, BIOL BC 1501Biodiversity Laboratory. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Environmental Science | Department of Environmental Science, Barnard College, 3009 Broadway404 Altschul Hall, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5618 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad,four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Film Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Film Program | The educational goal of this program is to provide a solid grounding in the history and theory of film and its relation to other forms of art. Students are introduced to visual storytelling, film technology, and the economic and sociopolitical context of the film industry. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are FILM BC 3201x Introduction to Film and Film Theory. A prerequisite for all further film classes, and open to first-year students, FILM W 3100 American Film History, 1930-60, FILM W 3200 Silent Screen, FILM W 3201 International Film History, 1930-60 or W 3202 International Film History 1960-90, FILM R 4005 The Film Medium: Script Analysis, FILM W 3050 The Documentary Tradition or W 4098 Film Theory I, FILM W 4145 Topics in World Cinema, or, with approval, appropriate substitutions from the list of elective courses below., FILM BC 3119x, y Screenwriting or FILM W 3005 Laboratory in Writing for Film or FILM BC 3120 Advanced Screenwriting, FILM BC3200 Production (substitutes for FILM W 3051: Laboratory in Nonfiction Filmmaking or W 3054: Laboratory in Fiction Filmmaking), ENGL BC 3998y Senior Seminar/Film or FILM W 3840x Senior Seminar in Film Studies. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Film Program | Film Program, 417 Barnard Hall, Barnard College3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2116 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Foreign Area Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Barnard College | The purpose of Foreign Area Studies is to provide an introduction to the study of a foreign region of the world. Foreign Area Studies majors are encouraged to study abroad in the region of interest. The work is divided into three elements: language, a scholarly discipline, and a diversified approach to a region. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are Anthropology V 3100 Anthropology of Urban Life, Anthropology V 3038 Ethnicity and Race, Economics BC 3041 Theoretical Foundation of Political Economy, History BC 1101, 1102 Introduction to European History (recommended as prerequisites for other history courses), History BC 3321 Colonial Encounters: Europe and the culture of Empire, History BC 3323 European Women in the Age of Revolution, History BC 4360 London: From 'Great Wen' to World City, History BC 4368 History of the Senses, Political Science BC 3007 Modern Political Movements, Political Science BC 3013, 3014 Political Theory, Political Science V 3505 Introduction to Comparative Politics, Religion V 1101 Introduction to the Study of Western Religion, Religion V 3501 18th- and 19th-Century Religious Thought, Sociology V 3100 Introduction to Social Theory. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Barnard College | Barnard College, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5262 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad,four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in French - French and Francophone Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of French | This program emphasizes the historical and contemporary inter relationship between France and the French-speaking world in their social, literary, and cultural aspects. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of French | Department of French, 320 milbank hall, Barnard College3009 broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8312 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in French - Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of French | This program emphasizes the language, culture, and literature of France and other French-speaking countries. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of French | Department of French, 320 milbank hall, Barnard College3009 broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8312 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in French - Translation and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of French | This program teaches students to translate from French into English and English into French, within a context of French culture and literature. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of French | Department of French, 320 milbank hall, Barnard College3009 broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8312 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in German Literature and Language | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of German | The courses comprising this program are all taught in German with the two-fold objective of combining the study of significant works, literary trends, and cultural manifestations with advanced practice in the use of German as a medium of intellectual communication. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are GER BC3005x and/or 3006y: Advanced German Conversation and Composition (3 pts. each), GER BC3011: Introduction to German Literature and Civilization, GER BC3061: Seminar, Five one-term advanced literature courses chosen from GER V3014-3048, A third advanced language course may be substituted for one advanced literature course, GER BC3062x or y: Senior Essay, A half-hour oral exit examination is required. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of German | Department of German, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8312 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in German Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of German | This program combines a study of literature with other aspects of German culture and civilization by choosing courses from the social sciences such as history, political science, and economics, and from other humanities dealing with the German-speaking regions of Europe | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are Two or three of the following language courses or their equivalent: GER BC3005-3006, Four or five one-term Advanced Literature and Culture courses numbered: GER BC3011-3048, One GER BC 3062x or y: Senior Essay, Six one-term courses in the Social Sciences and Humanities that relate to the German-speaking countries of Europe and define a special field of interest (to be chosen in consultation with the major adviser), Two courses dealing with German history are strongly recommended, A half-hour oral exit examination is required. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of German | Department of German, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8312 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Greek and Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies | Department of Classics and Ancient Studies, 219 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2597 | The objective of the department is to provide students with knowledge of the language and an understanding of the literature and civilization of the ancient Greeks and Romans.The close co-operation of Barnard and Columbia in planning and implementing the curriculum offers students a wide range of specialties from which to construct a sound and coherent program of studies according to their individual interests. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in History | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | History Department | The study of history develops habits of critical thinking and effective writing, as well as it cultivates the careful analysis of various types of quantitative and qualitative evidence. It should be of value not only to undergraduates who intend to pursue advanced degrees in the field, but also to students interested in exploring the diversity and complexity of the human past, even as they hone their analytical and expository skills. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | History Department | History Department, Barnard CollegeColumbia University, 3009 Broadway415 Lehman Hall, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2159 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Italian | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Program in Italian | This program offers the advantages of closely supervised work for a small number of students. Through the senior tutorial, students pursue research in a chosen area of Italian culture under the guidance of a specialist. The courses are designed to develop proficiency in all the language skills and to present the literary and cultural traditions of Italy. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are ITA V 1101 - V 1102 Elementary Full-Year Italian, ITA V 1201 - V 1202 Intermediate Italian, ITA V 3333 - V 3334 Introduction to Italian Literature or ITA W 4502 - W 4503 Italian Cultural Studies I - II,ITA V 3335 - V 3336 Advanced Italian, ITA V 3993 Seminar in Italian Literature. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Program in Italian | Program in Italian, 320 Milbank, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8312 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Mathematics Department | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are V 2010 Linear Algebra (or Honors Mathematics A-B), W 4041-2 Introduction to Modern Algebra, W 4061-2 Introduction to Modern Analysis, V 3951x, 3952y Undergraduate Seminar in Mathematics (at least one term). | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Mathematics Department | Mathematics Department, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 3577 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Mathematics - Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Mathematics Department | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are V 1101, V 1102, V 1201, V 1202 Calculus I, II, III, IV (including AP Credit) or V 1207, V 1208 Honors Math A-B (Note A), V 2010 Linear Algebra, V 3020 Number Theory and Cryptography (Note B), W 4041 Introduction to Modern Algebra, W 4061 Introduction to Modern Analysis (Note C), V 3951 or V 3952 Undergraduate Seminars in Mathematics, W 1004 Computer Science I (or AP credit), W1007 Computer Science II, W 3137 Data Structures and Algorithms, W 3157 Computer Science III (Advanced Programming), W 3203 Discrete Mathematics, W 3261 Computability and Models of Computation, W 3827 Fundamentals of Computer Systems, W 4231 Analysis of Algorithms I, W 4241 Numerical Algorithms and Complexity I. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Mathematics Department | Mathematics Department, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 3577 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Mathematics - Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Mathematics Department | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are V 1101, V 1102 and V 1201 Calculus I, II and III or equivalent, MATH V 2010 Linear Algebra, MATH V 2500 Analysis and Optimization, STAT W 1211 Introduction to Statistics B, STAT W 3000 Introduction to Statistics: Probability Models or SIEO W 4105 Probability, STAT W 3659 or W 4107 Statistical Inference, STAT W 4315 Linear Regression Models, IEOR E 4106 Introduction to Operations Research: Stochastic processes or SIEO W 4606 Elementary Stochastic Processes. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Mathematics Department | Mathematics Department, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 3577 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Medieval and Renaissance Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Medieval and Renaissance Studies | This program enables undergraduates to acquire a thorough knowledge of the most important aspects of medieval or renaissance civilizations and to gain an awareness of the interdependence of historical and cultural developments. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Medieval and Renaissance Studies | Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 422B Lehman, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 4350 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Music Program | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Music Program | Music Program, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5262 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Neuroscience and Behavior - Behavioral Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Biological Sciences | The behavior concentration places greater emphasis on behavioral and systems neuroscience, while the cellular concentration places greater emphasis on cellular and molecular neuroscience. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The coursers are Psychology BC 1001 Introduction to Psychology, Biology BC 1500/1501 Introduction to Organismal and Evolutionary Biology (lecture/lab), Biology BC 1502/1503 Introduction to Cell and Molecular Biology (lecture/lab), Psychology BC 1105 Psychology of Learning (lecture + lab), Biology BC 2280 Animal Behavior, Neuro and Behav BC 3593x, 3594y Research Seminar in Neuroscience and Behavior, Biology BC 2286 Statistics and Research Design, Psychology BC 1101 Statistics, Psychology BC 1117 Systems and Behavioral Neuroscience (lecture + lab) or BC 1119 Systems and Behavioral Neuroscience-Lec (lecture only), Biology BC 3362/3363 Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience (lecture/laboratory), Two of the following electives: Biology BC 2272 Ecology, Biology BC 2278 Evolution, Biology BC 2100 Molecular and Mendelian Genetics, Biology BC 3360 Animal Physiology, Biology BC 3302 Molecular Biology, Biology BC 3310 Cell Biology, Psychology BC 2154 Hormones and Reproductive behavior, Psychology BC 3169 Developmental Psychobiology, Psychology BC 3376 Infant Development, Psychology BC 3374 Theories of Learning, Psychology BC 3375 Organization of Movement, Psychology BC 3177 Psychology of Drug Use and Abuse, Psychology BC 3380 Neuropsychology, Psychology BC 3383 Neuropharmacology and Behavior, Psychology BC 4232 Production and Perception of Language, Psychology G 4440 Topics in Neurobiology and Behavior, Chemistry BC 1601 General Chemistry (lecture + lab), Chemistry BC 3328/3230 Organic Chemistry I (lecture/lab). | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Biological Sciences | Department of Biological Sciences, 1203 Altschul Hall, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2437 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Neuroscience and Behavior - Cellular Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Biological Sciences | This major provides a strong background in the biological underpinnings of behavior and cognition, and is intended for students who plan to pursue a research career in neuroscience or a related discipline. Students electing this major are exposed to basic courses in Biology and Psychology and to advanced courses in neuroscience and behavior. Majors must choose one of two areas of concentration. The behavior concentration places greater emphasis on behavioral and systems neuroscience, while the cellular concentration places greater emphasis on cellular and molecular neuroscience. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are Psychology BC 1001 Introduction to Psychology, Biology BC 1500/1501 Introduction to Organismal and Evolutionary Biology (lecture/lab), Biology BC 1502/1503 Introduction to Cell and Molecular Biology (lecture/lab), Biology BC 2100 Molecular and Mendelian Genetics, Biology BC 3310 Cell Biology, Neuro and Behav BC 3593x, 3594y Research Seminar in Neuroscience and Behavior, Biology BC 2286 Statistics and Research Design, Psychology BC 1101 Statistics, Psychology BC 1117 Systems and Behavioral Neuroscience (lecture + lab) or BC 1119 Systems and Behavioral Neuroscience-Lec (lecture only), Biology BC 3362/3363 Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience (lecture/laboratory), Biology BC 3303 Laboratory in Molecular Biology, Biology BC 3311 Laboratory in Cell Biology, Biology BC 2802 Laboratory in Genetics, Biology BC 2280 Animal Behavior, Biology BC 3352 Development, Biology BC 3360 Animal Physiology, Biology BC 3302 Molecular Biology, Biology BC 3308 Genomics and Bioinformatics, Chemistry BC 3282 Biological Chemistry, Psychology BC 2154 Hormones and Reproductive Behavior, Psychology BC 1107 Psychology of Learning, Psychology BC 3383 Neuro pharmacology and Behavior, Psychology G 4440 Topics in Neurobiology and Behavior. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Biological Sciences | Department of Biological Sciences, 1203 Altschul Hall, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2437 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Philosophy | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are One course on ancient or early medieval philosophy: PHIL V 2101 History of Philosophy I: Pre-Socratics through Augustine, PHIL V 3121 Plato, PHIL V 3131 Aristotle, One course on early modern philosophy: PHIL V 2201 History of Philosophy II: Aquinas through Kant, PHIL V 3237 Early Modern Philosophy, One course in logic: PHIL V 3411 Introduction to Symbolic Logic, One course in moral philosophy: PHIL V 3701 Moral Philosophy, PHIL V 3653 Mind and Morals, One of the following courses: PHIL V 4501 Epistemology, PHIL V 3601 Metaphysics, The Senior Seminar: PHIL BC 3900, Either: Senior Essay (PHIL BC 3950 and 3951) or one advanced seminar (above 4000) and one elective beyond the two stipulated in 8 (below), Two electives in addition to the eight courses stipulated above. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Philosophy | Department of Philosophy, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 4689 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Physics and Astronomy | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are PHY BC 2001: Physics I: Mechanics, PHY BC 2002: Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism, PHY BC 3001: Physics III: Waves and Optics, PHY W 3003: Mechanics, PHY W 3007: Electricity and Magnetism, PHY W 3008: Electromagnetism Waves and Optics, PHY W 3006: Quantum Physics, PHY G 4023: Statistical Physics. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Physics and Astronomy | Department of Physics and Astronomy, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5262 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Political Science | This program prepares students to play a leadership or participant role as citizens in a democratic society, as public or party officials, civil servants, commentators, or civic volunteers and voters. It equips students with skills in critical reading, analysis and argument, research, writing, and oral presentation that are vital for a wide variety of professional careers, including law, business, journalism and communications, and work in philanthropic, public interest, or international development organizations. It also prepares students for advanced graduate study in political science or in schools of public and international affairs, leading to careers in research, policy analysis, and teaching. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Political Science | Department of Political Science, Barnard College Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 8422 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Psychology | Psychology is the study of behavior and experience, from love to aggression, from the first babbling of infants to intellectual creativity, from sexuality to the physiology of taste. Faculty members in Psychology have a wide range of interests, including social and cognitive development, memory, language, animal learning, social stereotyping, the self-concept, the resolution of conflict, and behavior neuroscience. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are Psychology BC 1001 Introduction to Psychology (prerequisite for further Psychology courses), Psychology BC 1101 Statistics (preferably in the sophomore year) , Psychology BC 1105 or 1107 Psychology of Learning, Psychology BC 1113 or 1115 Cognitive Psychology, Psychology BC 1108 or 1110 Perception, Psychology BC 1117 or 1119 Systems and Behavioral Neuroscience , Psychology BC 1123 or 1125 Personality, Psychology BC 1136 or 1138 Social Psychology, Psychology BC 1127 or 1129 Developmental Psychology, Psychology BC 3465 Research Seminar: Toddler Center, Psychology BC 3466 Research Seminar: Toddler Center, Psychology BC 3591 Senior Research Seminar, Psychology BC 3592 Senior Research Seminar, Psychology BC 3599 Individual Projects. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Psychology | Department of Psychology, 415 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2069 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Religion | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Religion | Department of Religion, 219 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2597 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Russian Language and Literature | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $37,052 a year | Slavic Department | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are V3430x Russian for Heritage Speakers, I, V3431y Russian for Heritage Speakers, II, W3010 Masterpieces of 19th-Century Russian Literature, W3340 Masterpieces of 20th-Century Russian Literature, V3220x Literature and Empire: The Reign of the Russian Novel, V3221y Literature and Revolution: Tradition, Innovation and Politics in Russian Culture, V3595 Senior Seminar for Russian majors. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Slavic Department | Slavic Department, 226 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5417 | The Department prides itself on giving students a strong foundation in language study, which serves as invaluable preparation for future graduate work in literature, history, economics, or political science, as well as for careers in government, business, journalism, or international law. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | |||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Russian Regional Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Slavic Department | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Slavic Department | Slavic Department, 226 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5417 | The Department prides itself on giving students a strong foundation in language study, which serves as invaluable preparation for future graduate work in literature, history, economics, or political science, as well as for careers in government, business, journalism, or international law. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Slavic and East European Literature and Culture | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | US $37,052 a year | Slavic Department | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Slavic Department | Slavic Department, 226 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5417 | The Department prides itself on giving students a strong foundation in language study, which serves as invaluable preparation for future graduate work in literature, history, economics, or political science, as well as for careers in government, business, journalism, or international law. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Slavic and East European Regional Studies - Czech, Polish, Serbo-Croatian, Ukrainian | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | US $37,052 a year | Slavic Department | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Slavic Department | Slavic Department, 226 Milbank Hall, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 5417 | The Department prides itself on giving students a strong foundation in language study, which serves as invaluable preparation for future graduate work in literature, history, economics, or political science, as well as for careers in government, business, journalism, or international law. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Sociology | This program prepares students for graduate work in sociology as well as in other disciplines, for professional schools (law, business, social work, journalism, urban planning) and for all occupations requiring general knowledge of society and social interaction as well as basic skills of social research. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The courses are SOCI BC 1003 Introduction to Sociology (or SOCI V 1202 The Sociological Imagination, SOCI BC 3082 Junior Colloquium: Sociological Theory, SOCI BC 3211 Quantitative Methods (or SOC V 3212 Statistics/Methods) (no later than the junior year), SOCI BC 3087-3088 Individual Projects for seniors. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Sociology | Department of Sociology, Barnard CollegeColumbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 3577 | Barnard, founded in 1889 was the only college in New York City, and one of the few in the nation, where women could receive the same rigorous and challenging education available to men. Barnard College aims to provide the highest quality liberal arts education to promising and high-achieving young women, offering the unparalleled advantages of an outstanding residential college in partnership with a major research university.With a dedicated faculty of scholars distinguished in their respective fields, Barnard is a community of accessible teachers and engaged students who participate together in intellectual risk-taking and discovery.Barnard students develop the intellectual resources to take advantage of opportunities as new fields, new ideas, and new technologies emerge.They graduate prepared to lead lives that are professionally satisfying and successful, personally fulfilling, and enriched by love of learning. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Spanish and Latin American Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Spanish and Latin American Cultures | This program is designed to provide students with a solid literacy in the cultures of the Hispanic world. Literacy at the level of language instruction entails the students’ ability to express themselves fluently in Spanish, both orally and in writing. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include SPAN W3300 Advanced Spanish Language, SPAN W3330 Introduction to Hispanic Cultures, SPAN W3349 Hispanic Cultures I,SPAN W3350 Hispanic Cultures II. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Spanish and Latin American Cultures | Department of Spanish and Latin American Cultures, Barnard College (Milbank Hall), 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2597 | The Department of Spanish and Latin American Cultures at Barnard College boasts a long tradition of excellence in undergraduate education for women.Throughout its history, it has afforded students a solid preparation in both Spanish language and the literatures and cultures of Spain, Spanish America, and the Spanish-speaking United States. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 189097 | Barnard College | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Women's Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $37,052 a year | Department of Women's Studies | The Program provides an opportunity for senior majors to engage in original interdisciplinary research and to bring to bear the theoretical emphasis of feminist scholarship on a particular area of investigation. Further, in the senior seminar, majors have the opportunity to discuss methodological issues and problems of research in a directed and supportive environment. | Bachelor degree | Barnard College | The modules include WMST V 3111 Feminist Texts I, WMST V 3112 Feminist Texts II,WMST V 3311 Colloquium in Feminist Theory, WMST V 3312 Theorizing Women's Activism, and WMST V 3313 Colloquium on Feminist Inquiry. | Barnard College | 2360 | Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2014 | Department of Women's Studies | Department of Women's Studies, Barnard College, Columbia University, 3009 Broadway, NEW YORK, New York, 10027, +1 212 854 2108 | Women's Studies at Barnard was established in 1977.An interdisciplinary program, it initially relied almost entirely on faculty from other departments.In 1988, Women's Studies became a department. An option of a combined major has been offered since 1982 83, and a minor was added in 1998. | Yes | Living on campus means more than having a place to sleep.Barnard's campus is where students study, have meals, make friends, and exchange ideas.Housing at Barnard is guaranteed for all four years and more than 90 percent of students live in college housing.All first-year students live in the Quad, four connecting buildings on the south end of campus.Upper class students typically live in suite style rooms with several bedrooms.Residents share a kitchen, living room, and bathroom.All campus housing is within a few block radius of the Barnard campus and all have 24-hour security, internet access and laundry facilities. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BA in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | This program is integrally related to all other academic disciplines. The study of philosophy strengthen students intellectual capacities and skills (e.g., analytical, evaluative, and interpretive), and enable them to critically examine their own beliefs and judgments. This makes the study of philosophy an essential and valuable part of a university education. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 191Judeo-Christian Doctrine (3), 220 Introduction to Philosophy (3), 260 Philosophy of the Human Person (3), 292 Ethics (3), 300 Special Topics (3), 302 Spanish and Hispanic-American Philosophers (3), 304 Epistemology (3), 305 Problems in Philosophy (3), 306 Philosophy of God and Religion (3), 308 Philosophy of Law (3), 310 Formal Logic (3), 313 Philosophy of Art - Aesthetics (3), 314 Metaphysics (3), 316 Ancient Philosophy (3), 317 Medieval Philosophy (3), 318 Modern Philosophy (3), 319 Contemporary Philosophy (3), 320 American Philosophers (3), 321 Philosophy of Peace and War (3), 323 Philosophical Perspectives on Cinema (3), 332 The Thought of Ortega y Gasset (3), 336 Julian Marias and the School of Madrid (3), 353 Bio-Medical Ethics (3), 354 Environmental Ethics (3), 355 Philosophy of Politics (3), 360 Asian Philosophy (3), 365 Advanced Argument Analysis (3), 370 Contemporary Moral Problems (3), 371 Social and Ethical Issues in Business (3), 460 Philosophical Classics (3), 487 Seminar (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3469 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BA in Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | The program provides students with a background in the theories, methods, and practical skills of the field so that they can pursue a variety of careers in public relations. It offers a comprehensive curriculum that allows students to take courses involving research, strategic planning, case studies, campaign execution, creativity, photography, media writing and editing, marketing and computer technology. It provides a solid background in theory and methods. Students gain problem solving and critical thinking skills, and knowledge of basic principals of written communication and application of principles to real world situations. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses: 39 credits - COM 201 Introduction to Communication 3, COM 390 Principles of Public Relations 3, COM 391 Public Relations Campaigns 3, COM 484 Public Relations/Advertising Research 3, COM 495 or Communication Law 3, COM 409 Organizational Communication 3 , ADV 301 Principles of Advertising 3, JOU 445 or Publicity and Public Relations 3, ENG 374 Writing for the Internet 3, ENG 344 or Professional Editing 3, ENG 444 Business Research 3, Writing and Editing 3, ENG 417 or Copywriting 3, ADV 401 Advertising Creative Strategy and Execution 3, ENG 404 or Persuasive Writing 3, COM 412 or Persuasion 3, ENG 406 Rhetorical Analysis 3, SPE 415 or Speech Research, Writing, and Delivery 3, SPE 401 Business and Professional Communication 3, CS 325 Desktop Publishing 3, COM 399 or Practicum 3, COM 499 Internship 3; Co-Requisites - 9 credits - MKT 306 Marketing Concepts and Applications, MKT 385 Consumer Behavior 3, MKT 386 Sales Production, Advertising and Personal Selling 3; General Electives: 21 credits - Students are encouraged to take electives from among ADV, COM, CS, ENG, JOU, MKT, PHO, and SPE courses depending upon their areas of interest. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3456 | The department prepare students for a world of opportunities in Advertising, Broadcasting, Communication Studies, Public Relations, and Corporate Communications at both the undergraduate and graduate level. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BLS Degree with a Specialization in Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program focuses upon the analysis of human behavior, social organization, culture, social institutions from different academic traditions that collectively embrace a commitment to theory, basic and applied research, and social action and commentary. The curricular flexibility of the program affords opportunities for interdisciplinary exploration of human and societal problems and social realities and inequities from multiple disciplinary perspectives. The acquisition and conceptualization of knowledge from multiple perspectives is designed to facilitate critical thinking and integration which may result in more creative solutions for human and social ills. The program can be individually tailored to support further graduate training in counseling, marriage and family therapy, social work, education, law or organizational behavior. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Requirements for the Concentration (21 Credits): PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology or SOC 201 Introduction to Sociology, ANT 308 Perspectives in Anthropology or SWS 336 Social Welfare as a Social Institution, SOC 301 American Family or SOC 307 Race and Ethnicity, SOC 415 Women in Contemporary Society or SOC 417 Sociology of Death and Dying, PSY 325 Theories of Personality or PSY 382 Developmental Psychology, PSY 413 Abnormal Psychology or PSY 428 Human Sexuality or PSY 410 Group Dynamics and Decision-Making, PSY 425 Introduction to Psychotherapy and Counseling; Specialization Elective - 3 credits - Any additional 3 credits at the 300 or 400 level in Anthropology, Criminology, Psychology, Social Welfare Services or Sociology. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BLS Degree with a Specialization in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program focuses specifically upon the theoretical, empirical and applied foundations of psychology. It is designed to support the success of those students already employed as mental health paraprofessionals and/or prepare those students who anticipate employment in these areas. Students will emerge as more informed citizens cognizant of psychological ethics and able to recognize the complexities inherent in the description, prediction, analysis and influence of human behavior. The program has been designed to furnish necessary prerequisites for graduate education in psychology or to support graduate training in related fields such as social work, law, counseling, education or organizational behavior. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 18 credits - PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology, PSY 325 Theories of Personality, PSY 382 Developmental Psychology, PSY 410 Group Dynamics and Decision-Making or PSY 428 Human Sexuality, PSY 413 Abnormal Psychology, PSY 452 Child and Adolescent Psychopathology or PSY 425 Introduction to Psychotherapy and Counseling; Specialization Electives: 6 credits - PSY 301 Psychology of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, PSY 306 Psychology of Women, PSY 320 Tests and Measurements (MAT 152 prerequisite), PSY 329 Understanding and Coping with Stress, PSY 333 Experimental Psychology (MAT 152 prerequisite), PSY 370 Social Psychology, PSY 410 Group Dynamics and Decision-Making, PSY 417 Psychology of Aging, PSY 423 Industrial Psychology, PSY 428 Human Sexuality, PSY 449 Adolescent Psychology, PSY 490 Physiological Psychology. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BLS Specialization in Social Welfare | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program consists of three social welfare services courses, a human biology course, two additional required classes and one specialization elective from an array of social and behavioral sciences offerings. It is designed to orient students to human functioning and dynamics and to help ready them for bachelor's level employment in social and human service settings. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 21 credits - SWS 336 Social Welfare as a Social Institution, SWS 401 Social Welfare Policy and Services I, SWS 470 Human Behavior and Social Environment, BIO 302 Human Biology, PSY 325 Theories of Personality, PSY 413 Abnormal Psychology, SOC 301 American Family or SOC 307 Race and Ethnicity; Specialization Electives: 3 credits - Any Barry course with PSY, SOC prefixes courses (except SOC 309, 310), approved transfer class, or through Behavioral Sciences discipline-specific upper level portfolio credits with the academic coordinator’s approval. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BLS in Humanities Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is an interdisciplinary study of past and contemporary history of ideas and of the human experiences. This Study includes: philosophy, literature, and the fine arts (history of painting, sculpture, architecture, music). It enable students to achieve n understanding of past major artistic, historical, and philosophical ideas. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include - Students are required to complete three credits in HUM 303 and three in PHI 292. Additionally, students will earn at least three (3) credits in each of the areas below a total of 21 credits, and three credits in a capstone course. A total of thirty (30) credits must be completed. Credits: 21 - Humanities: HUM 303 Modern Currents in the Humanities (required), Philosophy: PHI 292 Ethics (required), Literature: ENG 316 World Literary Masterpieces, Art History: ART 319 History of Western Art I OR ART 320 History of Western Art II, Music: MUS 327 History: Baroque and Classical OR MUS 328 History: Romantic, History: HIS 101 Western Civilization I OR HIS 102 Western Civilization II, Theatre: TH 439 Theatre History I OR TH 440 Theatre History II; Electives: Credits: 6 - ART 400 Ancient Greek Art, ART 409 The Renaissance, ENG 315 The Novel, ENG 324 Major American Writers, ENG 337 Shakespeare and his Contemporaries, ENG 349 Women in Fiction, ENG 403 History of the English Language, HUM 305 Women in Antiquity, PHI 313 Philosophy of Art, PHI 316 Ancient Philosophy, PHI 317 Medieval Philosophy, PHI 318 Modern Philosophy, THE 303 Comparative Religion, THE 334 History of Christianity; Capstone Seminar: Credits: 3 - HUM 499. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BPS Specialization in Public Administration | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is of special interest to the working professional in public and not-for-profit organizations and those who wish to pursue a career in public management. The course work is designed to provide the student with an understanding and working application of the principles essential to the effective management of all public agencies. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 18 credits - PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology, PSY 325 Theories of Personality, PSY 382 Developmental Psychology, PSY 410 Group Dynamics and Decision-Making or PSY 428 Human Sexuality, PSY 413 Abnormal Psychology, PSY 452 Child and Adolescent Psychopathology or PSY 425 Introduction to Psychotherapy and Counseling; Specialization Electives: 6 credits - PSY 301 Psychology of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, PSY 306 Psychology of Women, PSY 320 Tests and Measurements (MAT 152 prerequisite), PSY 329 Understanding and Coping with Stress, PSY 333 Experimental Psychology (MAT 152 prerequisite), PSY 370 Social Psychology, PSY 410 Group Dynamics and Decision-Making, PSY 417 Psychology of Aging, PSY 423 Industrial Psychology, PSY 428 Human Sexuality, PSY 449 Adolescent Psychology, PSY 490 Physiological Psychology. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Biology | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provides with the opportunity to prepare for a number of career goals. Possible alternatives include graduate study; teaching; medical, dental, optometry, pharmacy, podiatric and veterinary school; medical technology; and various careers in research. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Biology with a Concentration in Biotechnology | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program deals with working in gene therapy, assisting in the development of new tests and drugs to diagnose and treat disease, and discovering new ways to study the molecular and genetic structure of cells. It prepares students for careers in industrial and commercial settings as well as medical centers. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Biology with a Concentration in Marine Biology | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program prepare for a number of career goals that focus on the marine environment. It prepares students for the opportunities in governmental agencies, teaching, graduate study, and various careers in research. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Computer Information Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | This program combines the study of computer-systems and computer technology while concentrating on an application domain selected by the student as a second discipline. The CIS graduate will be able to understand and implement computer systems on different platforms, and will be prepared to develop innovative applications in areas, such as, network administration and network programming, database-systems and database programming, data warehousing, web technologies and multimedia technologies, computer animation, and security. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Computer Information Sciences Core Courses: 39 credits - CS 211 Computer Programming I, CS 212 Computer Programming II, CS 305 Computer Systems, CS 306 Database Analysis and Logical Design, CS 338 Web Design, Authoring and Publishing, CS 341 Multimedia Systems, CS 372 Software Engineering, CS 406 Operating System Environments, CS 440 Data Communications, CS 473 Network Programming, CS 477 Computer Security, CS 499 Internship; Computer Information Systems Electives: 9 credits - These courses allow students to gain further knowledge and experience in an area of their choice. Suggested areas are, networks, systems programming, databases, electronic publishing, and Web development. In addition to the core courses, students in this major are required to select three additional 300 or 400 level courses in Computer Science; Science and Mathematics: 10 credits - MAT 109 Precalculus Mathematics I, MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics, PHY 151 Introductory Physics and Lab. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3612 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | The program is designed to provide majors with a solid theoretical and technical foundation in the field of computers. The program provides a balance between problem-solving techniques and system implementation. Majors demonstrate skills in critical thinking, project development, independent study, and research. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Computer Science Core: 40 credits - CS 231 Computer Science I, CS 232 Computer Science II, CS 311 Assembly Language, CS 331 Data Structures and Algorithms, CS 332 Computer Hardware Organization, CS 372 Software Engineering, CS 413 Operating Systems, CS 414 Computer Architecture, CS 426 Databases, CS 431 Concepts of Programming Languages, CS 471 Computer Networks, CS 477 Computer Security, CS 487 Seminar (Integrative Experience, Two Semesters); Computer Science Electives: 9 credits - Computer Science electives consist of three courses selected from the following list: CS 328 Unix, and Systems Concepts, CS 341 Multimedia Systems, CS 428 Object-Oriented Design and Software Development, CS 432 Compiler Design, CS 437 Computer Graphics, CS 438 Web Programming and Administration, CS 453 Artificial Intelligence, CS 454 Robotics, CS 456 Introduction to Expert Systems, CS 478 Applied Cryptography; Mathematics Minor: 20 credits - Given the close interaction between mathematics and computer science, a minor in mathematical sciences is required, consisting of at least 20 credits in mathematics courses, including: MAT 211 Calculus I, MAT 212 Calculus II, MAT 253 Discrete Mathematics I, MAT 254 Discrete Mathematics II, MAT 356 Statistics for Science and at least another MAT course above MAT 212, The following are suggested: MAT 213 Calculus III, MAT 314 Differential Equations, MAT 332 Linear Algebra, MAT 374 Theory of Computation, MAT 451 Probability Theory, MAT 452 Mathematical Statistics, MAT 456 Numerical Analysis; Physics: 8 credits - PHY 201 General College Physics I and Lab, PHY 202 General College Physics II and Lab. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3612 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Mathematical Sciences - Computational Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | This program is to build a strong foundation for careers in mathematics. The courses of study cover the main areas of algebra, analysis, probability, statistics, numerical analysis and topology. Co-requisites in physics and computer science are also required. There are three possible concentrations within Mathematical Sciences: General Mathematics, Statistics/Actuarial Science and Computational Mathematics. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core courses (21 credits): MAT-211 Calculus I, MAT-212 Calculus II, MAT-213 Calculus III, MAT-253 Discrete Mathematics I, MAT-314 Differential Equations, MAT-332 Linear Algebra; Co-requisites (16 credits): Eight credits in physics: PHY 211 and PHY 212 or PHY 201 and PHY 202, Eight credits in computer science: CS 231 and CS 232 or CS 211 and CS 212; Electives: 9 credits; Specialization in Computational Mathematics: MAT-254 Discrete Mathematics II, MAT-440 Mathematical Modeling, MAT-451 Probability Theory, MAT-456 Numerical Analysis, MAT-487 Undergraduate Mathematics Seminar, CS-331 Data Structures and Algorithms, CS-431 Concepts of Programming Languages, CS-478 Applied Cryptography. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3612 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Mathematical Sciences - General Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | This program is to build a strong foundation for careers in mathematics. The courses of study cover the main areas of algebra, analysis, probability, statistics, numerical analysis and topology. Co-requisites in physics and computer science are also required. There are three possible concentrations within Mathematical Sciences: General Mathematics, Statistics/Actuarial Science and Computational Mathematics. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core courses (21 credits): MAT-211 Calculus I, MAT-212 Calculus II, MAT-213 Calculus III, MAT-253 Discrete Mathematics I, MAT-314 Differential Equations, MAT-332 Linear Algebra; Co-requisites (16 credits): Eight credits in physics: PHY 211 and PHY 212 or PHY 201 and PHY 202, Eight credits in computer science: CS 231 and CS 232 or CS 211 and CS 212; Electives: 9 credits; Specialization in General Mathematics: MAT-310 Advanced Calculus I, MAT-311 Advanced Calculus II, MAT-331 Algebraic Structures, MAT-356 Statistics for Science, MAT-416 Introduction to Complex Analysis, MAT-441 Introduction to Topology, MAT-451 Probability Theory, MAT-462 Number Theory. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3612 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Mathematical Sciences - Statistics/Actuarial Science | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | This program is to build a strong foundation for careers in mathematics. The courses of study cover the main areas of algebra, analysis, probability, statistics, numerical analysis and topology. Co-requisites in physics and computer science are also required. There are three possible concentrations within Mathematical Sciences: General Mathematics, Statistics/Actuarial Science and Computational Mathematics. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core courses (21 credits): MAT-211 Calculus I, MAT-212 Calculus II, MAT-213 Calculus III, MAT-253 Discrete Mathematics I, MAT-314 Differential Equations, MAT-332 Linear Algebra; Co-requisites (16 credits): Eight credits in physics: PHY 211 and PHY 212 or PHY 201 and PHY 202, Eight credits in computer science: CS 231 and CS 232 or CS 211 and CS 212; Electives: 9 credits; Specialization in Statistics-Actuarial Science: MAT-230 Statistical Methods I, MAT-330 Statistical Methods II, MAT-356 Statistics for Science, MAT-451 Probability Theory, MAT-452 Mathematical Statistics, MAT-487 Undergraduate Mathematics Seminar; For students interested in Actuarial Science, it is recommended that as part of the general electives they take the following courses (15 credits): ACC-201 Financial Accounting I, ECO-201 Introductory Macroeconomics, ECO-202 Introductory Microeconomics, FIN-319 Managerial Finance, FIN-419 Financial Policy and Strategy. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science | School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3612 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Physical Education K-12 | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This program will prepare students to teach physical education, fitness, and wellness in the primary, elementary, and/or secondary schools. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Co-requisites: 47 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro. to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Literature and Composition (3), ENG 112 OR 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 OR COM 104 OR TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 11 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics (3), SES 360/ 360L Applied Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (also required in SES Core) (4); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - ECO 201 Introductory Macroeconomics (3), PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 6 credit hours from university approved distribution list (6); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours - 9 credit hours from university approved distribution list (9); SES Core Requirements: 21 credit-hours - SES 112/ 112L CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer and Laboratory (2), SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 361 / 361L Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (4), SES 465 Administration of Programs and Facilities (3), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3); Physical Education Major Requirements: 49 Credit hours - ISR Elective (2), CS 180 Intro to Computers (3), EDU 151 Introduction to Education (3), EDU 218 Educational Psychology (3), TSL 400 Comp. ESOL Strategies (3), SES 220/ 220L Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries and Laboratory (4), SES 320/ 320 Kinesiology and Laboratory (4), SES 326 Principles of Motor Learning (3), SES 350 Tests and Measurement in HPER and Sport (3), SES 470 Methods Teaching Elementary PE (4), SES 476 Methods Teaching Secondary PE (4), SES 486 Practicum in Teaching Secondary PE (3-6), SES 486 Practicum in Teaching Secondary PE (3-6), SES Electives (3-9); Electives: 3 credit-hours Recommended Courses: SES 325 Officiating Team and Individual Sports (2), SES 328 Theory of Coaching (3), SES 330 Nutrition for Physical Performance (3), SES 431 Media Relations in Sport (3), SES 479 Directed Research in Physical Education (3), SES 485 Intro to Law in SES (3), SES 486 Practicum in Coaching (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Sport Management - Diving Industry Program | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This rapidly growing recreational industry extends globally as divers of all ages and interests travel to explore the underwater realm. To preserve the ocean resources, the diving industry partners with other academic areas such as marine and environmental sciences, photography, forensics, international business and more. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Corequisites: 47 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs, and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Comp. and Lit. (3), ENG 112 / 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 or COM 104 or TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 11 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), Science and Mathematics: 11 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics (3), SES 360/ 360L Applied Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (also required in SES Core) (4); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - ECO 201 Introductory Macroeconomics (3), PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 6 credit hours from university approved distribution list (6); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours, SES Core Requirements: 18 credit-hours - SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3) SES 212/ 212L Emergency Response and Laboratory (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 361 / 361L Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (4), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3); Sport Management Major Requirements: 33 Credit hours - CS 180 Intro to Computers (3), SES 250 Sport and Recreational Management (3), SES 485 Introduction to Law In Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 499 Internship in Sport Management or SM-Diving Industry (12); Diving Industry Specialization Requirements: 26 credit-hours - SES 110 Intro to Diving Sciences, Technology and Management (2), SES 226 Seamanship and Laboratory (3), SES 230 Recreational Diving Theory (3), SES 240/ 240L Dive Accident Management and Rescue with Laboratory (3), SES 351/ 351L Diving Leadership and Practicum with Laboratory (3), SES 362 Diving Business Management, Retailing and Practicum (3), SES 365 Hyperbaric Physiology and Decompression Theory (3), SES 421 Methods of Instruction in SCUBA Diving (3); Summer Intensive Program - SES 311 Tropical Diving Environments (3), SES Dive Industry Track Electives TBA; Minor in Business: 18 credit-hours - ACC 201 Financial Accounting (3), ECO 201 Intro. Macroeconomics, (3 hrs. counted in Distribution), MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management (3), MGT 352 Human Resource Management (3), MKT 306 Marketing Concepts and Applications (3), MKT 385 Consumer Behavior (3); Electives (3 hours minimum): 3 credit-hours Recommended Courses: SES 260 Leisure Planning and Programming (3), SES 300 Special Topics in Diving Industry (3), SES 308 Underwater Photography (3), SES 380 Facility Design and Event Management (3), SES 444 Financial Applications to Sport (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | BS in Sport Management - Golf Industry Program | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This rapidly growing recreational industry extends globally as divers of all ages and interests travel to explore the underwater realm. To preserve the ocean resources, the diving industry partners with other academic areas such as marine and environmental sciences, photography, forensics, international business and more. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Corequisites: 47 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs, and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Comp. and Lit. (3), ENG 112 / 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 or COM 104 or TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 11 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), Science and Mathematics: 11 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics (3), SES 360/ 360L Applied Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (also required in SES Core) (4); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - ECO 201 Introductory Macroeconomics (3), PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 6 credit hours from university approved distribution list (6); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours, SES Core Requirements: 18 credit-hours - SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3) SES 212/ 212L Emergency Response and Laboratory (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 361 / 361L Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (4), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3); Sport Management Core Requirements: 21 Credit hours - CS 180 Intro to Computers (3), SES 250 Sport and Recreational Management (3), SES 485 Introduction to Law In Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 499 Internship in Sport Management or Sport Management - Golf Industry (12); Additional Sport Management Requirements: 3 credit-hours SES 440 Sport Marketing, Promotions, and Fund Raising (3); SM-Golf Industry Requirements: 20 credit hours - SES 205 Managerial Issues in the Golf Industry (3), SES 320/ 320L Kinesiology and Laboratory (4), SES 382 Turfgrass Management for the Golf Professional (2), SES 442 Golf Country Club Management (3), SES 472 Methods of Teaching Golf (3), SES 486 Practicum in Golf Industry I (2), SES 486 Practicum in Golf Industry II (2),Minor in Business: 18 credit-hours - ACC 201 Financial Accounting (3), ECO 201 Intro. Macroeconomics, (3 hrs. counted in Distribution), MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management (3), MGT 352 Human Resource Management (3), MKT 306 Marketing Concepts and Applications (3), MKT 385 Consumer Behavior (3); Electives (4 hours minimum): ISR Elective Various Sport Activity Courses (1-2), COM 200 Introduction to Mass Media (3), COM 390 Principles of Public Relations (3), ENG 417 Advertising Copywriting (3), ENG 418 Publication Production and Layout (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Music - Instrumental Performance Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program emphasizes study of a primary instrument, with the option of a secondary instrument: piano, brass, guitar, strings, percussion, or woodwinds. Individualized attention by the Music faculty, frequent opportunities for formal and informal student performances and forums on and off campus, ensembles, and quality private applied lessons characterize this nurturing specialization. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Music Core: 27 credits - MUS 109 Theory I 3 credits, MUS 110 Theory II 3 credits, MUS 186 Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 135-288 Applied Music 8 credits, MUS 327 History: Baroque and Classical 3 credits, MUS 328 History: Romantic Music 3 credits, MUS 386 Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; for BA, choose 12 credits from Instrumental Performance Requirements based upon student interest and discretion of advisor. Instrumental Performance Requirements: 14 credits - Instrumental Performance Requirements; MUS 335 Applied Music 2 credits, MUS 338 Applied Music 2 credits, MUS 386 Ensemble 4 credits, MUS 384 Conducting I 2 credits, MUS 487 Applied Music 2 credits, MUS 490 Applied Music 2 credits; Instrumental Performance Electives: 24 credits - MUS 192 Performance Workshop 2 credits, MUS 205 Piano Sight Reading 1 credit, MUS 211 Theory III 3 credits, MUS 212 Theory IV 3 credits, MUS 223 Piano Literature I 1 credit, MUS 309 Vocal Literature I 1 credit, MUS 302 Accompaniment 1 credit, MUS 329 History: Twentieth Century 3 credits, MUS 340 Sightsinging/Eartraining 1 credit, MUS 375 Piano Pedagogy 1 credit, MUS 380 Opera Workshop 1 credit, MUS 385 Conducting II 2 credits, MUS 386 Ensemble 1-3 credits , MUS 392 Performance Workshop 3-9 credits, MUS 420 Vocal Interpretation 1 credit, MUS 422 Instrumental Interpretation 1 credit, MUS 488 Vocal Pedagogy 1 credit. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Music - Voice, Opera and Musical Theatre Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program is designed for music students with a combined interest in voice and vocal stage performances with an emphasis on opera, art song, choral repertoire, and musical theatre. Opera and Musical Theatre scenes programs are performed each semester, and vocal recitals are presented on a regular basis throughout each academic year. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Music Core: 27 credits - MUS 109 Theory I 3 credits, MUS 110 Theory II 3 credits, MUS 186 Chamber Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 135 - 288 Applied Music 8 credits, MUS 327 History: Baroque and Classical 3 credits, MUS 328 History: Romantic Music 3 credits, MUS 386 Chamber Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; for BA, choose 12 credits from Voice, Opera, Musical Theatre Requirements based upon student interest and discretion of advisor. Voice, Opera and Musical Theatre Requirements: 32 credits - MUS 192 Performance Workshop 3 credits, MUS 335 Applied Music (voice) 2 credits, MUS 338 Applied Music (voice) 2 credits, MUS 386 Chamber Ensemble 9 credits, MUS 392 Performance Workshop 12 credits, MUS 487 Applied Music (voice) 2 credits, MUS 490 Applied Music (voice) 2 credits; Voice, Opera and Musical Theatre Electives: 10 credits - MUS 180 Opera Workshop 1 credit, MUS 200 Diction for Singers 1 credit, MUS 211Theory III 3 credits , MUS 212Theory IV 3 credits, MUS 324 Musical Theatre Styles I 3 credits, MUS 340 Sightsinging/Eartraining 1 credit, MUS 380 Opera Workshop 1-3 credits, MUS 384 Conducting I 2 credits, MUS 385 Conducting II 2 credits, MUS 392 Performance Workshop 3-6 credits, MUS 420 Vocal Interpretation 1 credit, MUS 488 Vocal Pedagogy 2 credits, TH 155 Acting I 3 credits, TH 255 Acting II 3 credits, DAN 1-6 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Theatre - Acting Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program offers courses for individuals pursuing work in the theatre, musical theatre, and film or television. With a foundation in both contemporary acting approaches and methodologies, and an overview of historical acting styles, this program combines academic training with performance opportunities in both Mainstage and laboratory theatre environments. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Theatre Core: 17 credits - TH 100 Intro to Theatre 3 credits, TH 105 Intro to Tech. Theatre (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 111 Technical Theatre Lab I 1 credit, TH 155 Acting I: Fundamentals 3 credits, TH 439 Theatre History I 3 credits, TH 440 Theatre History II 3 credits, TH 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Acting Specialization Electives: minimum 19 credits - TH 156 Voice and Movement 3 credits, TH 180 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 1 credit, TH 255 Acting 2: Role Analysis 3 credits, TH 256 Acting 3: Scene Study 3 credits, TH 300 Special Topics 3 credits, TH 323 Play Directing 3 credits, TH 355 Acting 4: Period Styles 3 credits, TH 295 Principles of Cost. and Makeup 3 credits, TH 380 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 389 Critical Reading (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 441 Contemporary Theatre 3 credits, TH 455 Acting 5: Camera 3 credits, TH 459 Independent Study 3 credits, TH 499 Internship 3 credits, DAN Elective 3 credits, MUS Elective 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Theatre - Dance Theatre Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program is designed for students with a performance interest in both Theater and Dance. The Dance Theatre Production specialization electives provide a diverse selection of dance courses to better prepare students interested in a Theater Dance Production career. In addition to having performance possibilities in annual dance concerts and involvement in University theatrical productions, students may participate in dance workshops and student choreography. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Theatre Core: 17 credits - TH 100 Intro to Theatre 3 credits, TH 105 Intro to Tech. Theatre (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 111 Technical Theatre Lab I 1 credit, TH 155 Acting I: Fundamentals 3 credits, TH 439 Theatre History I 3 credits, TH 440 Theatre History II 3 credits, TH 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Dance Specialization Electives: minimum 19 credits - DAN 104 Dance Appreciation 3 credits, DAN 105 Ballet I 2 credits, DAN 108 Theatrical Movement 1 credit, DAN 109 Modern Dance I 2 credits, DAN 110 Modern/Jazz Dance I 2 credits, DAN 119 Latin Dance I 2 credits, DAN 180 Repertory Ensemble (A, B, C…) 1 credit, DAN 199 Special Topics in Dance 2 credits, DAN 205 Ballet II 2 credits, DAN 209 Modern Dance II 2 credits, DAN 210 Modern/Jazz Dance II 2 credits, DAN 219 Latin Dance II 2 credits, DAN 220 Dance Composition/ Choreography I 2 credits, DAN 300 Special Topics in Dance 2 credits, DAN 305 Ballet III (A, B, C…) 2 credits, DAN 309 Modern Dance III 2 credits, DAN 310 Modern Jazz III 2 credits, DAN 320 Dance Composition/ Choreography II 2 credits, DAN 325 Dances of African Diaspora 3 credits, DAN 380 Repertory Ensemble (A, B, C) 1 credit, DAN 410 Dance Production 3 credits, DAN 429 History and Philosophy of Dance 3 credits, TH 180 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 1 credit, TH 380 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 459 Independent Study 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Theatre - Technical Theatre Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program allows students to combine technical elective courses in order to concentrate on a variety of theater design and technology areas. Through involvement in University productions, students can expect significant hands-on production experience directly related to the theory taught in Technical Theatre and related courses. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Theatre Core: 17 credits - TH 100 Intro to Theatre 3 credits, TH 105 Intro to Tech. Theatre (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 111 Technical Theatre Lab I 1 credit, TH 155 Acting I: Fundamentals 3 credits, TH 439 Theatre History I 3 credits, TH 440 Theatre History II 3 credits, TH 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit, Technical Specialization Electives: minimum 19 credits - TH 180 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…), TH 185 Stagecraft 3 credits, TH 208 Principles of Light and Sound 3 credits, TH 211 Technical Theatre, Lab II (A, B, C…) 1 credit, TH 295 Principals of Costume and Makeup 3 credits, TH 300 Special Topics 3 credits, TH 311 Technical Theatre Lab III (A, B, C…) 1 credit, TH 380 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 389 Critical Reading (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 391 Lighting Design 3 credits, TH 392 Scene Design 3 credits, TH 441 Contemporary Theatre 3 credits, TH 459 Independent Study, TH 499 Internship 3 credits, ART 101A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B 2-D Design 3 credits, ART 102A Figure Drawing 3 credits, ART 319 Art History I 3 credits, ART 320 Art History II 3 credits, ART 411 20th Century Art 3 credits, ART 415 History of Graphic Design 3 credits, PHO 305 Computer Imaging I 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Theatre - Theatre Publicity Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program combines studies in Theatre, Photography, Graphic Design, and related courses. This specialization is for students pursuing experience and involvement in theatre productions, the photographing of actors and sets, as well as the creation of photo composites, brochures, playbills, and posters as theatre publicity. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Theatre Core: 17 credits - TH 100 Intro to Theatre 3 credits, TH 105 Intro to Tech. Theatre (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 111 Technical Theatre Lab I 1 credit, TH 155 Acting I: Fundamentals 3 credits, TH 439 Theatre History I 3 credits, TH 440 Theatre History II 3 credits, TH 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Publicity Specialization Electives: minimum 19 credits - PHO 203 Basic Photography 3 credits, PHO 303 Intermediate Photography 3 credits, PHO 305 Computer Imaging I 3 credits, PHO 401 Color Photography 3 credits, PHO 411 Lighting Techniques 3 credits, PHO 404 Advanced Photography 3 credits, PHO 412 Studio Lighting 3 credits, ART 101 A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B 2-Dimensional Design 3 credits, ART 205 Graphic Design I 3 credits, ART 305 Graphic Design II 3 credits, ART 405 Graphic Design III 3 credits, TH 180 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C) 1 credit, TH 380 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C) 3 credits, TH 459 Independent Study 3 credits, TH 499 Internship 3 credits, ADV 301 Principles of Advertising 3 credits, MKT 306 Marketing Concepts and Appl. 3 credits, MKT 386 Sales Promotion, Advertising 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Pre-Law | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program includes concentrations in business, history, political science, and philosophy. The Pre-Law program also offers students the opportunity to integrate these disciplines in a required integrative experience senior seminar. Specialized courses within the different academic areas in the Pre-Law major include: Constitutional law, Business law, Philosophy of law, Rhetorical analysis. The learning objectives include exposure to themes central to the study of law, with analysis of their historical, political and philosophical backgrounds and implications, general emphasis on the Western tradition of law in the context of the United States, understanding of general economic theory, relationship of law and business in Western societies, acquiring rhetorical skills and developing strong writing and communication skills. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include - Classes will include the following as part of the 59-61 credits in distribution requirements in the following areas: Oral and Written Communication-ENG 111, 210; SPE 101 or COM 104 elective, Theology and Philosophy-220 and 3 PHI credits; THE 201 and 3 THE elective credit hours, Humanities and Arts-6 elective credit hours, Mathematics and Science-MAT 152; CS 180 or higher; Lab Science elective (3-4 credit hours), Social Sciences-HIS 150, POS 201, PSY 281, SOC 200, Foreign Language-3 credit hours; classes will include the following as part of the 48-credit major requirements in the five indicated component areas: Philosophy (12 credit hours)-PHI 304, 308, 310, 355, Political Science (12 credit hour)-POS 207, 308, 425-426, History (9 credit hours)-HIS 201, 202, 432, Business (12 credit hours)-BUS 181, 239, ECO 201, 202, English (minimum 3 credit hours)-ENG 406, Integrative Experience-HIS/POS 487. The balance of 14-15 credit hours completing the 120-credit-hour course of study is to be chosen from electives to strengthen each component of the major with ENG 207, 312, 410 recommended as needed and with SOC 370 especially recommended. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3780 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Advertising | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This program is designed to provide students with knowledge of all aspects of advertising. The curriculum exposes students to advertising strategy and planning, creative, media, and culture and provides them with the necessary tools to pursue a career in Advertising. Students can do specialization in International Advertising by taking one additional course. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses: 39 credits - ADV 301 Principles of Advertising 3, ADV 362 Advertising Media Planning 3, ADV 401 Advertising Creative Strategy and Execution 3, ADV 442Advertising and Social Responsibility 3, ADV 470 Advertising Campaigns 3, ADV 480 International Advertising 3, ADV 484 Public Relations/Advertising Research 3, ADV 499 Internship 3, COM 200 Introduction to Mass Media 3, COM 201Introduction to Communication 3, COM 390 Principles of Public Relations 3, COM 412 Persuasion 3, COM 495 Communication Law 3; Production Co-requisites: 6 credits - ART 205 Graphic Design I 3, PHO 305 Computer Imaging 3; Business Co-requisites: 6 credits, MKT 306 Marketing Concepts and Applications 3, MKT 385 Consumer Behavior 3; General Electives: 17-18 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3456 | The department prepare students for a world of opportunities in Advertising, Broadcasting, Communication Studies, Public Relations, and Corporate Communications at both the undergraduate and graduate level. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Broadcast Communication | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This program is designed for students considering a career in television/video and related broadcast and new/emerging media fields. Major requirements are designed to provide the student with a strong core of knowledge in all facets of the profession. There are two concentrations - Television and Video Production Focus and Broadcast News Focus. It emphasizes producing and anchoring a newscast, writing and producing a web newscast, and learning the skills for radio and television reporting. Another concentration focuses on production, editing, studio and field work, and television directing. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at-least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include SPE 101 Fundamentals of Speech 3, COM 201 Introduction to Communication 3; Broadcast Communication Requirements: 24 credits - COM 200 Introduction to Mass Media 3, COM 204 Writing for the Media 3, COM 214 Television Production 3, COM 314 Advanced Television Production 3, COM 490 Public Affairs Producing (capstone) 3, COM 495 Communication Law 3, COM 497 Media Management 3, COM 499 Internship 3; Broadcast Communication Major Focus (complete one focus): 9 credits - Television and Video Production Focus: COM 420 Media Programming 3, COM 456 Advanced Video Editing 3, COM 491 Television Directing 3 or Broadcast News Focus: COM 318 Radio and TV Reporting 3, COM 418 Broadcast News 3, COM 421 Ethics in the News Media 3; Communication Electives (Courses designated ADV, COM, JOU, or SPE 300 and 400 level) - 6 credits; Minor (a minor is strongly recommended) - 21 credits COM 200 Introduction to Mass Media 3, COM 201 Introduction to Communication 3, COM 204 Writing for the Media 3, COM 214 Television Production 3, COM 314 Advanced Television Production 3, COM 366 History of the Moving Image 3, COM 495 Communication Law 3; General Electives - 6 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3456 | The department prepare students for a world of opportunities in Advertising, Broadcasting, Communication Studies, Public Relations, and Corporate Communications at both the undergraduate and graduate level. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This is a broadly-based program designed for those students who seek a generalist’s orientation to the communication discipline. The student is encouraged to investigate all aspects of the program, developing a core of knowledge in communication studies, and to apply general elective hours to the minor in order to create a double major. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Senior Level Courses: 6 credits - COM 407 Theories of Human Communication 3, COM 499 or Internship 3, COM 399 Practicum (or additional upper level) 3; Overview Courses: 12 credits - COM 200 Introduction to Mass Media 3, COM 201 Introduction to Communication 3, ADV 301 Principles of Advertising 3, COM 390 Principles of Public Relations 3; Public Address Courses: 6 credits - SPE 401 Business and Professional Communication 3, SPE 415 Speech Research, Writing and Delivery 3; Context Courses: 12 credits - COM 104 Interpersonal Communication 3, COM 304 Intercultural Communication 3, COM 326 Small Group Communication 3, COM 408 or Relational Communication 3, COM 320 Family Communication 3, COM 409 Organizational Communication 3, COM 412 Persuasion 3; Communication Electives (Courses designated ADV, COM, JOU, or SPE) - 6 credits; Minor: 21credits - COM 104 Interpersonal Communication 3, COM 201 Introduction to Communication 3, COM 304 Intercultural Communication 3, COM 407 Theories of Human Communication 3, COM 408 Relational Communication 3, COM 409 Organizational Communication 3, SPE 401 or Business and Professional Communication 3, SPE 415 Speech Research, Writing, and Delivery 3; General Electives: 120 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3456 | The department prepare students for a world of opportunities in Advertising, Broadcasting, Communication Studies, Public Relations, and Corporate Communications at both the undergraduate and graduate level. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in English - Literature | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages | This program encourages broad exposure to literature of various cultures, literary periods, genres and themes; the development of critical, analytic, and interpretive skills in reading texts; and strong competencies in research and written communication. Students majoring in English pursue careers directly related to literature and teaching, there are numerous career options in today's competitive economy for accomplished English majors. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses - 9 Credit Hours - ENG 324 Major American Writers, ENG 331 Major British Writers I or ENG 332 Major British Writers II, ENG 350 Theories of Rhetoric and Public Discourse; Required Courses - 15 Credit Hours - ENG 331 Major British Writers I or ENG 332 Major British Writers II, ENG 352 Survey African American Literature, ENG 387 Introduction to Literary Theory and Criticism, ENG 407 Shakespeare, ENG 487 Senior Seminar; 21 Credits from ENG or HUM (with no more than 12 credits in HUM) - ENG 420 Medieval, ENG 424 American 1800-1865, ENG 425 American 1865-1914, ENG 426 American 1914-present, ENG 432 British Romantics, ENG 433 British Victorians, ENG 460 1900-1945, ENG 461 1945-present; Other English Courses - ENG 300 Special Topics, ENG 315 The Novel, ENG 316 World Lit, ENG 336 Latino/Latina Lit, ENG 340 Women in Lit, ENG 348 Caribbean, ENG 419 Lit and Film, ENG 429 English Studies, ENG 449 Film Theory, HUM Courses, HUM 396 Cultural Studies, HUM 397 Ethnic Studies, HUM 398 Gender Studies, HUM 399 Genre Studies. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3410 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in English - Professional Writing Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages | This program provides students with a background in the theories, methods, and practical skills of the field so that they can pursue a variety of careers in writing, publishing, and electronic media. It is a career-oriented program for English majors who are interested in pursuing an array of professional fields including: Journalism, Public Relations, Advertising, Desktop Publishing, Editing, Technical Writing, Business, Law, E-commerce, Teaching. In this program, students explore various forms of writing styles including fiction, technical writing, persuasive writing, multimedia writing and desktop publishing. The program also integrates computer technology, allowing students to create web pages, design Internet publications and learn about current software applications. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses - 9 Credit Hours - ENG 324 Major American Writers, ENG 331 Major British Writers I or ENG 332 Major British Writers II, ENG 350 Theories of Rhetoric and Public Discourse; Co-requisite: CS 280; 33 Credit Hours from the Following Courses: ENG 333 Into Fiction Writing, ENG 344 Professional Editing, ENG 362 Magazine Article, ENG 364 Multi Media Writing, ENG 374 Writing for the Internet, ENG 404 Persuasive Writing, ENG 406 Rhetorical Analysis, ENG 417 Copywriting, ENG 444 Business Writing, ENG 446 Screenwriting, ENG 447 Technical Writing, CS 325 Desktop Publishing; Internship 3-6 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3410 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program provides the knowledge of a context in which to place, understand and better interpret local and world events. Education provide students with intensive training in research, critical thinking, decision-making, writing and analysis. Students will be equipped with the flexibility to succeed in a variety of careers and to go on to more specialized graduate or professional training. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include HIS 101, 102 Western Civilization I and II (3) (3), HIS 150 The Meaning of History (3), HIS 199 Special Topics (3), HIS 201, 202 U.S. People and Ideas, I and II (3) (3), HIS 300 Special Topics (3-6), HIS 306 Twentieth-Century America (3), HIS 308 History of Asian Civilizations (3), HIS 315 History of Florida (3), HIS 335 Modern Russia (3), HIS 339 Germany Since 1871 (3), HIS 344 Europe in the Nineteenth Century (3), HIS 345 Europe in the Twentieth Century (3), HIS 352 Politics and Music (3), HIS 383 History of Latin American Colonial Period to 1824 (3), HIS 384 Latin American National Period from 1824 to present (3), HIS 388 History of the Caribbean (3), HIS 389 U.S. History from the Gilded Age to World War II (3), HIS 390 U.S. History Since 1945 (3), HIS 393 America in the World (3), HIS 403 American Diplomatic I to 1890 (3), HIS 404 American Diplomatic II 1890 to present (3), HIS 432 Modern English History (3), HIS 437 European Diplomatic Since 1815, HIS 449/549 Race, Gender (3), and Class in Latin America, HIS 454 America in the 1960s (3), HIS 456/556 African American History Since Reconstruction (3), HIS 359, 459 Independent Study (3-12) (3-12), HIS 487 Seminar (3-6), HIS 499 Internship (3-12). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3780 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Photography - Biomedical and Forensic | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program is for students with a combined interest in photography, biology, and criminal justice. An integral part of this program is the priceless six-month internship. This will give students first-hand experience working at the medical examiner's office, where they will contribute to cases, prepare evidence, and work as a forensic photographer for Miami-Dade County. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Biomedical and Forensic Photography Core (48 credits): 2-D Design, Basic Photography, Intermediate Photography, Computer Imaging I, Photography Practicum I, Color Photography or Color Processes, Advanced Digital Imaging or Advanced Computer Imaging, Large Format Photography, Lighting Techniques, Studio Lighting, History of Art/Photography, Senior Seminar, Biomedical and Forensic Internship; Biomedical and Forensic Photography Co-requisites (16-17 credits): Biology Overview for Non-majors, Introductory Human Anatomy, Introduction to Criminology, BIO and/or CRM 300 Elective, BIO 300 Special Topics. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Photography - Creative Photography | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | Photography emphasizes originality, self-expression, creative thinking and experimentation within the discipline of photography. This focuses on creative image making; while also emphasizing technical skills, which can be applied in the commercial field. This program offers the largest and most diversified menu of Photography Electives, permitting students to customize their photographic curriculum. This program is for the true individualist: who do their own thing, and combine their interests to develop a program that is right for them. The majority of the students choose this track. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Photography Core (30 credits): 2-D Design, Basic Photography, Intermediate Photography, Computer Imaging I, Color Photography or Color Processes, Lighting Techniques or Studio Lighting, Senior Seminar, Art History; Photography Electives choose 9 credits from the following: Pinhole Photography, Photojournalism, Color Photography, Color Processes, Advanced Photography, Advanced Digital Imaging, Advanced Computer Imaging, View Camera, Large Format Photography, Lighting Techniques, Studio Lighting, Influences of the Masters, Manipulative Photography, Digital Fine Art Printing, History of Photography, Film and Art, Fine Art Digital Portfolio, The Art of Web Design, Underwater Photography, Television Production, Advanced Television Production, Photography Practicum I, Photography Practicum II, Independent Study, Special Topics, Internship, Other Art courses. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Spanish - Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages | This program provides students with proficiency in the four basic skills - listening, speaking, reading, and writing - and gives them a deeper understanding of the Hispanic culture and literature. Spanish literature classes are offered to expose students to the major works of Spanish and Hispanic-American literature, and to the philosophical, historical, and cultural background of each work. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Track I (for non-natives learning the language): SPA 101, 102 Elementary Spanish I, II, SPA 203, 204 Intermediate Spanish I, II, SPA 304 Advanced Spanish, SPA 307 Advanced Conversation, SPA 315, 316 Reading and Writing I, II, SPA 317 Commercial Spanish, SPA 320 Structural Analysis of Spanish and English (Permission of instructor required); Track II (for students from a Hispanic background with no formal training in the language): SPA 315, 316 Reading and Writing I, II, SPA 317 Commercial Spanish, SPA 320 Structural Analysis of Spanish and English (Permission of instructor required); Track III (for native speakers or non-natives with near-native fluency) 30 credits selected from the following after consultation with an advisor: SPA 300 Special Topics, SPA 315, 316 Reading and Writing I, II, SPA 317 Commercial Spanish, SPA 320 Structural Analysis of Spanish and English, SPA 325 Introduction to Translation, SPA 326 Introduction to Interpretation, SPA 355, 356 Major Spanish Authors I, II, SPA 359/459 Independent Study, SPA 360, 361 Major Hispanic-American Authors I, II, SPA 366 The Hispanic-American Novel, SPA 440 Spanish Literature of the Golden Age, SPA 443 Twentieth-Century Spanish Literature, SPA 447 Contemporary Hispanic-American Fiction, SPA 476 Methods of Teaching Foreign Languages, 6-12; The language and literature specialization consists of a minimum of 33 credits beyond SPA 101 and 102. In addition, students must take SPA 487 Senior Seminar. Students will choose 12 credits from the following list of courses: SPA 315, 316 Reading and Writing I, II, SPA 355, 356 Spanish Authors I, II, SPA 360, 361 Major Hispanic-American Authors I, II. The remaining 21 credits may be selected from any 300 or 400 level course. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3410 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Spanish - Translation and Interpretation Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages | This program is designed to give students from a variety of backgrounds the opportunity to learn about theories, methods and practices for a possible career as translators or interpreters. The goals of the translation and interpretation specialization is to develop translation and interpretation skills in Spanish and English increase knowledge and understanding of other cultures, enhance students’ confidence in both languages and familiarize students with theories, methods, practices and techniques to prepare for a career as a translator or interpreter. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Translation and Interpretation Courses (15): SPA 325 Introduction To Translation, SPA 326 Introduction To Interpretation, SPA 425 Advanced Techniques Of Translation, SPA 426 Advanced Techniques Of Interpretation, SPA 487 Senior Seminar; Language Courses (12): SPA 304 Advanced Spanish, SPA 307 Advanced Conversation, SPA 315 Reading and Writing I, SPA 316 Reading and Writing II, SPA 320 Structural Analysis of Spanish and English, SPA 317 Commercial Spanish, ENG 410 Advanced English Grammar, ENG 447 Technical and Scientific Research, Writing and Editing; Culture Courses (6): PA 333 Spanish Culture, SPA 335 Hispanic-American Culture; Communication Courses (3): COM 304 Intercultural Communication (COM 104 OR SPE 101 are pre-requisites for COM 304). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Foreign Languages, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3410 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art - Art History | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program is designed to provide a comprehensive understanding of the art works, artists and movements that have shaped Western visual culture from prehistory to the present, and the leading theories and methods of the discipline. The program prepares students for careers in art museums, commercial galleries, professional art writing and art consulting, and for advanced graduate training for careers in secondary and college teaching and art conservation and restoration. | Students to be admitted should have a score of at least 79 of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or at least a 213 on the computer-based TOEFL. Undergraduate applicants whose TOEFL score is between 61 and 78 (173-212 on the computer-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture Program (TLC) and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicants who score less than 61 (173 on the computer-based test) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. Consideration may be given to waiving the TOEFL requirement for international applicants who meet one of the following situations: If the international freshman applicant presents a composite SAT or ACT test score (English version) which meets the admission standard and also reflects a verbal score that demonstrates English proficiency. If the international transfer applicant has attended an accredited college/university in the USA, has completed at least 24 hours of transferable degree credits, and is in good standing at the last institution attended. | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Art History Core: 24 credits - ART 101B 2-D Design 3 credits, ART 114 Art Appreciation 3 credits, ART 329 World Art I: To 1400 3 credits, ART 330 World Art II: Since 1400 3 credits, ART 400 or ART 408 Ancient Greek Art, Medieval Monuments 3 credits, ART 409 or ART 410 Renaissance Art, or Art in the Age of Rembrandt 3 credits, ART 417 or ART 423 20 th -Century Art, Contemporary Art 3 credits, ART 487A Senior Seminar: Art History 3 credits; Art History Electives: 15 credits - ART 359A Independent Study 3 credits, ART 400 Ancient Greek Art 3 credits, ART 408 Medieval Monuments 3 credits, ART 409 Renaissance Art 3 credits, ART 410 Art in the Age of Rembrandt 3 credits, ART 411 19 th-Century European Art 3 credits, ART 415 History of Graphic Design 3 credits, ART 417 20 th-Century Art 3 credits, ART 423 Contemporary Art 3 credits, ART 459A Independent Study 3 credits, ART 499A Internship 3 credits, PHO 203 or PHO 206 Basic Photography Digital Photography I 3 credits, PHO 420 History of Photography 3 credits, PHO 421 History of Photography, Film and Art 3 credits; Art History Cognate Courses: 6 credits - COM 366 History of the Moving Image 3 credits, ENG 449 Film Theory and Criticism 3 credits, HIS 344 Europe in the 19th Century 3 credits, HIS 345 Europe in the 20th Century 3 credits, PHI 313 Philosophy of Art 3 credits, SOC 306 Sociology of Art 3 credits, THE 300 Art as Revelation 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program provides exposure to the various materials and techniques of the ceramic medium. The emphasis is upon the development of creativity, self-expression and technical skills in working with clay. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Studio Art Core: 24 credits - ART 101A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B 2-D Design 3 credits 3 credits, ART 102A Figure Drawing 3 credits, ART 102B 3-D Design 3 credits, ART 204 Color Foundations 3 credits, ART 319 History of Western Art I 3 credits, ART 320 History of Western Art II 3 credits, ART 364A Figure Studies 3 credits, ART 487 Professional Practices in Art 3 credits; Ceramics Electives - choose 12 credits from the following - ART 141 Basic Hand building 3 credits, ART 241 Basic Potter’s Whee 3 credits, ART 342 (A,B, C, ….) Directed Studies in Ceramics 3 - 18 credits; Art History Electives - 3 credits - ART 400 Ancient Greek Art 3 credits, ART 408 Medieval Monuments 3 credits, ART 409 Renaissance Art 3 credits, ART 410 Art in the Age of Rembrandt 3 credits, ART 411 19 th-Century European Art 3 credits, ART 415 History of Graphic Design 3 credits, ART 417 20 th-Century Art 3 credits, ART 423 Contemporary Art 3 credits, PHO 420 History of Art: Photography 3 credits, PHO 421Hist. of Photo., Film and Art 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art - Painting / Drawing | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program in painting and/or drawing provides extensive exposure to the various 2-dimensional visual arts media. The emphasis is upon the development of creativity, self-expression and technical skills in these media. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Studio Art Core: 24 credits - ART 101A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B 2-D Design 3 credits, ART 102B 3-D Design 3 credits, ART 204 Color Foundations 3 credits, ART 319 History of Western Art I 3 credits, ART 320 History of Western Art II 3 credits, ART 364A Figure Studies 3 credits, ART 487 Professional Practices in Art 3; Painting/Drawing Electives - choose 12 credits from the following - ART 260 Basic Painting 3 credits, ART 265 Basic Painting II 3 credits, ART 359 Independent Study 3 credits, ART 364(B, C, D….) - Figure Studies 3 - 15 credits, ART 365(A,B, C, ….) Directed Studies in Painting and/or Drawing 3 - 18 credits, ART 450(A,B, C, ….) Collage 3 - 15 credits; Art History Electives: choose 3 credits from the following - ART 400 Ancient Greek Art 3 credits, ART 408 Medieval Monuments 3 credits, ART 409 Renaissance Art 3 credits, ART 410 Art in the Age of Rembrandt 3 credits, ART 411 19th-Century European Art 3 credits, ART 415 History of Graphic Design 3 credits, ART 417 20 th-Century Art 3 credits, ART 423 Contemporary Art 3 credits, PHO 420 History of Art: Photography 3, PHO 421 Hist. of Photo., Film and Art 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Arts in Theology | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | This program will enable students to engage in the ongoing search for meaning and truth by acquiring a foundation in Christian thought and practice. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 103 World Religions: Spiritual Experiences of Humankind (3), 108 Introduction to the Old Testament (3), 191 Judeo-Christian Doctrine (3), 201 Theology: Faith, Beliefs and Traditions (3), 231 Judaism (3), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Comparative Religion (3), 304 Theology Through Film (3), 306 Dynamics of Faith, Beliefs and Theology (3), 307 Christology (3), 309 The Old Testament and Its Interpreters (3), 311 Sexuality, Sex and Morality (3), 312 Freedom and Virtue (3), 315 Christian Spirituality and Prayer (3), 321 The New Testament as Christian Scripture (3), 324 The Catholic Imagination in Film (3), 325 Feminist Perspectives in Ethics (3), 327 Peace and Justice (3), 330 Approaches to God (3), 331 Christianity and Culture (3), 333 Christian Understanding of God (3), 334 History of Christianity I (3), 335 History of Christianity II (3), 338 The Church (3), 342 Salvation, Liberation and Politics (3), 344 Sacraments (3), 345 Liturgy, Feasts and Devotions (3), 353 Bioethics, 354 Music in Workshop (3), 360 Women in the Church (3), 362 Women in the New Testament (3), 365 Creation and Apocalypse (3), 370 Protestantism (3), 372 Marriage and Family (3), 431 Jesus in the Gospels (3), 432 Prophetic and Wisdom Writings (3), 438 Catholic Social Teaching (3), 487 Theology Seminar (3), 495 Topics in Biblical Hermeneutics and Theology (3), 496 Topics in Historical and Comparative Theology (3), 497 Topics in Systematic and Sacramental Theology (3), 498 Topics in Moral and Spiritual Theology (3), 499 Independent Study (3-12). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3469 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) in Theatre - Acting Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program offers courses for individuals pursuing work in the theatre, musical theatre, and film or television. With a foundation in both contemporary acting approaches and methodologies, and an overview of historical acting styles, this program combines academic training with performance opportunities in both Mainstage and laboratory theatre environments. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Theatre Core: 17 credits - TH 100 Intro to Theatre 3 credits, TH 105 Intro to Tech. Theatre (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 111 Technical Theatre Lab I 1 credit, TH 155 Acting I: Fundamentals 3 credits, TH 439 Theatre History I 3 credits, TH 440 Theatre History II 3 credits, TH 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Acting Specialization Electives: minimum 43 credits - TH 156 Voice and Movement 3 credits, TH 180 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 1 credit, TH 255 Acting 2: Role Analysis 3 credits, TH 256 Acting 3: Scene Study 3 credits, TH 300 Special Topics 3 credits, TH 323 Play Directing 3 credits, TH 355 Acting 4: Period Styles 3 credits, TH 295 Principles of Cost. and Makeup 3 credits, TH 380 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 389 Critical Reading (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 441 Contemporary Theatre 3 credits, TH 455 Acting 5: Camera 3 credits, TH 459 Independent Study 3 credits, TH 499 Internship 3 credits, DAN Elective 3 credits, MUS Elective 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) in Theatre - Dance Theatre Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program is designed for students with a performance interest in both Theater and Dance. The Dance Theatre Production specialization electives provide a diverse selection of dance courses to better prepare students interested in a Theater Dance Production career. In addition to having performance possibilities in annual dance concerts and involvement in University theatrical productions, students may participate in dance workshops and student choreography. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Theatre Core: 17 credits - TH 100 Intro to Theatre 3 credits, TH 105 Intro to Tech. Theatre (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 111 Technical Theatre Lab I 1 credit, TH 155 Acting I: Fundamentals 3 credits, TH 439 Theatre History I 3 credits, TH 440 Theatre History II 3 credits, TH 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Dance Specialization Electives: minimum 43 credits - DAN 104 Dance Appreciation 3 credits, DAN 105 Ballet I 2 credits, DAN 108 Theatrical Movement 1 credit, DAN 109 Modern Dance I 2 credits, DAN 110 Modern/Jazz Dance I 2 credits, DAN 119 Latin Dance I 2 credits, DAN 180 Repertory Ensemble (A, B, C…) 1 credit, DAN 199 Special Topics in Dance 2 credits, DAN 205 Ballet II 2 credits, DAN 209 Modern Dance II 2 credits, DAN 210 Modern/Jazz Dance II 2 credits, DAN 219 Latin Dance II 2 credits, DAN 220 Dance Composition/ Choreography I 2 credits, DAN 300 Special Topics in Dance 2 credits, DAN 305 Ballet III (A, B, C…) 2 credits, DAN 309 Modern Dance III 2 credits, DAN 310 Modern Jazz III 2 credits, DAN 320 Dance Composition/ Choreography II 2 credits, DAN 325 Dances of African Diaspora 3 credits, DAN 380 Repertory Ensemble (A, B, C) 1 credit, DAN 410 Dance Production 3 credits, DAN 429 History and Philosophy of Dance 3 credits, TH 180 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 1 credit, TH 380 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 459 Independent Study 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) in Theatre - Technical Theatre Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program allows students to combine technical elective courses in order to concentrate on a variety of theater design and technology areas. Through involvement in University productions, students can expect significant hands-on production experience directly related to the theory taught in Technical Theatre and related courses. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Theatre Core: 17 credits - TH 100 Intro to Theatre 3 credits, TH 105 Intro to Tech. Theatre (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 111 Technical Theatre Lab I 1 credit, TH 155 Acting I: Fundamentals 3 credits, TH 439 Theatre History I 3 credits, TH 440 Theatre History II 3 credits, TH 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit, Technical Specialization Electives: minimum 43 credits - TH 180 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…), TH 185 Stagecraft 3 credits, TH 208 Principles of Light and Sound 3 credits, TH 211 Technical Theatre, Lab II (A, B, C…) 1 credit, TH 295 Principals of Costume and Makeup 3 credits, TH 300 Special Topics 3 credits, TH 311 Technical Theatre Lab III (A, B, C…) 1 credit, TH 380 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 389 Critical Reading (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 391 Lighting Design 3 credits, TH 392 Scene Design 3 credits, TH 441 Contemporary Theatre 3 credits, TH 459 Independent Study, TH 499 Internship 3 credits, ART 101A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B 2-D Design 3 credits, ART 102A Figure Drawing 3 credits, ART 319 Art History I 3 credits, ART 320 Art History II 3 credits, ART 411 20th Century Art 3 credits, ART 415 History of Graphic Design 3 credits, PHO 305 Computer Imaging I 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) in Theatre - Theatre Publicity Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program combines studies in Theatre, Photography, Graphic Design, and related courses. This specialization is for students pursuing experience and involvement in theatre productions, the photographing of actors and sets, as well as the creation of photo composites, brochures, playbills, and posters as theatre publicity. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Theatre Core: 17 credits - TH 100 Intro to Theatre 3 credits, TH 105 Intro to Tech. Theatre (A, B, C…) 3 credits, TH 111 Technical Theatre Lab I 1 credit, TH 155 Acting I: Fundamentals 3 credits, TH 439 Theatre History I 3 credits, TH 440 Theatre History II 3 credits, TH 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Publicity Specialization Electives: minimum 43 credits - PHO 203 Basic Photography 3 credits, PHO 303 Intermediate Photography 3 credits, PHO 305 Computer Imaging I 3 credits, PHO 401 Color Photography 3 credits, PHO 411 Lighting Techniques 3 credits, PHO 404 Advanced Photography 3 credits, PHO 412 Studio Lighting 3 credits, ART 101 A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B 2-Dimensional Design 3 credits, ART 205 Graphic Design I 3 credits, ART 305 Graphic Design II 3 credits, ART 405 Graphic Design III 3 credits, TH 180 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C) 1 credit, TH 380 Theatre Ensemble (A, B, C) 3 credits, TH 459 Independent Study 3 credits, TH 499 Internship 3 credits, ADV 301 Principles of Advertising 3 credits, MKT 306 Marketing Concepts and Appl. 3 credits, MKT 386 Sales Promotion, Advertising 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Photography - Creative Photography | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | Photography emphasizes originality, self-expression, creative thinking and experimentation within the discipline of photography. This focuses on creative image making; while also emphasizing technical skills, which can be applied in the commercial field. This program offers the largest and most diversified menu of Photography Electives, permitting students to customize their photographic curriculum. This program is for the true individualist: who do their own thing, and combine their interests to develop a program that is right for them. The majority of the students choose this track. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Photography Core (30 credits): 2-D Design, Basic Photography, Intermediate Photography, Computer Imaging I, Color Photography or Color Processes, Lighting Techniques or Studio Lighting, Senior Seminar, Art History; Photography Electives (30 credits): Pinhole Photography, Photojournalism, Color Photography, Color Processes, Advanced Photography, Advanced Digital Imaging, Advanced Computer Imaging, View Camera, Large Format Photography, Lighting Techniques, Studio Lighting, Influences of the Masters, Manipulative Photography, Digital Fine Art Printing, History of Photography, Film and Art, Fine Art Digital Portfolio, The Art of Web Design, Underwater Photography, Television Production, Advanced Television Production, Photography Practicum I, Photography Practicum II, Independent Study, Special Topics, Internship, Other Art courses. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio Art - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program provides exposure to the various materials and techniques of the ceramic medium. The emphasis is upon the development of creativity, self-expression and technical skills in working with clay. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Studio Art Core: 24 credits - ART 101A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B 2-D Design 3 credits 3 credits, ART 102A Figure Drawing 3 credits, ART 102B 3-D Design 3 credits, ART 204 Color Foundations 3 credits, ART 319 History of Western Art I 3 credits, ART 320 History of Western Art II 3 credits, ART 364A Figure Studies 3 credits, ART 487 Professional Practices in Art 3 credits; Ceramics Electives - 18 credits - ART 141 Basic Hand building 3 credits, ART 241 Basic Potter’s Whee 3 creditsl, ART 342 (A,B, C, ….) Directed Studies in Ceramics 3 - 18 credits; Art History Electives - 6 credits - ART 400 Ancient Greek Art 3 credits, ART 408 Medieval Monuments 3 credits, ART 409 Renaissance Art 3 credits, ART 410 Art in the Age of Rembrandt 3 credits, ART 411 19 th -Century European Art 3 credits, ART 415 History of Graphic Design 3 credits, ART 417 20 th -Century Art 3 credits, ART 423 Contemporary Art 3 credits, PHO 420 History of Art: Photography 3 credits, PHO 421Hist. of Photo., Film and Art 3 credits; Studio Art Electives: 15 credits - Any studio ART course and up to 6 crs. of PHO studio courses may be selected. Art history courses or PHO 420 and 421 may not be used as studio art electives. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio Art - Graphic Design | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program prepares students to pursue design careers in areas such as marketing, publishing and advertising. This program offers studies in typography, corporate identification, layout and production techniques, commercial design and professional standards. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Graphic Design Core: 21 credits - RT 101A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B2-D Design 3 credits, ART 204 Color Foundations 3 credits, ART 319 History of Western Art I 3 credits, ART 320 History of Western Art II 3 credits, ART 364A Figure Studies 3 credits, ART 487 Professional Practices in Ar 3 credits; Graphic Design Specialization: 27 credits - ART 205 Graphic Design Foundations 3 credits, ART 305 Collateral Design 3 credits, ART 325, Visual Communications 3 credits, ART 350 Packaging Design 3 credits, ART 405 Design Methodology 3 credits, ART 415 History of Graphic Design 3 credits, ART 425 Typography 3 credits, ART 445 Advertising Design and Production 3 credits, ADV 301 Principles of Advertising 3 credits; Studio Art Electives 9 credits - Any studio Art course and up to 6 crs. of PHO studio courses may be selected. Art history courses or PHO 420 and 421 may not be used as electives; Art History Elective: 3 Credits - Any Art History course except ART 319, 320 and 415. This may include PHO 420 or 421. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio Art - Painting / Drawing | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program in painting and/or drawing provides extensive exposure to the various 2-dimensional visual arts media. The emphasis is upon the development of creativity, self-expression and technical skills in these media. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Studio Art Core: 24 credits - ART 101A Basic Drawing 3 credits, ART 101B 2-D Design 3 credits, ART 102B 3-D Design 3 credits, ART 204 Color Foundations 3 credits, ART 319 History of Western Art I 3 credits, ART 320 History of Western Art II 3 credits, ART 364A Figure Studies 3 credits, ART 487 Professional Practices in Art 3 credits; Painting/Drawing Electives - 18 credits - ART 260 Basic Painting 3 credits, ART 265 Basic Painting II 3 credits, ART 359 Independent Study 3 credits, ART 364(B, C, D….) - Figure Studies 3 - 15 credits, ART 365(A,B, C, ….) Directed Studies in Painting and/or Drawing 3 - 18 credits, ART 450(A,B, C, ….) Collage 3 - 15 credits; Art History Electives: 6 credits - ART 400 Ancient Greek Art 3 credits, ART 408 Medieval Monuments 3 credits, ART 409 Renaissance Art 3 credits, ART 410 Art in the Age of Rembrandt 3 credits, ART 411 19th-Century European Art 3 credits, ART 415 History of Graphic Design 3 credits, ART 417 20 th-Century Art 3 credits, ART 423 Contemporary Art 3 credits, PHO 420 History of Art: Photography 3, PHO 421 Hist. of Photo., Film and Art 3 credits; Studio Art Electives: 12 credits - Any studio ART course and up to 6 crs. of PHO studio courses may be selected. Art history courses or PHO 420 and 421 may not be used as studio art electives. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Music (B.M.) in Music - Instrumental Performance Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program emphasizes study of a primary instrument, with the option of a secondary instrument: piano, brass, guitar, strings, percussion, or woodwinds. Individualized attention by the Music faculty, frequent opportunities for formal and informal student performances and forums on and off campus, ensembles, and quality private applied lessons characterize this nurturing specialization. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Music Core: 27 credits - MUS 109 Theory I 3 credits, MUS 110 Theory II 3 credits, MUS 186 Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 135-288 Applied Music 8 credits, MUS 327 History: Baroque and Classical 3 credits, MUS 328 History: Romantic Music 3 credits, MUS 386 Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Instrumental Performance Requirements: 14 credits - Instrumental Performance Requirements; MUS 335 Applied Music 2 credits, MUS 338 Applied Music 2 credits, MUS 386 Ensemble 4 credits, MUS 384 Conducting I 2 credits, MUS 487 Applied Music 2 credits, MUS 490 Applied Music 2 credits; Instrumental Performance Electives: 24 credits - MUS 192 Performance Workshop 2 credits, MUS 205 Piano Sight Reading 1 credit, MUS 211 Theory III 3 credits, MUS 212 Theory IV 3 credits, MUS 223 Piano Literature I 1 credit, MUS 309 Vocal Literature I 1 credit, MUS 302 Accompaniment 1 credit, MUS 329 History: Twentieth Century 3 credits, MUS 340 Sightsinging/Eartraining 1 credit, MUS 375 Piano Pedagogy 1 credit, MUS 380 Opera Workshop 1 credit, MUS 385 Conducting II 2 credits, MUS 386 Ensemble 1-3 credits , MUS 392 Performance Workshop 3-9 credits, MUS 420 Vocal Interpretation 1 credit, MUS 422 Instrumental Interpretation 1 credit, MUS 488 Vocal Pedagogy 1 credit. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Music (B.M.) in Music - Sacred Music Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program is designed for the development of sacred music leadership skills through applied lessons, directed coursework, ensemble, and Church/Synagogue experience while acquiring a foundation in Judeo-Christian thought and practice through biblical, history, comparative, systematic, liturgical, moral and spiritual theology. It will assist students pursuing future graduate studies in Music, Theology, or Sacred Music; provide background for students to lead their music ministry in various religious settings, and elementary and secondary schools, as well as other professional education. | Students to be admitted should have a score of at least 79 of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or at least a 213 on the computer-based TOEFL. Undergraduate applicants whose TOEFL score is between 61 and 78 (173-212 on the computer-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture Program (TLC) and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicants who score less than 61 (173 on the computer-based test) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. Consideration may be given to waiving the TOEFL requirement for international applicants who meet one of the following situations: If the international freshman applicant presents a composite SAT or ACT test score (English version) which meets the admission standard and also reflects a verbal score that demonstrates English proficiency. If the international transfer applicant has attended an accredited college/university in the USA, has completed at least 24 hours of transferable degree credits, and is in good standing at the last institution attended. | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Music Core: 27 credits - MUS 109 Theory I 3 credits, MUS 110 Theory II 3 credits, MUS 186 Chamber Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 135 - 288 Applied Music 8 credits, MUS 327 History: Baroque and Classical 3 credits, MUS 328 History: Romantic Music 3 credits, MUS 386 Chamber Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Sacred Music Requirements: 10 credits - MUS 350 History: Sacred Music Literature 3 credits, MUS 384 Conducting I 2 credits, MUS 385 Conducting II 2 credits, MUS 386 Chamber Ensemble 3 credits; Theology Co-requisites 18 credits - THE 201 Theology: Faith, Beliefs and Traditions 3 credits, THE 309 Old Testament and its Interpreters 3 credits, THE 321 The New Testament as Christian Scripture 3 credits, THE 344 Sacraments 3 credits, THE 345 Liturgy 3 credits, Feasts and Devotions 3 credits, THE 354 Worship in Music 3 credits; Sacred Music Electives: 14 credits - MUS 192 Performance Workshop 3 credits, MUS 211 Theory III 3 credits, MUS 212 Theory IV 3 credits, MUS 386 Chamber Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 392 Performance Workshop 3 credits, MUS 335-487 Applied Music 2-6 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Music (B.M.) in Music - Voice, Opera and Musical Theatre Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program is designed for music students with a combined interest in voice and vocal stage performances with an emphasis on opera, art song, choral repertoire, and musical theatre. Opera and Musical Theatre scenes programs are performed each semester, and vocal recitals are presented on a regular basis throughout each academic year. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Music Core: 27 credits - MUS 109 Theory I 3 credits, MUS 110 Theory II 3 credits, MUS 186 Chamber Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 135 - 288 Applied Music 8 credits, MUS 327 History: Baroque and Classical 3 credits, MUS 328 History: Romantic Music 3 credits, MUS 386 Chamber Ensemble 3 credits, MUS 497 Senior Seminar 1 credit; Voice, Opera and Musical Theatre Requirements: 32 credits - MUS 192 Performance Workshop 3 credits, MUS 335 Applied Music (voice) 2 credits, MUS 338 Applied Music (voice) 2 credits, MUS 386 Chamber Ensemble 9 credits, MUS 392 Performance Workshop 12 credits, MUS 487 Applied Music (voice) 2 credits, MUS 490 Applied Music (voice) 2 credits; Voice, Opera and Musical Theatre Electives: 10 credits - MUS 180 Opera Workshop 1 credit, MUS 200 Diction for Singers 1 credit, MUS 211Theory III 3 credits , MUS 212Theory IV 3 credits, MUS 324 Musical Theatre Styles I 3 credits, MUS 340 Sightsinging/Eartraining 1 credit, MUS 380 Opera Workshop 1-3 credits, MUS 384 Conducting I 2 credits, MUS 385 Conducting II 2 credits, MUS 392 Performance Workshop 3-6 credits, MUS 420 Vocal Interpretation 1 credit, MUS 488 Vocal Pedagogy 2 credits, TH 155 Acting I 3 credits, TH 255 Acting II 3 credits, DAN 1-6 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Professional Studies - Network and Systems Engineering Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program focuses on how to effectively plan, implement, administer, and support various size networks in the enterprise. This specialization provides the groundwork for professionals to pursue highly recognized industry certification. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements: 45 credits - Theology and Philosophy 9 credits, Written and Oral Communication 9 credits, Natural Sciences and Mathematics 9 credits, Social and Behavioral Sciences 9 credits, Humanities and Arts 9 credits; Prerequisite Courses: 6 credits - IT 190 Microcomputer Operating Systems, IT 310 Telecommunications and Computer Networks; Network and Systems Engineering Specialization: 21 credits - NSE 210 Network Administration, NSE 305 Advanced PC Hardware and Networking, NSE 310 Client Operating System, NSE 320 Server Operating System, NSE 405 Managing a Microsoft Network, IT 499 Integrated Capstone Project; Current List of Approved NSE Electives: NSE 300 Special Topics, NSE 330 Working with Cisco LAN Hardware, NSE 415 Linux Operating System, NSE 425 Advanced Directory Services, NSE 445 Advanced Network Services. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Professional Studies - Parks and Recreation | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is for individuals who are interested in exposure to the history, theory and practice of park and recreation management. Classes are structured to teach administrative, leadership and professional principles and skills necessary for success in the park and recreation field. This program prepares students for career opportunities in the recreational industry. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Degree Requirements: General Education (Distribution) 45 credits; Specialization Courses (24 credits): SES 260 Leisure Planning and Programming, SES 262 Recreational Leadership, SES 292 Commercial Recreation SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Recreation and Sport, SES 380 Facility Design and Event Management, SES 390 Natural Resource Recreation Management, SES 444 Financial Applications to Sport, SES 485 Introduction to Law in Sport and Exercise Sciences. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Professional Studies - Software Engineering Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program focuses on web programming and software development. Students develop the skills and knowledge necessary for the research and development of information systems. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements: 45 credits- Theology and Philosophy 9 credits, Written and Oral Communication 9 credits, Natural Sciences and Mathematics 9 credits, Social and Behavioral Sciences 9 credits, Humanities and Arts 9 credits; Prerequisite courses: 3 credits - IT 200 Foundations of Information Technology; Software Engineering Specialization: 21 credits - CS 372 Software Engineering, IT 338 Web Design, authoring and Publishing, CS 426 Databases, CS 407 Database Programming and Administration, CS 438 Web Programming and Administration, IT 499 Integrated Capstone Project, Approved 3-credit upper level SE elective; Current List of Approved SE electives: CS 301 Computer Programming, CS 340 Java Programming for the Web. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Professional Studies Degree with a Legal Studies Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is designed to provide a broad background in fundamental legal studies related to work in law firms, financial institutions, insurance companies, governmental agencies or related entities. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include PLA 301 Law and the Legal System, PLA 310 Legal Research, PLA 315 Legal Writing, PLA 320 Civil Litigation, PLA 330 Alternative Dispute Resolution, PLA 405 Administrative Law and Process, PLA 430 Criminal Law Practice, PLA 440 Contracts. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Professional Studies in Administration Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is designed to provide students with the administrative and leadership competencies required by all organizations, whether private, public, or non-profit, in order to be successful and achieve their goals. Course offerings are intended to address contemporary organizational theory and practice with an emphasis on application to the modern workplace. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 18 credits - ADM 303 Administrative Theory and Practice, ADM 306 Services Marketing, ADM 320 Financial Administration, ADM 353 Leadership Development, ADM 412 Quality and Productivity, ADM 464 Strategic Human Resource Administration, ADM 499 Administrative Capstone Course; Additional Electives: 6 credits - ADM (any ADM prefix course), PUB (any PUB prefix course), HSA (any HSA prefix course), IT (190, 200, 310, 338, 320, 400, 403, 450, 420), CS (301, 426, 372, 407), PLA (300, 339, 343, 440), NSE 210. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Professional Studies with Health Services Administration Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is designed to provide a broad view of today's health care system and to prepare graduates for entry and middle management positions in such areas as hospitals, medical or dental clinics, group medical practices, managed care organizations, long-term care facilities, insurance companies, home health agencies, and government agencies. The curriculum emphasizes management skills for use in any health care setting. The Health Services specialization is an excellent career pathway for persons licensed in clinical health and medical care professions but lacking an undergraduate degree. Additionally, the specialization prepares students for graduate studies in health care administration. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 15 credits - HSA 319 Health Care Finance, HSA 339 Health Law, HSA 410 Management in Health Care, HSA 425 Public and Community Health, HSA 475 Issues in Health Care, HSA 499 Capstone in Health Services Administration; Specialization Electives: 6 credits - HSA 301 The Health Care System, HSA 425 Public and Community Health, HSA 441 Health Care for the Elderly, HSA 459 Independent Study in Health Care, ADM Any ADM prefix course, PSY 329 Understanding and Coping with Stress, PSY 331 Counseling Techniques for Managers, PSY 382 Developmental Psychology, PSY 410 Group Dynamics and Decision-Making, PSY 417 Psychology of Aging, PSY 423 Industrial Psychology, PUB 404 Concepts and Issues in Public Planning, PUB 406 Human Resources in the Public Sector, PUB 409 Contemporary Issues in Public Safety. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Public Administration (BPA) | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is the most acceptable undergraduate degree for professional employment in general public administration and is highly desirable for most of the special applications such as police, fire and planning. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 18 credits - POS 303 Public Policy and Administration, PUB 402 Values and Ethics in Public Administration, PUB 403 Public Budgeting and Finance, PUB 404 Concepts and Issues in Public Planning, PUB 406 Human Resources in the Public Sector, PUB 407 Productivity Improvements in the Public Sector, PUB 409 Contemporary Issues in Public Safety, PUB 410 Methods and Techniques in Public Administration; Elective courses: PUB 405 Administrative Law and Process, PUB 407 Productivity Improvements in the Public Sector, PUB 408 Public Administration and the Political Process, PUB 409 Contemporary Issues in Public Safety, ADM 301 Labor Relations, ADM 303 Administrative Theory and Practice, ADM 353 Leadership Development, ADM 361 Negotiation: Theory and Practice, ADM 412 Quality and Productivity, ADM 464 Strategic Human Resources Administration, POS 302 Comparative State and Local Government; Additional Requirements: 21 credits - Twenty-one additional credit hours shall be earned in public administration, emergency medical training, management, business, political science, criminal justice, fire science, HSA 410, HSA 425 or classes approved by the program director in health service administration, social work, or sociology or portfolio credits attributable to any of the disciplines included in this paragraph. These twenty-one hours may be transferred from a regionally accredited institution, or from General Administration and Social Sciences discipline-specific portfolio credits and may be lower-level credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science (BS) and Master of Science (MS) in Athletic Training | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | The BS to MS degree in Athletic Training is a 165 semester-hour program that may be completed in five years with the choice of either a thesis or the successful completion of a comprehensive examination and internship (11 semesters). The program requires 132 undergraduate semester hours and 30 graduate semester hours. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Co-requisites: 52 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro. to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Literature and Composition (3), ENG 112 OR 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 OR COM 104 OR TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 16 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), BIO 240/ 240L Intro. to Human Physiology and Laboratory (5), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics (3), PHY 151/ 151L Introductory Physics and Laboratory (4); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), SOC 201 Introduction to Sociology (3), BEH/SOC Elective (3); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours - From Approved Distribution List (9); SES Core Requirements: 25 credit-hours - SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 212/ 212L Emergency Response and Laboratory (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 361/ 361L Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (4), SES 465 Administration of Programs and Facilities (3), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3); Athletic Training Major Requirements: 55 credit-hours - CAT 180 Intro to Computers (3), SES 181 A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills I (1), SES 220/ 220L Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries and Laboratory (4), SES 281 A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills II (1), SES 316/ 316L Therapeutic Modalities and Laboratory (4), SES 318/ 318L Therapeutic Exercise and Laboratory (4), SES 320/ 320L Kinesiology and Laboratory (4), SES 321/ 321L Advanced Upper Extremity Assessment of Athletic Injuries and Laboratory (4), SES 322/ 322L Advanced Lower Extremity Assessment of Athletic Injuries and Laboratory (4), SES 330 Nutrition for Physical Performance (3), SES 381A A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills II Pt. 1 (2), SES 381B A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills II Pt. 2 (2), SES 481A A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills III Pt. 1 (2), SES 481B A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills III Pt. 2 (2), SES 487 Senior Seminar in Athletic Training (3), SES 499A A.T. Internship - I (6), SES 499B A.T. Internship - II (6). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science (BS) and Master of Science (MS) in Exercise Science | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This five-year Exercise Science program offers two tracks: physiology of sport performance and clinical exercise physiology. The program is a 151 credit-hour program requiring 115 undergraduate credit-hours and 36 graduate credit-hours. Upon successful completion of the program, students will have earned the Bachelor of Science degree in Exercise Science and Master of Science degree in Movement Science with a Specialization in Exercise Science. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Co-requisites: 56 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro. to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Literature and Composition (3), ENG 112 OR 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 OR COM 104 OR TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 20 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), BIO 240/ 240L Intro. to Human Physiology and Laboratory (5), CHE 152 / 152L Intro. to Organic and Biological Chemistry and Laboratory (4) MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics (3); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 6 credit hours from university approved distribution list (6); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours - 9 credit hours from university approved distribution list (9); SES Core Requirements: 24 credit-hours - SES 112/ 112L CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer and Laboratory (2), SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 361 / 361L Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (4), SES 465 Administration of Programs and Facilities (3), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3); Exercise Science Major Undergraduate Requirements: 32 Credit hours - CS 180 Intro to Computers (3), SES 220 Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries (3), SES 320 / 320L Kinesiology and Laboratory (4), SES 330 Nutrition for Physical Performance (3), SES 370 / 370L Fitness Assessment and Exercise Prescription and Laboratory (4), SES 441 / 441L Cardiac Rehabilitation and Laboratory (4), SES 463 Applied Physiology of Resistance Training (3), SES 486 Practicum (2), SES 499 Internship (6); Undergraduate Course Electives: 3 - SES 326 Principles of Motor Learning (3), SES 469 Directed Readings in Exercise Science (3), SES 479 Directed Research in Exercise Science (3), SES 485 Introduction to Law in Sport and Exercise Science (3), ACC 201 Financial Accounting (3), ECO 201 Intro Macroeconomics (3); Exercise Science Graduate Requirements: 27-30 credit-hours - SES 520 Biomechanics (3), Or SES 546 Qualitative Analysis in Biomechanics (3), SES 561 / 561L Adv Exercise Physiology and Lab (4), SES 578 ECG Interpretation and Exercise Testing (2), SES 616 Research Methodology (3), SES 618 Fitness and Wellness Promotion (3), SES 672 Exercise and Energy Metabolism (3), SES 686 Advanced Practicum (3); Clinical (6 hours required): SES 679 Internship (6); Research (9 hours required): SES 689 Thesis (6), SES 600 Advanced Studies in Applied Statistics (3); Graduate Courses Electives: 6-9 Credits - Recommended Courses: SES 551 Fitness Assessment and Program Development (3), SES 537 Sports Psychology (3), SES 585 The Law in Sport and Exercise Science (3), SES 600 Advanced Studies in Exercise Science (3), SES 625 Motor Learning and Control (3), SES 627 Laboratory Instrumentation in Biomechanics (3), SES 660 Performance Enhancement Psychology (3), SES 662 Exercise Psychology (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science (BS) in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences | This program provides outstanding preparation for students who plan further graduate work in chemistry or who plan to continue their education in medicine, dentistry, or pharmacy. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses: CHE 111/111L General Chemistry I 4, CHE 112/112L General Chemistry II 4, CHE 343/343L Organic Chemistry I 4, CHE 344/344L Organic Chemistry II 4, PHY 201/201L or 211/211L Physics I 4, PHY 202/202L or 212/212L Physics II 4, MAT 211 Calculus I 4; Subject courses: CHE 321 Quantitative Analysis 4, CHE 356 Physical Chemistry I 3, CHE 357 Physical Chemistry II 3, CHE 366 Physical Chemistry Lab 2, CHE 421 Instrumental Analysis 4, CHE 490 Senior Seminar 2, CHE electives above 300 (excluding CHE 300) 5, MAT 212 Calculus II 4. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3433 | The department offers two undergraduate degrees; the BS in Chemistry and the BS in Chemistry with a specialization in Biochemistry. It also offer the necessary courses for students interested in pursuing professional degrees such as pre-medical, pre-dental, pre-pharmacy and pre-veterinary. The department offer outstanding research opportunities and hands-on experience with instrumentation for our students. These activities make Barry University’s degree program unique. The Department of Physical Sciences includes community service as part of the liberal arts educational experience. The department houses many state-of-the-art instruments and these are incorporated throughout the undergraduate curriculum beginning in first semester general chemistry. The complexity and opportunity to use a variety of modern pieces of instrumentation increase throughout our curriculum. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science (BS) in Chemistry - Biochemistry Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences | This program provides students with a strong background and preparation in current practices in biochemical processes. This training prepares students for graduate study in biochemistry, pre-professional fields such as pre-medicine, pre-dental, and pre-veterinary as well as for employment in both the pharmaceutical and biotechnology sectors and chemistry teaching. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses: CHE 111/111L General Chemistry I 4, CHE 112/112L General Chemistry II 4, CHE 343/343L Organic Chemistry I 4, CHE 344/344L Organic Chemistry II 4, PHY 201/201L or 211/211L Physics I 4I, PHY 202/202L or 212/212L Physics II 4, MAT 211 Calculus I 4; Subject courses: CHE 321 Quantitative Analysis 4, CHE 352/352L Biochemistry I with lab 4, CHE 353 Biochemistry II 3, CHE 490 Senior Seminar 2, CHE electives above 300 (excluding CHE 300) 10, BIO 122 Biological Foundations 4, BIO 330 Cell Biology 4, BIO 341 Genetics 4, BIO 325 Microbiology 4, MAT 212 Calculus II 4. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3433 | The department offers two undergraduate degrees; the BS in Chemistry and the BS in Chemistry with a specialization in Biochemistry. It also offer the necessary courses for students interested in pursuing professional degrees such as pre-medical, pre-dental, pre-pharmacy and pre-veterinary. The department offer outstanding research opportunities and hands-on experience with instrumentation for our students. These activities make Barry University’s degree program unique. The Department of Physical Sciences includes community service as part of the liberal arts educational experience. The department houses many state-of-the-art instruments and these are incorporated throughout the undergraduate curriculum beginning in first semester general chemistry. The complexity and opportunity to use a variety of modern pieces of instrumentation increase throughout our curriculum. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science (BS) in Chemistry - Environmental Chemistry Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences | This program emphasizes chemistry in the study of environmental problems and includes relevant courses in biology, ethics, and social sciences. It prepares future graduates to become a part of the burgeoning environmental science field. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses: CHE 111/111L General Chemistry I 4, CHE 112/112L General Chemistry II 4, CHE 343/343L Organic Chemistry I 4, CHE 344/344L Organic Chemistry II 4, PHY 201/201L or 211/211L Physics I 4I, PHY 202/202L or 212/212L Physics II 4, MAT 211 Calculus I 4; Subject courses: CHE 209 Environmental Perspectives in Chemistry, CHE 421 Instrumental Analysis, MAT 356 Statistics for Science, BIO 112 Botany, BIO 116 Zoology, BIO 312 Ecology, BIO 305 Introduction to Oceanography, BIO 310 Marine Biology, BIO 325 Microbiology. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3433 | The department offers two undergraduate degrees; the BS in Chemistry and the BS in Chemistry with a specialization in Biochemistry. It also offer the necessary courses for students interested in pursuing professional degrees such as pre-medical, pre-dental, pre-pharmacy and pre-veterinary. The department offer outstanding research opportunities and hands-on experience with instrumentation for our students. These activities make Barry University’s degree program unique. The Department of Physical Sciences includes community service as part of the liberal arts educational experience. The department houses many state-of-the-art instruments and these are incorporated throughout the undergraduate curriculum beginning in first semester general chemistry. The complexity and opportunity to use a variety of modern pieces of instrumentation increase throughout our curriculum. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science (BS) in Chemistry - Pre-Dental, Pre-Medical, Pre-Pharmacy, or Pre-Veterinary Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences | This program offers courses for students interested in pre-medical, pre-dental, pre-pharmacy, and pre-veterinary specializations. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses: CHE 111/111L General Chemistry I 4, CHE 112/112L General Chemistry II 4, CHE 343/343L Organic Chemistry I 4, CHE 344/344L Organic Chemistry II 4, PHY 201/201L or 211/211L Physics I 4I, PHY 202/202L or 212/212L Physics II 4, MAT 211 Calculus I 4. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physical Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3433 | The department offers two undergraduate degrees; the BS in Chemistry and the BS in Chemistry with a specialization in Biochemistry. It also offer the necessary courses for students interested in pursuing professional degrees such as pre-medical, pre-dental, pre-pharmacy and pre-veterinary. The department offer outstanding research opportunities and hands-on experience with instrumentation for our students. These activities make Barry University’s degree program unique. The Department of Physical Sciences includes community service as part of the liberal arts educational experience. The department houses many state-of-the-art instruments and these are incorporated throughout the undergraduate curriculum beginning in first semester general chemistry. The complexity and opportunity to use a variety of modern pieces of instrumentation increase throughout our curriculum. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science (BS) in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program prepares students to teach children in the K-6 age range. This option allows flexibility with placement, from kindergarten to grade six students. Students in this program want to work with K-6 children, to make a difference in their lives, and to give back to the community. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 151 Introduction to Education (3), 218 Educational Psychology (3), 320 Children’s Literature (3), 322 Methods of Teaching Reading (3), 362 Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School (3), 366 Teaching Social Studies in the Elementary School (3), 388 Teaching Science in the Elementary School (3), 407 Humanities in the Classroom (3), 414 Classroom Management (3), 417 Evaluation and Measurement in Education (3), 435 Teaching Language Arts - Reading and Writing across the Curriculum (3), 441 Elementary School Curriculum (3), 466 Reading Assessment and Instruction (3), 496 Accomplished Practices Seminar (1), 499 Internship (12), 400 Comprehensive ESOL Strategies (3), 415 ESOL Instruction and Assessment Practices (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science (BS) in Exceptional Student Education | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program prepares students to teach and work with students with varying disabilities such as specific learning disabilities (SLD), intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD), and emotional/behavioral disorders (EBD). With a degree in exceptional student education from Barry University students will be certified to teach students with special needs in grades K-12. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 151 Introduction to Education (3), 218 Educational Psychology (3), 320 Children's Literature (3), 322 Methods of Teaching Reading (3), 362 Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School (3), 366 Teaching Social Studies in the Elementary School (3), 376 Art in the Elementary School (3), 377 Teaching Music in the Elementary Schools (3), 388 Teaching Science in the Elementary School (3), 407 Humanities in the Classroom (3), 414 Classroom Management (3), 417 Evaluation and Measurement in Education (3), 435 Teaching Language Arts - Reading and Writing across the Curriculum (3), 441 Primary/Elementary School Curriculum (3), 466 Reading Assessment and Instruction (3), 496 Accomplished Practices Seminar (1), 499 Internship (12); Exceptional Student Education Prefix: ESE - 410 Educational Management of Students with Exceptionalities (3), 411 Speech Correction for Children (3), 414 Transition: Teaching Social, Personal, and Work Skills to Students with Exceptionalities (3), 420 Instructional Strategies for Students with Intellectual and Developmental Delays (3), 424 Instructional Strategies for Students with Learning Disabilities (3), 428 Instructional Strategies for Students with Emotional and/or Behavioral Disorders (3), 470 Introduction to Children with Exceptionalities (3), 483 Educational Assessment of the Exceptional Child (3), 490 Curriculum Design in Exceptional Student Education (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Administration | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is designed to provide students with the administrative and leadership competencies needed by all organizations, whether private, public or non-profit, in order to achieve their missions and achieve their goals. Course offerings focus on contemporary organizational theory and practice, with an emphasis on workplace applications. The program of study, while addressing a broad range of organizational principles and practices, also allows for individualized emphasis in areas such as Human Resource Administration, Health Services Administration, Public Administration, Information Technology, Legal Studies, Organizational Leadership or Network Administration. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 18 credits - ADM 303 Administrative Theory and Practice, ADM 306 Services Marketing, ADM 320 Financial Administration, ADM 353 Leadership Development, ADM 464 Strategic Human Resource Administration, ADM 499 Administrative Capstone Course; Additional Requirements: 12 credits - ADM (any ADM prefix course), PUB (any PUB prefix course), HSA (any HSA prefix course), IT (190, 200, 310, 338, 320, 400, 403, 450, 420), CS (301, 426, 372, 407), PLA (300, 339, 343, 440), NSE 210. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This program provides a comprehensive view of the field and prepare students for career opportunities in professions related to the care, prevention, assessment, and rehabilitation of sport-related injuries. The Athletic Training bachelor's also provides a strong foundation in the sciences for students interested in pursuing graduate study in athletic training or in the related fields of exercise physiology, occupational therapy, physical therapy, recreational therapy, and physician's assistant. It offers two specializations - Pre-Med Specialization and Pre-Physical Therapy Specialization. The Pre-Med Specialization program prepares students for the actual clinical skills required for the medical professions. The specialization provides the opportunity for students to add a deeper scientific foundation to their curriculum and enables them to develop skills in hands-on techniques, diagnosis, and treatment. The Pre-Physical Therapy Specialization program option provides with the Human Performance and Leisure Science core, the Athletic Training focus, and the pre-medicine introduction that will help you succeed in physical therapy school. The extensive hands-on experience that students receive throughout the program will prepare them for a clinical environment. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Co-requisites: 52 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro. to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Literature and Composition (3), ENG 112 OR 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 OR COM 104 OR TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 16 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), BIO 240/ 240L Intro. to Human Physiology and Laboratory (5), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics (3), PHY 151/ 151L Introductory Physics and Laboratory (4); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), SOC 201 Introduction to Sociology (3), BEH/SOC Elective (3); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours - From Approved Distribution List (9); SES Core Requirements: 25 credit-hours - SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 212/ 212L Emergency Response and Laboratory (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 361/ 361L Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (4), SES 465 Administration of Programs and Facilities (3), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3); Athletic Training Major Requirements: 55 credit-hours - CAT 180 Intro to Computers (3), SES 181 A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills I (1), SES 220/ 220L Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries and Laboratory (4), SES 281 A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills II (1), SES 316/ 316L Therapeutic Modalities and Laboratory (4), SES 318/ 318L Therapeutic Exercise and Laboratory (4), SES 320/ 320L Kinesiology and Laboratory (4), SES 321/ 321L Advanced Upper Extremity Assessment of Athletic Injuries and Laboratory (4), SES 322/ 322L Advanced Lower Extremity Assessment of Athletic Injuries and Laboratory (4), SES 330 Nutrition for Physical Performance (3), SES 381A A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills II Pt. 1 (2), SES 381B A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills II Pt. 2 (2), SES 481A A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills III Pt. 1 (2), SES 481B A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills III Pt. 2 (2), SES 487 Senior Seminar in Athletic Training (3), SES 499A A.T. Internship - I (6), SES 499B A.T. Internship - II (6). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Dental | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | The pre-dental program prepares students well for acceptance into dental school. The curriculum offers electives such as histology and embryology that are sometimes prerequisites for dental programs. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Medical | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program prepares students for admission to medical school through this highly competitive and structured program. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Optometry | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provides students with the opportunity to prepare for a number of career goals, including optometry. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Pharmacy | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provides students with the opportunity to prepare for a number of career goals, including pharmacy. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Physical Therapy | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is a health care profession that fosters optimal health and functional abilities for people with musculoskeletal, respiratory, cardiovascular, or neurologic dysfunctions. By applying scientific principles as a physical therapist assesses, prevents, and/or treats the existing problems through evaluation, patient education, establishment of goals, and the design of a plan that targets each problem. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Physician Assistant | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is designed to make students exceptionally competitive for professional school admission. It prepares for entrance into a physician assistant program at the graduate level. Physician assistants are board certified and licensed health care professionals who participate in the process of clinical decision making, diagnosis, and therapeutic management. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Podiatry | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provides students with the opportunity to prepare for a number of career goals, including podiatry. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Professional | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provide students with the opportunity to prepare for a number of career goals. In this section, the program concentrate on the pre-pharmacy, pre-podiatry, and pre-optometry specializations. Preparation for any of the specializations is very similar, which means the career alternatives include graduate study; teaching; medical, dental, optometry, pharmacy, podiatric, and veterinary school; medical technology; and various careers in research. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Biology - Pre-Veterinary | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences | This program prepares students to apply to veterinary schools throughout the country. Specialized classes such as animal behavior, comparative anatomy, physiology, histology, embryology, and parasitology are offered. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 101-102 General Biology I and II (1-6), 104 Biological Foundations (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 112 Botany (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 120 Biology Overview for Non-majors (3), 199 Special Topics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 216 Zoology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 225 Comparative Anatomy (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 230 Human Anatomy for Majors (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (Lecture 4, Lab 1), 253 Introductory Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 300 Special Topics (3), 303 Principles of Human Genetics (3), 305 Introduction to Oceanography (3), 308 Environmental Science (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 310 Marine Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 312 Ecology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 325 Microbiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 330 Cell Biology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 334 Human Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 335 Comparative Physiology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 341 Genetics (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 346 Parasitology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 352 Biochemistry (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 360 Dynamics of Restoration Ecology (3), 401 Biostatistics (3), 404 Epidemiology (3), 420 Marine Field Study (3-10), 427, 428 Biochemistry I, II (3), (3), 440 Evolution (3), 450 Histology (Lecture 3, Lab 1), 451 Embryology (3), 454 Virology (3), 455 Immunology (3), 465 Environmental Field Study (3-10), 471 Biotechnology Internship (9-12), 475 Seminar (3), 476 Teaching of Biology in the Secondary School (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (1-3), (1-3), (1-3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with a Major in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Andreas School of Business | This program prepares students for careers in auditing, corporate accounting, management consulting, governmental and not-for-profit organizations, and taxation. It equips the prospective business executive with tools for intelligent analysis, planning, control, and decision making. Graduates of this program have and will continue to be among the leaders of the profession and the worldwide business community. The accounting curriculum provides an excellent background for the student who wishes to pursue graduate work in business, public administration or law. Because this curriculum is highly structured and courses must be taken in a certain order, interested students should select this major as soon as possible in order to graduate within four years. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Business Core (39 credits) - BUS 181 Introduction to Business, ACC 201 Financial Accounting, ACC 202 Managerial Accounting, ECO 202 Principles Microeconomics, BUS 239 Business Law I, MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management, MGT 325 Business Processes and Supply Chain Management, MKT 306 Principles of Marketing, BUS 311 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 111 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 315 Introduction to Information Systems, FIN 319 Managerial Finance, BUS 366 International Business, BUS 498 Strategic Management; Business Electives (3 credits) - Accounting Major (24 credits) - ACC 335 Int. Acc. I, ACC 336 Int. Acc. II, ACC 337 Int. Acc. III, ACC 360 Cost Acc., ACC 362 Fed. Inc. Tax, ACC 400 Acc. Info Sys., ACC 435 Adv. Acc., ACC 437 Auditing; Distribution Requirements with co-requisites: Theology and Philosophy (9 credits) - THE, PHI 292 Ethics; Communication Arts - Oral and Written (9 credits) - ENG 111, ENG 112/210, SPE; Natural Science and Mathematics (9 credits) - MAT 108 Precal for Business, MAT 152 Elem Prob and Stats; Behavioral and Social Sciences (9 credits) - ECO 201 Principles of Macroeconomics(3 credits required from: ANT, CRM, PSY, SOC); Humanities and Arts (9 credits) ; Non-Business Electives (15 credits) - CS 180 Introduction to Computers, ORI 100 Freshman Seminar, ORI 300 Senior Transitions. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Andreas School of Business | Andreas School of Business, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3544 | The Schools mission is to deliver a high-quality education that enables their students to become successful business practitioners. They serve students primarily from South Florida, Latin America, and the Caribbean in a highly cosmopolitan, multicultural setting. They function as part of a Catholic, international University, a community of scholars committed to raising up all people in the tradition of the Dominican Order. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with a Major in Finance | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Andreas School of Business | This program prepares students for careers in corporate finance, investments, commercial and investment banking, international finance, government finance, insurance and real estate. The study of finance provides students with both the theoretical background and the analytical tools required to make effective, value creating business decisions. As businesses operate in increasingly competitive global environments, and as individuals and institutions seek investments on a global scale, the core fundamental principles of finance and their applications become of greater value and importance. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Business Core (39 credits) - BUS 181 Introduction to Business, ACC 201 Financial Accounting, ACC 202 Managerial Accounting, ECO 202 Principles Microeconomics, BUS 239 Business Law I, MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management, MGT 325 Business Processes and Supply Chain Management, MKT 306 Principles of Marketing, BUS 311 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 111 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 315 Introduction to Information Systems, FIN 319 Managerial Finance, BUS 366 International Business, BUS 498 Strategic Management; Business Electives (3 credits): Finance Major(21 credits) - FIN 316 Financial Markets and Institutions, FIN 327 International Finance, FIN 352 Fundamentals of Security Analysis, FIN 360 Financial Statement Analysis, FIN 419 Financial Management: Theory and Practice, FIN 470 Portfolio Management and Risk Analysis, FIN 492 Advanced Seminar in Finance; Distribution Requirements with co-requisites: Theology and Philosophy (9 credits) - THE, PHI 292 Ethics; Communication Arts - Oral and Written (9 credits) - ENG 111, ENG 112/120, SPE; Natural Science and Mathematics (9 credits) - MAT 108 Precal for Business, MAT 152 Elem Prob and Stats, SCI; Behavioral and Social Sciences (9 credits) - ECO 201 Principles of Macroeconomics (3 credits required from: ANT, CRM, PSY, SOC); Humanities and Arts (9 credits); Non-Business Electives (15 credits) - CS 180 Introduction to Computers, ORI 100 Freshman Seminar, ORI 300 Senior Transitions. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Andreas School of Business | Andreas School of Business, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3544 | The Schools mission is to deliver a high-quality education that enables their students to become successful business practitioners. They serve students primarily from South Florida, Latin America, and the Caribbean in a highly cosmopolitan, multicultural setting. They function as part of a Catholic, international University, a community of scholars committed to raising up all people in the tradition of the Dominican Order. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with a Major in International Business | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Andreas School of Business | This program prepares students to operate locally yet think globally. They are ideally located in close proximity to Miami, a recognized international business center and home to people of many different cultures. There is no better place to see international business at work than in Miami. As boundaries diminish and economic treaties like NAFTA, the European Union, and MERCOSUR unite countries, a culturally-minded and internationally-educated workforce will become increasingly important. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 960 (Math score of at least 400) or a score of atleast 20 on the ACT (Math score of 17). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Business Core (39 credits) - BUS 181 Introduction to Business, ACC 201 Financial Accounting, ACC 202 Managerial Accounting, ECO 202 Principles Microeconomics, BUS 239 Business Law I, MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management, MGT 325 Business Processes and Supply Chain Management, MKT 306 Principles of Marketing, BUS 311 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 111 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 315 Introduction to Information Systems, FIN 319 Managerial Finance, BUS 366 International Business, BUS 498 Strategic Management; Business Electives (3 credits) - International Business Major (21 credits) - ECO 326 Int’l Economics, FIN 327 Intl. Finance, MGT 336 Cross-Cultural Mgt., MKT 466 International Mktg., BUS 341/441 International Internship, BUS 342/442 Domestic Internship, Elective; Distribution Requirements with co-requisites: Theology and Philosophy (9 credits) - THE, PHI 292 Ethics; Communication Arts - Oral and Written (9 credits) - ENG 111, ENG 112/120, SPE; Natural Science and Mathematics (9 credits) - MAT 108 Precal for Business, MAT 152 Elem Prob and Stats, SCI; Behavioral and Social Sciences (9 credits) - ECO 201 Principles of Macroeconomics (3 credits required from: ANT, CRM, PSY, SOC); Humanities and Arts (9 credits); Non-Business Electives (15 credits) - CS 180 Introduction to Computers, ORI 100 Freshman Seminar, ORI 300 Senior Transitions. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Andreas School of Business | Andreas School of Business, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3544 | The Schools mission is to deliver a high-quality education that enables their students to become successful business practitioners. They serve students primarily from South Florida, Latin America, and the Caribbean in a highly cosmopolitan, multicultural setting. They function as part of a Catholic, international University, a community of scholars committed to raising up all people in the tradition of the Dominican Order. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with a Major in Management | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Andreas School of Business | This program offers courses in the areas of business strategy, conflict management, cross-cultural management, entrepreneurship, human resource management, leadership, negotiation and organizational behavior. It is designed to accommodate a variety of students' career interests. It offers students preparation for entry into corporate management training positions, human resource management positions, and management of entrepreneurial ventures. Students learn managerial leadership skills in courses that concern themselves not only with the broad aspects of management and organization but also with developing cutting-edge skills for dealing with problems of motivation, organization design, and the increasingly complex issues of human resource allocation in today's multicultural world. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Business Core (39 credits) - BUS 181 Introduction to Business, ACC 201 Financial Accounting, ACC 202 Managerial Accounting, ECO 202 Principles Microeconomics, BUS 239 Business Law I, MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management, MGT 325 Business Processes and Supply Chain Management, MKT 306 Principles of Marketing, BUS 311 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 111 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 315 Introduction to Information Systems, FIN 319 Managerial Finance, BUS 366 International Business, BUS 498 Strategic Management; Business Electives (3 credits) - Management Major (18 credits): MGT 309 Organizational Communications, MGT 336 Cross-Cultural Man., MGT 352 Human Resource Man., MGT 355 Conflict and Negotiation, MGT 420 Leadership, MGT 428 Entrepreneurship; Distribution Requirements with co-requisites: Theology and Philosophy (9 credits) - THE, PHI 292 Ethics; Communication Arts - Oral and Written (9 credits) - ENG 111, ENG 112/120, SPE; Natural Science and Mathematics (9 credits) - MAT 108 Precal for Business, MAT 152 Elem Prob and Stats, SCI; Behavioral and Social Sciences (9 credits) - ECO 201 Principles of Macroeconomics (3 credits required from: ANT, CRM, PSY, SOC); Humanities and Arts (9 credits); Non-Business Electives (15 credits) - CS 180 Introduction to Computers, ORI 100 Freshman Seminar, ORI 300 Senior Transitions. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Andreas School of Business | Andreas School of Business, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3544 | The Schools mission is to deliver a high-quality education that enables their students to become successful business practitioners. They serve students primarily from South Florida, Latin America, and the Caribbean in a highly cosmopolitan, multicultural setting. They function as part of a Catholic, international University, a community of scholars committed to raising up all people in the tradition of the Dominican Order. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with a Major in Marketing | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Andreas School of Business | This program prepares students for careers in marketing, sales, and marketing research. The marketing major focuses on the study of all activities required to determine which products and services are most desired by consumers as well as how to design and implement programs to efficiently communicate and distribute products and services. The marketing students learn to make decisions about product design and quality, pricing, advertising, channels of distribution, and personal selling in ways to enhance consumer satisfaction and further the goals of the company or organization. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Business Core (39 credits) - BUS 181 Introduction to Business, ACC 201 Financial Accounting, ACC 202 Managerial Accounting, ECO 202 Principles Microeconomics, BUS 239 Business Law I, MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management, MGT 325 Business Processes and Supply Chain Management, MKT 306 Principles of Marketing, BUS 311 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 111 Applications of Statistics in Business, BUS 315 Introduction to Information Systems, FIN 319 Managerial Finance, BUS 366 International Business, BUS 498 Strategic Management; Business Electives (3 credits) - Marketing Major (21): MKT 371 Personal Selling, MKT 381 Marketing Research, MKT 385 Consumer Behavior, MKT 466 International Marketing, MKT 467 Retail Management, MKT 486 Advertising and Promotional Strategies, MKT 490 Marketing Management Strategy; Distribution Requirements with co-requisites: Theology and Philosophy (9 credits) - THE, PHI 292 Ethics; Communication Arts - Oral and Written (9 credits) - ENG 111, ENG 112/120, SPE; Natural Science and Mathematics (9 credits) - MAT 108 Precal for Business, MAT 152 Elem Prob and Stats, SCI; Behavioral and Social Sciences (9 credits) - ECO 201 Principles of Macroeconomics (3 credits required from: ANT, CRM, PSY, SOC); Humanities and Arts (9 credits); Non-Business Electives (15 credits) - CS 180 Introduction to Computers, ORI 100 Freshman Seminar, ORI 300 Senior Transitions. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Andreas School of Business | Andreas School of Business, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3544 | The Schools mission is to deliver a high-quality education that enables their students to become successful business practitioners. They serve students primarily from South Florida, Latin America, and the Caribbean in a highly cosmopolitan, multicultural setting. They function as part of a Catholic, international University, a community of scholars committed to raising up all people in the tradition of the Dominican Order. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Cardiovascular Perfusion | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Health Sciences | This program is one of the newest and most challenging professions in medicine today. The cardiovascular perfusionist is a highly skilled, allied health professional trained and educated specifically as a member of the open heart, surgical team responsible for the selection, set-up and operation of a mechanical pump commonly referred to as the heartlung machine. Although the perfusionist’s primary role remains in Cardiovascular Surgery, additional scope of practice includes blood conservation, long-term support for respiratory failure, isolated limb perfusion for the treatment of malignant tumors, transplantation for heart, liver, and lung, and artificial cardiac assist devices. While operating the heart and lung machine, additional responsibilities include hemostasis management, blood gas analysis and myocardial protection. | Students should have a minimum G.P.A. of 2.5 for post-secondary course work and a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 310 Cardiac Anatomy and Physiology (3), 340 Basic Surgery and Monitoring (2), 350 Perfusion Technology I (3), 360 Perfusion Devices and Lab I (1) , 400 Cardiovascular Pharmacology (3), 410 Research Methodology (1), 420 Cardiology (2), 430 Physiological Management of Bypass (2), 440 Cardiovascular Pathology (3), 450 Perfusion Technology II (3), 460 Perfusion Devices and Lab II (1), 470 Clinical Practicum I (12), 475 Clinical Practicum II (12), 480 Clinical Practicum III (12). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Criminology | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Criminology | This program focuses on the study of historical and contemporary patterns of crime and victimization, the social etiology of criminality, social responses to crime, and the processes of crime control. Criminologists combine theoretical and empirical methods to study crime and delinquency, including the manner in which offenders are processed. The functions and dynamics of the criminal justice system are studied in detail with emphasis on the linkage between these processes and various social institutions and organizations. Criminology is a valuable liberal arts major for students planning graduate studies in criminology/criminal justice, sociology, public administration, law, urban planning, business, social services, and community planning. The major also provides a useful background for those planning to enter the job market immediately following graduation. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include - It requires the completion of 120 credit hours. These hours include 39-42 credits in the major and 78-81 credits in distribution requirements and general electives. Core Courses: CRM 200 Introduction to Criminology, SOC 320 Sociology of Law, SOC 409 Research Methodology, SOC 410 Theories of Deviance, CRM 487 Senior Seminar; Organizational-Institutional Courses: SOC 204 Social Problems, CRM 202 Juvenile Delinquency, CRM 300 Special Topics, CRM 311 Corrections, CRM 309 Police and Policing, CRM 307 Critical Issues in Criminal Justice, SOC 326 Sociology of Violence, CRM 499 Internship; Cultural-Inequalities-Specialization Courses: CRM 300 Special Topics, CRM 305 Women and Crime, CRM 328 Race, Class and Crime, SOC 332 Drugs and Society, CRM 317 Elite and Organized Crime, SOC 370 Social Psychology, CRM 499 Internship. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Criminology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Criminology, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3476 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Exercise Science | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This eclectic, science-based field of study examines the effects of exercise and physical activity on people in order to optimize their physical and mental health. An undergraduate degree in exercise science prepare students for a broad range of careers such as clinical testing, corporate fitness, performance enhancement, physical therapy, and cardiac rehabilitation. A degree in Exercise Science is students first step toward other health-related careers such as nursing, physical therapy, physician assistant, and medicine. The program even offers Pre-Med Specialization and Pre-Physical Therapy (Pre-PT) Specialization. A pre-med specialization in the Exercise Science program prepares for the actual physiological assessment skills required for the profession. The specialization provides the opportunity for students to add a scientific foundation to the curriculum and enables to develop skills in hands-on techniques, assessment, monitoring, and interpersonal communication skills. A pre-PT specialization in the Exercise Science program prepares for a thorough understanding and application of the principal of individuality in terms of physical limitation, assessment, performance, and adaptation. This specialization provides the opportunity for students to incorporate an in-depth understanding of the human body in motion into a science-laden curriculum thereby enabling students to develop skills in exercise prescription, proper techniques for performing and monitoring exercises, exercise adaptations required for special populations, and interpersonal communication skills. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Co-requisites: 56 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro. to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Literature and Composition (3), ENG 112 OR 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 OR COM 104 OR TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 20 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), BIO 240/ 240L Intro. to Human Physiology and Laboratory (5), CHE 152 / 152L Intro. to Organic and Biological Chemistry and Laboratory (4) MAT 152Elementary Probability and Statistics (3); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 6 credit hours from university approved distribution list (6); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours - 9 credit hours from university approved distribution list (9); SES Core Requirements: 24 credit-hours - SES 112/ 112L CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer and Laboratory (2), SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 361 / 361L Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (4), SES 465 Administration of Programs and Facilities (3), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3); Exercise Science Major Requirements: 38 Credit hours - CS 180 Intro to Computers (3), SES 220 Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries (3), SES 320 / 320L Kinesiology and Laboratory (4), SES 330 Nutrition for Physical Performance (3), SES 370 / 370L Fitness Assessment and Exercise Prescription and Laboratory (4), SES 441 / 441L Cardiac Rehabilitation and Laboratory (4), SES 463 Applied Physiology of Resistance Training (3), SES 486 Practicum in Exercise Science (2), SES 499 Internship in Exercise Science (12); Electives (3 hours minimum): 3 credit-hours - Recommended Courses: SES 326 Principles of Motor Learning (3), SES 469 Directed Readings in Exercise Science (3), SES 479 Directed Research in Exercise Science (3), SES 485 Legal Issues in Sport and Exercise Science (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Health Services Administration | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is designed to prepare the student for a career in the health services industry in an administrative capacity. The program of study will give students a broad view of today's health care system and will prepare its graduates for entry and middle management positions in such areas as hospital, medical or dental clinics, group medical practices, managed care organizations, long-term care facilities, insurance companies, home health agencies, and governmental health agencies. Management skills and business practices used in today's complex health care systems are emphasized. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 18 credits - HSA 319 Health Care Finance, HSA 339 Health Law, HSA 410 Management in Health Care, HSA 425 Public and Community Health, HSA 475 Issues in Health Care, HSA 499 Capstone in Health Services Administration; Additional Requirements: HSA 301 The Health Care System, HSA 441 Health Care for the Elderly, HSA 459 Independent Study in Health Care, ADM Any ADM prefix course, PSY 329 Understanding and Coping with Stress, PSY 382 Developmental Psychology, PSY 410 Group Dynamics and Decision-Making, PSY 417 Psychology of Aging, PSY 423 Industrial Psychology, PUB 404 Concepts and Issues in Public Planning, PUB 406 Human Resources in the Public Sector, PUB 409 Contemporary Issues in Public Safety. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Information Technology - Information Systems Administration | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology | This program is designed to provide students with both the theoretical knowledge and technical skills required by today's information technology professionals. The program is designed to build the knowledge and skills necessary for the proper utilization of information technology in a variety of business settings. It improves a technologist's depth of knowledge and skills in analysis, design, implementation, and use of both information technology core skills and specialization skills. This specialization is for students wishing to focus on the professional administrative coupled with the technical skills needed to develop highly skilled IT decision makers. In addition, students will be able to understand and apply the theories and strategies related to the areas of planning, organizing, managing, and validating information systems. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Degree Requirements: Major Prerequisite Courses (3 credits): CAT 102 Basic Computer Applications, Major Core Courses (30 credits) - IT 190 Microcomputer Operating Systems, IT 200 Foundations of Information Technology, IT 310 Telecommunications and Computer Networks, IT 320 Computer Security, IT 338 Web Design, Authoring and Publishing, CS 372 Software Engineering, CS 426 Databases, IT 499 Integrated Capstone Project; Information Systems Administration Specialization (15 credits): IT 400 IT Project Management, IT 450 Administrative Information Systems, ADM 303 Administrative Theory and Practice, ADM 464 Human Resource Administration, 3-credit upper level CS/IT/NSE/ADM elective. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Information Technology - Network and Systems Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology | This program is designed to provide students with both the theoretical knowledge and technical skills required by today's information technology professionals. The program is designed to build the knowledge and skills necessary for the proper utilization of information technology in a variety of business settings. It improves a technologist's depth of knowledge and skills in analysis, design, implementation, and use of both information technology core skills and specialization skills. This specialization is for students to focus on how to effectively plan, implement, administer, and support various size networks in the enterprise. This specialization provides the groundwork for professionals to pursue highly recognized industry certification. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Degree Requirements: Major Prerequisite Courses (3 credits): CAT 102 Basic Computer Applications, Major Core Courses (30 credits) - IT 190 Microcomputer Operating Systems, IT 200 Foundations of Information Technology, IT 310 Telecommunications and Computer Networks, IT 320 Computer Security, IT 338 Web Design, Authoring and Publishing, CS 372 Software Engineering, CS 426 Databases, IT 499 Integrated Capstone Project; Network and Systems Engineering Specialization (15 credits): NSE 210 Network Administration, NSE 320 Server Operating System, NSE 405 Managing a Microsoft Network, 6-credit upper level NSE electives; Current List of NSE electives: NSE 300 Special Topics, NSE 305 Advanced PC Hardware and Networking, NSE 310 Client Operating System, NSE 330 Working with Cisco LAN Hardware, NSE 415 Linux Operating System. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Information Technology - Software Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology | This program is designed to provide students with both the theoretical knowledge and technical skills required by today's information technology professionals. The program is designed to build the knowledge and skills necessary for the proper utilization of information technology in a variety of business settings. It improves a technologist's depth of knowledge and skills in analysis, design, implementation, and use of both information technology core skills and specialization skills. This specialization is for students choosing to focus on web programming skills and software development. Students will be able to evaluate business systems and processes and recommend software solutions, which meet organizational needs and goals; and develop the skills and knowledge required of an analyst-programmer for the research and development of web and computer-based applications. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Degree Requirements: Major Prerequisite Courses (3 credits): CAT 102 Basic Computer Applications, Major Core Courses (30 credits) - IT 190 Microcomputer Operating Systems, IT 200 Foundations of Information Technology, IT 310 Telecommunications and Computer Networks, IT 320 Computer Security, IT 338 Web Design, Authoring and Publishing, CS 372 Software Engineering, CS 426 Databases, IT 499 Integrated Capstone Project; Software Engineering Specialization (15 credits): CS 301 Computer Programming, CS 407 Database Programming and Administration, CS 438 Web Programming and Administration, CS 340 Java Programming for the Web, 3-credit upper level CS/IT/NSE elective. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Information Technology - Telecommunications | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology | This program is designed to provide students with both the theoretical knowledge and technical skills required by today's information technology professionals. The program is designed to build the knowledge and skills necessary for the proper utilization of information technology in a variety of business settings. It improves a technologist's depth of knowledge and skills in analysis, design, implementation, and use of both information technology core skills and specialization skills. This specialization is for students choosing to focus on building skills in the rapidly expanding telecommunication and wireless communications and network systems. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Degree Requirements: Major Prerequisite Courses (3 credits): CAT 102 Basic Computer Applications, Major Core Courses (30 credits) - IT 190 Microcomputer Operating Systems, IT 200 Foundations of Information Technology, IT 310 Telecommunications and Computer Networks, IT 320 Computer Security, IT 338 Web Design, Authoring and Publishing, CS 372 Software Engineering, CS 426 Databases, IT 499 Integrated Capstone Project; Telecommunications Specialization (15 credits): IT 351 Voice and Digital Communications, IT 460 Wireless and Mobile Computing, IT 402 Advanced Topics in Signaling Systems, IT 440 International Telecommunications, 3-credit upper level CS/IT/NSE elective. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology | School of Adult and Continuing Education, Department of Information Technology, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in International Studies | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program is headed towards a career in international relations, global politics, cultural affairs or any number of professional pursuits dealing with business, law and economics. The study of international relations involves three major components - social sciences, economics and business, society and culture. The first of these components, social sciences, entails studies in international relations, comparative government, and history. The second component provides basic business skills and an understanding of international economic forces. The final component develops a greater understanding of other societies and cultures. The international studies graduate will have a wide variety of career options. Some of these include: Federal government service, ranging from the Department of State to the Peace Corps, private sector employment such as international banking, trade and political risk, analysis, service for an international organization like the United Nations the European Union, the Organization of American States (OAS), graduate or law school. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include - the social science component will include HIS 150 and 9 credits of HIS electives; POS 201 and 325, and 9 credits of POS electives; the business component will include BUS 181; ECO 201-202; 6 credits of ECO 300, 351, 406, or 326; BUS 366; MGT 305; and MGT 336; the cultural component will include THE 303; SOC 200; GEO 301; and 12 credits of a foreign language; the remaining distribution requirements will include ENG 111-210; MAT 108, 152; PHI 220 and 3 PHI credits; CS 180; SPE 101 or COM 104; 3 credits in fine arts; 3 credits in HUM; Theology (3 credits); PSY 281, and a science with a lab (4 credits). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3780 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Legal Studies | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is designed to provide a broad background in fundamental legal studies to students who desire to become paralegals or legal assistants working under the supervision of a lawyer. Legal assistants assume paralegal responsibilities as skilled members of a legal team in law firms, financial institutions, insurance companies, governmental agencies and related entities. In addition, exposure to law and law-related topics in the Legal Studies programs provide students with an appropriate academic foundation if they decide to attend law school. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. Intensive English instruction is offered at Barry University through the ELS Language Center. Students who complete Master's level 112 at the ELS Language Center are not required to sit for the TOEFL examination. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of atleast 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses: 15 credits - PLA 301 Law and the Legal System, PLA 310 Legal Research, PLA 315 Legal Writing, PLA 320 Civil Litigation, PLA 430 Criminal Law Practice; Additional Requirements: 15 credits - PLA 300 Special Topics, PLA 330 Alternative Dispute Resolution, PLA 335 Employment Law, PLA 339 Health Law, PLA 343 Business Organizations, PLA 350 Real Estate Law, PLA 405 Administrative Law and Process, PLA 440 Contracts, PLA 452 Environmental Law, PLA 460 Probate Proceedings, PLA 470 Immigration Law, PLA 480 Bankruptcy, PLA 483 Family Law. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Leisure and Recreation Management | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | In this program students can pursue careers in within the billion-dollar tourism and recreation industry. New career opportunities include: leisure management and marketing, leisure and recreational facility management, the adventure business, parks and recreation management, resort management, event planning, promotions and special events, and many more. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 110 Introduction to Diving Science, Technology and Management (2), 112, 112L CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer (2), 150 Introduction to Outdoor Pursuits (2), 170 Introduction to Wellness (3), 181 A. T. Pre-clinical Skills I (1), 199/299 Special Topics (1-3), 201 Dance and Aerobic Activities (2), 202 Elementary Games (Including Track and Field) (2), 203 Gymnastics and Tumbling (2), 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise (3), 211 Lifeguard Training (3), 212, 212L Emergency Response and Lab (3), 214 Methods of Instruction in Swimming and Water Safety (3), 220 Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries (3), 220L Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries Lab (1), 225, 225L Assessment of Athletic Injuries and Lab (4), 226 Seamanship and Lab (3), 230 Recreational Diving Theory (3), 240 Dive Accident Management and Rescue and Lab (3), 250 Sport and Recreational Management (3), 259/359/459 Independent Study (3), 260 Leisure Planning and Programming (3), 262 Recreational Leadership (3), 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), 275 Professional Proficiency - Aquatic Activities (1), 280 Professional Proficiency - Dance Activities (1), 281 A.T. Pre-Clinical Skills II (1), 285 Professional Proficiency - Individual and Dual Sports (1), 290 Professional Proficiency - Racquet Sports (1), 292 Commercial Recreation (3), 295 Professional Proficiency - Team and Field Sports (1), 300 Special Topics (3), 306 Research Diving (3), 308 Underwater Photography (3), 310 Personal Health and Disease Prevention (3), 311 Tropical Diving Environments (3), 312 Advanced Assessment of Athletic Injuries and Lab (4), 314 SCUBA Equipment Repair and Maintenance (3), 316, 316L Therapeutic Modalities and Lab (4), 318, 318L Therapeutic Exercise and Lab (4), 320 Kinesiology (3), 320L Kinesiology Lab (1), 321 Advanced Upper Extremity Assessment of Athletic Injuries and Lab (4), 322 Advanced Lower Extremity Assessments of Athletic Injuries and Lab (4), 325 Officiating Team and Individual Sports (2), 326 Principles of Motor Learning (3), 328 Theory of Coaching (3), 330 Nutrition for Physical Performance (3), 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Recreation and Sport (3), 344 Teaching Health, Physical Education, and Dance in the Primary/Elementary School (3), 346 Wilderness Expeditionary Training (3), 350 Tests and Measurement in HPER and Sport (3), 351 Diving Leadership Practicum and Lab (3), 360, 360L Essentials of Exercise Physiology and Lab (4), 361, 361L Exercise Physiology and Lab (4), 362 Diving Business Management, Retailing and Practicum (3), 365 Hyperbaric Physiology and Dompression Theory (3), 370 Fitness Assessment and Exercise Prescription (3), 380 Facility Design and Event Management (3), 381A A.T. Clinical Skills Level II Part 1 (2), 381B A.T. Clinical Skills Level II Part 2 (2), 382 Turfgrass Management for the Golf Professional (2), 390 Natural Resource Recreation Management (3), 402 Biological and Medical Aspects of Motor and Physical Disabilities (3), 404 Physical Education and Sport for Children with Mental Deficiencies (2), 406 Physical Education and Sport for Children with Sensory Disabilities (2), 408 Physical Education and Sport for Children with Motor Disabilities (2), 417 Assessment in Physical Education for Exceptional Students (2), 419 Aquatics for Individuals with Disabilities (2), 420 Biomechanics (3), 421 Methods of Instruction in SCUBA Diving and Lab (3), 422 Principles of Sport Travel and Tourism (3), 424 Instructor Preparation in SCUBA Diving (2-6), 431 Media Relations in Sport (3), 441 Cardiac Rehabilitation and Lab (4), 442 Golf Country Club Management (3), 444 Financial Applications to Sport (3), 446 Qualitative Analysis in Biomechanics (3), 447 Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injuries (3), 463 Applied Physiology of Resistance Training (3), 469 Directed Readings (3), 470 Methods and Practice of Elementary Physical Education (4), 487 Senior Seminar, 499 Internship. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing - Accelerated Option | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Division of Nursing | This program deals with practicing in a variety of health-care settings such as hospitals, schools, community clinics, public health services and homes. The Accelerated Option in Nursing is available to individuals who are not registered nurses. | Students should have a graduation from a state-approved diploma or associate degree nursing program along with a cumulative GPA of at least 3.2. International students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Pre-requisites: 70 credits - ENG 111/112 English Composition and Research, SPE 101 Fundamentals of Speech, BIO 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (with lab), BIO 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (with lab), BIO 253 Introductory Microbiology (with lab), CHE 152 Introduction to Organic and Biological Chemistry (with lab) and supplemental instruction), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics, PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology, PSY 382 Developmental Psychology, SOS Any History, Economics, Geography, Political Science, ANT/SOC Any Anthropology or Sociology, PHI Philosophy Distribution, NUR 216/0216 Pathophysiology (with supplemental instruction), THE/PHI 353 Bio-Medical Ethics, THE Theology Distribution, HUM and ARTS Humanities and Arts Distribution (9 credits), DIN 271 Nutrition in Clinical Care, CS 180 Introduction to Computers, OPEN Open Elective; Major courses: (63 credits) - NUR 110 Orientation for Nursing Students, NUR 200 Introduction to Professional Nursing, NUR 211 Medication Calculation for Nurses, NUR 212 Therapeutic Nursing Interventions, NUR 215 NUR 0215 Pharmacology SI: Pharmacology, NUR 220 Nursing Care of Individuals, Families, and Communities, NUR 283 Health Assessment Across the Life Span, NUR 301 Research in Nursing, NUR 320 Nursing Care of Families: Adult/Elderly, NUR 325 Nursing Care of Families: Parent/Child, NUR 380 Nursing Care of Families: Mental Health Nursing, NUR 489 High Acuity Nursing of the Adult, NUR 490 Community/Public Health Nursing, NUR 491 Nursing Care of the Older Adult, NUR 493 Nursing Leadership, N 499E Professional Role Transition. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Division of Nursing | Division of Nursing, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3800 | The Division of Nursing provides an exciting educational experience for women and men interested in shaping the health care system of the new century. Nursing is a unique and valued human service, rich in scholarship, research, and political activism. Barry University's Division of Nursing offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs that prepare students to meet the health care challenges of the future with confidence, knowledge, and creativity. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing - Pre-Nursing | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Division of Nursing | This program is the first two-years of general education, pre-requisites and supporting courses needed for a baccalaureate degree in nursing at Barry University. However, students can complete the required courses within a shorter period of time by taking selected courses in the summer. | Students should have a graduation from a state-approved diploma or associate degree nursing program along with a cumulative GPA of at least 2.7. International students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include ENG 111/112 English Composition and Research, SPE 101 Fundamentals of Speech, BIO 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (with lab), BIO 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (with lab), BIO 253 Introductory Microbiology (with lab), CHE 152 Introduction to Organic and Biological Chemistry (with lab) and supplemental instruction), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics, PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology, PSY 382 Developmental Psychology, SOS Any History, Economics, Geography, Political Science, ANT/SOC Any Anthropology or Sociology, PHI Philosophy Distribution, NUR 216/0216 Pathophysiology (with supplemental instruction), THE/PHI 353 Bio-Medical Ethics, THE Theology Distribution, HUM and ARTS Humanities and Arts Distribution (9 credits), DIN 271 Nutrition in Clinical Care, CS 180 Introduction to Computers, OPEN Open Elective. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Division of Nursing | Division of Nursing, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3800 | The Division of Nursing provides an exciting educational experience for women and men interested in shaping the health care system of the new century. Nursing is a unique and valued human service, rich in scholarship, research, and political activism. Barry University's Division of Nursing offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs that prepare students to meet the health care challenges of the future with confidence, knowledge, and creativity. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing - Traditional Option | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | Division of Nursing | This program is for freshman and transfer students (including Baptist Bond) who meet the requirements for admission to the baccalaureate degree in nursing program. | Students should have a graduation from a state-approved diploma or associate degree nursing program along with a cumulative GPA of at least 3.2. International students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Pre-requisites: 70 credits - ENG 111/112 English Composition and Research, SPE 101 Fundamentals of Speech, BIO 220 Introductory Human Anatomy (with lab), BIO 240 Introduction to Human Physiology (with lab), BIO 253 Introductory Microbiology (with lab), CHE 152 Introduction to Organic and Biological Chemistry (with lab) and supplemental instruction), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics, PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology, PSY 382 Developmental Psychology, SOS Any History, Economics, Geography, Political Science, ANT/SOC Any Anthropology or Sociology, PHI Philosophy Distribution, NUR 216/0216 Pathophysiology (with supplemental instruction), THE/PHI 353 Bio-Medical Ethics, THE Theology Distribution, HUM and ARTS Humanities and Arts Distribution (9 credits), DIN 271 Nutrition in Clinical Care, CS 180 Introduction to Computers, OPEN Open Elective; Major courses: (63 credits) - NUR 110 Orientation for Nursing Students, NUR 200 Introduction to Professional Nursing, NUR 211 Medication Calculation for Nurses, NUR 212 Therapeutic Nursing Interventions, NUR 215 NUR 0215 Pharmacology SI: Pharmacology, NUR 220 Nursing Care of Individuals, Families, and Communities, NUR 283 Health Assessment Across the Life Span, NUR 301 Research in Nursing, NUR 320 Nursing Care of Families: Adult/Elderly, NUR 325 Nursing Care of Families: Parent/Child, NUR 380 Nursing Care of Families: Mental Health Nursing, NUR 489 High Acuity Nursing of the Adult, NUR 490 Community/Public Health Nursing, NUR 491 Nursing Care of the Older Adult, NUR 493 Nursing Leadership, N 499E Professional Role Transition. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Division of Nursing | Division of Nursing, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3800 | The Division of Nursing provides an exciting educational experience for women and men interested in shaping the health care system of the new century. Nursing is a unique and valued human service, rich in scholarship, research, and political activism. Barry University's Division of Nursing offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs that prepare students to meet the health care challenges of the future with confidence, knowledge, and creativity. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | This program prepares students for careers in a wide choice of fields, including the practice of law, various types of government service, the business world, and teaching on the secondary level. Students are also well prepared to enter graduate study in the field of political science. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include POL 199 Special Topics (1-3), POL 201 American Government (3), POL 202 State Local Government (3), POL 207 The American Courts (3), POL 209 Comparative Government Politics (3), POL 300 Special Topics (3), POL 305 The Presidency (3), POL 306 The Congress (3), POL 308 Constitutional Law (3), POL 311 Scope Methods in Political Science (3), POL 325 International Relations (3), POL 352 Politics Music (3), POL 393 America in the World (3), POL 395 International Organizations (3), POL 396 Latin American Politics (3), POL 404 American Diplomatic II 1890 to present (3), POL 406 Political Economy of Development (3), POL 415/515 American Political Institutions: Legacy of the Framers (3), POL 425/525 Political Theory I (3), POL 426/526 Political Theory II (3), POL 429 Public Policy Administration (3), 440/540 Disempowered Voices (3), POL 487 Senior Seminar (3), POL 499 Internship (3-12), POL 359,459 Independent Study (3-12). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History and Political Science, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3780 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology (BS) | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program prepares for many bachelor-level careers valuing strong skills in writing, problem-solving, critical thinking, and social relations. Alternatively, plan for graduate work in psychology, education, social work, law, business, and more. Major combines core psychology courses and electives from various psychology sub-specialties. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 284 Psychology and Professional Development, 300 Special Topics (3), 306 Psychology of Women (3), 316 Cognitive Psychology (3), 318 Psychology of Learning (3), 320 Tests and Measurements (3), 323 History and Systems (3), 325 Theories of Personality (3), 370 Social Psychology (3), 382 Developmental Psychology (3), 413 Abnormal Psychology (3), 417 Psychology of Aging (3), 423 Industrial Psychology (3), 426 Health Psychology (3), 428 Human Sexuality (3), 445 Community Psychology (3), 449 Adolescent Psychology (3), 452 Child and Adolescent Psychopathology (3), 459 Independent Study (1-3), 490 Physiological Psychology (3), 494 Substance Abuse (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (3) (3) (3), 497 Senior Seminar (3), 498 Seminar (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3278 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology - Industrial/Organizational Psychology Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is a unique preparation for bachelor-level positions in human resources or graduate school in industrial/organizational psychology or human resources management. This specialization adds focused coursework in business management. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 284 Psychology and Professional Development, 300 Special Topics (3), 306 Psychology of Women (3), 316 Cognitive Psychology (3), 318 Psychology of Learning (3), 320 Tests and Measurements (3), 323 History and Systems (3), 325 Theories of Personality (3), 334 Advanced Experimental Psychology (3), 335 Research Methods and Analysis I (3), 343 Introduction to Perception (3), 370 Social Psychology (3), 382 Developmental Psychology (3), 413 Abnormal Psychology (3), 417 Psychology of Aging (3), 423 Industrial Psychology (3), 426 Health Psychology (3), 428 Human Sexuality (3), 436 Research Methods and Analysis II (3), 449 Adolescent Psychology (3), 452 Child and Adolescent Psychopathology (3), 459 Independent Study (1-3), 490 Physiological Psychology (3), 494 Substance Abuse (3), 295, 395, 495 Research (3) (3) (3), 497 Senior Seminar (3), 498 Seminar (3); In addition, the following courses are required: MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management, MGT 352 Human Resources Management, MGT 355 Conflict and Negotiation, and MGT 420 Leadership. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3278 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Criminology | This program focuses on the study of the interactive dynamics of social institutions, organizations, and everyday life. Sociologists combine humanistic and scientific perspectives to study urban and rural life, family patterns, social change, health care and illness, crime and violence, social class, technology and communications, social movements, and many other social issues and problems. Sociology is a valuable liberal arts major for students planning graduate studies or careers in a variety of areas. The undergraduate sociology degree serves as excellent preparation for graduate education in sociology, family relations, criminology, demography, social psychology, public administration, counseling, social work, law, urban planning, and architecture. The major also provides a useful background for those planning to enter the job market immediately following graduation. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses (15 credit hours): SOC 201 Introduction to Sociology, SOC 370 Social Psychology, SOC 409 Research Methodology, SOC 423 Sociological Theory, SOC 487 Senior Seminar; Specialized Theme Courses (minimum of 3 credit hours from each area for a total minimum of 12 credit hours): Cultural Courses - SOC 306 Sociology of Art, SOC 320 Sociology of Law, SOC 349 Sociology of Religion; Organizational Course - SOC 317 Sociology of Work; Social Psychological Courses - SOC 246 Marriage and the Family, SOC 332 Drugs and Society, SOC 404 Ethical Issues in Social Science Research; IV. Distributive Courses - SOC 307 Race and Ethnicity, SOC 372 Social Stratification, SOC 394 The World in America; Elective Sociology Courses - SOC 204 Social Problems, SOC 359 Independent Study, SOC 410 Theories of Deviance, SOC 426 Sociology of Violence, SOC 455 Sociology of the Family, SOC 499 Internship. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Criminology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Criminology, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3476 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science in Sport Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This program provide students with the skills and expertise that they need to succeed. This is the program to choose if students aspire to: manage and market professional and collegiate athletic organizations or resort establishments, own a sport-related business, or operate recreational programs in municipalities or leisure/tourism settings. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Co-requisites: 47 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro. to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Literature and Composition (3), ENG 112 OR 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 OR COM 104 OR TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 11 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics (3), SES 360/ 360L Applied Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (also required in SES Core) (4); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - ECO 201 Introductory Macroeconomics (3), PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 6 credit hours from university approved distribution list (6); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours - Sport Management Major Requirements: 53 credit-hours - SES Core Requirements: 18 credit-hours - SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 212 Emergency Response (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 360 Applied Exercise Physiology and Lab (4) or SES 361 Exercise Physiology and Lab (4), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3) SES 360 is required; Sport Management Core: 21 credit-hours - CS 180 Introduction to Computers (3), SES 250 Sport and Recreational Management (3), SES 485 Legal Issues In Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 499 Internship in Sport Mgmt. AND/OR SM-Diving Industry (12); Additional Sport Management Requirements: 12 credit-hours - SES 260 Leisure Planning and Programming (3), SES 380 Facility Design and Event Management (3), SES 440 Sport Marketing, Promotions, and Fund Raising (3), SES 444 Financial Applications to Sport (3); Minor in Business: 18 credit-hours - ACC 201 Financial Accounting (3), ECO 201 Intro. Macroeconomics, (3 hrs. counted in Distribution), MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management (3), MGT 352 Human Resource Management (3), MKT 385 Consumer Behavior (Prerequisite - SES 440) (3); Electives (3 hours minimum): 6 credit-hours - Recommended Courses: SES 431 Media Relations in Sport (3), COM 200 Introduction to Mass Media (3), COM 390 Principles of Public Relations (3), ENG 417 Advertising Copywriting (3), ENG 418 Publication Production and Layout (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science to Master of Science in Education | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program is designed to create future leaders who possess highly developed critical thinking skills and the ability to maintain a focus on civic and community advancement and the educational policy implications therein. It is designed to provide a sound general education in Arts and Science, as well as a firm grounding in curriculum and teaching. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include Education major and an area of specialization in either: infancy through Early Childhood (Birth through Grade 3); Early and Middle Childhood (K - 6th Grade); Special Education (K - 12.) | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Science(BS) and Master of Science(MS) in Sport Management | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | The Master of Science (MS) Degree in Sport Management combines both theory and practice to prepare students for opportunities in management in a variety of sport, recreation, and health promotion areas (e.g., arena and dome management; amateur and professional sports; high school and college athletics; resort and tourism industries; parks and recreational centers; fitness and wellness centers; etc.). The Sport Management graduate curriculum includes coursework offered within the Andreas School of Business. Students can choose from two degree options: the MS in Sport Management or the dual degree option leading to master's degrees in both Sport Management and Business Administration (MS/MBA). The MS and the MS/MBA degrees include at least eight industry-specific courses in the Sport and Exercise Sciences Department and two to nine courses in the Andreas School of Business. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Distribution Requirements and Co-requisites: 47 credit-hours - Theology and Philosophy: 9 credit-hours - THE 201 Faiths, Beliefs and Traditions (3), PHI 220 Intro. to Philosophy (3), THE/PHI Elective (3); Written and Oral Communication: 9 credit-hours - ENG 111 First Year Literature and Composition (3), ENG 112 OR 210 Techniques of Research or Intro to Literature (3), SPE 101 OR COM 104 OR TH 155 Elective (3); Science and Mathematics: 11 credit-hours - BIO 220/ 220L Intro to Human Anatomy and Laboratory (4), MAT 152 Elementary Probability and Statistics (3), SES 360/ 360L Applied Exercise Physiology and Laboratory (also required in SES Core) (4); Social and Behavioral Sciences: 9 credit-hours - ECO 201 Introductory Macroeconomics (3), PSY 281 Introduction to Psychology (3), 6 credit hours from university approved distribution list (6); Humanities and the Fine Arts: 9 credit-hours - Sport Management Major Requirements: 53 credit-hours - SES Core Requirements: 18 credit-hours - SES 210 Foundations of Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 212 Emergency Response (3), SES 270 Concepts of Fitness and Wellness (3), SES 335 Psycho-Social Aspects of Sport (3), SES 340 Adapted Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (3), SES 360 Applied Exercise Physiology and Lab (4) or SES 361 Exercise Physiology and Lab (4), SES 480 Contemporary Issues and Ethics in Sport (3) SES 360 is required; Sport Management Core: 21 credit-hours - CS 180 Introduction to Computers (3), SES 250 Sport and Recreational Management (3), SES 485 Legal Issues In Sport and Exercise Sciences (3), SES 499 Internship in Sport Mgmt. AND/OR SM-Diving Industry (12); Additional Sport Management Requirements: 12 credit-hours - SES 260 Leisure Planning and Programming (3), SES 380 Facility Design and Event Management (3), SES 440 Sport Marketing, Promotions, and Fund Raising (3), SES 444 Financial Applications to Sport (3); Minor in Business: 18 credit-hours - ACC 201 Financial Accounting (3), ECO 201 Intro. Macroeconomics, (3 hrs. counted in Distribution), BUS 315 Intro.to Management Systems(3), MGT 305 Organizational Behavior and Management (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) | Full Time | Variable | $13600 for 12-18 credits per semester | School of Social Work | This program gives a strong social work core, a liberal arts background, volunteer experience, and year-long field placement. In this program, students will get the social work practice skills and the academic background they need to make a difference. Students education will be further enhanced by Barry's mission as a Catholic, Dominican University that works for social justice and promotes community service. | Students should have a score of 550 on the paper-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer-based TOEFL or 79 on the Internet-based TOEFL. The undergraduate applicant whose TOEFL score is between 500 and 549 (173-212 on the computer-based test or 61-78 on the Internet-based test) may be admitted to the Transition in Language and Culture (TLC) Program and enroll concurrently for academic and English courses. Applicant scores less than 500 (173 computer-based or 61 Internet-based) will be required to improve their English proficiency. They should have a SAT I score of at least 850 (Math score of at least 400 is required for all business applicants) or a score of at least 18 on the ACT (Math score of 17 is required for all business applicants). | Bachelor degree | Barry University | The modules include 201 Introduction to Social Work, 340 The Personal, Cultural, and Social Influences on Helping, 352 Social Welfare Policy, 361 Human Behavior in the Social Environment I, 362 Human Behavior in the Social Environment II, 376 Practice I, 471 Practice II, 472 Practice III, 476 Social Work Practice IV, 481 Social Work Research, 491 Field Education I, 492 Field Education II, 425 Community Organization, 455 Ethnic Sensitive Social Work Practice, 458 Social Work with Women, 475 Social Work Practice with Refugees and Immigrants. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3900 | The mission of the School of Social Work is framed by the values, ethics and social commitments of the social work profession as well as those of Barry University. The School is committed to the development of professional social workers who are drawn from diverse communities and who are prepared to engage in social work practice that improves the quality of life within those communities. Through professional and continuing education, knowledge development and professional action, the School aims to enhance the quality and effectiveness of human services and social well-being throughout the region and nation. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Counseling: Specialization in Marital, Couple, and Family Counseling/ Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $995 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program is designed for students who already hold a master's or higher degree in counseling or a related field. The doctoral program provides a specialization in marital, couple, and family counseling/therapy. The program includes education and training aimed at developing skills that will prepare students to assume leadership roles in the field of counseling. The program follows a practitioner/educator/investigator model and stresses integration of theory, research, and practice. Through course work and supervised practice, students develop knowledge and skills in the following areas: appraisal; treatment planning; individual, family and group counseling; career counseling; consultation; and supervision. Coursework on research design and statistics, combined with supervised independent research on professional projects and dissertations, refine students' research skills. As researchers, counselors possess the expertise to evaluate the degree to which clients are achieving their goals, and to evaluate and conduct research, thus increasing the body of knowledge on the theory and practice of counseling. It also provides opportunities for students to study neuroscience applications in marital, couple, and family counseling / therapy and strength-based narrative, collaborative, and solution-focused approaches. | Students should have completed a master's or higher degree (in counseling or closely related field) from a regionally accredited college/university. They should have a graduate GPA of 3.25 on a 4.0 scale. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score at the graduate level and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Doctoral | Barry University | The modules include CSL 729 Counseling for Change (3), CSL 735 Advanced Consultation in Counseling (3), CSL 758 Advanced Clinical Counseling Techniques (3), CSL 761 Advanced Multicultural Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 763 Advanced Family Systems Theory (3), CSL 765 Advanced Professional Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 767 Advanced Clinical Family Therapy Techniques (3), CSL 768 Advanced Appraisal Techniques (3), CSL 784 Counseling Supervision (3), CSL 786 Practicum in Clinical Supervision (3), CSL 794 Advanced Counseling Practicum (3), CSL 796 Dissertation Seminar (3), CSL 797 Dissertation (3), CSL 798 Seminar in Counseling (3), CSL 799 Advanced Counseling Internship (3), CSL 800 Continuous Matriculation (1-3), HSE 703 Philosophy of Science and Theory Development (3), HSE 705 Qualitative Methods of Inquiry (3), HSE 706 Advanced Qualitative Inquiry (3), HSE 707 Quantitative Methods of Inquiry (3), HSE 708 Advanced Quantitative Inquiry (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Leadership and Education: Specialization in Higher Education Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $995 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program is diversified in scope and can prepare a student for teaching and administrative positions in community colleges, four year colleges, and universities, or a career path in industry. | Students should have completed a master's or higher degree (in counseling or closely related field) from a regionally accredited college/university. They should have a graduate GPA of 3.25 on a 4.0 scale. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score at the graduate level and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Doctoral | Barry University | The modules include Common Core (15 s.h.): ADL 705 Theories of Leadership, ADL 720 History of Education, ADL 737 Information Technology Administration, ADL 745 Organizational Change, HSE 703 Philosophy of Science and Theory Development; Higher Education Specialization Core (12 s.h.): HED 713 Teaching and Learning at the University level, HED 726 Governance of Higher Education, HED 730 Higher Education and the Law, HED 745 Seminar in Higher Education Administration; Electives (9 s.h.): ADL 713 Program Planning, ADL 730 Sociology of Education, ADU 750 Leadership Exploration and Expression, HED 646 College Student Development; Research Foundations (12 s.h.): HSE 705 Qualitative Methods of Inquiry, HSE 707 Quantitative Methods of Inquiry, HSE 706 Advanced Qualitative Methods or HSE 708 Advanced Quantitative Methods, RES 710 Analysis of Research Data; Dissertation (6 s.h.): ADL 798 Dissertation Seminar, ADL 799 Dissertation. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Leadership and Education: Specialization in Leadership | Full Time | Variable | US $995 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program integrates the knowledge, skills, and competencies necessary for students to become a highly accomplished professional and an outstanding leader in public or non-public educational institutions. Students pursue a career as a college professor, or become a consultant to various companies. | Students should have completed a master's or higher degree (in counseling or closely related field) from a regionally accredited college/university. They should have a graduate GPA of 3.25 on a 4.0 scale. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score at the graduate level and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Doctoral | Barry University | The modules include Leadership Foundation (15 s.h.): ADL 705 Theories of Leadership, ADL 737 Information Technology Administration, ADL 745 Organizational Change, ADL 720 History of Education or ADL 730 Sociology of Education or ADL 739 Ethical Issues in Leadership, HSE 703 Philosophy of Science and Theory Development; Leadership Specialization Courses (12 s.h.): ADL 713 Program Planning, ADL 717 Team Building for Leaders, ADL 721 Policy Development, ADL 729 Leadership Seminar; Leadership Electives (9 s.h.): ADL 709 Legal Issues in Leadership, ADL 720 History of Education, ADL 725 Financial Administration, ADL 730 Sociology of Education, EDU 701 Advanced Study in Education, EDU 750 Leadership Exploration and Expression; Research (12 s.h.): HSE 705 Qualitative Methods of Inquiry, HSE 707 Quantitative Methods of Inquiry, HSE 706 Advanced Qualitative Methods or HSE 708 Advanced Quantitative Methods, RES 710 Analysis of Research Data; Dissertation (6 s.h.): ADL 798 Dissertation Seminar, ADL 799 Dissertation. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Doctor of Podiatric Medicine | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $28,050 a year | School of Podiatric Medicine | This program is designed to provide students with a broad base of medical knowledge and extensive clinical experience. After graduation students are encouraged to continue preparing for their careers by pursuing a residency program. The program is one of only two schools to maintain association with an accredited, independent, comprehensive, coeducational University. It has a rich history in the medical and health care sciences. | Students should have completed a master's degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university with a GPA of 3.0 or greater on a scale of 4.0, especially in the last two years of study. They must take and achieve a combined score of 1000 or higher in the verbal and quantitative tests in the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). International students should have a TOEFL score of 600 for paper-based, a minimum score of 250 for computer-based, a minimum total score is 100 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Doctoral | Barry University | The modules include First Year: Fall - GMS 507 Basic Research Methodology 2, GMS 525 Introduction to Podiatric Medicine 2, GMS 527 Biochemistry I 3, GMS 550 Histology 5, GMS 590 Gross Anatomy 6; Spring - GMS 528 Biochemistry II / Nutrition 3, GMS 547 Neuroanatomy 3, GMS 549 Medical Psychiatry 1, GMS 553 Biomedical Ethics 1, GMS 595a Physiology I 4, GMS 625 Applied Lower Extremity Anatomy 4; Second Year: Summer - GMS 557 Conceptual Lower Extremity Anatomy 3, GMS 595b Physiology with Lab 2, GMS 610 Clinical Neurology 2, GMS 623 Medical Microbiology I 2, GMS 627 Functional Orthopedics I 3, GMS 649 General Radiology 3, GMS 665 Independent Study 1-3, GMS 675 Research 1-12; Fall - GMS 600 Pathology I 4, GMS 620 Medical Pharmacology 3, GMS 624 Medical Microbiology II 5, GMS 632 Podiatric Medicine I 2, GMS 644 Dermatology 2, GMS 711 Podiatric Radiology 2, GMS 717 Biomechanics of Foot Function 2; Spring - GMS 601 Pathology II 2, GMS 605a Physical Diagnosis 2, GMS 621 Clinical Pharmacology 3, GMS 634 Podiatric Medicine II 2, GMS 634L Podiatric Medicine II Lab 1, GMS 640 Surgical Principles 2, GMS 650 Internal Medicine I 2, GMS 652 Peripheral Vascular Disease 2, GMS 717L Biomechanics Clinical Practicum Lab 1; Third Year: Summer - GMS 605b Physical Diagnosis (Lab) 2, GMS 700 Physical Medicine 1, GMS 703 Anesthesiology 1, GMS 705 Emergency and Traumatology I 2, GMS 712 Clinical Orientation 7, GMS 750 Internal Medicine II 2, GMS 765 Independent Study 1-3, GMS 775 Research 1-12; Fall - GMS 706 Emergency and Traumatology II 3, GMS 713 Podiatric Surgery I 4, GMS 715 Podiatric Medicine III 2, GMS 719 Rotating Clinical Externships 7, GMS 738 Podopediatrics 3; Spring - GMS 707 Emergency and Traumatology I 2, GMS 714 Podiatric Surgery II 4, GMS 716 Podiatric Medicine IV 2, GMS 720 Rotating Clinical Externships 7; Fourth Year: GMS 820 Hospital Rotation ISummer and Fall 4, GMS 821 Hospital Rotation II 4, GMS 832 Externship I 4, GMS 833 Externship II 4, GMS 834 Externship III 4, GMS 835 Externship IV 4, GMS 836 Externship V 4, GMS 865 Independent Study 1-3, GMS 875 Research 1-12; Spring - GMS 802 Podiatric Medicine Seminar 1, GMS 806 Library Research Paper 1, GMS 809 Senior Clinical Rotations 7, GMS 813 Risk Management 1, GMS 815 Orthopedic Seminar 1, GMS 825 Practice Management 2, GMS 826 Sports Medicine 2, GMS 831 Community and Minority Medicine 1. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Podiatric Medicine | School of Podiatric Medicine, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3249 | Barry University’s School of Podiatric Medicine and Surgery is one of two podiatric medical schools in the U.S. that is integrated within a comprehensive university. Barry’s program is accredited by the Council on Podiatric Medical Education.The University is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Growing demand, challenging specializations, attractive earnings, and flexible work schedules characterize podiatric medicine and surgery. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Doctor of Podiatric Medicine and MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | School of Podiatric Medicine | This program will not add to the length of the study if students possess the necessary business prerequisites. The addition of no more than one business course per semester to the regular DPM curriculum provides the necessary didactic experience for the MBA degree. This is a distinct advantage over similar programs in allopathic or osteopathic schools, which usually require an additional year of study. | Students should have completed a master's degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university with a GPA of 3.25 or greater on a scale of 4.0, especially in the last two years of study. They must take and achieve a combined score of 1000 or higher in the verbal and quantitative tests in the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). International students should have a TOEFL score of 600 for paper-based, a minimum score of 250 for computer-based, a minimum total score is 100 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Doctoral | Barry University | The modules include MBA Curriculum - First Year: Business Workshops (if required), Fall - MBA 682 Competitive Environment and Strategy Formulation, Spring - MBA 617 Technology and Information Systems; Second Year: Business Workshops (if required), Summer - MBA 660 Managerial Accounting, Fall - MBA 621 Managerial Finance, Spring - MBA 681 Economics for Strategic Decisions; Third Year: Summer - (No MBA Course), Fall - MBA 646 Marketing in a Dynamic Environment, Spring - MBA 603 International Business; Fourth Year - Summer - (No MBA Course), Fall - (No MBA Course), Spring - MBA 683 Leadership and Strategy Implementation. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Podiatric Medicine | School of Podiatric Medicine, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3249 | Barry University’s School of Podiatric Medicine and Surgery is one of two podiatric medical schools in the U.S. that is integrated within a comprehensive university. Barry’s program is accredited by the Council on Podiatric Medical Education.The University is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Growing demand, challenging specializations, attractive earnings, and flexible work schedules characterize podiatric medicine and surgery. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Dual Degree in Master of Science in Health Services Administration and Master of Public Health | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Health Sciences | This program is structured to include coursework in a number of health disciplines. A solid knowledge base in Health Services Administration and Public Health collectively offers an abundance of career opportunities to suit a variety of interests and skills in the health-care industry. The program helps prepare students for positions in management and administration in many health care settings, including hospitals, physicians offices, nursing homes, the insurance industry, and others sectors of the health care industry. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Fall: HSA510 Principles of Health Services Administration 3, HSA520 Managerial Epidemiology 3, MPH513 Environmental and Occupational Health 3; Spring: HSA525 Health Care Policy 3, HSA526 Health Care Economics 3, NUR679 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention 3; Summer: HSA525 Health Care Policy 3, HSA526 Health Care Economics 3, NUR679 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention 3; Summer: HSA530 Health Law and Ethics 3, HSA535 Applied Biostatistics 3, MPH606 Health Care Disparities 3; Fall: HSA620 Health Care Budgeting and Financial Management 3, NUR638 Performance Improvement and QA OR HSA 540 Quality Management and Utilization Review 3, MPH567 Field Experience in PH 3; Spring: HSA650 Research Application in Health Services 3, HSA667 Health Care Leadership 3, MPH652 Diversity in the Workplace 3; Spring: HSA650 Research Application in Health Services 3, HSA667 Health Care Leadership 3, MPH652 Diversity in the Workplace 3; Summer: HSA668 Health Care Human Resources Management 3, HSA675 Health Information Systems Management 3, MPH697 Special Topics in Health Care (Capstone) 3; Fall: HSA680 Health Care Marketing 3, HSA690 Health Care Strategic Planning (Capstone) 3. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Dual Program - Doctor of Podiatric Medicine / Master of Public Health (MPH) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | School of Podiatric Medicine | This program will not add to the length of the study if students possess the necessary business prerequisites. After completing a successful first year in the podiatric program, academically qualified students can begin taking courses in the Master of Public Health program. The program is designed to be completed by the end of third year in the podiatric program. | Students should have completed a master's degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university with a GPA of 3.0 or greater on a scale of 4.0, especially in the last two years of study. They must take and achieve a combined score of 1000 or higher in the verbal and quantitative tests in the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). International students should have a TOEFL score of 600 for paper-based, a minimum score of 250 for computer-based, a minimum total score is 100 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Doctoral | Barry University | The modules include Required Courses for Public Health, GMS 507 Basic Research Methodology, GMS 537 (a)(b)(c) Public Health Issues: Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, GMS 613 Environmental and Occupational Health, GMS 675 Research, GMS 697 Special Topics (Public Health), GMS 731 (a)(b)(c) Clinical Epidemiology and Evidence-based Medicine, HSA 510 Principles of Health Services Administration, HSA 520 Essentials of Health Behavior and Health Promotion, HSA 530 Health Law, Ethics, and Social Issues, HSA 535 Applied Biostatistics and Epidemiology for Health Services, HSA 667 Health Care Leadership and Human Resources. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Podiatric Medicine | School of Podiatric Medicine, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3249 | Barry University’s School of Podiatric Medicine and Surgery is one of two podiatric medical schools in the U.S. that is integrated within a comprehensive university. Barry’s program is accredited by the Council on Podiatric Medical Education.The University is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Growing demand, challenging specializations, attractive earnings, and flexible work schedules characterize podiatric medicine and surgery. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Ed.S. Degree - Dual Specialization in Marital, Couple, Family Counseling and Therapy and Mental Health Counseling | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program prepares students for work within both the marriage and family counseling field and mental health field. This program is designed to understand the history and development of marital, couple, and family counseling/therapy as a specialization within the counseling profession; to appreciate the specific role and function of the marital, couple, and family counselor/therapist in the helping professions; to facilitate an understanding of the influences of culture, family life cycle, diversity, and societal trends on the practice of marital, couple, and family counseling/therapy; to assist students in developing a systemic perspective about client behaviors and the processes of problem-formation, problem-maintenance, and problem-resolution; to help students identify and understand the major theoretical and practice models in the area of marital, couple, and family counseling/therapy; to facilitate students’ development of marital, couple, and family counseling/therapy interviewing, assessment, and intervention skills; and to increase awareness of the role of wellness, prevention, and relationship enhancement programs in the practice of marital, couple, and family counseling/therapy. The mental health counseling is designed to understand the history and development of the Mental Health Counseling specialization; to develop the knowledge and skills to provide counseling in a mental health setting or agency; to understand the specific role and function of the mental health counselor in the helping professions; to develop the knowledge and skills necessary to function as part of a multi-disciplinary mental health team member in a community agency, with other mental health service providers; to develop a knowledge and understanding of abnormal behavior (psychopathology) as it applies to the mental health counselor; and to develop a knowledge and understanding of psychopharmacology as it applies to the mental health counselor. | Students should have completed a master's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits in Exceptional Student Education as indicated by transcripts and a grade point average of 3.0 or higher of 4.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling (3), CSL 585 Principles of Guidance (3), CSL 588 Crisis Intervention (3), CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling (3), CSL 591 Group Dynamics (3), CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling (3), CSL 610 Human Growth and Development (3), CSL 612 Child Guidance and Therapy (3), CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 639 Physical and Mental Disabilities (3), CSL 650 Human Sexuality (3), CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning (3), CSL 657 Advanced Group Dynamics (3), CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 660 Designing Health, Wellness, and Employee Assistance Programs (3), CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 682 Consultation Procedures (3), CSL 683 Industrial Rehabilitation/Risk Management (3), CSL 684 Counseling Supervision (3), CSL 685 Rehabilitation Issues (3), CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions (3), CSL 687 Marital and Family Systems (3), CSL 688 Marital and Couples Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 689 Issues in Marriages and Family (3), CSL 691 Personality Theories (3), CSL 694 Counseling Practicum (3-6), CSL 698 Seminar in Counseling (3), CSL 699 Counseling Internship (6), EDU 601 Methodology of Research (3), CSL 621 Psychological Measurement (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Ed.S. Degree - Dual Specialization in Mental Health Counseling and Rehabilitation Counseling | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program prepares students for work within both the mental health and rehabilitation fields. Mental Health Counseling Specialization Goals is to understand the history and development of the Mental Health Counseling specialization; develop the knowledge and skills to provide counseling in a mental health setting or agency; understand the specific role and function of the mental health counselor in the helping professions; develop the knowledge and skills necessary to function as part of a multi-disciplinary mental health team member in a community agency, with other mental health service providers; develop a knowledge and understanding of abnormal behavior (psychopathology) as it applies to the mental health counselor; and develop a knowledge and understanding of psychopharmacology as it applies to the mental health counselor. Rehabilitation Counseling Specialization Goals is to enhance students' knowledge of the physical and mental aspects of disability; identify clients' strengths and weaknesses in order to facilitate their placement in appropriate work settings; understand the roles and responsibilities of the rehabilitative counselor and the history and legislation associated herewith; and acquaint students with the philosophy and organization of rehabilitative services and eligibility. | Students should have completed a master's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits in Exceptional Student Education as indicated by transcripts and a grade point average of 3.0 or higher of 4.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling (3), CSL 585 Principles of Guidance (3), CSL 588 Crisis Intervention (3), CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling (3), CSL 591 Group Dynamics (3), CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling (3), CSL 610 Human Growth and Development (3), CSL 612 Child Guidance and Therapy (3), CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 639 Physical and Mental Disabilities (3), CSL 650 Human Sexuality (3), CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning (3), CSL 657 Advanced Group Dynamics (3), CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 660 Designing Health, Wellness, and Employee Assistance Programs (3), CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 682 Consultation Procedures (3), CSL 683 Industrial Rehabilitation/Risk Management (3), CSL 684 Counseling Supervision (3), CSL 685 Rehabilitation Issues (3), CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions (3), CSL 687 Marital and Family Systems (3), CSL 688 Marital and Couples Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 689 Issues in Marriages and Family (3), CSL 691 Personality Theories (3), CSL 694 Counseling Practicum (3-6), CSL 698 Seminar in Counseling (3), CSL 699 Counseling Internship (6), EDU 601 Methodology of Research (3), CSL 621 Psychological Measurement (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Ed.S. Degree in Marital, Couple, Family Counseling and Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program is designed for students who already hold a master's degree in counseling or a related field. This program is for individuals seeking to increase their education and skills beyond the master’s degree for advanced licensure or certification requirements or other professional objectives. The educational specialist degree offers five specializations and provides students with the knowledge and skills necessary to perform competently, ethically, and successfully as professional counseling practitioners in a wide range of settings. This specialization provides students with an introduction to systemic theories and practices for future therapeutic work with couples and families. Clinical skills are developed to help couples and families deal with relationship issues, life cycle and developmental crises, and other issues which may be affecting family and/or couple life and living. | Students should have completed a master's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits in Exceptional Student Education as indicated by transcripts and a grade point average of 3.0 or higher of 4.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling (3), CSL 585 Principles of Guidance (3), CSL 588 Crisis Intervention (3), CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling (3), CSL 591 Group Dynamics (3), CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling (3), CSL 610 Human Growth and Development (3), CSL 612 Child Guidance and Therapy (3), CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 639 Physical and Mental Disabilities (3), CSL 650 Human Sexuality (3), CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning (3), CSL 657 Advanced Group Dynamics (3), CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 660 Designing Health, Wellness, and Employee Assistance Programs (3), CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 682 Consultation Procedures (3), CSL 683 Industrial Rehabilitation/Risk Management (3), CSL 684 Counseling Supervision (3), CSL 685 Rehabilitation Issues (3), CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions (3), CSL 687 Marital and Family Systems (3), CSL 688 Marital and Couples Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 689 Issues in Marriages and Family (3), CSL 691 Personality Theories (3), CSL 694 Counseling Practicum (3-6), CSL 698 Seminar in Counseling (3), CSL 699 Counseling Internship (6), EDU 601 Methodology of Research (3), CSL 621 Psychological Measurement (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Ed.S. Degree in Mental Health Counseling | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program is designed for students who already hold a master's degree in counseling or a related field. This program is for individuals seeking to increase their education and skills beyond the master’s degree for advanced licensure or certification requirements or other professional objectives. The educational specialist degree offers five specializations and provides students with the knowledge and skills necessary to perform competently, ethically, and successfully as professional counseling practitioners in a wide range of settings. Mental Health Counseling provides students with training in the prevention, assessment, and treatment of individuals dealing with mental health problems. Individual, group, and family therapy are focused upon in this specialization. | Students should have completed a master's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits in Exceptional Student Education as indicated by transcripts and a grade point average of 3.0 or higher of 4.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling (3), CSL 585 Principles of Guidance (3), CSL 588 Crisis Intervention (3), CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling (3), CSL 591 Group Dynamics (3), CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling (3), CSL 610 Human Growth and Development (3), CSL 612 Child Guidance and Therapy (3), CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 639 Physical and Mental Disabilities (3), CSL 650 Human Sexuality (3), CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning (3), CSL 657 Advanced Group Dynamics (3), CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 660 Designing Health, Wellness, and Employee Assistance Programs (3), CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 682 Consultation Procedures (3), CSL 683 Industrial Rehabilitation/Risk Management (3), CSL 684 Counseling Supervision (3), CSL 685 Rehabilitation Issues (3), CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions (3), CSL 687 Marital and Family Systems (3), CSL 688 Marital and Couples Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 689 Issues in Marriages and Family (3), CSL 691 Personality Theories (3), CSL 694 Counseling Practicum (3-6), CSL 698 Seminar in Counseling (3), CSL 699 Counseling Internship (6), EDU 601 Methodology of Research (3), CSL 621 Psychological Measurement (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Ed.S. Degree in Rehabilitation Counseling | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program is designed for students who already hold a master's degree in counseling or a related field. This program is for individuals seeking to increase their education and skills beyond the master’s degree for advanced licensure or certification requirements or other professional objectives. The educational specialist degree offers five specializations and provides students with the knowledge and skills necessary to perform competently, ethically, and successfully as professional counseling practitioners in a wide range of settings. This specialization provides students with knowledge and skills for work in health and human service agencies, government, and industry. The aim of the program is to enhance students’ knowledge of the physical and mental aspects of disability and to acquaint students with the philosophy and organization of rehabilitative services and eligibility. | Students should have completed a master's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits in Exceptional Student Education as indicated by transcripts and a grade point average of 3.0 or higher of 4.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling (3), CSL 585 Principles of Guidance (3), CSL 588 Crisis Intervention (3), CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling (3), CSL 591 Group Dynamics (3), CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling (3), CSL 610 Human Growth and Development (3), CSL 612 Child Guidance and Therapy (3), CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 639 Physical and Mental Disabilities (3), CSL 650 Human Sexuality (3), CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning (3), CSL 657 Advanced Group Dynamics (3), CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 660 Designing Health, Wellness, and Employee Assistance Programs (3), CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 682 Consultation Procedures (3), CSL 683 Industrial Rehabilitation/Risk Management (3), CSL 684 Counseling Supervision (3), CSL 685 Rehabilitation Issues (3), CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions (3), CSL 687 Marital and Family Systems (3), CSL 688 Marital and Couples Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 689 Issues in Marriages and Family (3), CSL 691 Personality Theories (3), CSL 694 Counseling Practicum (3-6), CSL 698 Seminar in Counseling (3), CSL 699 Counseling Internship (6), EDU 601 Methodology of Research (3), CSL 621 Psychological Measurement (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Ed.S. Degree in School Counseling | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program is designed for students who already hold a master's degree in counseling or a related field. This program is for individuals seeking to increase their education and skills beyond the master’s degree for advanced licensure or certification requirements or other professional objectives. The educational specialist degree offers five specializations and provides students with the knowledge and skills necessary to perform competently, ethically, and successfully as professional counseling practitioners in a wide range of settings. This program is designed to develop the knowledge and skills necessary to provide developmental guidance activities; to develop the knowledge and skills to provide counseling to preschool through high school students; to understand the specific role and function of the school counselor in the helping professions; to develop the knowledge and skills necessary to consult with teachers, administrators, parents and other professionals within the school setting; and to understand the processes involved in program development, implementation, and evaluation. | Students should have completed a master's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits in Exceptional Student Education as indicated by transcripts and a grade point average of 3.0 or higher of 4.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling (3), CSL 585 Principles of Guidance (3), CSL 588 Crisis Intervention (3), CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling (3), CSL 591 Group Dynamics (3), CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling (3), CSL 610 Human Growth and Development (3), CSL 612 Child Guidance and Therapy (3), CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling (3), CSL 639 Physical and Mental Disabilities (3), CSL 650 Human Sexuality (3), CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning (3), CSL 657 Advanced Group Dynamics (3), CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures (3), CSL 660 Designing Health, Wellness, and Employee Assistance Programs (3), CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 682 Consultation Procedures (3), CSL 683 Industrial Rehabilitation/Risk Management (3), CSL 684 Counseling Supervision (3), CSL 685 Rehabilitation Issues (3), CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions (3), CSL 687 Marital and Family Systems (3), CSL 688 Marital and Couples Counseling and Therapy (3), CSL 689 Issues in Marriages and Family (3), CSL 691 Personality Theories (3), CSL 694 Counseling Practicum (3-6), CSL 698 Seminar in Counseling (3), CSL 699 Counseling Internship (6), EDU 601 Methodology of Research (3), CSL 621 Psychological Measurement (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Ed.S. in Montessori with Specialization in either Early Childhood or Elementary Education | Full Time | 45 Credit-hour(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program includes a synthesis of the Early Childhood curriculum for the specialists in Elementary Education and vice versa. The Montessori courses may also be taken for re-certification credits. | Students should have completed a master's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits as indicated by transcripts. They should have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of 3.0 (B) or higher. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include 600 Introduction to Montessori (3), 601 Montessori Methods and Materials I (3), 602 Montessori Methods and Materials II (4), 603 Montessori and Child Development (3), 605 Language Arts for Montessori Teachers (3), 607 Humanities in the Montessori Early Childhood Classroom (3), 626 Sciences in the Montessori Early childhood Classroom (3), 628 Life Sciences for Montessori Teachers (3), 629 Physical/Social Sciences for Montessori Teachers (3), 631 Math I or the Montessori Teacher (3), 632 Math II for the Montessori Teacher (3), 633 Humanities in the Montessori Classroom (3), 640 Montessori Early Childhood Curriculum, 641 Montessori Elementary Curriculum, 649 Management for Montessori Teachers (3), 656 Practicum I (3), 657 Practicum II (3), 659 Practicum I (3), 660 Practicum II (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Juris Doctor Program | Full Time | Variable | US $32,650 a year | Dwayne O Andreas School of Law | This program is designed to develop students' analytical ability, communication skills, and understanding of the codes of professional responsibility and ethics that are central to the practice of law. The faculty utilizes a variety of teaching methods, including simulations and role-playing. Courses designed to develop and refine writing abilities are required. Seminars and advanced courses provide close interaction with faculty. | Students should have completed a master's degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university. International students should have a TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, a minimum score of 213 for computer-based, a minimum total score is 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Doctoral | Barry University | The modules include - Required first-year courses that must be completed prior to taking upper-division courses: Civil Procedure 5 credits, Contracts 6 credits, Legal Research and Writing 1, 2 6 credits, Criminal Law 3 credits, Property 5 credits, Torts 5 credits; Required Curriculum: Business Organizations 3 credits, Capstone 3 credits, Commercial Law Overview 3 credits, Constitutional 4 credits, Criminal Procedure 3 credits, Evidence 4 credits, Florida Civil Practice 3 credits, Professional Responsibility 3 credits, Skills Component 1-6 credits; Electives: The remaining 28-33 credits of the curriculum can be chosen from a variety of electives. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Dwayne O Andreas School of Law | Dwayne O Andreas School of Law, 6441 East Colonial Drive, ORLANDO, Florida, 32807, +1 321 206 5600 | Providing graduates with the skills and knowledge to aid society through the competent and ethical practice of law is what drives the Barry University Dwayne O. Andreas School of Law. Students are exposed to the theories of law from an accessible faculty comprised of professors who are leaders in their fields, while valuable clinical and externship opportunities provide dynamic practical experience. Championship-caliber trial and moot court teams showcase the real-world legal skills developed at Barry Law. With the completion of a new three-story Legal Advocacy Center this summer, the law school’s 14-acre campus in Orlando is transforming into a state-of-the-art complex that is the focal point for legal resources, services and knowledge in Central Florida. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | MS / Ed.S. in Educational Leadership | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program has been designed to prepare students to become an outstanding leader in public and non-public educational institutions. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university along with an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of 3.0 (B) or higher. For Ed.S. degree, students should have a master's degree from a regionally accredited college or internationally recognized university. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include EDU 601 Methodology of Research (3), EDU 614 Visionary Leadership in Education (3), EDU 615 Ethics and Communication for Leaders (3), EDU 623 School and Community Relations (3), EDU 624 Instructional Design, Measurement, and Evaluation (3), EDU 637 Educational Decision Making (3), EDU 674 The Legal Environment in Education (3), EDU 675 School Finance (3), EDU 676 School Personnel Administration and Development (3), EDU 699 Internship in Educational Leadership (3), ECT 687 Technology Applications in Educational Leadership (3), TSL 509L Cross Cultural Communication and Understanding (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | MS in Counseling - Dual Specialization in Marital, Couple, Family Counseling and Therapy and Mental Health Counseling | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program prepares students for work within both the marriage and family counseling field and mental health field. Students in this area will also be academically eligible for certification and licensure in both Mental Health Counseling (L.M.H.C.) and Marriage and Family Therapy (L.M.F.T.) in the State of Florida. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Counseling Core - 39 credits: CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling, EDU 601 Methodology of Research, CSL 610 Human Growth and Development, CSL 621 Psychological Measurement, CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling, CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures, CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning, CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures, CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions, CSL 694 Counseling Practicum, CSL 699 Counseling Internship; Dual Specialization in Marital, Couple, Family Counseling and Therapy and Mental Health Counseling - 27credits: CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling, CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling, CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling, CSL 650 Human Sexuality, CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy, CSL 687 Marital and Family Systems, CSL 688 Marital and Couples Counseling and Therapy, CSL 689 Issues in Marriage and Family, CSL 691 Personality Theories. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | MS in Counseling - Dual Specialization in Mental Health Counseling and Rehabilitation Counseling | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program prepares students for work within both the mental health and rehabilitation fields. Students in this area will be academically eligible for certification and licensure in Mental Health Counseling (L.M.H.C.) in the State of Florida. Students will also be provided with knowledge and skills to work with populations challenged by vocational issues, disabilities, and chronic illness. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Counseling Core - 39 credits: CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling, EDU 601 Methodology of Research, CSL 610 Human Growth and Development, CSL 621 Psychological Measurement, CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling, CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures, CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning, CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures, CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions, CSL 694 Counseling Practicum, CSL 699 Counseling Internship; Dual Specialization in Mental Health Counseling and Rehabilitation Counseling - 27 credits: CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling, CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling, CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling, CSL 639 Physical and Mental Disabilities, CSL 650 Human Sexuality, CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy, CSL 683 Industrial Rehabilitation/Risk Management, CSL 685 Rehabilitation Issues, CSL 691 Personality Theories. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | MS in Movement Science - Exercise Physiology Specialization | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This program prepares graduates for career opportunities in sport performance and clinical exercise physiology, with emphasis on developing professional practices in clinical settings and on exercise physiology research. The Exercise Physiology graduate program curriculum offers advanced coursework as well as extensive opportunities for research and clinical practice in the state-of-the-art Human Performance Laboratory. Two program tracks - Clinical Exercise Physiology or Physiology of Sport Performance are offered. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Movement Science Graduate Program Core: 15 credit-hours - SES 520 Biomechanics (3), or SES 546 Qualitative Analysis (3), SES 616 Research Methods (3), SES 621 Ethics (3), SES 689 Thesis (6) or SES 679 Internship(6); Exercise Physiology Course Requirements: 15 credit-hours - SES 561 Advanced Exercise Physiology (3), SES 561L Advanced Exercise Physiology Lab (1), SES 578 ECG Interpretation and Exercise Testing (2), SES 618 Fitness and Wellness Promotion (3), SES 672 Exercise and Energy Metabolism (3), SES 686 Advanced Practicum (3); Students must choose between two program tracks, Clinical Exercise Physiology or Physiology of Sport Performance. Within each program track, students may choose between an internship plan of study or a thesis plan of study. Clinical Exercise Physiology: 6 credit-hours - Internship plan of Study: Choice of two of the following electives: SES 541 Cardiac Rehabilitation (3), SES 551 Fitness Assessment and Program Development (3), SES 625 Motor Learning and Control (3), SES 662 Exercise Psychology (3), SES 701 Advanced Studies in Exercise Science (3) or Thesis Plan of Study: SES 701 Advanced Studies in Statistics (3) Plus a choice of one of the following electives: SES 541 Cardiac Rehabilitation (3), SES 551 Fitness Assessment and Program Development (3), SES 563 Applied Physiology of Resistance Training (3), SES 625 Motor Learning and Control (3), SES 662 Exercise Psychology (3); Physiology of Sport Performance: 6 credit-hours - Internship plan of Study - Choice of two of the following electives: SES 551 Fitness Assessment and Program Development (3), SES 563 Applied Physiology of Resistance Training (3), SES 625 Motor Learning and Control (3), SES 662 Exercise Psychology (3), SES 701 Advanced Studies in Sport Physiology (3) or Thesis Plan of Study: SES 701 Advanced Studies in Statistics (3) Plus a choice of one of the following electives: SES 551 Fitness Assessment and Program Development (3), SES 563 Applied Physiology of Resistance Training (3), SES 625 Motor Learning and Control (3), SES 662 Exercise Psychology (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | MS in Movement Science with Specialization in Injury and Sport Biomechanics - Athletic Training Track | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This program combines both theory and practice that will prepare students for a leadership position as an allied health practitioner in athletic training. Career options include: college/university athletic training administration, clinical administration, athletic training curriculum clinical education, and clinical research in any athletic training setting. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include SES Movement Science Core (15): SES 520 Biomechanics (3), SES 616 Research Methodology in SES (3), SES 621 Ethics and Social Issues in Sport (3), SES 689 Thesis (6); Injury and Sport Biomechanics Specialization (12): SES 547 Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury (3), SES 590 Gross Anatomy and Lab (6), SES 627 Biomechanics Instrumentation (3); Athletic Training Track (9): SES 545 Manual Therapy in Sports Medicine (3), SES 686 Advanced Practicum I (1), SES 686 Advanced Practicum II (1), SES 686 Advanced Practicum III (1), SES 540 Medical Recognition (1), SES 640 Rehabilitation Science (1), SES 645 Curriculum and Instructional Design (1). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | MS in Movement Science with Specialization in Injury and Sport Biomechanics - Biomechanics Track | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This program will include movement analysis and use of performance enhancement models. In this program, students will be well-prepared for a career as a movement analyst in orthopedics, coaching, teaching, sports medicine, and research. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include SES Movement Science Core (15): SES 520 Biomechanics (3), SES 616 Research Methodology in SES (3), SES 621 Ethics and Social Issues in Sport (3), SES 689 Thesis (6); Injury and Sport Biomechanics Specialization (12): SES 547 Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury (3), SES 590 Gross Anatomy and Lab (6), SES 627 Biomechanics Instrumentation (3); Biomechanics Track (9): SES 546 Qualitative Analysis in Biomechanics (3), SES 686 Advanced Practicum (3), SES 686 Advanced Studies in Applied Statistics (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Arts in Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $675 per credit / unit | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is designed as a graduate degree program for adult learners and practitioners focusing on administration, leadership, communication, and teamwork. The degree program places an emphasis on developing the critical administrative competencies which contribute to workplace success in all organizations - public, private, and not-for-profit - through both theoretical course content and also by application and practice throughout the curriculum. | Students should have completed a baccalaureate degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative grade average of B or higher (an overall GPA of 3.00 or higher on a four-point scale). International students should have a TOEFL score of 550 or higher for paper-based, 213 or higher for computer-based, 79 or higher for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Prerequisites (9 credits); Courses: ADM 521 Applied Administrative Concepts (3), ADM 535 Research Methodologies (3), ADM 545 Values and Ethics in Administration (3), ADM 568 Changing Environment of Administration (3), ADM 680 Project Administration (3), ADM 699 Capstone: Applied Project (3), HRD 646 Dynamics of Change and Planning (3), HRD 648 Group Behavior in Organizations (3), HRD 652 Diversity in the Workplace (3), IT 515 Information Technology Concepts (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Arts in Broadcast Communication | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This program provides a hands-on learning environment, forming an ideal combination of theory and practical application. This in-depth, two-year program culminates in a practical capstone or research- oriented thesis. Many aspects of the program are customized based on interests (e.g. radio, television, documentary, video production, editing, directing, and much more). It prepares for a career in a wide range of broadcast positions including news writing, advanced broadcast producing and directing, reporting, announcing, film and video editing, and sound engineering, outstanding opportunities for internships, networking and employment. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative undergraduate GPA of less than 3.0, or a GMAT score less than 500. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Required Core: 15 Hours - COM 507 Communication Theory (3), COM 595 Communication Law (3), COM 637 Communication Research (3), COM 647 Qualitative Research Methods (3), COM 651 Intercultural Communication (3); Broadcast Communication: 21 Hours - COM 518 Broadcast News (3), COM 597 Media Management (3), COM 605 Advanced Television Production (3), COM 626 Media Programming (3), COM 697 Advanced Video Editing (3), COM 697 Special Topics (3), COM 650 Final Video Project (3), COM 699 Thesis Guidance (3-6). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3456 | The department prepare students for a world of opportunities in Advertising, Broadcasting, Communication Studies, Public Relations, and Corporate Communications at both the undergraduate and graduate level. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Arts in Liberal Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences | This program teaches students to understand the forces (historical, philosophical, religious, social, economic, and political) that have shaped societies. Students learn to appreciate the expressions of those societies through their arts and cultures. They learn to apply that understanding and appreciation to contemporary issues and cultures. It provides students with unique knowledge and logical/intellectual skills that prepare them to become strong knowledgeable teachers and intellectual individuals. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average B as indicated by transcripts. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses: 15 credits - MLS 500 Methods of Inquiry, MLS 502 The Origins of Modern Culture, MLS 505 The Emerging Modern Mind (16th, 17th century), MLS 508 Reason and Science (18th century), MLS 511 The Contemporary Perspective; Elective Courses: 15 credits - MLS 610 Literature and the Human Experience, MLS 615 Social and Political Images in the Arts, MLS 620 The Technological Society, MLS 625 Social Justice, MLS 630 The Responsible Self, MLS 635 The Authentic Self, MLS 640 Shakespeare in Love, MLS 645 Beauty, Love, and the Good; Capstone Course: 3 credits - MLS 690 Capstone Integrated Project. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3400 | A challenging academic program, committed faculty, exceptional facilities, and invaluable opportunities best describe the School of Arts and Sciences. Students from California to New York, and around the world are taking advantage of the programs, which are designed to provide the graduates with a strong liberal arts foundation, enabling them to pursue exciting careers. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Arts in Pastoral Ministry for Hispanics | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | This program is to provide focused theological reflection on the Hispanic and other cultural contexts and social realities currently challenging the ministries of the Christian churches and especially the Roman Catholic Church for lay leadership in the churches. All coursework offered in the MA in Pastoral Ministry for Hispanics is conducted in Spanish. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3469 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | |||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Arts in Pastoral Theology | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | This program is to provide focused theological reflection on the cultural contexts and social realities currently challenging the ministries of the Christian churches. The degree is designed especially for the laity in the Roman Catholic Church who will assume greater responsibility for the teaching and healing of the church. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3469 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | |||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Arts in Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program develops students personal style of art and aesthetics. While in the program, students will work side-by-side with faculty members, all recognized working artists. In fact, the mentoring relationship within the independent study closely resembles the real-life scenario which working artists/photographers must face after graduation, in that they will be involved in production of art. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include PHO,COM,ART Photography, Communication, and Art graduate courses 18 credits, PHO 559/659 Independent Study in Photography 9 credits, ART/PHO Art History graduate courses 6 credits PHO 690 MFA Grad. Thesis Exhibition 3 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Arts in Practical Theology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | This program offers students the opportunity to deepen the theological foundations of their faith commitment and to do so in practical ways. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. A minimum score of 40 on the Miller Analogies Test or 1000 on the G.R.E. is required. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Core Curriculum : 39 credit-hours - THE 552 Method in Practical Theology (3 credit-hours), THE 609 Introduction to Systematic Theology (3 credit-hours), THE 620 Supervised Ministry (3 credit-hours), THE 621 Supervised Ministry (3 credit-hours), THE 636 or 637 Christology or The Christian God (3 credit-hours), THE xxx New Testament course (3 credit-hours), THE xxx Old Testament course (3 credit-hours), THE xxx Liturgical/Sacramental Theology course (3 credit-hours), THE xxx Fundamental Morality, Electives (12 credit-hours). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology and Philosophy, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3469 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Arts in Public Relations and Corporate Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | This program prepares students to become an expert in communication both within an organization and with the public. The skills that they develop will help students deal with situations (such as power situations and personnel conflicts) that arise any time they work within an organization, enabling them to function more effectively within a corporate environment and preparing to be a good business leader. It prepares for a career as a public relations specialist in the context of corporate communication. Gain valuable knowledge and hands-on experience as an effective advocate for a business, hospital, university, or non-profit organization. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative undergraduate GPA of less than 3.0, or a GMAT score less than 500. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Required Core: 15 Hours - COM 507 Communication Theory (3), COM 595 Communication Law (3), COM 637 Communication Research (3), COM 647 Qualitative Research Methods (3), COM 651 Intercultural Communication (3); Public Relations and Corporate Communication: 21 Hours: COM 509 Organizational Communication (3), COM 512 Persuasion (3), COM 590 Principles and Case Studies (3), COM 613 Leadership and Decision Making (3), COM 616 Communication and Conflict Management (3), COM 638 Strategic Issues and Crisis Management (3), COM 690 Public Relations Campaigns (3), COM 699 Thesis Guidance (3-6). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3456 | The department prepare students for a world of opportunities in Advertising, Broadcasting, Communication Studies, Public Relations, and Corporate Communications at both the undergraduate and graduate level. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Fine Arts in Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | This program develops and refines students personal style of art and aesthetics, and obtain the background and credentials they need to teach photography at the university level. The program offers strong academics and experiential learning. During the course of study, students will engage in directed independent study. In addition to fostering a mentoring relationship with the well-recognized faculty, the independent study most closely resembles the real-life scenario which working artists/photographers face, in that students will be involved in independent production of art. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include PHO,COM,ART Photography, Communication, and Art graduate courses 33 credits, PHO 559/659 Independent Study in Photography 15 credits, ART/PHO Art History graduate courses 9 credits PHO 691A MFA Grad. Thesis Exhibition 5 credits, PHO 691B MFA Grad. Thesis Exhibition 4 credits. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | The department has created a personal, caring environment, in which faculty work one-on-one with students to foster creativity and individual expression. The small size and the intimate setting of the Fine Arts Quadrangle facilitate this close relationship. Each of the faculty is active in his or her own professional development - whether performing, exhibiting, or publishing - and they bring this expertise and energy to the classroom as well. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upperclass students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upperclass students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upperclass students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upperclass students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Public Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $675 per credit / unit | School of Adult and Continuing Education | This program is designed as a professional development program for adult learners with a focus on the administration of public, non-profit, and other organizations which serve a public purpose. The program is generally considered to be the terminal professional degree for practitioners in public service. Its philosophical background and explicit content are grounded in an assessment of how the modern public sector workplace has evolved and the factors responsible for this evolution. The curriculum is designed to address the critical administrative competencies in this evolving environment through skills development in the context of a theoretical foundation. The degree program also incorporates adult learner principles and strategies. | Students should have completed a baccalaureate degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative grade average of B or higher (an overall GPA of 3.00 or higher on a four-point scale). International students should have a TOEFL score of 550 or higher for paper-based, 213 or higher for computer-based, 79 or higher for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include ADM/IT/PUB 535 Research Methodologies (3), ADM/PUB 545 Values and Ethics in Administration (3), ADM/PUB 699 Capstone: Applied Project (3), PUB 605, Public Policy Analysis and Evaluation, Public Sector (3), PUB 635, Leadership in Public Purpose Organizations, PUB 647 Public Law and Administration (3), PUB 650 Public/Private Enterprise, PUB 670, Public Planning and Growth Management. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Adult and Continuing Education | School of Adult and Continuing Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3320 | The Experiential Learning program at Barry University's School of Adult and Continuing Education (ACE) has been in place since the School began in 1974. In response to the needs and competencies demonstrated by adult learners, the School offers a variety of methods to validate college-level learning acquired in non-traditional ways. Students may receive credits toward their Bachelor of Professional Studies or Bachelor of Liberal Studies degrees by developing an experiential learning portfolio (up to 30 credits). Additionally, credit for testing includes the College Level Examination Program (CLEP), the Advanced Placement Program (APP), the Defense Activity for Nontraditional Education Support (DANTES), and Barry University Challenge Tests. Licensure credit, non-traditional transfer credit for military coursework (American Council on Education-Military) and the Program on Noncollegiate Sponsored Instruction (PONSI) are also accepted toward degree completion. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science (M.S.) in Counseling - Marital, Couple, Family Counseling and Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program provides students with an introduction to systemic theories and practices for future therapeutic work with couples and families. Clinical skills are developed to help couples and families deal with relationship issues, life cycle and developmental crises, and other issues which may be affecting family and/or couple life and living. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Counseling Core - 39 credits: CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling, EDU 601 Methodology of Research, CSL 610 Human Growth and Development, CSL 621 Psychological Measurement, CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling, CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures, CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning, CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures, CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions, CSL 694 Counseling Practicum, CSL 699 Counseling Internship; Marital, Couple, Family Counseling and Therapy - 24 credits: CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling, CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse, CSL 650 Human Sexuality, CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy, CSL 687 Marital and Family Systems, CSL 688 Marital and Couples Counseling and Therapy, CSL 689 Issues in Marriage and Family, CSL 691 Personality Theories. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science (M.S.) in Counseling - Mental Health Counseling | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program provides students with training in the prevention, assessment, and treatment of individuals dealing with mental health problems. Individual, group, and family therapy are focused upon in this specialization. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Counseling Core - 39 credits: CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling, EDU 601 Methodology of Research, CSL 610 Human Growth and Development, CSL 621 Psychological Measurement, CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling, CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures, CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning, CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures, CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions, CSL 694 Counseling Practicum, CSL 699 Counseling Internship; Mental Health Counseling - 21 credits: CSL 569 Psychopathology: Diagnosis and Treatment in Counseling, CSL 589 Introduction to Mental Health Counseling, CSL 605 Treatment of Substance Abuse in Counseling, CSL 650 Human Sexuality, CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy, CSL 691 Personality Theories. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science (M.S.) in Counseling - Rehabilitation Counseling | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program provides students with knowledge and skills for work in health and human service agencies, government, and industry. Clinical skills are developed to help students work with special populations challenged by vocational issues, disabilities, chronic illness. Students may also develop skills to work with forensic populations. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Counseling Core - 39 credits: CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling, EDU 601 Methodology of Research, CSL 610 Human Growth and Development, CSL 621 Psychological Measurement, CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling, CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures, CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning, CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures, CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions, CSL 694 Counseling Practicum, CSL 699 Counseling Internship; Rehabilitation Counseling - 9 credits: CSL 639 Physical and Mental Disabilities, CSL 683 Industrial Rehabilitation/Risk Management, CSL 685 Rehabilitation Issues. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science (M.S.) in Counseling - School Counseling | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program provides students with the knowledge and skills to develop, implement, and evaluate a PK-12 comprehensive developmental guidance program. Particular attention is given to the multiple roles and responsibilities which a guidance counselor may fulfill in a school setting. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with at least a 3.0 grade point average. A combined score of 1000 on the Graduate Record Examination is required. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Counseling Core - 39 credits: CSL 600 Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling, EDU 601 Methodology of Research, CSL 610 Human Growth and Development, CSL 621 Psychological Measurement, CSL 629 Social and Cultural Issues in Counseling, CSL 652 Individual Counseling Procedures, CSL 653 Career Development and Life Work Planning, CSL 658 Group Counseling Procedures, CSL 686 Counseling Theories and Interventions, CSL 694 Counseling Practicum, CSL 699 Counseling Internship; School Counseling - 15 credits: CSL 586 Student Services Personnel in the Public Schools, CSL 612 Child Guidance and Therapy, CSL 680 Family Counseling and Therapy, CSL 682 Consultation Procedures, SPY 571 Exceptionality in Learning and Behavior. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science (MS) in Movement Science | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | This program is personalized to meet the professional goals in students specific areas of interest, including biomechanics, athletic training, human performance, physical education, physical therapy, exercise and sport science, and kinesiology. The program is designed to enhance the standing in their current occupation by increasing students' knowledge and salary potential, expand students career options in coaching, teaching, or other sport and exercise-related field and to prepare students for doctoral studies by developing an interdisciplinary foundation. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Movement Science Graduate Program Core (12 credit-hours): SES 520 Biomechanics (3), SES 616 Research Methodology in SES (3), SES 689 Thesis (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science Research Track, Sport Science Thesis Track; Optional: Sport and Exercise Psychology) (6) or SES 679 Internship/Project (Athletic Training, Exercise Science Clinical Track; Optional: Sport and Exercise Psychology); Movement Science Graduate Courses: SES 530 Managing the Sport Enterprise (3), 537 Sport Psychology (3), 541 Cardiac Rehabilitation (3), 541L Cardiac Rehabilitation Lab (1), 545 Manual Therapy in Sports Medicine (3), 546 Qualitative Analysis in Biomechanics (3), 547 Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injuries (3), 551 Fitness Assessment and Program Development (3), 561 Advanced Exercise Physiology (3), 561L Advanced Exercise Physiology Lab (1), 563 Applied Physiology of Resistance Training (3), 578 ECG Interpretation and Exercise Testing (2), 585 The Law in Sport and Exercise Science (3), 590 Gross Anatomy (6), 618 Fitness and Wellness Promotion (3), 621 Ethics and Social Issues in Sport (3), 625 Motor Learning and Control (3), 627A Laboratory Instrumentation in Biomechanics: Videography (1), 627B Laboratory Instrumentation in Biomechanics: Force Measurement (1), 627C Laboratory Instrumentation in Biomechanics: Electromyography (1), 660 Performance Enhancement Psychology (3), 662 Exercise Psychology (3), 664 Motor Development (3), 668 Psychophysiology of Human Performance (3), 672 Exercise and Energy Metabolism (3), 686 Advanced Practicum (1-3), SES 701 Advanced Studies: Applied Statistics (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences | School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences, Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3490 | The Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences (SES) offers both undergraduate and graduate degree programs for students seeking career opportunities in human performance, leisure, and sport-related areas. Undergraduate programs include Athletic Training, Exercise Science, Physical Education, Sport Management, Sport Management-Diving Industry, and Sport Management-Golf Industry. Graduate programs include Movement Science (Athletic Training, Biomechanics, Exercise Science, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the General Option), Sport Management, and a dual degree program with the School of Business leading to both the MBA and the MS in Sport Management. Barry also offers seamless bachelor's to master's programs in Sport Management, Exercise Science, and Athletic Training that will enable students to earn both their bachelor’s and master's degrees in five years. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Andreas School of Business | This program is designed to prepare students to become a successful accounting professional with a global orientation and a strong sense of ethics and social responsibility. The course work is structured to achieve the assurance of learning goals prescribed by AACSB International - The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, to develop the necessary core competencies for entry into the accounting profession endorsed by the AICPA - American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, and to acquire the relevant knowledge, skills, and abilities specified by the IMA - Institute of Management Accountants. It provides the necessary preparation to be eligible for certification examinations like Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Certification in financial Management (CFM), Certification in Management Accounting (CMA). The CPA track enables to pursue a rewarding career in assurance services (auditing) and taxation, while the CFM and CMA tracks will prepare for an important financial and management accounting position within business, governmental, and not-for-profit entities. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative undergraduate GPA of less than 3.0, or a GMAT score less than 500. International students should have a TOEFL score of 550 or higher for paper-based, 213 or higher for computer-based, 79 or higher for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include MSA 650 International Accounting - (3 credits), MSA 660 Contemporary Accounting Theory and Research - (3 credits), MSA 662 Advanced Managerial Accounting - (3 credits), MSA 663 Business Taxation - (3 credits), MSA 664 Advanced Auditing - (3 credits), MSA 668 Governmental and Not-for-Profit Accounting - (3 credits), MBA 617 - Technology and Information Systems - (3 credits), MBA 621 - Managerial Finance - (3 credits), MBA 692 - Social, Legal, and Ethical Aspects of Business - (3 credits). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Andreas School of Business | Andreas School of Business, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3544 | The Schools mission is to deliver a high-quality education that enables their students to become successful business practitioners. They serve students primarily from South Florida, Latin America, and the Caribbean in a highly cosmopolitan, multicultural setting. They function as part of a Catholic, international University, a community of scholars committed to raising up all people in the tradition of the Dominican Order. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Anatomy | Full Time | Variable | US $28,050 a year | School of Podiatric Medicine | This program is to provide students with quality education in an environment that is conducive to both teaching and research. Students are exposed to broad-based knowledge in the anatomical sciences. The program may be applied to careers such as teaching (in junior colleges or small four-year colleges) and research (research assistants). | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university with a GPA of 3.0 or greater on a scale of 4.0, especially in the last two years of study. They must take and achieve a combined score of 1000 or higher in the verbal and quantitative tests in the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Students must have a background in the sciences, including upper-level courses in biology, chemistry, physics, and mathematics. International students should have a TOEFL score of 600 for paper-based, a minimum score of 250 for computer-based, a minimum total score is 100 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Core Curriculum: GMS 507 Basic Research Methodology 2, GMS 547 Neuroanatomy w/lab 3, GMS 550 Histology and Cell Biology w/lab 5, GMS 553 Biomedical Ethics 1, GMS 590 General Gross Anatomy w/lab 6, GMS 625 Lower Extremity Anatomy w/lab 4, GMS 642 Human Developmental Anatomy 3, GMS 654 Research Techniques Seminar 1 (per semester), GMS 616 Research Rotations 1 (per semester), GMS 674 Master of Science Thesis Research 6 (minimum); Electives: GMS 600, 601 Pathology I w/lab, II 4, 2, GMS 527, 528 Biochemistry I, II 3, 3, GMS 620 Pharmacology 4, 595A, 595B Physiology I, Physiology II w/lab 4, 2, GMS 610 Clinical Neurology 2, GMS 623, 624 Medical Microbiology I, II w/lab 2, 5, GMS 697 Special Topics 1-3, GMS 649 General Radiology 3. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Podiatric Medicine | School of Podiatric Medicine, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3249 | Barry University’s School of Podiatric Medicine and Surgery is one of two podiatric medical schools in the U.S. that is integrated within a comprehensive university. Barry’s program is accredited by the Council on Podiatric Medical Education.The University is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Growing demand, challenging specializations, attractive earnings, and flexible work schedules characterize podiatric medicine and surgery. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Anesthesiology | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Health Sciences | This program help students to develop their expertise in anesthesiology, pharmacology, and physiology, as well as a broad understanding of the U.S. healthcare system and advanced practice. It provides for intense and analytic exploration of the basic medical sciences, clinical anesthesiology, professional practice, technology and research methodology. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include ANE 500A Basic Principles of Anesthesia (3 credits), ANE 510 Pharmacology I (3 credits), ANE 520 Pathophysiology I (3 credits), ANE 525A Professional Aspects of Anesthesiology (1 credit), ANE 535 Clinical Practicum I (1 credit), ANE 540A Advanced Principles of Anesthesia: Pediatrics (2 credits), ANE 545A Advanced Principles of Anesthesia: Obstetrics (2 credits), ANE 55A Advanced Principles of Anesthesia: Specialty Care (1 credit), ANE 555A Pharmacology II (3 credits), ANE 560 Chemistry and Physics for Anesthesia (3 credits), ANE 565A Pathophysiology II (3 credits), ANE 570A Regional Anesthesia and Pain management (2 credits), ANE 575 Clinical Practicum II (1 credit), ANE 580A Pharmacology III (3 credits), ANE 585A Pathophysiology III (3 credits), ANE 590A Advanced Principles of Anesthesia: Cardiovascular and Thoracic (2 credits), ANE 595 Clinical Practicum III (1 credit), ANE 600A Leadership and Health Care Systems (3 credits), ANE 605 Clinical Practicum IV (1 credit), ANE 627A Advanced Research and Evidence-Based Practice (3 credits), ANE 630 Clinical Practicum V (1 credit), ANE 650 Anesthesia Seminar I (2 credits), ANE 660 Clinical Practicum VI (1 credit), ANE 670 Anesthesia Seminar II (2 credits), ANE 680 Clinical Practicum VII (1 credit). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Clinical Biology - Histotechnology Specialization | Full Time | 12 Month(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Health Sciences | This program is designed to prepare laboratory and allied health professionals for career advancement by providing interdisciplinary educational opportunities in research, biotechnology, clinical practice and health-care law, ethics and leadership. The curriculum is reflective of a program of graduate study that provides for intense and analytic exploration of laboratory and clinical science, professional practice, technological applications and research methodology. Students will have the opportunity to develop skills that prepare them for a leadership position in health sciences, research and industry. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Fall: BMS/BIOE 550 Cell Biology and Histology, HSA 530 Health Law and Ethics, BIOE 445/545 Introduction to Histotechnology, HSA 667 Health Care Leadership; Spring: BMS/BIOE 550 Cell Biology and Histology, HSA 530 Health Law and Ethics, BIOE 445/545 Introduction to Histotechnology, HSA 667 Health Care Leadership; Summer: BIOE 547 Clinical Experience (300 clinical hours), BIOE 671 Capstone Project. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Clinical Biology - Laboratory Management Specialization | Full Time | 15 Month(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Health Sciences | This program is designed to prepare laboratory and allied health professionals for career advancement by providing interdisciplinary educational opportunities in research, biotechnology, clinical practice and health-care law, ethics and leadership. The curriculum is reflective of a program of graduate study that provides for intense and analytic exploration of laboratory and clinical science, professional practice, technological applications and research methodology. Students will have the opportunity to develop skills that prepare them for a leadership position in health sciences, research and industry. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Core Curriculum: BMS/BIOE 505A Biotechnology I, BMS/BIOE 505B Biotechnology II, BMS/BIOE 510 Pathophysiology, HSA 530 Health Law and Ethics, HSA 535 Applied Biostatistics, HSA 620 Health Care Budgeting and Finance, HSA 667 Health Care Leadership, BIOE 671 Capstone Project, BMS/BIOE 648 Epidemiology; Electives (select one): HSA 525 Health Care Policy, HSA 690 Health Care Strategic Planning, HSA 650 Research Applications in Health Services; Electives (select two): BMS/BIOE 537 Human Genetics, BMS/BIOE 555 Immunology, BMS/BIOE 623 Medical Microbiology, BMS/BIOE 527 Biochemistry I, BMS/BIOE 528 Biochemistry II, BMS/BIOE 644 Cancer Biology. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Health Services Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Health Sciences | This program is designed to meet the needs of health professionals, and others, in developing and enhancing the requisite knowledge and skills necessary to qualify for such leadership positions amidst the constant changes in health care delivery, managed care, policy regulation and a diversified consumer environment. The program empowers students in the critical evaluation of theoretical and research perspectives in all specialty areas of health administration and the practical application of these insights into their daily professional work. Health care executives are the health professionals who most directly impact health care delivery and are responsible for ensuring patient access to treatment, promoting quality, and increasing staff morale on a day-to-day basis. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Fall: HSA510 Principles of Health Services Administration 3, HSA520 Managerial Epidemiology 3, MPH513 Environmental and Occupational Health 3; Spring: HSA525 Health Care Policy 3, HSA526 Health Care Economics 3, NUR679 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention 3; Summer: HSA525 Health Care Policy 3, HSA526 Health Care Economics 3, NUR679 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention 3; Summer: HSA530 Health Law and Ethics 3, HSA535 Applied Biostatistics 3, MPH606 Health Care Disparities 3; Fall: HSA620 Health Care Budgeting and Financial Management 3, NUR638 Performance Improvement and QA OR HSA 540 Quality Management and Utilization Review 3, MPH567 Field Experience in PH 3; Spring: HSA650 Research Application in Health Services 3, HSA667 Health Care Leadership 3, MPH652 Diversity in the Workplace 3; Spring: HSA650 Research Application in Health Services 3, HSA667 Health Care Leadership 3, MPH652 Diversity in the Workplace 3; Summer: HSA668 Health Care Human Resources Management 3, HSA675 Health Information Systems Management 3, MPH697 Special Topics in Health Care (Capstone) 3; Fall: HSA680 Health Care Marketing 3, HSA690 Health Care Strategic Planning (Capstone) 3. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Management | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Andreas School of Business | This program is designed to prepare individuals to assume leadership positions in the private and public sectors by offering comprehensive study and proficiency enhancement in decision making, human resource responsibilities and management skills. The program is designed for individuals from diverse undergraduate backgrounds and requires no specialized knowledge of business for entry into the program. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree with a cumulative undergraduate GPA of less than 3.0, or a GMAT score less than 500. International students should have a TOEFL score of 550 or higher for paper-based, 213 or higher for computer-based, 79 or higher for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Required Core Courses (18 Credit Hours): MBA 601 Human Resource Management, MBA 604 Research in Management, MBA 608 Organizational Behavior, MBA 652 Management of Diversity, MBA 682 Competitive Environment and Strategy Formulation, MBA 692 Social, Legal and Ethical Aspects of Business; Elective Management Courses (6 Credits): MBA 605 Entrepreneurial Management, MBA 607 Business Consulting, MBA 614 Cross Cultural Management, MBA 630 Quality Management; General Elective Courses: (6 Credits). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Andreas School of Business | Andreas School of Business, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3544 | The Schools mission is to deliver a high-quality education that enables their students to become successful business practitioners. They serve students primarily from South Florida, Latin America, and the Caribbean in a highly cosmopolitan, multicultural setting. They function as part of a Catholic, international University, a community of scholars committed to raising up all people in the tradition of the Dominican Order. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Montessori with Specialization in Early Childhood Education | Full Time | 39 Credit-hour(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program equips educators with competencies to guide a class ranging in ages from two and a half through six years. The focus of the program is to understand the unique needs of a young child striving to become independent, acquire the language of one’s community, refine one's coordination through movement, and seeking a significant place in one's social group. The desired outcome is an individual who shows self-confidence in one's capacity to learn, who shows courtesy and respect in one's interaction with others, and who exercises freedom with responsibility. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits as indicated by transcripts. They should have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of 3.0 (B) or higher. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include 600 Introduction to Montessori (3), 601 Montessori Methods and Materials I (3), 602 Montessori Methods and Materials II (4), 603 Montessori and Child Development (3), 605 Language Arts for Montessori Teachers (3), 607 Humanities in the Montessori Early Childhood Classroom (3), 626 Sciences in the Montessori Early childhood Classroom (3), 628 Life Sciences for Montessori Teachers (3), 629 Physical/Social Sciences for Montessori Teachers (3), 631 Math I or the Montessori Teacher (3), 632 Math II for the Montessori Teacher (3), 633 Humanities in the Montessori Classroom (3), 640 Montessori Early Childhood Curriculum, 641 Montessori Elementary Curriculum, 649 Management for Montessori Teachers (3), 656 Practicum I (3), 657 Practicum II (3), 659 Practicum I (3), 660 Practicum II (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Montessori with Specialization in Elementary Education | Full Time | 40 Credit-hour(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | Adrian Dominican School of Education | This program prepares the educator to implement the Montessori curriculum for children ages six through twelve years. The breadth and depth of the curriculum ignites intellectual curiosity, awakens a special kinship with nature, and inspires gratitude to those who have contributed in the past to benefit humankind. Special tools fro developing literacy and mathematical skills make learning personalized, meaningful and long-lasting. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with appropriate credits as indicated by transcripts. They should have an undergraduate cumulative grade point average of 3.0 (B) or higher. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include 600 Introduction to Montessori (3), 601 Montessori Methods and Materials I (3), 602 Montessori Methods and Materials II (4), 603 Montessori and Child Development (3), 605 Language Arts for Montessori Teachers (3), 607 Humanities in the Montessori Early Childhood Classroom (3), 626 Sciences in the Montessori Early childhood Classroom (3), 628 Life Sciences for Montessori Teachers (3), 629 Physical/Social Sciences for Montessori Teachers (3), 631 Math I or the Montessori Teacher (3), 632 Math II for the Montessori Teacher (3), 633 Humanities in the Montessori Classroom (3), 640 Montessori Early Childhood Curriculum, 641 Montessori Elementary Curriculum, 649 Management for Montessori Teachers (3), 656 Practicum I (3), 657 Practicum II (3), 659 Practicum I (3), 660 Practicum II (3). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Adrian Dominican School of Education | Adrian Dominican School of Education, 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3719 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Nursing - Acute Care Nurse Practitioner Specialization | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Division of Nursing | This program is an advanced study to prepare acute care nurse practitioners. The major focus of the program is on clinical practice. All students complete a minimum of 500 hours of precepted clinical learning including an acute care practicum in the students' practice area of interest. They will develop expertise necessary for patient management of high-risk critically ill adults and their families and advanced nursing practice skills across the wellness-illness continuum. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative grade point average of 3.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Year 1, Fall - NUR 617: Role Development for Advanced Practice Nursing (3), NUR 510: Advanced Pathophysiology (4); Year 1, Spring - NUR 601: Phil/Theoretic Bases of Nursing (3), NUR 615: Advanced Pharmacology (4); Year 1, Summer - NUR 679: Health Promotion/Disease Prevention (3), NUR 678: Advanced Health Assessment/Differential Diagnosis (4); Year 2, Fall - NUR 614: Evidence-Based Inquiry I (3), NUR 680 S/T: Behavioral Health (3); Year 2, Fall - NUR 614: Evidence-Based Inquiry I (3), NUR 680 S/T: Behavioral Health (3); Year 2, Spring - NUR 624: Evidence-Based Inquiry II (3), NUR 667: Advanced Concepts Acute Care I (5); Year 2, Summer - NUR 668: Advanced Concepts Acute Care II (5), Year 3, Fall - NUR 669: Advanced Concepts Acute Care III (5); Year 3, Spring - NUR 694: Acute Care Practicum (5). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Division of Nursing | Division of Nursing, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3800 | The Division of Nursing provides an exciting educational experience for women and men interested in shaping the health care system of the new century. Nursing is a unique and valued human service, rich in scholarship, research, and political activism. Barry University's Division of Nursing offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs that prepare students to meet the health care challenges of the future with confidence, knowledge, and creativity. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Nursing - Family Nurse Practitioner Specialization | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Division of Nursing | This program is an advanced study to prepare family nurse practitioners. The major focus of the program is on clinical practice. All students complete a minimum of 500 hours of precepted clinical learning including an acute care practicum in the students' practice area of interest. They will develop advanced nursing practice of the expertise necessary for the management of individuals and their families across the wellness-illness continuum. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative grade point average of 3.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Year 1, Fall - NUR 617: Role Development for Advanced Practice Nursing (3), NUR 510: Advanced Pathophysiology (4); Year 1, Spring - NUR 601: Phil/Theoretic Bases of Nursing (3), NUR 615: Advanced Pharmacology (4); Year 1, Summer - NUR 679: Health Promotion/Disease Prevention (3), NUR 678: Advanced Health Assessment/Differential Diagnosis (4); Year 2, Fall - NUR 614: Evidence-Based Inquiry I (3), NUR 676: Advanced Concepts of Clinical Nursing III (Pedi) (5); Year 2, Spring - NUR 624: Evidence-Based Inquiry II (3), NUR 670: Advanced Concepts of Clinical Nursing I (Adult) (5); Year 2, Summer - NUR 673: Women’s Health (5); Year 3, Fall - NUR 677: Advanced Concepts of Clinical Nursing IV (Geri) (5), NUR 680 S/T: Advanced Concepts of Clinical Nursing V (Behavioral Health) (3); Year 3, Spring - NUR 689: Nurse Practitioner Practicum (5). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Division of Nursing | Division of Nursing, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3800 | The Division of Nursing provides an exciting educational experience for women and men interested in shaping the health care system of the new century. Nursing is a unique and valued human service, rich in scholarship, research, and political activism. Barry University's Division of Nursing offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs that prepare students to meet the health care challenges of the future with confidence, knowledge, and creativity. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Nursing - Nurse Administrator Specialization | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Division of Nursing | This program prepares the graduate with skills in organizational behavior, clinical operations and system design, quality measurement and risk management, fiscal operations and systematic change, human resource development and the use of technology. Specialized skills in organizational politics and policy development, implementation and impact analysis will be acquired. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative grade point average of 3.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Year 1, Fall - NUR 617: Role Development of the Advanced Practice Nurse, NUR 520: Nursing Informatics; Year 1, Spring - NUR 601: Phil/Theoretic Bases of Nursing, NUR 660: Administration/Organization Theories; Year 1, Summer - NUR 679: Health Promotion/Disease Prevention, NUR 638: Quality Improvement for Nursing Administration; Year 2, Fall - NUR 614: Evidence-Based Inquiry I, NUR 674: Financial Strategies for Nurses; Year 2, Spring - NUR 624: Evidence-Based Inquiry II (Course requires prerequisites), NUR 688: Human Resource Development in Nursing; Year 2, Summer - NUR 682: Leadership/Management Strategies in Nursing, Elective; Year 3, Fall - NUR 696: Nurse Administrator Integration Practicum Clinical (240 hours) 6 credit course. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Division of Nursing | Division of Nursing, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3800 | The Division of Nursing provides an exciting educational experience for women and men interested in shaping the health care system of the new century. Nursing is a unique and valued human service, rich in scholarship, research, and political activism. Barry University's Division of Nursing offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs that prepare students to meet the health care challenges of the future with confidence, knowledge, and creativity. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Nursing - Nurse Educator Specialization | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | Division of Nursing | This program prepare students to assume the roles of teacher, scholar, and collaborator. In the role of teacher, students will serve as a leader in curriculum development, clinical, classroom, and other educational settings. In the role of scholar, they will demonstrate clinical expertise and disseminate information by scholarly writing and presentations. In addition, the scholar role incorporates designing, collaborating and utilizing research in nursing education and practice. In the role of collaborator, they will enact and enhance best practices through collaboration with peers, students, administrators, and communities of interest. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a cumulative grade point average of 3.0. International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Year 1, Fall - NUR 510: Advanced Pathophysiology (4), NUR 617: Role Development for the Advanced Practice Nurse (3); Year 1, Spring - NUR 601: Phil/Theoretic Bases of Nursing (3), NUR 615: Advanced Pharmacology (4); Year 1, Summer - NUR 679: Health Promotion/Disease Prevention (3), NUR 678: Advanced Health Assessment/Differential Diagnosis (4); Year 2, Fall - NUR 614: Evidence-Based Inquiry I (3), NUR 631: Learning Theory and Course Development (3); Year 2, Spring - NUR 624: Evidence-Based Inquiry II (3) Course requires prerequisites, NUR 639: Teaching and Learning Strategies for Classroom and Clinical (4) Theory 45 hours/ Fieldwork 40 hours; Year 2, Summer - NUR 686: Nursing Education Leadership (3), NUR 649: Assessment and Evaluation Strategies in Nursing Education (1.5), NUR 642: Technology for Teaching and Learning (1.5); Year 3, Fall - NUR 695: Nurse Educator Integration Practicum (5). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | Division of Nursing | Division of Nursing, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3800 | The Division of Nursing provides an exciting educational experience for women and men interested in shaping the health care system of the new century. Nursing is a unique and valued human service, rich in scholarship, research, and political activism. Barry University's Division of Nursing offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs that prepare students to meet the health care challenges of the future with confidence, knowledge, and creativity. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Science in Occupational Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Health Sciences | This program offers an innovative curriculum that leads to a Master of Science degree, and prepares students for certification as a registered occupational therapist. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. They should have grades of B or better in prerequisite courses - Human Anatomy (3 cr.), Human Physiology (3 cr.), Sociology or Anthropology (3 cr.) Psychology (3 cr.) , inesiology (3 cr.). International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. |
Masters | Barry University | The modules include Summer Semester (3 credits) Pre-requisite: OTR 247 Kinesiology for Health Science Majors (if needed) 3; Clinical Foundations Courses Fall Semester(11 credits): OTR 500 Principles of Occupational Therapy 1 (on-line), OTR 510 Neuroscience Fundamentals for Occupational Therapy 2, OTR 512 Conditions in Childhood 2 (on-line), OTR 514 Evaluation with Children 3, OTR 516 Development and Intervention in Childhood 3; Spring Semester (10 credits): OTR 522 Conditions in Adulthood 2 (on-line) OTR 524 Evaluation with Adults 3, OTR 526 Activities of Daily Living: Strategies for Special Needs 2, OTR 528 Development and Intervention in Adulthood 3; Summer Semester (10 credits): OTR 530 Conditions in Later Life 2 (on-line), OTR 532 Evaluation with Older Adults 3, OTR 534 Development and Intervention in Later Life 3, OTR 536 Clinical Practicum and Seminar 2; Fall Semester (6 credits): OTR 595 Level II Fieldwork in General Rehabilitation 6; Advanced Professional Skills Courses Spring Semester (10 credits): OTR 610 Advanced Neuroscience for Occupational Therapy 2 or OTR 650 Special Topics II 2, OTR 615 Cognition and Occupation 2, OTR 620 Special Topics I 2, OTR 630 Introduction to Clinical Research 4; Summer Semester (10 credits): OTR 640 Assistive Technology 2, OTR 650 Special Topics II 2, OTR 635 Advanced Clinical Reasoning 4, OTR 660 Graduate Project 2; Fall Semester (11 credits): OTR 660 Graduate Project 1, OTR 670 Legal and Ethical Issues in Occupational Therapy 2, OTR 675 Models of Service Delivery 2, OTR 680 Seminar in Professional Issues 2, OTR 685 Leadership and Management in Occupational Therapy 4; Spring Semester (5-7 credits): OTR 660 Graduate Project 1, OTR 695 Level II Fieldwork in Area of Interest 6 (entry-level students) or OTR 699 Advanced Practicum (for OTRs) 4. | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Sciences in Biomedical Sciences - Non-Thesis Program | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Health Sciences | This program is a rigorous curriculum designed for students who have already completed their undergraduate pre-med preparation and want to enhance their qualifications for entrance into medical or dental school. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. They should have GRE scores totaling 1,000. International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include 527 Biochemistry I (3), 528 Biochemistry II (3), 547 Neuroanatomy (4), 550 Histology and Cell Biology (5), 553 Health Law and Ethics, 559 General Dentistry-Principles and Practices (3), 590 Gross Anatomy (6), 591 Head and Neck Anatomy (3), 595 Human Physiology (6). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Sciences in Biomedical Sciences - Non-Thesis Two Year Program | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Health Sciences | This program is designed to prepare students for acceptance to medical and dental schools, but at a slightly less rigorous pace than the 1-year accelerated program. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. They should have GRE scores totaling 1,000. International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include 527 Biochemistry I (3), 528 Biochemistry II (3), 547 Neuroanatomy (4), 550 Histology and Cell Biology (5), 553 Health Law and Ethics, 559 General Dentistry-Principles and Practices (3), 590 Gross Anatomy (6), 591 Head and Neck Anatomy (3), 595 Human Physiology (6). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Sciences in Biomedical Sciences - Thesis Program | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | College of Health Sciences | This program is designed for students who are currently employed in the health-care industry who seek advancement in their chosen biomedical fields in industry or teaching, and those who are preparing for Ph.D. programs. | Students should have completed a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from a regionally accredited or internationally recognized college or university in nursing or an appropriate science with a GPA of 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. They should have GRE scores totaling 1,000. International students should have a minimum score 550 on the written version of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer version, or at least 79 on the internet-based TOEFL and IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include Core Courses: 501 Biostatistics, 507 Basic Research Methodology (3), 555 Immunology (3), 670 Seminar (1), 675 Research (3 s.h.); Elective Courses: 505A Biotechnology: Immunochemistry (1), 505B Biotechnology: Molecular Biology (1), 510 Pathophysiology (3), 511 Forensic Pathology (3), 535 Human Embryology (3), 537 Human Genetics (3), 558 General Microbiology (3), 600 (4), 601 (2) Pathology, 620 Pharmacology (3), 623 Medical Microbiology (3), 629 Matriculation Continued (1), 635 Nutrition (2), 644 Cancer Biology (3), 648 Epidemiology (3), 665 Advanced Study (Credit not to exceed 3 s.h.). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | College of Health Sciences | College of Health Sciences, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3184 | Barry University is a private, Catholic institution with a history of academic excellence in the Dominican tradition. Founded in 1940 in Miami, Florida, the University enrolls 2,747 full-time undergraduate students and 3,748 graduate students. With more than 100 undergraduate, graduate, professional and doctoral programs, populated by people of all ages, cultures, faiths and perspectives, Barry University provides a nurturing environment built on strong values and mutual respect. Barry University community is comprised of nearly 9,000 students, served by more than 2,100 administrators, faculty members and support staff from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The faculty and administration have worked closely together to serve the student population and the local community surrounding the University, where the expansion and growth have kept pace with excellence in education programs. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 132471 | Barry University | Master of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | US $875 per credit / unit | School of Social Work | This program is designed to develop and advance students clinical knowledge and skills, preparing them for highly skilled, challenging and diverse career choices in the social work profession. It prepares students to engage in professional social work practice with diverse populations including, individuals, families, groups, communities, and organizations. Social workers promote a global perspective on the human condition through knowledge generation, competent practice and the exercise of leadership. | Students should have completed a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited college/university with a minimum of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). International students should have a minimum TOEFL score of 550 for paper-based, 213 for computer-based, 79 for internet-based test (iBT) score and an IELTS score of 6.5 or higher. | Masters | Barry University | The modules include 501 Social Welfare Policy and Services (3 credits), 521 Social Work Practice I (3 credits), 524 Social Work Practice II (3 credits), 572 Human Behavior and the Social Environment I (3 credits), 573 Human Behavior and the Social Environment II (3 credits), 581 Social Work Research I (3 credits), 591 Field Education I (3 credits), 592 Field Education II (4 credits), 621 Advanced Clinical Social Work Practice with Individuals (3 credits), 622 Advanced Clinical Social Work Practice with Families (3 credits), 622 Advanced Clinical Social Work Practice with Groups (3 credits), SW 625 Seminar in Professional Social Work Practice (3 credits), 640 Advanced Social Welfare Policy and Analysis (3 credits), 651 Psychopathology (3 credits), 682 Advanced Research (3 credits), 691 Field Education III (4 credits), 692 Field Education IV (4 credits); Elective Courses: 525 Community Organization (3 credits), 527 Social Work with Addictions (3 credits), 543 Social Work and Spirituality (3 credits), 56 Social Work Practice with Aging Individuals and their Families (3 credits), 558 Social Work Practice with Women (3 credits), 575 Social Work Practice with Immigrants and Refugees (3 credits), 604 Conflict Resolution and Social Work (3 credits), 615 Social Work Practice with Family Violence (3 credits), 617 Social Work Practice with Adolescents (3 credits) 642 Social Work Practice with Children (3 credits), 643 Crisis Intervention (3 credits), 645 Human Sexuality (3 credits), 646 HIV/AIDS Related Social Work Practice (3 credits), 654 Contemporary Social Work Practice with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Persons (3 credits), 655 Ethnic Sensitive Social Work Practice (3 credits), 672 Social Work Practice and Major Mental Illness (3 credits). | Barry University | 11300 NE Second Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3100 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, 11300 NE 2nd Avenue, MIAMI SHORES, Florida, 33161, +1 305 899 3900 | The mission of the School of Social Work is framed by the values, ethics and social commitments of the social work profession as well as those of Barry University. The School is committed to the development of professional social workers who are drawn from diverse communities and who are prepared to engage in social work practice that improves the quality of life within those communities. Through professional and continuing education, knowledge development and professional action, the School aims to enhance the quality and effectiveness of human services and social well-being throughout the region and nation. | Yes | Accommodation is provided at the following residence halls: Benincasa Hall - It houses male and female upper-class students. Browne Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between two rooms. Dalton- Dunspaugh Hall - It serves as a co-ed residence hall, male and female wings separated by a central lobby. Dalton, the female wing, is composed of suites, which share a bathroom between double rooms. Dunspaugh, the male wing, has a large community bathroom on each floor. Dalton- Dunspaugh is exclusively for first year students. A computer lounge sponsored by the Division of Information Technology is located in the lobby area as well as a 24 hour desk staffed by public safety. Flood Hall - It houses male and female students in double air-conditioned suites; a bathroom is shared between double rooms. Flood is predominately upper-class students. Holly House Apartments - Located approximately two blocks north of the main campus, these are traditional apartment-style units, consisting of efficiencies, 1-bedroom, and 2-bedroom units. Amenities include full kitchens, gated access, and on-site pool and laundry facility. It house male and female upper-class students. Kolasa Hall - Kolasa is comprised of double and single rooms with private bathrooms in each. It houses male and female upper-class students, and features three lounge areas within the building. Mottram Doss Hall - It contains 12 five-bedroom / two-bath suites and 4 three-bedroom / one-bath suites. Sage Hall - Sage houses male and female first-year and transfer students in double rooms. A bathroom is shared between double rooms. Weber Hall - It houses female, predominantly first-year students. It contains single, double, triple, and quad air-conditioned rooms, with shared and community bathrooms. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Austin Executive MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Austin Executive EMBA | The Program seeks to provide information that is immediately applicable to professionals from functional areas such as finance, marketing, and quantitative business analysis. The students can take the knowledge, apply it in their area/s of responsibilities, add value to the organization, and increase the firm's return on investment (ROI). | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Austin Executive EMBA | Hankamer School of Business, Austin Executive EMBA, Hankamer School of Business Baylor University, One Bear Place # 98013, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3622 | The program seeks to provide information that is immediately applicable to professionals from functional areas such as finance, marketing, and quantitative business analysis. The students can take the knowledge, apply it in their area/s of responsibilities, add value to the organization, and increase the firm's return on investment (ROI). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree - Major in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | 1055 per semester hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ENV 1101 and 1301, 3314 and 43C1., Social Science three hours from: ENV 2376, 3300, 3320, 4310, 4307, 4350 or 4393, Ecology three hours from: ENV 2407, 3306, or 4450, Pollution three hours from: ENV 2375, 3333, 3387, 4344, 4349, or 4370, ENV 2175, 3106, 3133, 4287, or by taking ENV, 2407 (with lab) or ENV 4450 (with lab), ENV 3301, 3V90, 4V90, 4V93, (4199 and 4299), 4302, 4315, 4332, 4394, 4613, 4680, Chemistry At least three hours from CHE 1405, 1300, or 1301, Option II. (Open to B.A. degree only), Chemistry at least three hours from CHE 1405, 1300, 1301, Life Science four hours from BIO 1401, 1305, and 1105, or 1306 and 1106, Physical Science At least three hours from: GEO 1403, GEOG 1404, CHE 1302 or 1341, Three hours of STA or ECO 1305 or 2306, and an additional seven hours from: ANT 2305, GEOG 1404, 4314; ECO 1305, 2306, 2307; PSC 1305, 1306, 3312, 3314, 3315, 3322; CHE 1100, 1102, 1146, 1302, 1316, 1341, 3331; HED 2331 or any BIO, GEO, PHY, or STA. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies, One Bear Place # 97266, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6566 | The Department of Environmental Studies is dedicated in training students who can steward the planet's soil, air and water resources as well as maintaining the great diversity of species occupying the biosphere. The Department is committed in teaching students to consider the political and social issues inherent in environmental management, and to exercise love for the neighbors through care for the earth and all humankind. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | The Program offers students a general introduction to the cultural, physical and archaeological sub fields through classroom learning, seminars and hands-on field and laboratory research opportunities.Cultural anthropology examines human behavior and cultural diversity from the recent past through the present. Physical anthropology studies evolutionary trends through the fossil record, genetics, and comparative primate behavior. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97173, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4084 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Astrophysics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This Program is designed for students who plan to attend professional school in the health-related areas such as medicine and dentistry. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Baylor University Sciences Building, One Bear Place #97348, WACO, Texas, 76706, +1 254 710 3311 | The Department is housed in the modern, Baylor University Sciences Building, the Department is well-equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation to support the research efforts of its faculty, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate researchers. Modern, well-equipped individual research labs are supported by excellent departmental facilities, including a Bruker 360 MHz NMR, a Varian 500 MHz NMR, a VG/Fisons ProSpec high-resolution GC/mass spectrometer, and an Enraf-Nonius CAD4-F single-crystal and Bruker-Nonius X8 Apex X-ray diffractometer. Major Departmental equipment is supervised and maintained by a full-time Director of Instrumentation, Dr. James Karban, who also provides training and instruction in instrumental operation. The Department has a fully supported chemical and biochemical stockroom. In addition, a fully equipped machine shop, staffed by a full-time machinist, is available for the fabrication of specialized research equipment. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Baylor University Sciences Building, One Bear Place #97348, WACO, Texas, 76706, +1 254 710 3311 | The Department is housed in the modern, Baylor University Sciences Building, the Department is well-equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation to support the research efforts of its faculty, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate researchers. Modern, well-equipped individual research labs are supported by excellent departmental facilities, including a Bruker 360 MHz NMR, a Varian 500 MHz NMR, a VG/Fisons ProSpec high-resolution GC/mass spectrometer, and an Enraf-Nonius CAD4-F single-crystal and Bruker-Nonius X8 Apex X-ray diffractometer. Major Departmental equipment is supervised and maintained by a full-time Director of Instrumentation, Dr. James Karban, who also provides training and instruction in instrumental operation. The Department has a fully supported chemical and biochemical stockroom. In addition, a fully equipped machine shop, staffed by a full-time machinist, is available for the fabrication of specialized research equipment. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Classics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1301 Vocabulary Development, 1305 Heroes and Heroines of the Ancient World, 3301 Roman Civilization, 3302 Greek Civilization, 3321 Topography of Rome and Pompeii, 3380 Classical Mythology, 3381 Medical Terminology, 4301 Principles of Classical Studies, 4331 The Archaeology of Sicily and Southern Italy, 4350 Augustine's Theological Development, 4V01 Topics in Classical Literature. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97352, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Communication Specialist | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | The Communication Specialist Major combines courses in speech and Film and Digital Media. This program of study blends a leadership/management/organizational communication focus with the development of expertise in digital media production. Like the speech major, it is appropriate for students with a wide array of career aspirations, but is most appropriate for those intending to take advantage of communication expertise in a corporate career track. The focus of the Communication Specialist major is to prepare students for professional communication positions in business and industry. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies, One Bear Place # 97332, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Earth Science | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | The B.A. degree in Earth science is not a professional degree in geology. It may be combined with majors in environmental studies or museum studies or with courses in education for teaching certification. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include GEOG 1300, GEO 1406, One course from GEO 1401, 1402, 1403, 1405, 1408. (Majors are encouraged to take GEO 1405.), GEOG 3312, GEO 3427, 3435, 4312, 4313, 4314. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, One Bear Place #97354, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2361 | The mission of the Geology Department at Baylor University is to develop, apply and transmit scientific knowledge about the Earth and Earth's systems throughout its 4.6 billion year history. The mission includes: provision of high-quality undergraduate and graduate education, including development of techniques for enhancing geoscience education; development of geoscience students as scientists and as highly competent practitioners; education of Baylor's general student population about Earth and its natural systems; development of new knowledge through scientific research; effective communication of new knowledge to the global geoscience community; application of geoscience knowledge to address practical problems affecting human society, including stewardship of the natural world; service as a source of reliable geoscience information within the university community and beyond; and maintenance of an environment within the Geology Department characterized by mutual support, respect and kindness. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Film and Digital Media | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | This Program courses are designed to prepare students for a variety of careers in radio, television, cable, and allied fields, and for careers in which knowledge of and skills in electronic and film communication are an integral part of professional activity. These would include, for example, business and industry, religion, and education. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies, One Bear Place # 97332, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Geography | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | This Program covers courses, leading to a bachelor of arts degree provide opportunities for specialization in either physical geography or political geography. Geography courses may also be combined with courses in education for teaching certification. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include GEOG 1300, (GEOG 1310 or ANT 1305), GEOG 1404, (3395 or 4350), 4485, and (4386 or 4487), Physical Geogaphy-- GEOG 4314, 4340, GEO 3349, 4312, 4345, 4348, 4371, 4373, 4375, 4459, Cultural Geography GEOG 3330, 3365, 4315, ANT 4350, PSC 3300, 4330, SOC 4331, African Studies: AFS 3301, American Studies: AMS 4382, Asian Studies: AST 2380, Latin American Studies: HIS 3355, Middle East Studies: MES 2301, Slavic and East European Studies: SEES 2380, ANT 3340, GEOG 3312. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, One Bear Place #97354, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2361 | The mission of the Geology Department at Baylor University is to develop, apply and transmit scientific knowledge about the Earth and Earth's systems throughout its 4.6 billion year history. The mission includes: provision of high-quality undergraduate and graduate education, including development of techniques for enhancing geoscience education; development of geoscience students as scientists and as highly competent practitioners; education of Baylor's general student population about Earth and its natural systems; development of new knowledge through scientific research; effective communication of new knowledge to the global geoscience community; application of geoscience knowledge to address practical problems affecting human society, including stewardship of the natural world; service as a source of reliable geoscience information within the university community and beyond; and maintenance of an environment within the Geology Department characterized by mutual support, respect and kindness. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Greek | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | The Program needs students to complete twenty-seven semester hours including at least fifteen semester hours at the 3000 or 4000 level in Greek. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1301 Elementary Greek, 1302 Elementary Greek, 2310 Intermediate Greek, 2320 Intermediate Greek, 3302 Greek Historians, 3303 Greek Tragedy, 3305 Classical Rhetoric and the Christian Tradition, 3306 Alexander the Great: Reading the Ancient Sources, 3307 Sicilian Narratives, 3311 Greek Epigraphy, 3351 Advanced New Testament Greek, 3352 Hellenistic Greek, 3354 Apocalyptic Literature, 4301 Readings from Greek Literature, 4302 Greek Lyric Poetry, 4303 Homer's Iliad, 4304 Greek Comedy, 4307 Readings in Attic Oratory, 4351 The Gospels and New Testament Criticism. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97352, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1301 Elementary Latin, 1302 Elementary Latin, 2310 Intermediate Latin, 2320 Intermediate Latin, 3301 Lucretius, 3302 Livy, 3303 Tacitus, 3304 Pliny and Martial, 3305 Cicero, Philosophical Writings, 3306 Sallust, 3307 Julius Caesar: Reading the Ancient Sources, 3308 Readings in Imperial Epic, 3309 Ovid's Metamorphoses, 3310 Augustus: Reading the Ancient Sources, 3311 Epistles and Epigraphy of Rome, 3312 Augustine, 3350 Roman Drama: Senecan Tragedies, 3351 Roman Comedy, 3352 Roman Lyric Poetry, 3353 Roman Satire, 3354 Horace's Odes, 3390 Medieval Latin Prose, 3395 Medieval Latin Poetry, 4308 Latin Language Seminar, 4309 Virgil, 4V01 Readings from Latin Literature. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97352, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Museum Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MST 1300 Introduction to Museums, MST 2301 Introduction to Museum Administration, MST 2304 Introduction to Collection Management and Care, MST 3302 Introduction to Museum Marketing and Development, MST 3303 Educational Programming for Museums, MST 3305 Exhibit Design and Preparation, MST 3308 Introduction to Material Culture, MST 4306 Applied Principles of Collection Care, MST 4307 Documentation and Interpretation of Historic Buildings and Sites, MST 4395 The Museum as a Learning Resource, MST 4600 Introduction to Museum Field Methods, MST 4V30 Museum Special Topics Seminar, MST 4V60 Museum Internship, MST 4V70 Independent Studies in Museums. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies, One Bear Place # 97154, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4349 | The Department of Museum Studies offers a Master of Arts degree in museum studies, which combines academic and professional training for students preparing to be the next generation of museum leaders. Students learn about the history and philosophy of different types of museums, about the different skills that are needed in museum administration, museum education, collections management and care, archival management, and exhibit design, as well as courses on material culture, decorative arts, and historic preservation. Students are also given the opportunity to apply (and test out) this knowledge in the real world, through work at the Mayborn Museum Complex and other museums in Waco and central Texas, in formal internships in museums across the country, and through attendance at professional conferences such as the Texas Association of Museums. The program consists of thirty-six credit hours, including a thesis or a master's project. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | The program provides a solid foundation in the history of philosophy. In addition, the program involves in-depth study of specific subject areas, including logic, ethics, aesthetics, epistemology, and metaphysics. This dual emphasis cultivates students' capacity for critical analysis, stimulates independent thinking, and promotes sound reasoning based on knowledge, moral discrimination, and religious insight. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, One Bear Place # 97273, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3368 | The Baylor University philosophy department has been an independent academic department since the early 1940s. The Department's graduate program has been in place since 1950. Graduates of the department, at both the BA and the MA levels, have gone on to further work and distinguished academic achievement at many of the most prestigious universities in the world. The Department is well-represented by graduates who are among the faculty and administration of major universities, leaders in business, distinguished attorneys and judges, and influential theologians and religious leaders. In 2003, the Baylor philosophy department began to offer graduate work leading to the Ph.D. degree in philosophy. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | The Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in physics provides a traditional liberal arts education with a solid set of core courses in physics. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. Degree in Speech Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | The Program provide students with a broad-based understanding of the processes of human communication and the importance of these communication processes in our society, while serving and encouraging those students with professional aspirations to become ethical, articulate, creative and innovative leaders in the field of communication. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies, One Bear Place # 97332, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Biology - General | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This Program offers a flexible curriculum that can be tailored to student’s interest. It is appropriate for students who desire a strong, diverse background in biology in preparation for graduate school or teaching. The general program is also appropriate for students desiring careers as technicians in biotechnology or other research settings. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Biology - Pre-Health Care | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This Program is designed to prepare students for medical or dental school or graduate school in medical and molecular biology. The most common sequence of upper level courses includes vertebrate physiology, cell physiology, vertebrate histology, immunology, molecular biology, cell and developmental biology, and bacteriology. This program is also appropriate for students interested in veterinary medicine, medical technology, or other health related professions. Graduates will also be prepared to work in technical areas in molecular biology as research technicians or assistants. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Biology - Science Education | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1302 Thinking and Writing or FAS 1302, 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research or 3300 Technical Writing or 3 courses from FAS 1118, 1128, 1139, 2301 British Literature, 2304 American Literature or 2306 World Literature or 3 hours of “2000” or above GTX, Religion (REL) 1310 Christian Scriptures, 1350 Christian Heritage, Human Performance (HP), Chapel (CHA 1088), 1301 OR 1401 Elementary level, 1302 OR 1402 Elementary level, 1412 Accelerated Elementary level, 2310 Intermediate level, 2320 Intermediate level, 2302 American Constitutional Development, 1305 World History to 1500, 1307 World History since 1500, 2365 American History to 1877, 2366 American History since 1877, Anthropology (ANT), 1305 Introduction to Anthropology, 3301 Science, Society and Culture, Economics (ECO), 1305 Survey of Economic Principles, 2306 Principles of Microeconomics, 2307 Principles of Macroeconomics, Geography (GEOG), 1300 World Geography, Philosophy (PHI), 1306 Logic, 1307 Critical Thinking, 1308 Ethics, 1321 Introduction to Philosophy, 3301 Moral Philosophy, 3310 History of Philosophy (Classical), 3312 History of Philosophy (Modern European), Political Science (PSC), 1305 American National Government, 1306 American State and Local Govt., Psychology (PSY), 1305 Introduction to Psychology, Sociology (SOC), 1305 Introduction to Sociology. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Child and Family Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The Child and Family Studies Program at Baylor University focuses on the development of families and individuals as they continue to grow and change. Students in this major of study benefit by optimizing their life as individuals, parents, and community leaders. They do this by acquiring a broad knowledge in the study of individuals, families, and relationships, and become better able to understand and work with today's families as they change and diversify. This leads to careers involving children and families in communities, government, and business. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1104 Professional Perspectives, 1300 Apparel in Today's Society, 1311 Apparel Production and Evaluation, 1315 Individual and Family Development, 2351 Nutrition, 2354 Prenatal Care and Infant Development, 2355 Child Development, 2380 Meal Management, 3350 Individual and Family Financial Management, 3356 Family Development, 3357 The Preschool Child, 4358 Planning and Administration of Preschool Programs, 4359 Parenting, 4362 Child Life Theory and Practice, 4390 Practicum in Family and Consumer Sciences, 4695 Internship in Child Life. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | The Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in computer science provides a traditional liberal arts education with a solid set of core courses in computer science. These courses provide the foundation necessary for a career in computer science. During the sophomore year, a student selects one of several areas of concentration in order to meet specific goals. Students may choose a concentration program from business, science, or computer science, or any approved minor in another discipline. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include CSI 1430-Intro. to Comp.Sci. I 4 , MTH 1321-Calculus I 3 , ENG 1302-ThinkingandWriting 3 , REL 1310-The Christian Scriptures 3 , Fine Arts 2 , Human Performance 1 , CSI 1440-Intro.to Comp.Sci. II 4 , CSI 2350-Discrete Structures 3 , REL 1350-The Christian Heritage 3 , Laboratory Science 4 , Human Performance 1 . | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3876 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1301 Economic and Business History, 1305 Survey of Economic Principles for Nonbusiness Majors (Cross-listed as AMS 1305), 2306 Principles of Microeconomics, 2307 Principles of Macroeconomics, 3305 Money and Banking, 3306 Intermediate Microeconomic Analysis, 3307 Intermediate Macroeconomic Analysis, 3308 Engineering Economic Analysis, 4312 Business Cycles and Forecasting, 4317 The Economics of Regulation, 4318 Law and Economics, 4319 Game Theory, 4320 The Economics of Government, 4321 Energy Economics, 4323 The Environment and Economic Analysis, 4325 Urban and Regional Economic Analysis, 4327 E-Commerce Economics, 4331 African Economic Development, 4332 Economic Problems of Latin America, 4334 Economic Development, 4336 Economics of Labor, 4338 Economic Systems of the World, 4343 History of Economic Thought, 4345 Mathematical Analysis in Economics, 4347 Econometrics, 4350 Economics of Health and Medical Care, 4355 Economics of Poverty and Discrimination, 4380 Economic Reasoning and Policy Analysis, 4V98 Special Studies in Economics. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics, 1311 S 5th Street One Bear Place #98003, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2263 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in English | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1302 Thinking and Writing, 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research, 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research Honors, 2301 British Literature, 2301.21 British Literature (ENG Majors Only), 2304 American Literature, 2304.01 American Literature (ENG Majors Only), 2306 World Literature, 3300 Technical and Professional Writing, 3301 English Words, 3302 Modern English Grammar, 3303 Advanced Expository Writing 305 Language in Society, 3307 Screenplay and Scriptwriting. |
Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97404, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1768 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Fashion Design | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This Program helps the students to develop knowledge and skills in design, trend tracking, apparel production operations, and textile performance. Students use a state-of-the art computer design laboratory to design and make production patterns. In the design studio, students learn production techniques used in the apparel industry. Graduates will be qualified to move into computer-aided design and pattern design jobs. Majors are required to complete an approved internship. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1104 Professional Perspectives, 1231 Principles of Art and Design as Applied to Family and Consumer Sciences, 1300 Apparel in Today's Society, 1311 Apparel Production and Evaluation, 1391 Introduction to Fashion Industry, 2301 Apparel Production II, 2310 Textile Science, 2311 Fashion Illustration, 2351 Nutrition, 2364 Costume History and Design, 2371 Apparel Analysis, 2373 Apparel Design I, 3312 Advanced Textile Science, 3350 Individual and Family Financial Management, 3356 Family Development, 3360 CAD in Apparel Design and Retailing, 3373 Apparel Design II, 4360 CAD Flat Pattern, 4371 Designing Apparel for Mass Marketing, 4394 Fashion Design Internship, 4396 Fashion Forecasting. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Fashion Merchandising | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The Fashion Merchandising Program at Baylor University focuses on developing professional skills, such as communication, analytical thinking, teamwork, and ethical behavior. These skills help sustain graduates as they apply management and marketing theory and business principles to the global fashion industry. The Fashion Merchandising program at Baylor University not only teaches students the professional skills they will need to succeed in a variety of jobs in the fashion industry, but also life skills that will help them succeed both on and off the job. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1104 Professional Perspectives, 1231 Principles of Art and Design as Applied to Family and Consumer Sciences, 1300 Apparel in Today's Society, 1311 Apparel Production and Evaluation, 1391 Introduction to Fashion Industry, 2301 Apparel Production II, 2310 Textile Science, 2311 Fashion Illustration, 2351 Nutrition, 2364 Costume History and Design, 2371 Apparel Analysis, 2373 Apparel Design I, 3312 Advanced Textile Science, 3350 Individual and Family Financial Management, 3356 Family Development, 3360 CAD in Apparel Design and Retailing, 3373 Apparel Design II, 4360 CAD Flat Pattern, 4371 Designing Apparel for Mass Marketing, 4394 Fashion Design Internship, 4396 Fashion Forecasting. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in History | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 305 World History to 1500, 1307 World History since 1500, 2365 History of the United States to 1877, 2366 History of the United States Since 1877, 2380 Introduction to Slavic and East European Studies, 3305 Traditional China, 3307 Japan, 3310 The Middle East, 3311 Middle East History 600-1798, 3315 History of West Africa, 3340 Russia to 1861, 3342 Russia since 1861, 3344 History of Modern Germany, 3353 Pre-Columbian and Colonial Latin America, 3355 Modern Latin America, 3360 History of the American Presidency, 3362 History of Religion in America, HIS 2365 and 2366 or consent of the instructor, 3371 History of Black Americans, 3380 History of Texas, 3395 Historiography and Philosophy of History. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, One Bear Place # 97306, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2667 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Interior Design | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This Program strives to provide a strong undergraduate experience espousing academic excellence and Christian integrity, preparing the individual to serve the design profession in both residential and commercial arenas within a diverse and global marketplace. The program is accredited by the Council for Interior Design Accreditation. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include FCS 1313 Drafting I, FCS 1332 Fundamentals of Interior Design, FCS 2310 Textile Science, FCS 2314 Drafting II, FCS 2315 Building Systems and Codes for Interiors, FCS 2316 Interior Design Presentation Studio, FCS 2320 Materials and Finishes for Interior Environments, FCS 3198 Internship Seminar, FCS 3313 Historical Design I, FCS 3317 Lighting for Interior Environments, FCS 3318 ID Studio I: Residential Design, FCS 3319 Computer Aided Drafting and Design for Interiors, FCS 3326 ID Studio II: Contract Design I, FCS 4313 Historical Design II, FCS 4318 ID Studio III: Contact Design II, FCS 3319 and 3326, FCS 4333 ID Studio IV: Business Practices and Procedures for ID/Capstone Studio, FCS 4398 Interior Design Field Experience. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Language and Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1302 Thinking and Writing, 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research, 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research Honors, 2301 British Literature, 2301.21 British Literature (ENG Majors Only), 2304 American Literature, 2304.01 American Literature (ENG Majors Only), 2306 World Literature, 3300 Technical and Professional Writing, 3301 English Words, 3302 Modern English Grammar, 3303 Advanced Expository Writing 305 Language in Society, 3307 Screenplay and Scriptwriting. |
Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97404, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1768 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | The Curriculum provides the student with a basic background in mathematics in the context of a liberal arts education. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1321, 1322, 2321, Calculus I - III, 2311 Linear Algebra, 3312 Foundations of Combinatorics and Algebra, 3323 Intro to Analysis, 4326 Advanced Calculus I. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97328, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3561 | The Department of Mathematics has much to offer to both students and prospective faculty. With excellent facilities housed in the newly renovated and centrally located Sid Richardson building, the department has a faculty and staff dedicated to helping students. The faculty (21 tenured or tenure-track, 10 lecturers) pride themselves with their 'easy access' attitude when helping students. It offers a wide variety of courses leading to a B.S. degree in mathematics, a B.S. degree in applied mathematics, and a B.A. degree in mathematics. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Nutrition Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The Study of Nutrition Sciences offers students an entry to a dynamic profession with a myriad of opportunities. The study of nutrition sciences focuses on the science based aspects of human nutrition and the application of those principles to food selection, preparation and consumption for people in many settings to achieve and maintain health and well being across the lifespan. Nutrition sciences graduates will help fill the increasing demand for dietetics professionals. Baylor University's nutrition sciences program enables motivated students to help fill the increased need for dietetics professionals due to society's embracing healthier eating and preventive health approaches. A major in nutrition sciences equips students with food and nutrition knowledge required of a registered dietitian. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1104 Professional Perspectives, 1231 Principles of Art and Design as Applied to Family and Consumer Sciences - (Cross-listed as FCS 1331), 1300 Apparel in Today's Society, 1301 Food Science, 1311 Apparel Production and Evaluation, 2351 Nutrition, 2380 Meal Management, 3350 Individual and Family Financial Management, 3351 Nutrition Education, 3356 Family Development, 3386 Experimental Foods, 3388 Clinical Nutrition, 3435 Food Service Production, 4100 Seminar in Nutrition Sciences, 4351 Life Cycle Nutrition, 4387 Advanced Nutrition, 2351. Nutrients and their roles in human health. Emphasis on trends in nutritional research, 4388 Advanced Clinical Nutrition, 4V93 Special Studies in Family and Consumer Sciences 1 to 3 semester. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | This is one of the most comprehensive and versatile majors in the undergraduate curriculum. Students bring diverse methods to bear on understanding the political world, from historical and philosophical analysis to statistical analysis. Students who want to understand politics, become effective citizens, and make a difference, study political science. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1305 American National Government, 2302 American Constitutional Development, 3301 Scope and Methods of Political Science, 5323 Research Design and Research Methods, 1306 American State and Local Government, 3310 Legislative Process and Behavior, 3320 Minority and Ethnic Group Politics, 3330 The American Presidency, 3340 Campaigns and Elections, 4300 Political Behavior, 4310 Politics and Communication, 4330 Urban Political Process, 4360 Religion and the Body Politic, 4380 Government and Business. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department, One Bear Place # 97276, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3161 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Professional Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1302 Thinking and Writing, 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research, 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research Honors, 2301 British Literature, 2301.21 British Literature (ENG Majors Only), 2304 American Literature, 2304.01 American Literature (ENG Majors Only), 2306 World Literature, 3300 Technical and Professional Writing, 3301 English Words, 3302 Modern English Grammar, 3303 Advanced Expository Writing 305 Language in Society, 3307 Screenplay and Scriptwriting. |
Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97404, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1768 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.A. in Theatre Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include THEA 1301 Practical Approach, THEA 1101 Fund. Voice/Move, THEA 1312 Scenic Elements or THEA 1316 Costume Elements, THEA 1316 Costume Elements, THEA Lower-level Elective, THEA 2374 Theatre History, THEA 2371 Lighting Elements, THEA 3105 Production Lab, THEA 4376 Theatre History III, THEA 3324 Directing, THEA 4107 Production Lab, THEA Advanced, THEA 1102 Fund. Voice/Move, THEA 1312 Scenic Elements, THEA 2375 Theatre History, THEA 3106 Production Lab. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts, Baylor Theatre One Bear Place # 97262, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1861 | The Baylor University Department of Theatre Arts is an elite program combining an excellent liberal arts education with rigorous training in both academic and artistic fields of theatre study. The department is ranked among the top 20 undergraduate theatre programs in the United States and is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Theatre. The Mission of the Department of Theatre Arts is to prepare students for theatre arts related fields by integrating excellence in traditional scholarship and artistic creativity with a Christian worldview. The mission of Baylor Theatre is to act as a cultural laboratory which engages the university, the larger community of artist scholars, and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. Degree in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | The Undergraduate Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) degree in Accounting is designed to provide students with technical accounting, communication and leadership skills. The accounting portion of the BBA degree is comprised of three rigorous semesters after which students are prepared for entry-level positions in accounting, but do not possess the semester hours or knowledge required to sit for the CPA exam. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ACC3301 - Financial Reporting I, ACC3303 - Accounting Information Systems, ACC3302 - Financial Reporting II, ACC3304 - Federal Income Tax, ACC3310 - Accounting Research and Communication, ACC4330 - Auditing, Assurance and Attestation, ACC4308 - Advanced Managerial Accounting, ACC4350 - Business and Professional Ethics for Accountants. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law, One Bear Place # 98002, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6138 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. Information Systems - Accounting Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | This Technology provides the infrastructure to collect, analyze, compile, and disseminate accounting information. The emergence of new technologies, real-time data, and the creation of international electronic standards for transmitting financial information electronically (i.e. XBRL) requires a new type of professional that can integrate accounting and information systems functions. With Sarbanes-Oxley’s strict reporting requirements this professional skill mix is in demand and growing. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MIS 3301 Introduction to Business Programming Logic, MIS 3320 System Analysis and Design, ACC 3301 Financial Accounting and Reporting I, ACC 3303 Accounting Information Systems, ACC 3306 Intermediate Accounting II, MIS 4340 Foundations of Database Systems Development, MIS 3332 Control and Audit of Information Systems. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems, One Bear Place #98005, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2258 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. Information Systems - Management Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | The MIS track builds technical skills with a theoretical, hands-on, and project-based curriculum. Students pursuing the MIS track master the latest technologies and understand system development basics. Students will be assets in the current business environment and will have skills that will enable them to master the latest technical trends. MIS graduates develop the following technical and business skills. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MIS 3301 Introduction to Business Programming Logic, MIS 3320 Systems Analysis and Design, MIS 4342 Advanced Business Networking, MIS 4340 Foundations of Database Management Systems Management, MIS 3341 Developing Client-Server Applications, MIS 4320 E-Commerce Systems Development, MIS 4321 Business Systems Development, MIS 4330 Project Management, MIS 4350 Cyber Security Technology Factors. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems, One Bear Place #98005, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2258 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Distribution Management and Technology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship | The Distribution Management and Technology programs prepares students for a variety of rewarding careers including purchasing, procurement, materials management, vendor management, customer relationship management, project management, integrated supply liaison, transportation/logistics, and consulting. Only a limited number of students are formally accepted into this major each. Once admitted, students take major courses in a lock-step sequence, including a guaranteed paid summer internship. Major courses also help students prepare for professional certifications in Supply Management (CPSM) and Project Management (PMP) if they so choose. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MGT 3320 (Fall, Junior year) Distribution Management, MGT 4333 (Spring, Junior year) Procurement and Materials Management, MGT 4396 (Summer following Junior year) Distribution Management and Technology Internship, MGT 4330 (Fall, Senior year) Project Management, MGT 4345 (Spring, Senior year) Global Supply Chain Management, MGT 4355 (Spring, Senior year)Management Consulting. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4169 | The primary mission of the Management and Entrepreneurship Department is to provide students, at the undergraduate and graduate level, with a high quality education. The Department have nationally recognized faculty in the areas of strategic management, organizational behavior, human resource management, entrepreneurship, operations, and international business. The faculty members are committed to providing students with a hands-on learning environment that emphasizes practical application to complement the latest theoretical developments in their fields. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include Business Cycles and Forecasting (ECO 4312), Contemporary Government and Business Relations (ECO 4317), Urban and Regional Economic Analysis (ECO 4325), International Economics (ECO 4330), Economics of Labor (ECO 4336), Contemporary Government and Business Relations (ECO 4317), Public Finance (ECO 4320), Energy Economics (ECO 4321), The Environment and Economic Analysis (ECO 4323), International Economics (ECO 4330), Economic Problems of Latin America (ECO 4332), Economic Development (ECO 4334) , Economic Systems of the World (ECO 4338), Corporate Business Economist: Business Cycles and Forecasting (ECO 4312), Energy Economics (ECO 4321), The Environment and Economic Analysis (ECO 4323), Foreign Exchange Markets (ECO 4333) , Econometrics (ECO 4347),Commercial Bank Loan Officer: Business Cycles and Forecasting (ECO 4312) , Urban and Regional Economic Analysis (ECO 4325) , International Economics (ECO 4330) , Foreign Exchange Markets (ECO 4333). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics, 1311 S 5th Street One Bear Place #98003, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2263 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Entrepreneurship | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship | The Entrepreneurship major offers a unique learning opportunity to students who aspire to start or secure employment in, a business having high growth potential. The major helps students identify viable career options in entrepreneurship, expand their basic knowledge of the entrepreneurial process, and develop a repertoire of venture management skills and techniques. A major emphasis of the program involves contact with successful, practicing entrepreneurs and on-site business consulting. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include Entrepreneurial Process, ENT 3320, Entrepreneurial Finance ENT 4310, Entrepreneurial Business Plan ENT 4325, Managing the Family Business MGT 4320, Corporate Entrepreneurship: Initiating and Sustaining Innovations ENT 4330, Social Entrepreneurship and Economic Development ENT 4353, Technology Entrepreneurship ENT 4340, Internship in Business BUS 4395, International Entrepreneurship ENT 3350, Entrepreneurship in the European Union ENT 4351, Technology Entrepreneurship in Asia ENT 4352, Franchising: Franchise and Franchisor Perspectives ENT 4360, Social Entrepreneurship: Microfinance and Economic Development in Africa ENT 4380. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4169 | The primary mission of the Management and Entrepreneurship Department is to provide students, at the undergraduate and graduate level, with a high quality education. The Department have nationally recognized faculty in the areas of strategic management, organizational behavior, human resource management, entrepreneurship, operations, and international business. The faculty members are committed to providing students with a hands-on learning environment that emphasizes practical application to complement the latest theoretical developments in their fields. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate | This is the study and practice of decision-making to acquire and manage real and financial assets for the purpose of creating and maintaining economic (market) value. The Finance curriculum consists of two main areas of study-corporate finance and investments. Corporate finance explores which assets a firm should acquire, how to raise funds to purchase them, and how to manage acquired assets to maximize the value of the firm. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 3100 Stock Market Operations, 3310 Introduction to Financial Management, 4310 Entrepreneurial Finance, 4331 International Business Finance, 4335 Business Risk Management, 4339 Real Estate Investments, 4340 Real Estate Finance, 4360 Corporate Financial Management, 4361 Short-Term Financial Management, 4365 Investment Analysis, 4366 Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives, 4370 Management of Financial Institutions, 4381 Practicum in Portfolio Management, 4V98 Special Studies in Finance, 4387 Seminar in Contemporary Financial Economics, 4V98 Special Studies in Finance. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 98001, +1 254 710 1840 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Financial Services and Planning | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate | The Financial Services and Planning curriculum is interdisciplinary and offers students a broad education in financial services with emphasis on personal financial planning. Areas of study include investments, insurance, income tax, retirement benefits, and estate planning. Graduates of this program, which is registered with the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, Inc. (CFP Board), are qualified to take the Comprehensive CFP Certification Examination administered by the CFB Board. Students with a major in Financial Services and Planning may pursue career opportunities in the rapidly growing financial services industry, including personal financial planning, private banking/trust, securities brokerage, insurance agency sales, and employee benefit planning/consulting. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include FSP 3367 Introduction to Personal Financial Planning, FIN 4365 Investment Analysis, RMI 4310 Fundamentals of Life and Health Insurance, ACC 4377 Personal and Business Tax Planning, FSP 4367 Seminar in Personal Financial Counseling. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 98001, +1 254 710 1840 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship | The Human Resource Management major prepares students for business careers that are centered on people. Activities that require the human resource specialist's skills include recruitment, career planning, performance evaluation, job placement, compensation/benefit programs, training and development programs, and discipline. Career opportunities may be found in almost all business fields in firms that are large enough to warrant human resource specialists. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include Negotiating and Conflict Resolution (MGT 4320), Personnel/Human Resource Management (MGT 4336), Human Resource Staffing and Labor Relations (MGT 4337), Compensation and Performance Appraisal (MGT 4338 Spring only), Organizational Leadership and Change (MGT 4305), Internship in Business (BUS 4395), Employee Benefit Planning (RMI 4330), Employment Law (BL 4303), or Organizational Design and Development (MGT 4350). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4169 | The primary mission of the Management and Entrepreneurship Department is to provide students, at the undergraduate and graduate level, with a high quality education. The Department have nationally recognized faculty in the areas of strategic management, organizational behavior, human resource management, entrepreneurship, operations, and international business. The faculty members are committed to providing students with a hands-on learning environment that emphasizes practical application to complement the latest theoretical developments in their fields. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Management | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship | The focus of the Management major is on people and productivity. The Management curriculum offers students the opportunity to learn how to be "productive through people" in their study of such fundamental professional skills as leadership, negotiations, team building, project coordination, performance evaluation, and strategy formulation. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include Personnel/Human Resource Management MGT 4336, Doing Business Across Cultures INB 3333, Principled Leadership MGT 4305, Progressive Team Organizations MGT 4310, Negotiating and Conflict Resolution MGT 4320, Project Management MGT 4330-Spring only, Procurement and Materials Management MGT 4333-Spring only, Human Resource Staffing and Labor Relations MGT 4337, Compensation Management MGT 4338-Spring only, Global Supply Chain Management MGT 4345, Social Entrepreneurship and Development MGT 4353, Management Consulting MGT 4355-Fall only, Special Studies in Management MGT 4398. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Management and Entrepreneurship, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4169 | The primary mission of the Management and Entrepreneurship Department is to provide students, at the undergraduate and graduate level, with a high quality education. The Department have nationally recognized faculty in the areas of strategic management, organizational behavior, human resource management, entrepreneurship, operations, and international business. The faculty members are committed to providing students with a hands-on learning environment that emphasizes practical application to complement the latest theoretical developments in their fields. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Marketing - Advertising | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 3305 Principles of Marketing, 3310 Professional Selling and Communications, 3320 Advertising Procedures (Cross-listed as JOU 3320), 3325 Consumer Behavior, 3335 Services Marketing, 3340 Nonprofit Marketing, 4310 Sales Force Management/Leadership, 4311 Professional Selling and Communications II, 4315 Retail Store Management, 4320 Wholesaling and Industrial Marketing, 4321 Advertising Campaigns, 4324 European Business Seminar, 4325 International Marketing (cross listed as INB 4325), 4330 Marketing Analysis and Decision Making, 4335 Marketing Research, 4350 Internet Marketing Strategies, Advertising Procedures (MKT 3320), Promotion Campaigns (MKT 4321). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4769 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Marketing - Not-for-Profit | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing | Students interested in working for not-for-profit organizations are encouraged to build a strong communications, promotion, and services management foundation in the Not-for-Profit emphasis. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 3305 Principles of Marketing, 3310 Professional Selling and Communications, 3320 Advertising Procedures (Cross-listed as JOU 3320), 3325 Consumer Behavior, 3335 Services Marketing, 3340 Nonprofit Marketing, 4310 Sales Force Management/Leadership, 4311 Professional Selling and Communications II, 4315 Retail Store Management, 4320 Wholesaling and Industrial Marketing, 4321 Advertising Campaigns, 4324 European Business Seminar, 4325 International Marketing (cross listed as INB 4325), 4330 Marketing Analysis and Decision Making, 4335 Marketing Research, 4350 Internet Marketing Strategies, Nonprofit Marketing (MKT 3340), Services Marketing (MKT 3335). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4769 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Marketing - Retail Management | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing | Students interested in a retailing career and students interested in building their own business are encouraged to build a strong communications, promotion, and store management foundation in the Retail Management emphasis. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 3305 Principles of Marketing, 3310 Professional Selling and Communications, 3320 Advertising Procedures (Cross-listed as JOU 3320), 3325 Consumer Behavior, 3335 Services Marketing, 3340 Nonprofit Marketing, 4310 Sales Force Management/Leadership, 4311 Professional Selling and Communications II, 4315 Retail Store Management, 4320 Wholesaling and Industrial Marketing, 4321 Advertising Campaigns, 4324 European Business Seminar, 4325 International Marketing (cross listed as INB 4325), 4330 Marketing Analysis and Decision Making, 4335 Marketing Research, 4350 Internet Marketing Strategies, 4398 Directed Studies in Marketing, Professional Selling (MKT 3310), Retail Store Management (MKT 4315). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4769 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Marketing - Selling/Sales Management | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing | Students interested in a career in sales and sales management are encouraged to build a strong communications, negotiations, and management foundation in the courses recommended in the Selling/Sales Management emphasis. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 3305 Principles of Marketing, 3310 Professional Selling and Communications, 3320 Advertising Procedures (Cross-listed as JOU 3320), 3325 Consumer Behavior, 3335 Services Marketing, 3340 Nonprofit Marketing, 4310 Sales Force Management/Leadership, 4311 Professional Selling and Communications II, 4315 Retail Store Management, 4320 Wholesaling and Industrial Marketing, 4321 Advertising Campaigns, 4324 European Business Seminar, 4325 International Marketing (cross listed as INB 4325), 4330 Marketing Analysis and Decision Making, 4335 Marketing Research, 4350 Internet Marketing Strategies, 4398 Directed Studies in Marketing. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Marketing, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4769 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Media Business | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | The Program covers courses in the Film & Digital Media Division are designed to prepare students for a variety of careers in radio, television, cable, and allied fields, and for careers in which knowledge of and skills in electronic and film communication are an integral part of professional activity. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MKT 3320 Advertising Procedures, MKT 3325 Consumer Behavior, CST 1303 Introduction to Mass Communications, CST 2360 Production Methods, CST 3320 Business of Media, CST 3372 Writing for Media Markets. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies, One Bear Place # 97332, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Real Estate | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate | The Real Estate curriculum is designed to prepare students for the many careers in real estate as well as provide them the foundation necessary for graduate study in this field. As part of the coursework for the Real Estate major, students will be introduced to ARGUS financial analysis, the real estate industry's leading property analysis software. Satisfactory completion of RE 3405 (Principles of Real Estate), RE 4220/4221 (Real Estate Law of Agency and Contracts), and one other Real Estate course will qualify an individual to take the Texas real estate sales license examination administered by the Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC). Students with a major in Real Estate may find employment opportunities in mortgage banking and brokerage, real estate appraisal, real estate development, real estate management/leasing and tenant representation, and commercial/residential/ industrial brokerage. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include RE 3405 Principles of Real Estate, RE 4330 Real Estate Appraisal, RE 4335 Real Estate Investments, RE 4220/4221 Real Estate Law of Agency and Contracts, RE 4340 Real Estate Finance, RE 4345 Real Estate Management, ECO 4325 Urban and Regional Economic Analysis. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 98001, +1 254 710 1840 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.B.A. in Risk Management and Insurance | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate | The Risk Management and Insurance curriculum focuses on the financial and economic characteristics of potential exposures to loss faced by firms and individuals, and the techniques available to minimize the costs associated with such exposures. Increasingly, nonfinancial companies are recognizing the importance of enterprise-wide risk management and thus are turning to business schools for trained risk managers. There are also career opportunities in the various financial service industries such as insurance, banking, pensions, and investment management. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include RMI 3305 Principles of Risk Management and Insurance, RMI 4320 Fundamentals of Property and Liability Insurance, RMI 4335 Business Risk Management, RMI 4310 Fundamentals of Life and Health Insurance, RMI 4330 Employee Benefit Planning. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 98001, +1 254 710 1840 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.F.A. Design | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include THEA 1101 Voice and Movement I, THEA 1301 Acting Realism I, THEA 1312 Scenic Elements, THEA 1316 Costume Elements, THEA 1383 Drafting and Graphics, THEA 2371 Lighting Elements, THEA 2374 Theatre History, THEA 2375 Theatre History II, THEA 2383 Theatrical Drawing, THEA 2390 Stage Management, THEA 3324 Directing I, THEA 3326 Costume Design, THEA 3370 Scene Design, THEA 3371 Lighting Design, THEA 3380 Sound Design, THEA 3383 CAD/CAM, THEA 4376 Theatre History III. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts, Baylor Theatre One Bear Place # 97262, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1861 | The Baylor University Department of Theatre Arts is an elite program combining an excellent liberal arts education with rigorous training in both academic and artistic fields of theatre study. The department is ranked among the top 20 undergraduate theatre programs in the United States and is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Theatre. The Mission of the Department of Theatre Arts is to prepare students for theatre arts related fields by integrating excellence in traditional scholarship and artistic creativity with a Christian worldview. The mission of Baylor Theatre is to act as a cultural laboratory which engages the university, the larger community of artist scholars, and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.F.A. Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include THEA 1301 Acting Realism, THEA 1101 Voice and Movement I, THEA 1312 Scenic Elements, THEA 1316 Costume Elements, THEA 1302 Acting Realism II, THEA 1102 Voice and Movement II, THEA 2301 Acting: Auditioning, THEA 2101 Applied Voice I, THEA 2298 Dance I, THEA 2374 Theatre History I, THEA 2371 Lighting Elements, THEA 2316 Stage Makeup, THEA 2302 Acting: Shakespeare, THEA 2375 Theatre History II, THEA 2299 Dance II, THEA 3324 Directing I, THEA 3301 Acting: Advanced Realism, THEA 3105 Production Lab I, THEA 3325 Directing II, THEA 3302 Acting: Period Styles, THEA 3106 Production Lab II, THEA 3341 Masterworks of Drama, THEA 4107 Production Lab III, THEA 4102 Senior Showcase, THEA 4376 Theatre History III. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts, Baylor Theatre One Bear Place # 97262, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1861 | The Baylor University Department of Theatre Arts is an elite program combining an excellent liberal arts education with rigorous training in both academic and artistic fields of theatre study. The department is ranked among the top 20 undergraduate theatre programs in the United States and is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Theatre. The Mission of the Department of Theatre Arts is to prepare students for theatre arts related fields by integrating excellence in traditional scholarship and artistic creativity with a Christian worldview. The mission of Baylor Theatre is to act as a cultural laboratory which engages the university, the larger community of artist scholars, and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree - Major in Environmental Science | Full Time | Variable | 1055 per semester hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | This Program is designed for students interested in environmental science, including fields such as forestry, wildlife management, water resources, and environmental chemistry. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies, One Bear Place # 97266, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6566 | The Department of Environmental Studies is dedicated in training students who can steward the planet's soil, air and water resources as well as maintaining the great diversity of species occupying the biosphere. The Department is committed in teaching students to consider the political and social issues inherent in environmental management, and to exercise love for the neighbors through care for the earth and all humankind. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree - Major in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | 1055 per semester hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ENV 1101 and 1301, 3314, and 43C1, social science three hours from ENV 2376, 3300, 3320, 4307, 4310, 4350, or 4393, ecology three hours from ENV 2407, 3306, or 4450, pollution three hours from ENV 2375, 3333, 3387, 4344, 4349, or 4370, at least one semester hour of laboratory from ENV 2175, 3106, 3133, 4287, or by taking ENV 2407 (with lab), or ENV 4450 (with lab), at least 3 semester hours of research, internship, team project, thesis, or field studies from: ENV 3301, 3V90, 4V90, 4V93, (4199 and 4299) 4302, 4315, 4332, 4394, 4613, 4680. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies, One Bear Place # 97266, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6566 | The Department of Environmental Studies is dedicated in training students who can steward the planet's soil, air and water resources as well as maintaining the great diversity of species occupying the biosphere. The Department is committed in teaching students to consider the political and social issues inherent in environmental management, and to exercise love for the neighbors through care for the earth and all humankind. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | The Program offers students a general introduction to the cultural, physical and archaeological sub fields through classroom learning, seminars and hands-on field and laboratory research opportunities. Cultural anthropology examines human behavior and cultural diversity from the recent past through the present. Physical anthropology studies evolutionary trends through the fossil record, genetics, and comparative primate behavior. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97173, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4084 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This Program is appropriate for students who are planning to attend graduate school in biochemistry or a related area, are interested in the health-related professions (pre-medicine, pre-dentistry, pre-pharmacy or pre-veterinary science), or who plan careers in medical research or in industrial fields related to biotechnology. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Baylor University Sciences Building, One Bear Place #97348, WACO, Texas, 76706, +1 254 710 3311 | The Department is housed in the modern, Baylor University Sciences Building, the Department is well-equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation to support the research efforts of its faculty, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate researchers. Modern, well-equipped individual research labs are supported by excellent departmental facilities, including a Bruker 360 MHz NMR, a Varian 500 MHz NMR, a VG/Fisons ProSpec high-resolution GC/mass spectrometer, and an Enraf-Nonius CAD4-F single-crystal and Bruker-Nonius X8 Apex X-ray diffractometer. Major Departmental equipment is supervised and maintained by a full-time Director of Instrumentation, Dr. James Karban, who also provides training and instruction in instrumental operation. The Department has a fully supported chemical and biochemical stockroom. In addition, a fully equipped machine shop, staffed by a full-time machinist, is available for the fabrication of specialized research equipment. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Chemistry (American Chemical Society Certified) | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include CHE 1301, 1302, 1316, 3331, 3332, 3238, 4321, 4127, 4322, 4128, 4237, 4207, 4301, 4217, 316, 4341, 4151, 4152, and 4001. |
Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Baylor University Sciences Building, One Bear Place #97348, WACO, Texas, 76706, +1 254 710 3311 | The Department is housed in the modern, Baylor University Sciences Building, the Department is well-equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation to support the research efforts of its faculty, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate researchers. Modern, well-equipped individual research labs are supported by excellent departmental facilities, including a Bruker 360 MHz NMR, a Varian 500 MHz NMR, a VG/Fisons ProSpec high-resolution GC/mass spectrometer, and an Enraf-Nonius CAD4-F single-crystal and Bruker-Nonius X8 Apex X-ray diffractometer. Major Departmental equipment is supervised and maintained by a full-time Director of Instrumentation, Dr. James Karban, who also provides training and instruction in instrumental operation. The Department has a fully supported chemical and biochemical stockroom. In addition, a fully equipped machine shop, staffed by a full-time machinist, is available for the fabrication of specialized research equipment. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Chemistry - Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This Degree is recommended for those students who are considering a career in biochemistry, especially those considering graduate study in biochemistry. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Baylor University Sciences Building, One Bear Place #97348, WACO, Texas, 76706, +1 254 710 3311 | The Department is housed in the modern, Baylor University Sciences Building, the Department is well-equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation to support the research efforts of its faculty, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate researchers. Modern, well-equipped individual research labs are supported by excellent departmental facilities, including a Bruker 360 MHz NMR, a Varian 500 MHz NMR, a VG/Fisons ProSpec high-resolution GC/mass spectrometer, and an Enraf-Nonius CAD4-F single-crystal and Bruker-Nonius X8 Apex X-ray diffractometer. Major Departmental equipment is supervised and maintained by a full-time Director of Instrumentation, Dr. James Karban, who also provides training and instruction in instrumental operation. The Department has a fully supported chemical and biochemical stockroom. In addition, a fully equipped machine shop, staffed by a full-time machinist, is available for the fabrication of specialized research equipment. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Chemistry - Subdiscipline | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Baylor University Sciences Building, One Bear Place #97348, WACO, Texas, 76706, +1 254 710 3311 | The Department is housed in the modern, Baylor University Sciences Building, the Department is well-equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation to support the research efforts of its faculty, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate researchers. Modern, well-equipped individual research labs are supported by excellent departmental facilities, including a Bruker 360 MHz NMR, a Varian 500 MHz NMR, a VG/Fisons ProSpec high-resolution GC/mass spectrometer, and an Enraf-Nonius CAD4-F single-crystal and Bruker-Nonius X8 Apex X-ray diffractometer. Major Departmental equipment is supervised and maintained by a full-time Director of Instrumentation, Dr. James Karban, who also provides training and instruction in instrumental operation. The Department has a fully supported chemical and biochemical stockroom. In addition, a fully equipped machine shop, staffed by a full-time machinist, is available for the fabrication of specialized research equipment. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | The Courses in Geology leading to a bachelor of science degree provide opportunities for research and specialization (including surface and subsurface) in structural geology, structural petrology, and tectonics, sedmentology, sedimentary petrology, environmental geochemistry, and diagenesis, invertebrate paleontology, paleoecology, and modern carbonate environments, petroleum geology and stratigraphy, igneous petrology and volcanology, hydrogeology and hydrology, geophysics, geomorphology, urban geology, GIS, environmental geology, and wetlands, geoarchaeology. Geology students planning to specialize in paleontology should elect courses in biology; those planning to specialize in minerology and/or petrology should take more chemistry. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, One Bear Place #97354, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2361 | The mission of the Geology Department at Baylor University is to develop, apply and transmit scientific knowledge about the Earth and Earth's systems throughout its 4.6 billion year history. The mission includes: provision of high-quality undergraduate and graduate education, including development of techniques for enhancing geoscience education; development of geoscience students as scientists and as highly competent practitioners; education of Baylor's general student population about Earth and its natural systems; development of new knowledge through scientific research; effective communication of new knowledge to the global geoscience community; application of geoscience knowledge to address practical problems affecting human society, including stewardship of the natural world; service as a source of reliable geoscience information within the university community and beyond; and maintenance of an environment within the Geology Department characterized by mutual support, respect and kindness. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Geophysics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | The Degree in Geophysics provides fundamental skills in solid earth geophysics, including seismic and potential field exploration and earthquake seismology. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, One Bear Place #97354, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2361 | The mission of the Geology Department at Baylor University is to develop, apply and transmit scientific knowledge about the Earth and Earth's systems throughout its 4.6 billion year history. The mission includes: provision of high-quality undergraduate and graduate education, including development of techniques for enhancing geoscience education; development of geoscience students as scientists and as highly competent practitioners; education of Baylor's general student population about Earth and its natural systems; development of new knowledge through scientific research; effective communication of new knowledge to the global geoscience community; application of geoscience knowledge to address practical problems affecting human society, including stewardship of the natural world; service as a source of reliable geoscience information within the university community and beyond; and maintenance of an environment within the Geology Department characterized by mutual support, respect and kindness. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | The Bachelor of Science degree with a major in physics provides a comprehensive curriculum that prepares students for graduate studies or careers in technology, medicine, education, law, finance, industry, and other professions. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Physics - Computational Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | The Bachelor of Science degree with a major in physics provides a comprehensive curriculum that prepares students for graduate studies or careers in technology, medicine, education, law, finance, industry, and other professions. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. Degree in Physics - Pre-Health Care | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | The Bachelor of Science degree with a major in physics provides a comprehensive curriculum that prepares students for graduate studies or careers in technology, medicine, education, law, finance, industry, and other professions. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | Students will be able to apply knowledge of mathematics, basic science and engineering science to bring creatively a project from problem statement to final design; be professionally competent and engaged in life-long learning, serving society in a professional career or by continuing their education in a graduate program; work in interdisciplinary teams and clearly communicate ideas through a variety of media; be a responsible professional with a strong sense of vocation, ethics, and integrity developed in an educational environment shaped by Christian ideals, enabling graduates to become leaders in their churches, communities, professional societies, and society as a whole. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Anthropology - Forensic Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | The Program at Baylor offers a multi-disciplinary curriculum with an emphasis on the physical sciences, including anthropology, biology, chemistry and criminalization. Students are introduced to forensic science in the Survey of Forensic Science and Crime Scene Investigation classes. For students interested in pursuing a career in the forensic science field, it is recommended that s/he also complete the Minor in Forensic Science. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97173, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4084 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Applied Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | The B.S. in Applied Mathematics curriculum provides the student with a basic background in mathematics and offers training that emphasizes mathematics applicable to business, industry, and government. Students who plan to work in business and industry are advised to pursue this degree. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MTH 1321, 1322, 2321 Calculus I-III, MTH 2311 Linear Algebra, MTH 3312 Foundations of Combinatorics and Algebra, MTH 3323 Intro to Analysis, STA 3381 Statistical Methods, Group 1: STA 4382, 4385, 4386, 4387, Group 2: MTH 3325, 3326, 4329, Group 3: MTH 3324, 4322, 4328. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97328, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3561 | The Department of Mathematics has much to offer to both students and prospective faculty. With excellent facilities housed in the newly renovated and centrally located Sid Richardson building, the department has a faculty and staff dedicated to helping students. The faculty (21 tenured or tenure-track, 10 lecturers) pride themselves with their 'easy access' attitude when helping students. It offers a wide variety of courses leading to a B.S. degree in mathematics, a B.S. degree in applied mathematics, and a B.A. degree in mathematics. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Biology - Ecology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | The Program invites students who are interested in the biology of organisms that exist within the broad array of natural environments. Faculty specialties in aquatic ecosystems, biodiversity and conservation, and spatial analysis provide students many opportunities for study related to their environmental-related career paths. The ecology program emphasizes hands-on experience for students with most courses taught through field activities. A capstone experience for students is the summer field program which students may take at Baylor or at a number of approved off-campus programs at established field sites. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Biology - General | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This Program offers a flexible curriculum that can be tailored to student’s interest. It is appropriate for students who desire a strong, diverse background in biology in preparation for graduate school or teaching. The general program is also appropriate for students desiring careers as technicians in biotechnology or other research settings. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Biology - Pre-Health Care | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This Program is designed to prepare students for medical or dental school or graduate school in medical and molecular biology. The most common sequence of upper level courses includes vertebrate physiology, cell physiology, vertebrate histology, immunology, molecular biology, cell and developmental biology, and bacteriology. This program is also appropriate for students interested in veterinary medicine, medical technology, or other health related professions. Graduates will also be prepared to work in technical areas in molecular biology as research technicians or assistants. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Biology - Science Education | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1302 Thinking and Writing or FAS 1302, 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research or 3300 Technical Writing or 3 courses from FAS 1118, 1128, 1139, 2301 British Literature, 2304 American Literature or 2306 World Literature or 3 hours of “2000” or above GTX, Religion (REL) 1310 Christian Scriptures, 1350 Christian Heritage, Human Performance (HP), Chapel (CHA 1088), 1301 OR 1401 Elementary level, 1302 OR 1402 Elementary level, 1412 Accelerated Elementary level, 2310 Intermediate level, 2320 Intermediate level, 2302 American Constitutional Development, 1305 World History to 1500, 1307 World History since 1500, 2365 American History to 1877, 2366 American History since 1877, Anthropology (ANT), 1305 Introduction to Anthropology, 3301 Science, Society and Culture, Economics (ECO), 1305 Survey of Economic Principles, 2306 Principles of Microeconomics, 2307 Principles of Macroeconomics, Geography (GEOG), 1300 World Geography, Philosophy (PHI), 1306 Logic, 1307 Critical Thinking, 1308 Ethics, 1321 Introduction to Philosophy, 3301 Moral Philosophy, 3310 History of Philosophy (Classical), 3312 History of Philosophy (Modern European), Political Science (PSC), 1305 American National Government, 1306 American State and Local Govt., Psychology (PSY), 1305 Introduction to Psychology, Sociology (SOC), 1305 Introduction to Sociology. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Computer Science - Gaming | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | The B.S.C.S. Degree offers depth in upper-level computer science topics and a solid foundation in mathematics and the sciences. Graduates are prepared to pursue careers in research, development, and other computing and computing-related fields. Advanced degrees in computer science are recommended for those pursuing a research career. The gaming specialization is designed to provide an understanding of the development and application of interactive digital media technologies. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include CSI 4341 Computer Graphics, CSI 4342 Gaming Platform Frameworks, CSI 43C8 Gaming Capstone Design Project. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3876 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Computer Science - Software Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | The B.S.C.S. Degree offers depth in upper-level computer science topics and a solid foundation in mathematics and the sciences. Graduates are prepared to pursue careers in research, development, and other computing and computing-related fields. Advanced degrees in computer science are recommended for those pursuing a research career. The Software Engineering track emphasizes the methods used to produce and maintain high-quality software in a systematic, controlled, and efficient manner. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include CSI 3471 Software Engineering I, CSI 3372 Software Engineering II, CSI 3373 Software Quality Assurance and Testing, CSI 3374 Software Project Management. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3876 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1301 Economic and Business History, 1305 Survey of Economic Principles for Nonbusiness Majors (Cross-listed as AMS 1305), 2306 Principles of Microeconomics, 2307 Principles of Macroeconomics, 3305 Money and Banking, 3306 Intermediate Microeconomic Analysis, 3307 Intermediate Macroeconomic Analysis, 3308 Engineering Economic Analysis, 4312 Business Cycles and Forecasting, 4317 The Economics of Regulation, 4318 Law and Economics, 4319 Game Theory, 4320 The Economics of Government, 4321 Energy Economics, 4323 The Environment and Economic Analysis, 4325 Urban and Regional Economic Analysis, 4327 E-Commerce Economics, 4331 African Economic Development, 4332 Economic Problems of Latin America, 4334 Economic Development, 4336 Economics of Labor, 4338 Economic Systems of the World, 4343 History of Economic Thought, 4345 Mathematical Analysis in Economics, 4347 Econometrics, 4350 Economics of Health and Medical Care, 4355 Economics of Poverty and Discrimination, 4380 Economic Reasoning and Policy Analysis, 4V98 Special Studies in Economics. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics, 1311 S 5th Street One Bear Place #98003, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2263 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Forensic Science | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | The Forensic Science program at Baylor offers a multi-disciplinary curriculum with an emphasis on the physical sciences, including anthropology, biology, chemistry and criminalistics. Students are introduced to forensic science in the Survey of Forensic Science and Crime Scene Investigation classes. In addition to giving students a basis in many of the fields relevant to forensics, it offers a number of specialized lecture/laboratory courses based on current methods used by forensic scientists, including: blood pattern analysis, DNA analysis, drug analysis, forensic biology, forensic entomology, firearms evidence, and impression evidence. This program is designed to provide and introduction to the field of forensic science in general, and to the subfield of forensic anthropology, in particular. These classes provide students the unique opportunity to gain practical experience in their areas of interest. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97173, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4084 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in General Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | The General Studies Program in the Department of HHPR is designed to be a flexible degree program that can address several objectives. The thirty-six semester hours in HHPR courses, eighteen of which may be concentrated in one of the three areas, can be configured so that acceptable preparation results for some of the general career areas of health, fitness, recreation, and sports. The General Studies curriculum is not as specific as are degree programs tailored for a particular vocational choice. However, the program offers a broad undergraduate background for students who have not made a definite career choice but who want a university degree. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include CSI 1302 Introduction to Computer Science Education, CSI 1430 Introduction to Computer Science I with Laboratory, CSI 1303 Applications of Information Technology ISY 1305 Introduction to Inform. Technology and Processing, HIS 1305 World History through the Fourteenth Century, HIS 2365 History of the United States to 1877, HIS 1306 World History from 1400-1750, HIS 2366 History of the United States since 1877, HIS 1307 Modern World Civilizations Since 1750, BIO 1401 General Biology, GEO 1403 Environmental Geology, CHE 1405 Chemistry and Society, GEO 1405 The Dynamic Earth, ENV 1301/1101 An Introduction to Environmental Studies, GEO 1408 Earth Science, GEO 1401 Earthquakes and Other Natural Disasters, PHY 1405 General Physics, GEO 1402 World Oceans, PHY 1455 Descriptive Astronomy, MTH 1301 Ideas in Mathematics, MTH 1308 PreCalculus for Business Students, MTH 1304 Pre-Calculus Mathematics MTH 1321 Calculus I. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Informatics | Full Time | Variable | 1055 per semester hour | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Bachelor degree | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3876 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | The B.S. in Mathematics curriculum provides the student with a basic background in mathematics and allows a student to place some emphasis on an area of mathematics that is closely related to engineering, the biological, physical, or social sciences. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MTH 1321, 1322, 2321 Calculus I-III, MTH 2311 Linear Algebra, MTH 3312 Foundations of Combinatorics and Algebra, MTH 3323 Intro to Analysis, MTH 3325 Differential Equations, MTH 4314 Abstract Algebra, MTH 4316 Linear Algebra and Matrix Theory, MTH 4326 Advanced Calculus I, MTH 4327 Advanced Calculus II, STA 4386 Mathematical Statistics II. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97328, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3561 | The Department of Mathematics has much to offer to both students and prospective faculty. With excellent facilities housed in the newly renovated and centrally located Sid Richardson building, the department has a faculty and staff dedicated to helping students. The faculty (21 tenured or tenure-track, 10 lecturers) pride themselves with their 'easy access' attitude when helping students. It offers a wide variety of courses leading to a B.S. degree in mathematics, a B.S. degree in applied mathematics, and a B.A. degree in mathematics. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Museum Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MST 1300 Introduction to Museums, MST 2301 Introduction to Museum Administration, MST 2304 Introduction to Collection Management and Care, MST 3302 Introduction to Museum Marketing and Development, MST 3303 Educational Programming for Museums, MST 3305 Exhibit Design and Preparation, MST 3308 Introduction to Material Culture, MST 4306 Applied Principles of Collection Care, MST 4307 Documentation and Interpretation of Historic Buildings and Sites, MST 4395 The Museum as a Learning Resource, MST 4600 Introduction to Museum Field Methods, MST 4V30 Museum Special Topics Seminar, MST 4V60 Museum Internship, MST 4V70 Independent Studies in Museums. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies, One Bear Place # 97154, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4349 | The Department of Museum Studies offers a Master of Arts degree in museum studies, which combines academic and professional training for students preparing to be the next generation of museum leaders. Students learn about the history and philosophy of different types of museums, about the different skills that are needed in museum administration, museum education, collections management and care, archival management, and exhibit design, as well as courses on material culture, decorative arts, and historic preservation. Students are also given the opportunity to apply (and test out) this knowledge in the real world, through work at the Mayborn Museum Complex and other museums in Waco and central Texas, in formal internships in museums across the country, and through attendance at professional conferences such as the Texas Association of Museums. The program consists of thirty-six credit hours, including a thesis or a master's project. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Nutrition Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The Study of Nutrition Sciences offers students entering to a dynamic profession with a myriad of opportunities. This Program focuses on the science based aspects of human nutrition and the application of those principles to food selection, preparation and consumption for people in many settings to achieve and maintain health and well being across the lifespan. Nutrition sciences graduates will help fill the increasing demand for dietetics professionals. Baylor University's nutrition sciences program enables motivated students to help fill the increased need for dietetics professionals due to society's embracing healthier eating and preventive health approaches. A major in nutrition sciences equips students with food and nutrition knowledge required of a registered dietitian. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1305 Introductory Psychology, 1306 Introduction to Neuroscience, 1106 Introduction to Neuroscience Lab, 2402 Statistics Complete, 2405 Research Methods, 4300 Advanced Statistics, 3308Theories of Psychotherapy, 3314 Industrial/Organizational Psychology, 3318 Psychology of Memory, 3330 Psychopathology, 3350 Lifespan Human Development, 4327 Theories of Personality, 4395 History of Psychology, 3310 Social Psychology, 3425 Group Processes. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, One Bear Place 97334, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2961 | This is a vibrant and busy department, with over 600 undergraduate majors, 50 or more doctoral students, 15 tenure system faculty, and 4 instructors/lecturers, along with a wide range of intriguing and cutting-edge laboratories. This is an exciting time for the Department, with a recent move to the new Baylor Science Building (BSB), one of the most outstanding facilities in the country. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S. in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science | The Degree programs provided a balance between statistical theory and application of statistical methods. Emphasis was placed on acquiring research, consulting, and teaching skills that were applicable to the biomedical sciences, the natural sciences, academe, business and industry, and behavioral and social sciences. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include BIO 1305-1105, 1306-1106, CHE 1301 and CHE 1302 and CHE 1316, ENV 1301-1101, 1303-1103, 2375-2175, 2407, GEO 1406, One GEO from: 1401, 1402, 1403, 1405, 1408, NSC 1306-1106, PHY 1420, or PHY 1430. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science, P O Box 97140, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1699 | The Department of Statistical Science was created in June 2004 when it replaced the Institute of Statistics as the home for graduate statistics programs at Baylor University. The Ph.D. and M.A. degrees in statistics were first administered in 1991. Since that time the program has produced approximately 35 doctoral and 40 master level students. The degree programs are designed to provide a balance between statistical theory and applications of statistical methods with an emphasis being placed on acquiring research, consulting, and teaching skills that were applicable to the biomedical, industrial, and academic careers. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.E.D. in Atheletic Training | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.E.D. in Community Health | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include HED 1145 Health and Human Behavior, HED 2330 Introduction to Community Health and Health Promotion, HED 2331 Health Concepts and Competencies, HED 3331 Program Planning in Health Education, HED 3350 Human Physiology for Allied Health Professionals, HED 3351 Epidemiology/Vital Statistics, HED 4331 Intervention Design in Health Education, HED 4333 Program Evaluation in Health Education, HED 4355 Human Diseases, 15 Semester Hours of Required HED Electives (choose 5 courses):, HED 2313 Consumer Health, HED 3313 Nutrition, HED 3314 Environmental Health, HED 3317 Mood Modifying Substances, HED 3320 Stress Management, HED 4321 Human Sexuality, HED 4327 Dying and Death Education, HED 4340 International Health Education, HED 4341 Cross-Cultural Health Communication. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.E.D. in Exercise Physiology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | This Degree Program is designed especially to prepare practitioners for the myriad of career opportunities related to this emphasis. In addition to the concentration in health and fitness, which includes a full semester of supervised internship in a career setting chosen by the student, this program also provides preparation for the general environment which will house the professional function. Because these are "people jobs", there is also preparation in leadership skills. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ENG 1302 Thinking and Writing, ENG 1304 or ENG 3300,REL 1310 The Christian Scriptures , REL 1350 The Christian Heritage, SOC 1305 Introduction to Sociology HISTORY, MTH 1304 Pre-Calc or MTH 1321 Calculus I,CHE 1300 Introductory Chemistry,Fine Arts (2-3 hours) (Art, Music, or Theater Arts), CSS 1301 Fundamentals of Public Comm or HED 1145 Health and Human Behavior CSS 1302 Speech for Business. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.E.D. in Health Science Studies - Pre-Med/Pre-Dental | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | The purpose of this Program is to serve as pre-professional preparation for entrance into medical, dental, physical therapy, or other allied health professional graduate programs (e.g., occupational therapy, pharmacy, physician assistant, etc). The program helps students identify and meet entrance criteria to allied health degree programs while emphasizing health, fitness, and wellness. The program is the largest undergraduate program in the department and has a long history of producing outstanding students who successful matriculate into professional schools. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ENG 1302, 1304 or 3300, and one course from 2301, 2304 or 2306, History, PSY 1305, PSC 2302, REL 1310 and 1350, MTH 1321 and 1322, CSI 1302, 1303, 1430 or ISY 1305, CSS 1301 or 1302, BIO 1305/1105 and 1306/1106, CHE 1301, 1302 and 1316, PHY 1408 and 1409, HP 1420. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.E.D. in Health Science Studies - Pre-Physical Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | The purpose of this Program is to serve as pre-professional preparation for entrance into medical, dental, physical therapy, or other allied health professional graduate programs (e.g., occupational therapy, pharmacy, physician assistant, etc). The program helps students identify and meet entrance criteria to allied health degree programs while emphasizing health, fitness, and wellness. The program is the largest undergraduate program in the department and has a long history of producing outstanding students who successful matriculate into professional schools. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ENG 1302, 1304 or 3300, and one course from 2301, 2304 or 2306, History, PSY 1305, PSC 2302, REL 1310 and 1350, MTH 1321 and 1322, CSI 1302, 1303, 1430 or ISY 1305, CSS 1301 or 1302, BIO 1305/1105 and 1306/1106, CHE 1301, 1302 and 1316, PHY 1408 and 1409, HP 1420. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.E.D. in Physical Education / Coaching | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | This Degree programs satisfy the requirements for the Texas Teachers Certificate with one teaching field in Human Performance and another in an area selected by the student (all teaching fields must be selected from those approved by the Texas Education Agency). Programs offered by HHPR provide special preparation in Athletic Coaching, Athletic Training, All-Level (elementary and secondary certification), Health Education in combination with another field (other than Human Performance), Health Education as Specialization for the Elementary School Certificate, or Human Performance as Specialization for the Elementary School Certificate. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.E.D. in Recreation and Leisure Services - Church Recreation | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include CSI 1302 Introduction to Computer Science Education, CSI 1430 Introduction to Computer Science I with Laboratory, CSI 1303 Applications of Information Technology ISY 1305 Introduction to Inform. Technology and Processing, HIS 1305 World History through the Fourteenth Century, HIS 2365 History of the United States to 1877, HIS 1306 World History from 1400-1750, HIS 2366 History of the United States since 1877, HIS 1307 Modern World Civilizations Since 1750, BIO 1401 General Biology, GEO 1403 Environmental Geology, CHE 1405 Chemistry and Society, GEO 1405 The Dynamic Earth, ENV 1301/1101 An Introduction to Environmental Studies, GEO 1408 Earth Science, GEO 1401 Earthquakes and Other Natural Disasters, PHY 1405 General Physics, GEO 1402 World Oceans, PHY 1455 Descriptive Astronomy, MTH 1301 Ideas in Mathematics, MTH 1308 PreCalculus for Business Students, MTH 1304 Pre-Calculus Mathematics MTH 1321 Calculus I. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.E.D. in Recreation and Leisure Services - Outdoor Recreation | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $26,966 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include CSI 1302 Introduction to Computer Science Education, CSI 1430 Introduction to Computer Science I with Laboratory, CSI 1303 Applications of Information Technology ISY 1305 Introduction to Inform. Technology and Processing, HIS 1305 World History through the Fourteenth Century, HIS 2365 History of the United States to 1877, HIS 1306 World History from 1400-1750, HIS 2366 History of the United States since 1877, HIS 1307 Modern World Civilizations Since 1750, BIO 1401 General Biology, GEO 1403 Environmental Geology, CHE 1405 Chemistry and Society, GEO 1405 The Dynamic Earth, ENV 1301/1101 An Introduction to Environmental Studies, GEO 1408 Earth Science, GEO 1401 Earthquakes and Other Natural Disasters, PHY 1405 General Physics, GEO 1402 World Oceans, PHY 1455 Descriptive Astronomy, MTH 1301 Ideas in Mathematics, MTH 1308 PreCalculus for Business Students, MTH 1304 Pre-Calculus Mathematics MTH 1321 Calculus I. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.F.C.S. in Child and Family Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The Child and Family Studies Program at Baylor University focuses on the development of families and individuals as they continue to grow and change. Students in this major of study benefit by optimizing their life as individuals, parents, and community leaders. They do this by acquiring a broad knowledge in the study of individuals, families, and relationships, and become better able to understand and work with today's families as they change and diversify. This leads to careers involving children and families in communities, government, and business. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1104 Professional Perspectives, 1300 Apparel in Today's Society, 1311 Apparel Production and Evaluation, 1315 Individual and Family Development, 2351 Nutrition, 2354 Prenatal Care and Infant Development, 2355 Child Development, 2380 Meal Management, 3350 Individual and Family Financial Management, 3356 Family Development, 3357 The Preschool Child, 4358 Planning and Administration of Preschool Programs, 4359 Parenting, 4362 Child Life Theory and Practice, 4390 Practicum in Family and Consumer Sciences, 4695 Internship in Child Life. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.F.C.S. in Fashion Design | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The Fashion Design Program at Baylor University provides a diversified educational experience for the undergraduate encompassing academic excellence in a Christian environment. This program also prepares students to enter the apparel industry profession in domestic as well as international markets. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1104 Professional Perspectives, 1231 Principles of Art and Design as Applied to Family and Consumer Sciences, 1300 Apparel in Today's Society, 1311 Apparel Production and Evaluation, 1391 Introduction to Fashion Industry, 2301 Apparel Production II, 2310 Textile Science, 2311 Fashion Illustration, 2351 Nutrition, 2364 Costume History and Design, 2371 Apparel Analysis, 2373 Apparel Design I, 3312 Advanced Textile Science, 3350 Individual and Family Financial Management, 3356 Family Development, 3360 CAD in Apparel Design and Retailing, 3373 Apparel Design II, 4360 CAD Flat Pattern, 4371 Designing Apparel for Mass Marketing, 4394 Fashion Design Internship, 4396 Fashion Forecasting. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.F.C.S. in Fashion Merchandising | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The Fashion Merchandising Program at Baylor University focuses on developing professional skills, such as communication, analytical thinking, teamwork, and ethical behavior. These skills help sustain graduates as they apply management and marketing theory and business principles to the global fashion industry. The Fashion Merchandising program at Baylor University not only teaches students the professional skills they will need to succeed in a variety of jobs in the fashion industry, but also life skills that will help them succeed both on and off the job. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1104 Professional Perspectives, 1231 Principles of Art and Design as Applied to Family and Consumer Sciences, 1300 Apparel in Today's Society, 1311 Apparel Production and Evaluation, 1391 Introduction to Fashion Industry, 2301 Apparel Production II, 2310 Textile Science, 2311 Fashion Illustration, 2351 Nutrition, 2364 Costume History and Design, 2371 Apparel Analysis, 2373 Apparel Design I, 3312 Advanced Textile Science, 3350 Individual and Family Financial Management, 3356 Family Development, 3360 CAD in Apparel Design and Retailing, 3373 Apparel Design II, 4360 CAD Flat Pattern, 4371 Designing Apparel for Mass Marketing, 4394 Fashion Design Internship, 4396 Fashion Forecasting. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.F.C.S. in Interior Design | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This Program strives to provide a strong undergraduate experience espousing academic excellence and Christian integrity, preparing the individual to serve the design profession in both residential and commercial arenas within a diverse and global marketplace. The program is accredited by the Council for Interior Design Accreditation (CIDA). | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include FCS 1313 Drafting I, FCS 1332 Fundamentals of Interior Design, FCS 2310 Textile Science, FCS 2314 Drafting II, FCS 2315 Building Systems and Codes for Interiors, FCS 2316 Interior Design Presentation Studio, FCS 2320 Materials and Finishes for Interior Environments, FCS 3198 Internship Seminar, FCS 3313 Historical Design I, FCS 3317 Lighting for Interior Environments, FCS 3318 ID Studio I: Residential Design, FCS 3319 Computer Aided Drafting and Design for Interiors, FCS 3326 ID Studio II: Contract Design I, FCS 4313 Historical Design II, FCS 4318 ID Studio III: Contact Design II, FCS 3319 and 3326, FCS 4333 ID Studio IV: Business Practices and Procedures for ID/Capstone Studio, FCS 4398 Interior Design Field Experience. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | B.S.F.C.S. in Nutrition Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The Study of Nutrition Sciences offers students entering to a dynamic profession with a myriad of opportunities. The Program focuses on the science based aspects of human nutrition and the application of those principles to food selection, preparation and consumption for people in many settings to achieve and maintain health and well being across the lifespan. Nutrition sciences graduates will help fill the increasing demand for dietetics professionals. Baylor University's nutrition sciences program enables motivated students to help fill the increased need for dietetics professionals due to society's embracing healthier eating and preventive health approaches. A major in nutrition sciences equips students with food and nutrition knowledge required of a registered dietitian. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1104 Professional Perspectives, 1231 Principles of Art and Design as Applied to Family and Consumer Sciences - (Cross-listed as FCS 1331), 1300 Apparel in Today's Society, 1301 Food Science, 1311 Apparel Production and Evaluation, 2351 Nutrition, 2380 Meal Management, 3350 Individual and Family Financial Management, 3351 Nutrition Education, 3356 Family Development, 3386 Experimental Foods, 3388 Clinical Nutrition, 3435 Food Service Production, 4100 Seminar in Nutrition Sciences, 4351 Life Cycle Nutrition, 4387 Advanced Nutrition, 2351. Nutrients and their roles in human health. Emphasis on trends in nutritional research, 4388 Advanced Clinical Nutrition, 4V93 Special Studies in Family and Consumer Sciences 1 to 3 sem. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97346, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3626 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences at Baylor University prepares students to become professionals in business, education, and service careers that use the family and consumer sciences knowledge base and to assume individual, family and community roles as Christians in an increasingly complex global society. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BA in Architecture | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1311 Drawing II, 1314 Design 1A, 1316 Design 1B, 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, English 1302 or FAS 1302, English 1304, English 2301, English 2304 or 2306 or GTX, Religion 1310, Religion 1350, Music 1220, 3322, 3323, 4320, Theatre Arts 1206, 2374. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BA in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Art History program at Baylor offers undergraduates a specialization in art history as well as an academic minor in the field. There are also graduate level courses for those students working on a masters' degrees in other areas. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include RT 1314, Design IA (Two-dimensional Design), ART 1316, Design IB (Three-dimensional Design), ART 2302, History of Art I, ART 2303, History of Art II, ART 3334, Photography IIA (black and white), ART 4375, Art Theory and Criticism, ANT 1305, Intro to Anthropology, ART 3390, Philosophy and the Arts/Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BA in Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Studio Art provides a strong foundation in the creative, technical and historical aspects of the visual arts. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1314 Design 1A (2-D), 1316 Design 1B (3-D), 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, 2310 Figure Drawing I, Painting 3320, 3321, 4320 or Printmaking 3324, 3325, 3326, 3327, Ceramics 3340 or Sculpture 3344, 3345, 4375 Art Theory and Criticism, English 1302 or FAS 1302, English 1304, English 2301, English 2304 or 2306 or GTX, Religion 1310, Religion 1350, Mathematics 1301, 1304, 1321, STA1380. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BFA in Studio Art - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This Program provides students with a comprehensive immersion into the rich and highly diversified field of studio ceramics. Blending the study of global historical traditions with the development and implementation of contemporary issues and techniques, the ceramics curriculum engages students in the pursuit of technical mastery and a foundational understanding of the medium�s expressive potential. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1311 Drawing II, 1314 Design 1A, 1316 Design 1B, 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, 2310 Figure Drawing I, 3340 Ceramic Design IIA, 3341 Ceramic Design IIB, 4340 Ceramic Design IIIA, 4341 Ceramic Design IIIB, 4342 Ceramic Design IVA, 4343 Ceramic Design IVB, 3320 Oil Painting , 3344 Sculpture IIA, 3345 Sculpture IIB, 4375 Art Theory and Criticism. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BFA in Studio Art - Fabric Design | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This Concentration provides students to traditional fabric design techniques in combination with current innovative and non-conventional materials, forms and processes used in the design of fabric surface and structure. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1311 Drawing II, 1314 Design 1A, 1316 Design 1B, 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, 2310 Figure Drawing I, 3340 Ceramic Design IIA, 3341 Ceramic Design IIB, 4340 Ceramic Design IIIA, 4341 Ceramic Design IIIB, 4342 Ceramic Design IVA, 4343 Ceramic Design IVB, 3320 Oil Painting , 3344 Sculpture IIA, 3345 Sculpture IIB, 4375 Art Theory and Criticism. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BFA in Studio Art - Graphic Design | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This Program offers an emphasis in graphic design within the studio art major. An exceptionally high percentage of Baylor graphic design students find work in the field. The studio art major offers students the opportunity to develop their hand skills and aesthetic thinking skills, including drawing. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1311 Drawing II, 1314 Design 1A, 1316 Design 1B, 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, 2310 Figure Drawing I, 3330 Introduction to Graphic Design, 3332 Computer Aided Graphic Design, 3333 Graphics in Communication, 4329 Web Design, 4331 Package Design 3 Laboratory Science, 4332 Corporate Design, 4333 Portfolio Preparation, 2311 Figure Drawing II, 3334 Photography IIA (B and W), 3335 Photography IIB (B and W). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BFA in Studio Art - Painting | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Studio Art provides a strong foundation in the creative, technical and historical aspects of the visual arts. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1311 Drawing II, 1314 Design 1A, 1316 Design 1B, 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, 2310 Figure Drawing I, 3320 Oil Painting, 3321 Acrylic Painting, 4320 Watercolor Painting, 4321 Problems in Painting A, 4322 Problems in Painting B, 4323 Problems in Painting C, 2311 Figure Drawing II, 3324 Intaglio, 3325 Lithography, 4375 Art Theory and Criticism, English 1302 or FAS 1302, English 1304, English 2301, 2304, or 2306 or GTX, Religion 1310, 1350, Music 1220, Theatre 1206. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BFA in Studio Art - Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | This Concentration offers students the opportunity to study the fine art applications of photography within the context of a thriving studio arts program. Students will gain knowledge of and experience working with the latest digital tools and techniques as well as working with traditional and historical cameras and darkroom processes. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1311 Drawing II, 1314 Design 1A, 1316 Design 1B, 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, 2310 Figure Drawing I, 3334 Photography IIA, 3335 Photography IIB, 4334 Advanced Photography I, 4335 Advanced Photography II, 4336 Advanced Photography III, 4337 Advanced Photography IV, 3320 Oil or 3321 Acrylic Painting, 3324 Intaglio or 3325 Lithography, 3332 Computer Aided Graphic Design, 4375 Art Theory and Criticism, English 1302 or FAS 1302, English 1304, English 2301, 2304, or 2306 or GTX, Religion 1310, 1350. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BFA in Studio Art - Printmaking | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The BFA in Studio Art provides a strong foundation in the creative, technical and historical aspects of the visual arts. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1311 Drawing II, 1314 Design 1A, 1316 Design 1B, 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, 2310 Figure Drawing I, 3324 Intaglio, 3325 Lithography, 3326 Woodcut, 3327 Silkscreen, 4324 Advanced Intaglio, 4325 Advanced Lithography, 2311 Figure Drawing II, 3320 Oil Painting, 3321 Acrylic Painting, 4375 Art Theory and Criticism, English 1302 or FAS 1302, English 1304, English 2301, 2304, or 2306 or GTX, Religion 1310, 1350. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BFA in Studio Art - Sculpture | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | The Studio Art provides a strong foundation in the creative, technical and historical aspects of the visual arts. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1310 Drawing I, 1311 Drawing II, 1314 Design 1A, 1316 Design 1B, 2302 History of Art I, 2303 History of Art II, 2310 Figure Drawing I, 3344 Sculpture IIA (Wood), 3345 Sculpture IIB (Metal), 4344 Advanced Sculpture I, 4345 Advanced Sculpture II, 4346 Advanced Sculpture III, 4347 Advanced Sculpture IV, 3320 Oil or 3321 Acrylic Painting, 3324 Intaglio or 3325 Lithography, 3340 Ceramic Design IIA, 4375 Art Theory and Criticism, English 1302 or FAS 1302, English 1304, English 2301, 2304, or 2306 or GTX, Religion 1310, 1350. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art, One Bear Place #97263, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1867 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | BM Music History and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Music History and Literature Department | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MUS 1301 and 1101 Theory and Musicianship I, MUS 1302 and 1102 Theory and Musicianship II, MUS 2301 and 2101 Theory and Musicianship III, MUS 2302 and 2102 Theory and Musicianship IV, MUS 3301 Theory V: Form and Analysis, MUS 3324 History of Music before 1600, MUS 3325 History of Music from 16001800, MUS 3326 History of Music from 1800 to WW I, MUS 3327 History of Music from WWI to Present, MUS 1001 Recital Attendance. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Music History and Literature Department | School of Music, Music History and Literature Department, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies | The Program in American Studies offers a comprehensive knowledge of American institutions and culture. It prepares students for the world of practical affairs. The basic program consists of courses in a variety of areas of study which students may combine according to their cultural and professional objectives. The purpose is to acquaint students with the intellectual and cultural development of the nation, to prepare them for responsible citizenship, and to show the continuity of past, present, and future in acceptable cultural and historical terms. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies, P O Box 97240, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | American Studies is a relatively new intellectual endeavor that encompasses a variety of disciplines. At Baylor University, American Studies is offered as both an undergraduate and graduate program. Students are able to shape their studies around American culture and ultimately choose their path within a university setting. The many disciplines concerned with American culture include communications, history, literature, museum studies, political science, religion as well as many other areas. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Arts in Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | This Program emphasis is to maintain the highest academic quality and provide the student interested in archaeology with a broad and thorough grounding in the field. This is accomplished by offering courses in Old World and New World archaeology as well as field archaeology. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ARC 2308 Historical Geography of the Biblical World (on site), ARC 2401 History of Archaeology and its Scientific Techniques, ARC 3302 Archaeology and the Prehistoric World, ARC 3303 Archaeology and the Bible, ARC 3304 Physical Anthropology, ARC 3307 Historical Archaeology,ARC 3351 Ancient Civilization of Mesoamerica, ARC 3401 Interpretation of Archaeological Data, ARC 4101 Archaeology Seminar, ARC 4302 Archaeology and the Ancient Near East, ARC 4340 Environmental Archaeology, ARC 4341 Archaeology of the Eastern Mediterranean, ARC 4348 Geoarchaeology, ARC 4353 Archaeology of North America, ARC 4V06 Palestinian Field Archaeology, ARC 4V15 Research Methods in Archaeology-Field Work, ARC 4V50 Special Topics in Archaeology. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Forensic Science and Archaeology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97173, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4084 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Arts in Journalism - News Editorial | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | The Degree allows students to explore a broad-based liberal arts degree while also earning a skills and theory-based journalism degree backed up by practical experience. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include JOU 2303, Beginning Reporting and Writing, JOU 2325, Editing, JOU 3375, Advanced Reporting and Writing, JOU 3376, History of American Journalism, JOU 4380, Law and Ethics of Journalism, JOU 3355, Introduction to Photography, JOU 3356, Editorial and Documentary Photography, JOU 3357, Advanced Photography, JOU 4359, History of Photography, JOU 3320 (MKT 3320), Advertising Procedures, JOU 3321, Advertising Copy Writing, JOU 3322, Advanced Advertising Development, JOU 3394, Advertising Internship, JOU 2365, News Reporting for the Electronic Media, JOU 3387, International Communication, JOU 3391, Broadcast News Internship. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism, One Bear Place # 97353, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6322 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Arts in Journalism - Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | The Degree allows students to explore a broad-based liberal arts degree while also earning a skills and theory-based journalism degree backed up by practical experience. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include JOU 2325 Editing, JOU 3367 Public Relations, JOU 4368 Advanced Public Relations, JOU 4371 Public Relations Media Programming , JOU 3355, Introduction to Photography, JOU 3356, Editorial and Documentary Photography, JOU 3357, Advanced Photography, JOU 4359, History of Photography, JOU 3320 (MKT 3320), Advertising Procedures, JOU 3321, Advertising Copy Writing, JOU 3322, Advanced Advertising Development, JOU 3394, Advertising Internship, JOU 2365, News Reporting for the Electronic Media, JOU 3387, International Communication, JOU 3391, Broadcast News Internship. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism, One Bear Place # 97353, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6322 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Vocal Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Department of Voice | The Concentration in Voice is offered through the College of Arts and Sciences. In this degree, students may pursue studies that emphasize either performance or academic studies in music. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Voice | School of Music, Department of Voice, One Bear Place # 97408, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Arts in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1305 Introductory Psychology None, 1306 Introduction to Neuroscience None, 1106 Introduction to Neuroscience Lab None, 2402 Statistics Complete 1305/University Math Requirement, 2405 Research Methods, 4300 Advanced Statistics, 3308 Theories of Psychotherapy, 3314 Industrial/Organizational Psychology, 3318 Psychology of Memory, 3330 Psychopathology, 3350 Lifespan Human Development, 4327 Theories of Personality, 4395 History of Psychology, 3310 Social Psychology 1305/2402, 3425 Group Processes 1305/2402, 3311-3111 Cognitive Psychology, 3119-3319 Clinical Neuroscience, 3120-3320 Learning and Behavior, 3123-3323 Sensation and Perception, 4130-4330 Behavioral Neuroscience. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, One Bear Place 97334, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2961 | This is a vibrant and busy department, with over 600 undergraduate majors, 50 or more doctoral students, 15 tenure system faculty, and 4 instructors/lecturers, along with a wide range of intriguing and cutting-edge laboratories. This is an exciting time for the Department, with a recent move to the new Baylor Science Building (BSB), one of the most outstanding facilities in the country. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Arts in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion, One Bear Place # 97284, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3735 | The Department of Religion offers students the opportunity to study the biblical, historical, practical, and theological traditions of Christianity, and other world religions, as well. Here faculty and students journey together in pursuit of truth. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Business Administration in Business Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | The Degree in business journalism prepares students for working in the business world. Students take several core and elective courses in the journalism department while also taking business classes from the Hankamer School of Business. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include JOU 1303, Introduction to Mass Communications, JOU 2303, Reporting and Writing for Media, JOU 2325, Editing, JOU 3375, Advanced Reporting and Writing, JOU 4380, Law and Ethics of Journalism, MKT 3320, Advertising Procedures, JOU 3355 Photo Journalism, JOU 3367 Public Relations, JOU 3389 Magazine and Feature Writing. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism, One Bear Place # 97353, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6322 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Business Administration/Master of Accountancy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | The joint Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA)/Master of Accountancy (MAcc) is designed to provide eligible students an efficient program of study to achieve technical, communication, leadership and analytical skills for a successful career in business and uniting hours required to sit for the CPA exam. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Baylor University | The modules include ACC3301 - Financial Reporting I, ACC3303 - Accounting Information Systems, ACC3302 - Financial Reporting II, ACC3304 - Federal Income Tax, ACC3310 - Accounting Research and Communication, ACC4330 - Auditing, Assurance and Attestation, ACC4308 - Advanced Managerial Accounting, ACC4350 - Business and Professional Ethics for Accountants. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law, One Bear Place # 98002, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6138 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Business Administration/Master of Taxation | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | The joint Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA)/Master of Taxation (MTax) is designed to provide eligible students an efficient program of study to achieve technical, communication, leadership and analytical skills for a successful career in business and the hours required to sit for the CPA exam. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Baylor University | The modules include ACC3301 - Financial Reporting I, ACC3303 - Accounting Information Systems, ACC3302 - Financial Reporting II, ACC3304 - Federal Income Tax, ACC3310 - Accounting Research and Communication, ACC4330 - Auditing, Assurance and Attestation, ACC4308 - Advanced Managerial Accounting, ACC4350 - Business and Professional Ethics for Accountants. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law, One Bear Place # 98002, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6138 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music - Church Music, Voice Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Department of Voice | This degree prepares future church musicians for the wide-ranging field of church music. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Voice | School of Music, Department of Voice, One Bear Place # 97408, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music - Vocal Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Department of Voice | This is a professional degree designed for those who intend to perform in the professional world, or who wish to pursue a higher degree and eventually teach and perform at the college/university level. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Voice | School of Music, Department of Voice, One Bear Place # 97408, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music Education - Choral Music, Voice | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Department of Voice | This Program is designed for prospective choral teachers in the public schools. This professional degree conforms to the certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. Students completing this degree will be certified to teach music in elementary, middle, and high schools. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Voice | School of Music, Department of Voice, One Bear Place # 97408, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music in Church Music - Instrumental Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Department of Church Music | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ENG 2301 British Literature, HIS 1305 World History through the Fourteenth Century, HIS 1306 World History from 1400 to 1750, HIS 1307 Modern World Civilizations Since 1750, HIS 2365 History of the United States to 1877, HIS 2366 History of the United States Since 1877, REL 1310 and 1350 Christian Scriptures and Christian Heritage, PSC 2302 American Constitutional Development, MUS 1301 and 1101 Theory I; Musicianship I, MUS 1302 and 1102 Theory II; Musicianship II, MUS 2301 and 2101 Theory III; Musicianship III, MUS 2302 and 2102 Theory IV; Musicianship IV, MUS 3301 Theory V, MUS 3324 The History of Music Before 1600, MUS 3325 The History of Music from 1600 to 1800, MUS 3326 The History of Music from 1800 to World War I, MUS 3327 The History of Music from World War I to the Present, MUS 1001 Recital Attendance. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Church Music | School of Music, Department of Church Music, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music in Church Music - Keyboard Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Department of Church Music | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MUS 1007 Baylor Association of Church Musicians, MUS 2260 Elementary Conducting, MUS 2270 Introduction to Music Ministry, MUS 3261 Choral Conducting, MUS 3270 Children’s Music Ministry, MUS 3271 Youth and Adult Music Ministry, MUS 3273 Worship in the Church, MUS 3274 Congregational Song, MUS 3275 Music Ministry Administration, MUS 3276 Church Choral and Solo Literature, MUS 3277 Instrumental Music in the Church, MUS 3171 Church Music Instrumental Lab, MUS 3170 Guitar for Music Ministry, MUS 3278 Introduction to Keyboard Instruments, MUS 3279 Handbell Techniques, MUS 4171 Issues in Music Ministry, MUS 4270 Music Ministry Internship. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Church Music | School of Music, Department of Church Music, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music in Church Music - Voice Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Department of Church Music | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include MUS 1301 and 1101 Theory I; Musicianship I, MUS 1302 and 1102 Theory II; Musicianship II, MUS 2301 and 2101 Theory III; Musicianship III, MUS 2302 and 2102 Theory IV; Musicianship IV, MUS 3301 Theory V, MUS 3324 The History of Music Before 1600, MUS 3325 The History of Music from 1600 to 1800, MUS 3326 The History of Music from 1800 to World War I, MUS 3327 The History of Music from World War I to the Present. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Church Music | School of Music, Department of Church Music, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music in Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Composition Department | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Composition Department | School of Music, Composition Department, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music in Music Theory | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Music Theory Department | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include ENG 2301 British Literature, HIS 1305 World History through 14 th Century, HIS 1306 World History from 14001750, HIS 1307 Modern Civilizations, REL 1310 and 1350 Christian Scriptures/Heritage, PSC 2302 American Constitutional Development, MUS 1302 and 1102 Theory and Musicianship II, MUS 2301 and 2101 Theory and Musicianship III, MUS 2302 and 2102 Theory and Musicianship IV, MUS 3301 Theory V: Form and Analysis, MUS 3324 History of Music before 1600, MUS 3325 History of Music from 16001800, MUS 3326 History of Music from 1800 to WWI, MUS 3327 History of Music from WWI to Present. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Music Theory Department | School of Music, Music Theory Department, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music in Organ Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Department of Organ | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include English 1302 Thinking and Writing, English 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research, English 2301 British Literature, History 1305 World History through the Fourteenth Century, History 1306 World History from 1400 to 1750, History 1307 Modern World Civilizations Since 1750, Select one course from the above, Religion 1310 Christian Scriptures, Religion 1350 Christian Heritage, Political Science 2302 American Constitutional Development. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Organ | School of Music, Department of Organ, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Music in Piano Pedagogy | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Music, Piano Pedagogy Program | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 13K1 Piano Lessons, Level VI, 1301/02 Theory I/II, 1101/02 Musicianship I/II, 0137 Keyboard Skills, Band, Choir, or Orchestra, 1302/04 English: Thinking, Writing, Research, Modern, Foreign Language, HP Human Performance, 13K1 Piano, Level VII, 2301/02 Theory III/IV, 2101/02 Musicianship III/IV, 3324 Music History, 0136 Accompanying, Secondary, Applied: Instrument or Voice, 2301 British Literature, Modern, Foreign Language, 1305 Introductory Psychology. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Piano Pedagogy Program | School of Music, Piano Pedagogy Program, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical and Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | This Program builds on a strong general education and the technical foundations of mathematics, physics, chemistry and computer science. Students have one or more engineering courses each semester, which fosters the development of a close student-faculty relationship beginning the first semester with an Introduction to Engineering. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering - Biomedical Option | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | The Biomedical option adds additional courses in the biomedical sciences and biomedical engineering subjects that provide the student an opportunity to develop a strong background for engineering careers related to the field of biomedical engineering. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering - Flexible Option | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | The Flexible option provides the opportunity for the student to develop a statement of purpose that defines his or her own career goals and desired specialization. Then, subject to some specified curricular distribution requirements, the student selects one of several prescribed sets of engineering specialization courses, some additional engineering electives, and several courses (within engineering or another curricular field such as business, pre-law, science, etc.) that supports the student's statement of purpose. With approval, this plan then becomes the degree plan for the student. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | The modules include 1106 Introduction to Neuroscience Laboratory, 1305 Introduction to Psychology, 1306 Introduction to Neuroscience, 2402 Introduction to Statistics, 2405 Research and Methods, 3111 Laboratory in Cognition, 3120 Laboratory in Learning and Behavior, 3123 Laboratory in Sensation and Perception, 3V90 Community Volunteer Work, 3308 Theories of Psychotherapy/Counseling, 3310 Social Psychology, 3311 Cognitive Psychology, 3320 Learning and Behavior, 3321 Abnormal Psychology, 3323 Sensation and Perception, 3330 Psychopathology, 3341 Survey of Human Development, 3350 Lifespan Human Development, 4V96 Special Topics, 4300 Advanced Statistics, 4317 Neuroscience Literature, 4327 Theories of Personality,4339 Psychology of Religion, 4395 History of Psychology, 3355 Drugs and Behavior, 4130 Laboratory in Behavioral Neuroscience, 4312 Behavioral Medicine, 4330 Behavioral Neuroscience, 3319 Clinical Neuroscience. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, One Bear Place 97334, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2961 | This is a vibrant and busy department, with over 600 undergraduate majors, 50 or more doctoral students, 15 tenure system faculty, and 4 instructors/lecturers, along with a wide range of intriguing and cutting-edge laboratories. This is an exciting time for the Department, with a recent move to the new Baylor Science Building (BSB), one of the most outstanding facilities in the country. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | Louise Herrington School of Nursing | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Louise Herrington School of Nursing | Louise Herrington School of Nursing, 3700 Worth Street, Baylor University, DALLAS, Texas, 75246, +1 214 820 3361 | With Baylor University's Louise Herrington School of Nursing in Dallas located nearly 100 miles from Baylor's main Waco campus, providing a high speed optical network for education and research proved to be a challenge for Baylor and its nursing school. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Bachelor of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Social Work | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Bachelor degree | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include ENG 1302, 1304, and 2301, ENG 2304 or 2306 or 3 hours of "2000" level or above GTX, REL 1310 and 1350, MTH 1301, 1304, 1321, or STA 1380, MTH 1304 is intended only for students who plan to take MTH 1321 , ART 1300, 2302, or 2303, CLA 3380, FAS 1161, 1126, 1136 (must take all three courses), FSC 3313, 4313, JOU 1303 or FDM 1303, Credit not allowed for both JOU 1303 and FDM 1303, MUS 1220, 3322, 3323, 4320, CSS 1301, 1302, 1304, THEA 1206, 2374. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Bear Place # 97320, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6400 | The mission of the School of Social Work is to prepare social workers in a Christian context for worldwide service and leadership. The School of Social Work strives to prepare graduates to be professional social workers who practice with the highest standards of competence. Students will be prepared to function in the context of human diversity, including spirituality and religion, integrating the values, ethics, knowledge and skills of the social work profession with their own beliefs with ethical integrity and from a strengths-oriented perspective. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Curriculum and Teaching Degree | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | The purpose of this program is to prepare graduates for university-based leadership in the field of Curriculum and Teaching. Students develop the intellectual and moral background necessary to provide high-quality, long-term leadership in the field of Curriculum and Teaching. Students are taught to conduct research, prepare teachers, educate other professionals within the field of education, and perform all duties necessary to thrive as university faculty members. The curriculum prepares leaders who have the research background necessary to provide long-term vision for curriculum, teaching, and teacher education. Students are taught to integrate theory, practice, and faith in all aspects of their work. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6122 | The School of Education enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students and 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, commitment to faith based learning and desire to see students become successful individuals and professionals distinguish the Baylor School of Education as a special place to pursue bachelor, master, and doctoral studies. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | The goals of this Program are to improve the quality of instruction at higher education institutions; to develop teachers who encourage inquiry and creative production; to develop teachers who are scholars; to provide teachers with strategies for adult learners; and to develop researchers with multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives. Graduates from this program may expect to teach at the higher education level such as in departments of educational psychology or curriculum and instruction, at church-related institutions, and at community colleges; coordinate centers for professional development and continuing education in colleges, private education level; and develop field-based adult based education programs. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include EDP 5393 Children and Families in Multicultural Settings, EDP 6333 Advanced Study of Human Learning, EDP 6332 Advanced Human Growth and Development, Adult Learning and Creativity (9 hours), EDP 6353 Creativity and Problem Solving, Instructional Strategies and Higher Education (12 hours), EDP 6340 Practicum in Adult Learning: Campus-Based, EDP 6341 Internship in Adult Learning: Field-Based, EDP 6154 Introduction to Multidisciplinary Studies, EDP 6155 Reflection of Multidisciplinary Studies, EDP 6337 Psychometric Theory and Construction, EDP 5340 Educational and Psychological Measurements, EDP 6336 Qualitative Research and Data Analysis, EDP 6360 experimental Design I, EDP 6362 Applied Multiple Regression/Correlation Analysis in Education, EDP 6335 Research Practicum in Education, EDP 6338 Grant Writing, EDP 6V99 Dissertation (9 hours) | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4796 | The Department of Educational Psychology (EDP) offers a wide array of exciting opportunities for both undergraduate and graduate students. At the graduate level, the Department offers a Ph.D. degree-program in Educational Psychology, an Educational Specialist (Ed.S.) degree-program in School Psychology, as well Master's degree in Educational Psychology and Gifted and Talented. For undergraduates, the EDP offers teacher-certification programs in Special Education and Gifted and Talented. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include MTH 5310 Advanced Abstract Algebra I, MTH 5311 Advanced Abstract Algebra II, MTH 5323 Theory of Functions of Real Variables I, MTH 5324 Theory of Functions of Real Variables II, MTH 5330 Topology, MTH 5331 Algebraic Topology I, MTH 5350 Complex Analysis, MTH 5360 Applied Mathematics I, MTH 5361 Applied Mathematics II. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97328, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3561 | The Department of Mathematics has much to offer to both students and prospective faculty. With excellent facilities housed in the newly renovated and centrally located Sid Richardson building, the department has a faculty and staff dedicated to helping students. The faculty (21 tenured or tenure-track, 10 lecturers) pride themselves with their 'easy access' attitude when helping students. It offers a wide variety of courses leading to a B.S. degree in mathematics, a B.S. degree in applied mathematics, and a B.A. degree in mathematics. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | The research required for the Ph.D. Degree will be conducted in one of the active research areas within the department. Currently this includes the fields of theoretical or experimental astrophysics, atomic, molecular, nuclear, optical, solid-state, space, surface physics, elementary particle physics and super string /M-theory. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include 5320 Classical Mechanics I, 5330 Electromagnetic Theory I, 5331 Electromagnetic Theory II, 5340 Statistical Mechanics, 5360 Mathematical Physics I, 5370 Quantum Mechanics I, 5371 Quantum Mechanics II. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | The Program has several concentration in the following fields: political philosophy/political theory, American politics/constitutional law, comparative politics/international relations. Each of these three traditional areas of concentration, however, will be informed by a set of questions and themes, grounded in the training and research of the faculty, which make this program unique. It focus on the foundations and operation of constitutional government, the character and cultivation of political leadership, and the relation of both to civil society and to the task of educating citizens for the exercise of liberty. Civic education involves learning the mechanics of government, but it also involves the formation of citizens through involvement with civil society and service to the community. Proper civic institutions do not merely buttress individuals from the abuse of political power; they also shape the habits of mind and heart necessary for responsible citizenship and political leadership. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department, One Bear Place # 97276, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3161 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | The Doctoral Program in Psychology has two training tracks; Behavioral Neuroscience and Social Psychology. All Ph.D. students begin by taking a set of general core classes representing the breadth in the discipline of psychology. Differences in the tracks begin with the specialty core which is comprised of coursework specific to Behavioral Neuroscience or Social Psychology. Behavioral Neuroscience as a discipline emphasizes the relationship between brain and behavior. Within the behavioral neuroscience faculty research interests vary widely. Social Psychology as a discipline examines how the power of the situation, and relatively stable personality dimensions, influence individual behavior, cognition, and emotion. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, One Bear Place 97334, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2961 | This is a vibrant and busy department, with over 600 undergraduate majors, 50 or more doctoral students, 15 tenure system faculty, and 4 instructors/lecturers, along with a wide range of intriguing and cutting-edge laboratories. This is an exciting time for the Department, with a recent move to the new Baylor Science Building (BSB), one of the most outstanding facilities in the country. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology - Behavioral Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | This Program emphasizes the relationship between brain and behavior. Within the behavioral neuroscience faculty research interests vary widely. Many of the faculties have behavioral interests, such as animal learning and behavior, personality and impulsive/aggressive behavior and memory and cognition. Others have interests in the more molecular aspects of neuroscience, such as psychopharmacology and electrophysiology. Collaborative research among different laboratories is common. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include NSC 5311 Seminar in Memory and Cognition, PSY 5323 Biological Foundations of Behavior, PSY 5339 Social-Organizational Psychology, PSY 5301 Introduction to Experimental Design, PSY 5302 Measurement in Psychology, STA 5300 Statistical Methods, NSC 5330 Neuropharmacology, NSC 5430 Neuroanatomy, NSC 5V71 Selected Topics in Neuroscience, NSC 5V96 Research Methods, NSC 5318 Perception, NSC 5319 Clinical Neuroscience - Advanced, NSC 5320 Learning and Behavior Theory, NSC 5360 Neurophysiology, NSC 5V71 Selected Topics in Neuroscience, NSC 5V51 Supervised Teaching, NSC 5V96 Research Methods, NSC 6V99 Dissertation. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, One Bear Place 97334, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2961 | This is a vibrant and busy department, with over 600 undergraduate majors, 50 or more doctoral students, 15 tenure system faculty, and 4 instructors/lecturers, along with a wide range of intriguing and cutting-edge laboratories. This is an exciting time for the Department, with a recent move to the new Baylor Science Building (BSB), one of the most outstanding facilities in the country. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology - Social Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | Social Psychology as a discipline examines how the power of the situation, and relatively stable personality dimensions, influence individual behavior, cognition, and emotion. The social psychology track follows a research-intensive apprenticeship model in which students develop skills in research methodology, statistics, social-personality psychology, and other content areas. Specific faculty research areas include interpersonal relations (e.g., prejudice, aggression, attraction, helping, deception, social rejection), positive psychology (e.g., gratitude, forgiveness, humility, quality of life), personality, and the psychology of religion. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include NSC 5311 Seminar in Memory and Cognition, PSY 5323 Biological Foundations of Behavior, PSY 5339 Social-Organizational Psychology, PSY 5301 Introduction to Experimental Design, PSY 5302 Measurement in Psychology, STA 5300 Statistical Methods, PSY 5350 Advanced Personality Theory, PSY 5437 Social Psychology and Group Dynamics, PSY 5V71 Selected Topics in Psychology, PSY 5V96 Research Methods, PSY 5334 Health Psychology, PSY 5388 Seminar in Applied Statistics, PSY 5321 Developmental Psychology, PSY 5V71 Selected Topics in Psychology,PSY 5V51 Supervised Teaching , PSY 5V96 Research Methods, PSY 6V99 Dissertation. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, One Bear Place 97334, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2961 | This is a vibrant and busy department, with over 600 undergraduate majors, 50 or more doctoral students, 15 tenure system faculty, and 4 instructors/lecturers, along with a wide range of intriguing and cutting-edge laboratories. This is an exciting time for the Department, with a recent move to the new Baylor Science Building (BSB), one of the most outstanding facilities in the country. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Religion, Politics and Society | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies | This Program is designed for qualified students to do graduate work at the highest level of interdisciplinary studies. All graduate work to be transferred from other universities must be approved by the Dean of the Graduate School and the Graduate Council, upon the recommendation of the Director of the J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies, and only after the student has been admitted to candidacy. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include CHS 6333 Seminar on Religion, Politics, and Society, CHS 5341 Seminar on Church and State in the Modern World, CHS 5339 Seminar on Church and State in the United States, CHS 4304 International Human Rights, CHS 4350 Paradox of Power and Justice, CHS 4360 Religion and the Body Politic, CHS 4370 Politics and Religion, CHS 4376 Eastern Perspectives on Church and State, CHS 4379 Islam and Democracy, CHS 4385 Religious Ethics in a Liberal Democracy, CHS 5338 Seminar on the History of Church and State in the West, CHS 5342 Seminar on Religion, Law, and Politics, CHS 5361 Seminar on Religion and Politics in America, CHS 5369 American Civil Religion, CHS 5372 Church and State during the Reformation Era, CHS 5385 Religion and Education in America, SOC 5341 Introduction to the Sociology of Religion, SOC 6314 Advanced Quantitative Methods, SOC 5312 Social Science Data Analysis, PSC 5323 Research Design and Research Methods, HIS 5370 Historical Research and Writing, PHI 4310 Philosophy of Science, REL 5300 Research, Writing, and Teaching in Religion. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies, One Bear Place # 97308, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1510 | Baylor University established the J. M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies in 1957, so named in honor of an outstanding alumnus, an ardent advocate of religious liberty, and a distinguished author of publications on church and state. The Institute is the oldest and most well established facility of its kind located in a university setting. It is exclusively devoted to research in the broad field of church and state and the advancement of religious liberty around the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology - Applied Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The Program prepares students for university teaching/research and applied positions in industry, government and research institutions. The program consists of course work, a publishable paper, hands-on client oriented research, a qualifying examination, research leading to a doctoral dissertation, and a final oral examination. Students are admitted in the fall. The program is designed to concentrate coursework during the first three years of study, leading to the comprehensive exams. At the end of the second year, students are expected to have completed research resulting in a journal article or its equivalent. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, One Bear Place # 97326, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1165 | The Department of Sociology offers degrees at the undergraduate, masters, and doctoral levels. There is a two-fold thrust in the Sociology program: the study of general sociological knowledge and the development of research skills. The application of social theories to various institutional areas, ranging from small groups to large organizations, is a major goal. Both the undergraduate and graduate programs have a strong research emphasis that includes developing research designs, collecting data, analyzing those data through student use of the computer, and presenting research results at professional meetings. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology - Sociology of Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The program prepares students for university teaching/research and applied positions in industry, government and research institutions. The program consists of course work, a publishable paper, hands-on client oriented research, a qualifying examination, research leading to a doctoral dissertation, and a final oral examination. Students are admitted in the fall. The program is designed to concentrate coursework during the first three years of study, leading to the comprehensive exams. At the end of the second year, students are expected to have completed research resulting in a journal article or its equivalent. After successfully passing the comprehensive exams at the end of the third year, students are admitted to Ph.D. candidacy, where course demands are minimal, but directed research becomes more demanding. This program does not require a foreign language. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, One Bear Place # 97326, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1165 | The Department of Sociology offers degrees at the undergraduate, masters, and doctoral levels. There is a two-fold thrust in the Sociology program: the study of general sociological knowledge and the development of research skills. The application of social theories to various institutional areas, ranging from small groups to large organizations, is a major goal. Both the undergraduate and graduate programs have a strong research emphasis that includes developing research designs, collecting data, analyzing those data through student use of the computer, and presenting research results at professional meetings. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Doctor of Psychology in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, One Bear Place 97334, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2961 | This is a vibrant and busy department, with over 600 undergraduate majors, 50 or more doctoral students, 15 tenure system faculty, and 4 instructors/lecturers, along with a wide range of intriguing and cutting-edge laboratories. This is an exciting time for the Department, with a recent move to the new Baylor Science Building (BSB), one of the most outstanding facilities in the country. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Educational Specialist in School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | The Program is designed to comply with the standards of the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP), as well as the Texas State Board of Examiners (TSBEP). The TSBEP has jurisdiction over school psychology in Texas, and while it does not endorse university programs, it does approve the course of study of individual students. The field of school psychology combines the strengths of psychology and education in order to allow its practitioners work to promote the social and emotional health of school aged children and youth. The School Psychology Program at Baylor University strives to provide the best instruction and experiences possible for its graduate students in order to meet the demanding needs of providing specialized services to students and their families, school personnel, and the local community. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include EDP 5332 Human Growth and Development, EDP 5328 Individual and Academic Assessment I, EDP 5341 Professional Practice and Ethics for School Psychologists, EDP 5366 Psychology of Exceptional Children, EDP 5367 Psychopathology of Individuals and Families, EDP 5337 Intellectual and Academic Assessment II, EDP 5360 Counseling Children and Adolescents, EDP 5333 Psychology of Learning, EDP 5356 Behavior Management, EDP 5393 Cultural Issues with Children and Families, EDP 5335 Research in Research Education, EDP 5278 Practicum in School Psychology, EDP 5346 Therapeutic Intervention, EDP 5394 Social-Emotional Assessment, PSY 5323 Biological Foundations of Behavior, EDP 5370 Consultation and Parent Conferences, EDP 5279 Advanced Practicum in School Psychology, EDP 5334 Statistical Methods, EDC 5304 Problems in Teaching Reading, EDA 5345 Fundamentals of School Administration, EDP 5382 Internship in School Psychology I, EDP 5383 Internship in School Psychology II. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4796 | The Department of Educational Psychology (EDP) offers a wide array of exciting opportunities for both undergraduate and graduate students. At the graduate level, the Department offers a Ph.D. degree-program in Educational Psychology, an Educational Specialist (Ed.S.) degree-program in School Psychology, as well Master's degree in Educational Psychology and Gifted and Talented. For undergraduates, the EDP offers teacher-certification programs in Special Education and Gifted and Talented. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Executive MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 1.8 Year(s) More 21 months |
US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business | This program is designed for professionals choosing to pursue an advanced degree while maintaining full-time career responsibilities. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business | Hankamer School of Business, Baylor University, One Bear Place #98001, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3411 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Family Nurse Practitioner- MSN | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Louise Herrington School of Nursing | The Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) track is a 39 credit hour curriculum designed to prepare registered nurses to deliver primary health care to clients of all ages focusing on underserved people from a variety of cultures. The curriculum is designed for current and future missionary nurses and others interested in underserved populations. The program of study conforms to educational guidelines from the State of Texas and the National Organization of Nurse Practitioner Faculties (NONPF). Graduates of the program are eligible to sit for national Family Nurse Practitioner certification examinations offered by the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) and the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners (AANP). The traditional Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) degree with a major in Family Nurse Practitioner consists of a 39 semester hour curriculum. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Louise Herrington School of Nursing | Louise Herrington School of Nursing, 3700 Worth Street, Baylor University, DALLAS, Texas, 75246, +1 214 820 3361 | With Baylor University's Louise Herrington School of Nursing in Dallas located nearly 100 miles from Baylor's main Waco campus, providing a high speed optical network for education and research proved to be a challenge for Baylor and its nursing school. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Juris Doctor and Masters of Public Policy and Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department, One Bear Place # 97276, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3161 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Juris Doctor/MBA | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | A Joint Degree Program between Baylor Business and Baylor Law Schools lead to the simultaneous award of Juris Doctor and Master of Business Administration degrees. The JD/MBA program strives to teach students about the worlds of management and law, which are inextricably intertwined. JD/MBA graduates understand the role of both business managers and legal counsel and the importance of their respective contributions to the successful operation of a business. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | BUS 5290 Management Communication, ACC 5121 Accounting Planning, ACC 5122 Accounting Implementation, MIS 5151 Technical Foundations of Information Systems, FIN 5161 Corporate Finance- Planning, QBA 5131 Quantitative Methods for Decision Making-part 1, BUS 5001 Professional Career Development. ACC 5123 Accounting in a Changing Environment, MIS 5152 Aligning Info Technology with the Business Enterprise, MIS 5153 Managing the Info Technology Resource, FIN 5162 Corporate Finance-Implementing, FIN 5163 Financial Control, QBA 5132 Quantitative Methods for Decision Making part 2, QBA 5133 Quantitative Methods for Decision Making part 3, BUS 5001 Professional Career Development | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs, One Bear Place # 98013, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4163 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | M.A. in Earth Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | The Master of Arts program in earth science is designed specifically for those students desiring to teach in public schools and junior colleges. Fulfilling present guidelines prescribed by the State of Texas, the earth science program provides advanced training for the professional science teacher seeking career advancement. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, One Bear Place #97354, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2361 | The mission of the Geology Department at Baylor University is to develop, apply and transmit scientific knowledge about the Earth and Earth's systems throughout its 4.6 billion year history. The mission includes: provision of high-quality undergraduate and graduate education, including development of techniques for enhancing geoscience education; development of geoscience students as scientists and as highly competent practitioners; education of Baylor's general student population about Earth and its natural systems; development of new knowledge through scientific research; effective communication of new knowledge to the global geoscience community; application of geoscience knowledge to address practical problems affecting human society, including stewardship of the natural world; service as a source of reliable geoscience information within the university community and beyond; and maintenance of an environment within the Geology Department characterized by mutual support, respect and kindness. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | M.A. in Speech Language Pathology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders | The Degree program in speech-language pathology at Baylor University is accredited by the Council on Academic Accreditation in Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders, One Bear Place # 97368, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | The mission of the Department of Communication Studies at Baylor University is to achieve excellence in teaching and research through a balance of theory and practice-providing students with a broad-based understanding of the processes in the society, while serving and encouraging those students with professional aspirations to become ethical, articulate, creative and innovative leaders in the field of communication. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | M.S. and Ph.D. in Biomedical Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | The Programs involve faculty from the departments of Biology, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Environmental Science, Human Health and Performance, Philosophy, and Psychology and Neuroscience in Waco, and from the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, and the Mary Crowley Medical Research Center in Dallas. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies, One Bear Place # 97266, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6566 | The Department of Environmental Studies is dedicated in training students who can steward the planet's soil, air and water resources as well as maintaining the great diversity of species occupying the biosphere. The Department is committed in teaching students to consider the political and social issues inherent in environmental management, and to exercise love for the neighbors through care for the earth and all humankind. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | M.S. in Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include 4255 Advanced Seismic Interpretation, 43C0 Senior Thesis, 4312 Oceanography, 4313 Astronomy, 4314 Meteorology, 4325 Economic Mineral Deposits, 4328 Sedimentary Petrology, 4335 Volcanology, 4336 Analytical Techniques in Geochemistry, 4337 Paleoecology, 4338 Biostratigraphy, 4339 Advanced Marine Field Studies (Cross-listed as BIO 4339), 4340 Geomorphology, 4341 Introduction to Hydrology, 4345 Water Management, 4346 Hydrogeology, 4348 Geoarchaeology (Cross-listed as ANT 4348 and ARC 4348), 4371 Wetlands (Cross-listed as ENV 4371), 4373 Global Soil Systems (Cross-listed as ENV 4374), 4375 Natural Landscape Evaluation and Planning(Cross-listed as ENV 4375), 4385 Introduction to Geographic Information Systems, 4387 Applied Geographic Information Systems. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, One Bear Place #97354, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2361 | The mission of the Geology Department at Baylor University is to develop, apply and transmit scientific knowledge about the Earth and Earth's systems throughout its 4.6 billion year history. The mission includes: provision of high-quality undergraduate and graduate education, including development of techniques for enhancing geoscience education; development of geoscience students as scientists and as highly competent practitioners; education of Baylor's general student population about Earth and its natural systems; development of new knowledge through scientific research; effective communication of new knowledge to the global geoscience community; application of geoscience knowledge to address practical problems affecting human society, including stewardship of the natural world; service as a source of reliable geoscience information within the university community and beyond; and maintenance of an environment within the Geology Department characterized by mutual support, respect and kindness. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | M.S. in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include STA 5380 Statistical Methods for Research, MTH 5381 Regression Analysis, STA 5353 Theory of Statistics III, STA 5384 Multivariate Statistical Analysis. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science, P O Box 97140, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1699 | The Department of Statistical Science was created in June 2004 when it replaced the Institute of Statistics as the home for graduate statistics programs at Baylor University. The Ph.D. and M.A. degrees in statistics were first administered in 1991. Since that time the program has produced approximately 35 doctoral and 40 master level students. The degree programs are designed to provide a balance between statistical theory and applications of statistical methods with an emphasis being placed on acquiring research, consulting, and teaching skills that were applicable to the biomedical, industrial, and academic careers. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MA in Public Policy and Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | This Degree program provides rigorous training in the field and prepares graduates for careers in public policy analysis, county or city management, program director at NGO's and interest groups, campaign management, and a variety of other fields. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include MGT 3305 Fundamental Concepts of Management, or PSC 3312 Principles of Public Administration. American Government3 sem. hrs. PSC 1305 American National Government, or PSC 1306 American State and Local Governments, Economics3 to 6 sem. hrs. ECO 1305 Survey of Economic Principles, or ECO 2305 Principles of Economics I, ECO 2306 Principles of Economics II. Primary Core Courses 12 sem. hrs. PSC 5320 Seminar in Comparative Public Policy, PSC 5321 Seminar in Public Law, PSC 5322 Seminar in Public Administration, PSC 5323 Seminar in Research Design and Research Methods. Secondary Core Courses 9 sem. hrs. PSC 4300 Political Behavior, PSC 4310 Political and Communication, PSC 4321 Administrative Law, PSC 4322 Advanced Public Administration, PSC 4330 Urban Political Processes, PSC 4380 Government and Business, PSC 4390 Reading Course (Public Policy and Administration topics). Elective Courses Courses listed above. Other Political Science courses. Relevant graduate-level courses in cognate fields (e.g., Accounting, Church and State, Economics, Environmental Studies, History, Management, Quantitative Business Analysis, Sociology). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department, One Bear Place # 97276, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3161 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include ECO 5115 Demand Analysis 1 , MGT 5131 Operations Mgt Core , MIS 5151 Technical Foundations of Information Systems 1 , ACC 5121 Accounting Planning 1 , FIN 5161 Corporate Finance-Planning 1 , QBA 5131 Quantitative Methods for Decision Making-Part 1, BUS 5390 Management Communication 3 , BUS 5111 Professional Career Development 1. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs, One Bear Place # 98013, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4163 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Entrepreneurship | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include ENT 5332 The Entrepreneurial Start-up: Opportunity Recognition and Venture Launch , ENT 5329 Entrepreneurial Finance , ENT 5341 Technology Entrepreneurship , ENT 5342 Corporate Entrepreneurship: Creating and Sustaining Innovation . | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs, One Bear Place # 98013, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4163 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MBA - Master of Business Administration Healthcare Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | The Healthcare sector of the U.S. economy now accounts for more than 15 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP), and healthcare administrators are integral to the successful management of medical organizations, including hospitals, nursing homes, hospice facilities, insurance companies, provider networks and government policy organizations. As students prepare for a career in health administration, they will be introduced to the professional organizations providing lifelong educational programs for medical executives and given the opportunity to establish early mentoring relationships. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs, One Bear Place # 98013, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4163 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MBA - Master of Business Administration/MSIS | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | A joint degree program within the Baylor Business School leads to the simultaneous award of Master of Business Administration and Master of Science in Information Systems degrees. Students interested in expanding their breadth of business knowledge while concurrently obtaining an in-depth knowledge of information systems may be interested in pursuing the MBA and MSIS degrees concurrently. Within the MSIS degree program, students have the option of the development concentration (for those with little or no prior background in information systems or computer science) or the information security concentration (for those with a solid background in information systems or computer science). | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include BUS 5101 Focus Firm Case Competition, ECO 5115 Demand Analysis, ACC 5121 Accounting Planning, MKT 5111 Seminar in Marketing Admin. – Planning, FIN 5161 Corporation Finance – Planning, MGT 5186 Strategic Planning, QBA 5131 Quantitative Techniques for Decision Making I,ISY 5325 Info Systems for Management Decision Making , ISY 5301 Seminar in Object-Oriented Business Programming, ISY 5335 System Analysis and Design . | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems, One Bear Place #98005, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2258 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MBA - Master of Business Administration/Master of Science in Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | A Degree program within the Baylor Business School leads to the simultaneous award of Master of Business Administration and Master of Science in Information Systems degrees. The MBA/MSIS program gives students an in-depth study of management while training students in all aspects of information systems. Applications to both programs are made within the Baylor Business School. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include ECO Demand analysis, BUS 5290 Management Communication, MIS 5151 Technical Foundations of Information Systems, ACC 5121 Accounting Planning, FIN 5161 Corporate Finance-Planning, QBA 5131 Quantitative Methods for Decision Making-Part 1, BUS 5001 Professional Career Development. MIS 5152 Aligning Info. Tech. with the Business Enterprise, ACC 5122 Accounting Implementation, FIN 5162 Corporate Finance-Implementing, QBA 5132 Quantitative Methods for Decision Making- Part 2, BUS 5001 Professional Career Development | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs | Hankamer School of Business, Graduate Business Programs, One Bear Place # 98013, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4163 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MFA in Directing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts | The Master of Fine Arts degree in Directing is a course of study leading to a terminal artistic degree in the theatre arts. The degree is intended for students who want to establish their own theatres, or for directors who wish to pursue a vocation in educational or professional theatre. Admission to the program is highly competitive. Students should have a solid background in dramatic literature and theatre history as well as practical experience in play analysis, visual composition, design collaboration, and production skills. MFA students direct every semester of residency, practicing their craft in a diversity of styles, genres, and spaces. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre Arts, Baylor Theatre One Bear Place # 97262, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1861 | The Baylor University Department of Theatre Arts is an elite program combining an excellent liberal arts education with rigorous training in both academic and artistic fields of theatre study. The department is ranked among the top 20 undergraduate theatre programs in the United States and is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Theatre. The Mission of the Department of Theatre Arts is to prepare students for theatre arts related fields by integrating excellence in traditional scholarship and artistic creativity with a Christian worldview. The mission of Baylor Theatre is to act as a cultural laboratory which engages the university, the larger community of artist scholars, and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MHA | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Army-Baylor University | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include HCA 5301 U. S. Healthcare System, HCA 5350 Finance I LTC Broom, HCA 5310 Quantitative Analysis I, HCA 5322 Organizational Behavior and Theory, HCA 5122 Ethics, HCA 5336, Healthcare Jurisprudence, HCA 5291 Population Health, HCA 5309 Health Economics and Policy, HCA 5329 Leadership, HCA 5353 Finance II LTC Broom, HCA 5311 Quantitative Analysis II, HCA 5317 Healthcare Mgt Information Systems, MAJ Kruse, HCA 5315 Healthcare Marketing Management, HCA 5318 Finance III, HCA 5313 Health Policy, HCA 5331 Human Resources Management, HCA 5325 Healthcare Strategic Mgt (Capstone), HCA 5319 Current Issues in Healthcare Quality. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Army-Baylor University | Army-Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 210 221 6443 | This mission is to enhance the Federal Health System through excellence in Teaching, Research, and Community Service. The program exists as a strategic asset for the respective Army, Navy, and Air Force medical services as well as the Veterans Health Administration and other federal health agencies. The curriculum, based on the Joint Medical Executive Skills competency model, enlarges the field of talented federal healthcare executives by providing high-quality, accredited graduate education and research in management and health administration. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MHA/MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Army-Baylor University | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 score on the computer-based version, or 100 on the internet-based version or a minimum overall band score of 7.0 on the IELTS. Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include HCA 5301 Health Systems, HCA 5350, Finance I, HCA 5310, Quantitative Analysis I, HCA 5317, HMIS, HCA 5322 OB and T in HR, HCA 5122, Ethics. HCA 5309 Health Economics and Policy, HCA5329 Leadership, HCA 5353 Finance II, HCA 5311 Quantitative Analysis IIM, HCA 5336 Health Law. HCA 5325 Healthcare Strategic Management, HCA 5319 Current Issues in Healthcare Quality, HCA5337 Investments, MECO 5330 Macroeconomics, HCA 5330 Healthcare Contracting, HCA 5346 Quantitative Analysis III. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Army-Baylor University | Army-Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 210 221 6443 | This mission is to enhance the Federal Health System through excellence in Teaching, Research, and Community Service. The program exists as a strategic asset for the respective Army, Navy, and Air Force medical services as well as the Veterans Health Administration and other federal health agencies. The curriculum, based on the Joint Medical Executive Skills competency model, enlarges the field of talented federal healthcare executives by providing high-quality, accredited graduate education and research in management and health administration. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MM Music History and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Music, Music History and Literature Department | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Music History and Literature Department | School of Music, Music History and Literature Department, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | MM Music Theory | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Music, Music Theory Department | The Study of Music Theory is essential training for any career related to music. Beyond this vital utilitarian function, the study of theory helps train the whole person and enrich professional and personal life by stretching the mind's ability to reason and solve problems and by paving the way to a greater appreciation of the art of music, of culture, and of beauty, and an understanding of the importance of these to human society. Baylor students study with full-time professional music theorists, not graduate assistants. The theory faculties are active musicians with varied specialties in research, composition, and performance, and all share commitment to excellence in the classroom and to Baylor's distinctive mission. Students choosing to major in music theory will conduct research under faculty mentors who are engaged in scholarly discourse on national and international levels. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include MUS 5201 Pedagogy of Theory 2, MUS 5301 History of Music Theory 3, MUS 5328 The Twentieth Century 3, MUS 5355 Analysis Seminar (two semesters) 6, MUS 5V99 Thesis 3. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Music Theory Department | School of Music, Music Theory Department, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MM Piano Pedagogy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Music, Piano Pedagogy Program | The piano pedagogy program at Baylor University offers a comprehensive degree program with many opportunities for valuable teaching experiences. Undergraduate piano pedagogy classes prepare future teachers to work with all levels and ages of students in both group and private settings. Through piano pedagogy courses and internships in piano pedagogy, students participate in the teaching of the Piano Laboratory Program, in which elementary-age students from the community obtain their first piano lessons. The Piano Laboratory Program at Baylor University is designed to provide piano pedagogy students with actual teaching experiences in private and group settings. All student teachers are enrolled in a piano pedagogy course in the Baylor University School of Music. All classes and lessons are supervised by the Director of Piano Pedagogy Studies. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | MUS 4315/16 Advanced Piano Pedagogy and Practicum I, II, MUS 5V89 Special Research Problems in Pedagogy. MUS 4322/24 Piano Literature I, II, MUS 5114/15 Graduate Internship in Piano Teaching, MUS 5201 Pedagogy of Theory, MUS 51K2 Applied Organ, MUS 51K3 Applied Harpsichord, MUS 51M1 Applied MIDI Instruments. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Piano Pedagogy Program | School of Music, Piano Pedagogy Program, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MM in Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Music, Composition Department | The curriculum is structured to include a high level of performance on an instrument or multiple instruments, conducting experience, electronic music, improvisation, orchestration, and other composition, theory and history courses. Baylor's composition degree is cutting edge, but also gives the students a solid foundation that prepares them to be the multi-tasking musicians of the twenty-first century. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Composition Department | School of Music, Composition Department, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MPH in Community Health Education | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | This Program equips students to effectively practice as community health educators in a wide range of public health settings. The strong practice-based approach, global health opportunities, and low faculty-student ratios provide students with a quality learning experience that can enhance career development. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include HP/HED 5379 - Research Methods in HHPR, EDP 5334 - Statistical Methods or STAT 5300 - Statistical Methods. Emphasis Core, HED 4335 - Community Organization for Health Ed HED 5315 - Foundations in Health Ed, HED 5329 - Current Health Issues, HED 5334 - Community Health Education, HED 5337 - Health Concepts in Epidemiology, HED 5378 - Administration in Health Education. Suggested Electives for Health Education or Wellness/Corporate Fitness, HED 4321 - Understanding Human Sexuality, HED 4327 - Dying and Death Education, HED 4330 - Health Concepts and Materials, HED 4331 - Wellness Intervention and Health Promotion, HED 4332 - Planning and Programming in Health Promotion, RED 5376 - Facility and Equipment Risk Management, RED 5392 - Leisure Well-Being in Later Life PSY 4312 - Behavioral Medicine, EDP 4340 - Adult Learner, EDP 5332 - Human Growth and Development, FCS 5351 – Nutrition and Aging, BIO 5322 - Physiology of Aging. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | MS in Physics with a Specialty in Environmental Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Major in Communication Sciences and Disorders | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders | The Program emphasis in Speech-Language Pathology provides students with a comprehensive education in the fundamental principles of Communication Sciences and Disorders. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Major | Baylor University | The modules include CSD 1308 Survey of Audiology and Speech Pathology, CSD 2318 Language Development, CSD 2351 Introduction to Phonological Science, CSD 3308 Articulation, CSD 3357 Anatomy and Physiology, CSD 4301 Introduction to Audiology, CSD 4302 Language Therapy, CSD 4307 Fluency and Voice, CSD 4352 Diagnostic Methods, CSD 4358 Speech Science, CSD 4368 Introduction to Aural Rehabilitation, CSD 4477 Clinical Methods. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders, One Bear Place # 97368, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | The mission of the Department of Communication Studies at Baylor University is to achieve excellence in teaching and research through a balance of theory and practice-providing students with a broad-based understanding of the processes in the society, while serving and encouraging those students with professional aspirations to become ethical, articulate, creative and innovative leaders in the field of communication. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Major in French | Full Time | Variable | 1055 per semester hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of French and Italian | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Major | Baylor University | The modules include 1401 Elementary French TCCNS: FREN 1411, 1402 Elementary French TCCNS: FREN 1412, 1412 Pre-Intermediate French, 2310 Intermediate French, 2312 Intermediate French for Business, 2320 Intermediate French, 3301 Advanced French Grammar, 3302 Conversational French, 3305 Introduction to Commercial French, 3306 French Phonetics, 3310 Introduction to French Literature, Introduction to French literature through the study of selected major works, 3315 Panorama of French Theater, 3316 Theater in Paris, 3320 Conversation and Composition in Paris, 3325 Advanced Conversation and Composition, 3330 Modern French Cinema, 3337 French Civilization , 3338 Contemporary France,3340 Paris: A Cultural Overview, 3341 Tour de France: Regions and Provinces, 3V70 Special Problems 1 to 3 sem. hrs., 4301 Topics in French Grammar, 4315 Methods of Foreign Language Teaching (Cross-listed as GER 4315 SPA 4315), 4328 Francophone Culture and Literature, 4331 Survey of French Literature, 4332 Survey of French Literature, continued, 4337 Seventeenth-Century Literature, 4338 Eighteenth-Century Literature, 4339 Nineteenth-Century Literature, 4340 Twentieth-Century Literature, 4341 French Media, 43C0 French Senior Capstone, 4V90 Independent Study 1 to 3 sem. hrs. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of French and Italian | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of French and Italian, Old Main Room 204, P O Box 97391, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3711 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Major in German | Full Time | Variable | 1055 per semester hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of German and Russian | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Major | Baylor University | The modules include GER 1401 - Beginning German, GER 1402 - Beginning German, GER 1412 - Accelerated Beginning German, GER 2310 - Intermediate German, GER 2320 - Intermediate German cont., GER 3301 - German Conversation and Composition, GER 3302 - German Reading Development, GER 3311 - German Proficiency, GER 3341 - Introduction to German Culture: Germany in the Making, GER 3343 - Baylor in Germany: The Dresden Experience, GER 3345 - Introduction to German Film: German Culture from Berlin to Hollywood, GER 3352 - Modern German Short Prose, GER 3353 - German Drama, GER 3354 - German Poetry, GER 3355 - Deutsche Dichter und Denker I (under curricular consideration), GER 3356 - Deutsche Dichter und Denker II (under curricular consideration), GER 3V70 - Special Problems 1 to 3 sem. hrs., GER 4301 - Survey of German Literature: Early Writings, GER 4302 - Survey of German Literature: Enlightenment to Realism, GER 4303 - Survey of German Literature: Modernity, GER 4305 - German Literature of the Classical Period, GER 4306 - Goethe's Faust, GER 4307 - German Literature of the Nineteenth Century, GER 4308 - German Literature of the Nineteenth Century, GER 4309 - German Literature of the Twentieth Century, GER 4315 - Methods of Foreign Language Teaching, GER 4320 - Special Topics in German, GER 5370/71 - German for Reading Knowledge, GER 4V90 - Independent Study 1 - 3 hrs. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of German and Russian | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of German and Russian, Old Main Room 204, P O Box 97391, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3711 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Major in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | The Program provides a solid foundation in the history of philosophy. In addition, the program involves in-depth study of specific subject areas, including logic, ethics, aesthetics, epistemology, and metaphysics. This dual emphasis cultivates students' capacity for critical analysis, stimulates independent thinking, and promotes sound reasoning based on knowledge, moral discrimination, and religious insight. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Major | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, One Bear Place # 97273, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3368 | The Baylor University philosophy department has been an independent academic department since the early 1940s. The Department's graduate program has been in place since 1950. Graduates of the department, at both the BA and the MA levels, have gone on to further work and distinguished academic achievement at many of the most prestigious universities in the world. The Department is well-represented by graduates who are among the faculty and administration of major universities, leaders in business, distinguished attorneys and judges, and influential theologians and religious leaders. In 2003, the Baylor philosophy department began to offer graduate work leading to the Ph.D. degree in philosophy. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Major in Russian | Full Time | Variable | 1055 per semester hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of German and Russian | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Major | Baylor University | The modules include R1401 Beginning Russian I, R2301 Intermediate Russian I, R3301 Russian Conversation and Composition, R4301 Russian Literature 9th To 19th Century, R1402 Beginning Russian II, R2302 Intermediate Russian II, R3302 Russian Reading Development, R4302 20th Century Russian Literature. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of German and Russian | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of German and Russian, Old Main Room 204, P O Box 97391, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3711 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Major in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $26,966 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The Program that studies the social relations of people. Knowledge acquired through a variety of research techniques helps explain the social behavior of people and predict what they will do in certain situations. | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Major | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, One Bear Place # 97326, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1165 | The Department of Sociology offers degrees at the undergraduate, masters, and doctoral levels. There is a two-fold thrust in the Sociology program: the study of general sociological knowledge and the development of research skills. The application of social theories to various institutional areas, ranging from small groups to large organizations, is a major goal. Both the undergraduate and graduate programs have a strong research emphasis that includes developing research designs, collecting data, analyzing those data through student use of the computer, and presenting research results at professional meetings. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Major in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | 1055 per semester hour | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of Spanish and Portuguese | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Major | Baylor University | The modules include 1401 - Elementary Spanish (TCCNS: SPAN 1411), 1402 - Elementary Spanish (TCCNS: SPAN 1412), 1412 - Accelerated Elementary Spanish, 2310 - Intermediate Spanish (TCCNS: SPAN 2311), 2311 - Intermediate Spanish for Teachers, 2312 - Intermediate Spanish for Business, 2320 - Intermediate Spanish (TCCNS: SPAN 2312), 2321 - Intermediate Spanish for Medical Professions, 2322 - Spanish for Christian Ministry, 3302 - Conversation and Composition, 3305 - Introduction to Hispanic Literature, 3309 - Introduction to Spanish Linguistics, 3310 - Spanish Civilization, 3311 - Spanish-American Civilization, 3350 - Survey of Spanish Literature through the Seventeenth Century, 3352 - Survey of Spanish Literature from the Eighteenth Century, 3354 - Survey of Spanish-American Literature to 1880, 3356 - Survey of Spanish-American Literature from 1880 to Present, 1401 Elementary Portuguese TCCNS: PORT 1411, 1402 Elementary Portuguese TCCNS: PORT 1412, 2310 Intermediate Portuguese, 2320 Intermediate Portuguese. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of Spanish and Portuguese | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of Spanish and Portuguese, Old Main Room 204, P O Box 97391, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3711 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Accountancy (MAcc) | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | The Master of Accountancy (MAcc) is designed to provide students who already have an undergraduate accounting degree with the advanced knowledge required for a successful career in accounting-related fields. In addition, the degree will provide students with the additional knowledge and hours required above an undergraduate degree to sit for the CPA exam. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include Introductory Financial Accounting 3, Introductory Managerial Accounting 3, Intermediate Financial Accounting 6, Income Taxation 3, Cost Accounting 3, Accounting Information Systems 3 Auditing. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law, One Bear Place # 98002, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6138 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies | The Graduate Program in American Studies is an interdisciplinary program offering comprehensive study in American institutions and culture. The basic program consists of courses in American history and American literature. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include 4357 American Art - AAI, Artistic expression in the United States from the Colonial Period to 1945. 4358 Contemporary Art - AAI, Prerequisite(s): ART 2302 and 2303; upper level standing. American and European painting and sculpture from 1945 to the present. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies, P O Box 97240, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | American Studies is a relatively new intellectual endeavor that encompasses a variety of disciplines. At Baylor University, American Studies is offered as both an undergraduate and graduate program. Students are able to shape their studies around American culture and ultimately choose their path within a university setting. The many disciplines concerned with American culture include communications, history, literature, museum studies, political science, religion as well as many other areas. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | The Master of Arts degree provides a means for a student to focus on breadth of biological studies; though this is a non-thesis program, students still identify a sub discipline of specialization. Graduates who earn a master's degree should possess an academic background adequate to enable them to proceed into advanced academic (doctoral) or professional (e.g., medical, dental, or other health-related programs) programs, or to enter the work force in an array of biological contexts (e.g., government agencies, environmental consulting, teaching, biological products development and marketing). | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Church-State Studies - Non-thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies | The Master of Arts degree in Church-State Studies is specially designed to give students a broad interdisciplinary exposure to the contours of church-state relations-the historical, religious, legal, political, philosophical, and sociological dimensions. Approximately one-half of the course offerings are mandatory seminars taught in the Institute. The remaining course offerings are selected by the student in consultation with the Director of the Institute. Within prescribed limits, these courses can be chosen from the offerings of the associated Departments of Religion, Political Science, Philosophy, History, and Sociology. The program of study is flexible enough to allow the student, within certain prescribed limits, to tailor the program to his or her individual interests and needs. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies, One Bear Place # 97308, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1510 | Baylor University established the J. M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies in 1957, so named in honor of an outstanding alumnus, an ardent advocate of religious liberty, and a distinguished author of publications on church and state. The Institute is the oldest and most well established facility of its kind located in a university setting. It is exclusively devoted to research in the broad field of church and state and the advancement of religious liberty around the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Church-State Studies - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies | The Master of Arts degree in Church-State Studies is specially designed to give students a broad interdisciplinary exposure to the contours of church-state relations-the historical, religious, legal, political, philosophical, and sociological dimensions. Approximately one-half of the course offerings are mandatory seminars taught in the Institute. The remaining course offerings are selected by the student in consultation with the Director of the Institute. Within prescribed limits, these courses can be chosen from the offerings of the associated Departments of Religion, Political Science, Philosophy, History, and Sociology. The program of study is flexible enough to allow the student, within certain prescribed limits, to tailor the program to his or her individual interests and needs. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies, One Bear Place # 97308, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1510 | Baylor University established the J. M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies in 1957, so named in honor of an outstanding alumnus, an ardent advocate of religious liberty, and a distinguished author of publications on church and state. The Institute is the oldest and most well established facility of its kind located in a university setting. It is exclusively devoted to research in the broad field of church and state and the advancement of religious liberty around the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Communication Studies - Interpersonal/Organizational Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | The Degree is designed to prepare students to use organizational, rhetorical, media, and communication theory and research to pursue career goals including advanced work at the doctoral level, teaching, and careers in consulting, business, film, and the electronic media. Graduate education in the Department of Communication Studies socializes students into two crucial forms of knowing. The first approach is humanistic or qualitative. This approach essentially aims to describe the characteristics of various forms of spoken messages. Rhetorical criticism and theory, analysis of argumentation, the production of film and video artifacts, film theory, and the aesthetics of film and video all falls under the rubric of the qualitative approach. The second approach of studying and researching human communication is grounded firmly in such activities as experimental design, statistical analysis, studies of organizational and small group communication, and the process and effects of mass communication. Area of Study is Organizational Communication, Rhetorical Studies, Media Studies, Production. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies, One Bear Place # 97332, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Communication Studies - Media Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | This Concentration includes courses that focus on the production, reception, and influence of mass media texts. Areas of interest include the impact of digital media, the business of media, the historiography of mass media institutions, textual analysis of films, videos, and television, effects of mass media texts, the uses and gratifications of mass media texts, and mass communication law. Production issues in this emphasis revolve around the creation and production of film, audio, video, and interactive texts, while coursework focuses on the use of new technologies in the production of film, television, and video games. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies, One Bear Place # 97332, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Communication Studies - Rhetorical Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | This Concentration investigates the relationship between communication and the creation and maintenance of the social relationships in personal, group, and organizational contexts. This area focuses on issues such as how communication creates and sustains friendship, romantic relationships, and family. It also focuses on the influence of organizational structures and networks, how communication creates and maintains unique relational or organizational cultures, how communication affects the adoption of innovations, leadership as constituted by communication, crisis communication, communication and cohesiveness in groups and teams, and how communication gives voice to organizational members. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Studies, One Bear Place # 97332, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Education | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | The M. A. is a 33 semester hour program that includes a 12 hour minor in educational foundations, instructional technology, language and literacy, mathematics education or other approved areas. A thesis on an approved topic is required. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6122 | The School of Education enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students and 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, commitment to faith based learning and desire to see students become successful individuals and professionals distinguish the Baylor School of Education as a special place to pursue bachelor, master, and doctoral studies. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4796 | The Department of Educational Psychology (EDP) offers a wide array of exciting opportunities for both undergraduate and graduate students. At the graduate level, the Department offers a Ph.D. degree-program in Educational Psychology, an Educational Specialist (Ed.S.) degree-program in School Psychology, as well Master's degree in Educational Psychology and Gifted and Talented. For undergraduates, the EDP offers teacher-certification programs in Special Education and Gifted and Talented. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in English Literature - Non-Thesis Track | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97404, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1768 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in English Literature - Thesis Track | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The Thesis defense requirements have been satisfied in order to justify the topic and approach chosen, to demonstrate familiarity with methods of research, and to display a capacity for independent thought. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97404, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1768 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in History | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | The History prepares students for careers in teaching, public history, museums, and government service. Graduates also use their training in critical analysis, research, and writing in diverse businesses, journalism, law, libraries, and informational services. Offered for over eight decades, the graduate program in history exemplifies Baylor University’s abiding scholarly commitment to the study of the human past. A two-year Master of Arts degree is designed to acquaint students with the methods and skills of the historical profession, the program engages young historians with research-intensive seminars taught by faculty renowned for their excellence in graduate education. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, One Bear Place # 97306, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2667 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in International Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include BUS 5V95 Internship in International Business, ECO 5V98 Special Studies in Economics, ECO 5V99 Master's Thesis. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics, 1311 S 5th Street One Bear Place #98003, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2263 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in International Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | This Interdisciplinary Program includes classes in political science, area studies, anthropology, church-state, economics, history, philosophy and religion. Candidates must demonstrate proficiency in a foreign language through one of the options outlined in the Graduate Catalogue. This degree is designed for students wanting to prepare for careers in education, government service, international affairs, or to pursue a terminal degree in a related field. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include Asia PSC 4325 Asian International Relations, PSC 4344 Government and Politics of Russia, PSC 4364 The Governments and the Politics of the Asia-Pacific Region, PSC 4374 Governments and Politics of East Asia, AST 4350 Seminar in Asian Studies, PHI 4340 Oriental Philosophy, REL 4346 Religions of India and the Far East, REL 5347 Religions of India. Europe and the United States, PSC 4324 British Government and Politics, PSC 5310 Seminar in American Politics, PSC 5335 Seminar in National Security Decision Making, PSC 5345 American Foreign Policy, CHS 5338 Seminar on Church and State in the West, HIS 4336 Europe since World War I, HIS 4339 Cultural and Intellectual History of Modern Europe, HIS 4343 France since 1815, HIS 4390 American Foreign Relations to 1919, HIS 4392 American Foreign Relations since 1919, PHI 4341 Contemporary European Philosophy, REL 5335 Modern European Christianity | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department, One Bear Place # 97276, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3161 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | The M.A. degree serves those who want to work in journalism profession or related professions and for students looking to pursue the Ph.D. It is a traditional graduate degree. The M.A. is a professional journalism degree requiring 36 hours, including three hours for a thesis or major project. A major project proposal is required before the student may begin to work on the project. Students work with the graduate director to design a program that meets their goals. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism, One Bear Place # 97353, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6322 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Museum Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies | This Program combines academic and professional training for students preparing to be the next generation of museum leaders. Students learn about the history and philosophy of different types of museums, about the different skills that are needed in museum administration, museum education, collections management and care, archival management, and exhibit design, as well as courses on material culture, decorative arts, and historic preservation. Students are also given the opportunity to apply (and test out) this knowledge in the real world, through work at the Mayborn Museum Complex and other museums in Waco and central Texas, in formal internships in museums across the country, and through attendance at professional conferences such as the Texas Association of Museums. The program consists of thirty-six credit hours, including a thesis or a master's project. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Museum Studies, One Bear Place # 97154, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4349 | The Department of Museum Studies offers a Master of Arts degree in museum studies, which combines academic and professional training for students preparing to be the next generation of museum leaders. Students learn about the history and philosophy of different types of museums, about the different skills that are needed in museum administration, museum education, collections management and care, archival management, and exhibit design, as well as courses on material culture, decorative arts, and historic preservation. Students are also given the opportunity to apply (and test out) this knowledge in the real world, through work at the Mayborn Museum Complex and other museums in Waco and central Texas, in formal internships in museums across the country, and through attendance at professional conferences such as the Texas Association of Museums. The program consists of thirty-six credit hours, including a thesis or a master's project. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | The philosophy department no longer offers a terminal M.A. degree. However, admitted Ph.D. students will earn an M.A. degree after completion of thirty-three hours of graduate study in philosophy, passing one written examination either in Ancient and Medieval Philosophy or in Modern and Contemporary Philosophy, and an oral exam. At least 18 of these hours must be at the 5000 level. In the past, the department has helped students to carry on their graduate study toward a Ph.D. Qualified students have gone on from work in this department to major Ph.D. programs in the United States. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, One Bear Place # 97273, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3368 | The Baylor University philosophy department has been an independent academic department since the early 1940s. The Department's graduate program has been in place since 1950. Graduates of the department, at both the BA and the MA levels, have gone on to further work and distinguished academic achievement at many of the most prestigious universities in the world. The Department is well-represented by graduates who are among the faculty and administration of major universities, leaders in business, distinguished attorneys and judges, and influential theologians and religious leaders. In 2003, the Baylor philosophy department began to offer graduate work leading to the Ph.D. degree in philosophy. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include 5320 Classical Mechanics I, 5330 Electromagnetic Theory I, 5331 Electromagnetic Theory II, 5340 Statistical Mechanics, 5360 Mathematical Physics I, 5370 Quantum Mechanics I, 5371 Quantum Mechanics II. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | This Program is earned by students in the Ph.D. program in the process of completing their Ph.D. The Department therefore does not ordinarily admit students to the MAPSC as a terminal degree. The degree requires either 30 semester hours of coursework and an additional 6 thesis hours, or 36 coursework hours. Field concentrations are available in political philosophy and political theory, American politics and constitutional law, and comparative politics and international relations. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science Department, One Bear Place # 97276, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3161 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion | This program is designed to satisfy the needs of either those who want a broad foundation from which to do further graduate study or those who desire a deeper understanding of the Christian religion for personal or vocational purposes. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion, One Bear Place # 97284, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3735 | The Department of Religion offers students the opportunity to study the biblical, historical, practical, and theological traditions of Christianity, and other world religions, as well. Here faculty and students journey together in pursuit of truth. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, One Bear Place # 97326, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1165 | The Department of Sociology offers degrees at the undergraduate, masters, and doctoral levels. There is a two-fold thrust in the Sociology program: the study of general sociological knowledge and the development of research skills. The application of social theories to various institutional areas, ranging from small groups to large organizations, is a major goal. Both the undergraduate and graduate programs have a strong research emphasis that includes developing research designs, collecting data, analyzing those data through student use of the computer, and presenting research results at professional meetings. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts in Spanish | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of Spanish and Portuguese | The Master of Arts degree program in Spanish has four main objectives to prepare students to pursue a Ph.D. in Spanish through research and scholarly activities, to strengthen the Spanish skills of elementary and secondary school teachers, to prepare individuals to function in both social and business situations in Hispanic countries, to broaden the students' global perspective. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of Spanish and Portuguese | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Foreign Languages, Division of Spanish and Portuguese, Old Main Room 204, P O Box 97391, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3711 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Arts with a Specialty in Environmental Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Divinity - Christian Education | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | The Master of Divinity (M.Div) degree at Truett Seminary intends to provide graduate theological education that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include THEO 7453 Hebrew, THEO 7346 New Testament Greek 1, THEO 7347 New Testament Greek 2, THEO 7V54 OR 7V48 Hebrew Language Reading or Greek Language Reading, CRED 7300 Introduction to Christian Education, CRED 7379 Principles of Teaching the Christian Faith, LEAD 7309 Church Administration, LEAD 7308 Strategic Planning for Churches, CRED 7330 Introduction to Family Ministry, CRED 7340 Christian Education: Childhood, CRED 7350 Christian Education: Youth, CRED 7352 Seminar in Youth Ministry, CRED 7354 Seminar in College Ministry, CRED 7362 Seminar in Adult Christian Education, LEAD 7311 Conflict Management in the Church, LEAD 7310 Enabling an Evangelizing Church, LEAD 7V21 Studies in Leadership, PAST 7336 Life and Work of the Pastor, GRT 4395 Aging and Mental Health (also listed as SWO 4395), RED 4395 Principles of Church Recreation. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | George W. Truett Theological Seminary, 1100 S 3rd Street, One Bear Place #97126, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3755 | As a professional school of Baylor University, George W. Truett Theological Seminary subscribes to the university’s mission statement “to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. The seminary’s purpose is to provide theological education leading to the Master of Divinity or the Doctor of Ministry degrees that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Divinity - Missions and World Christianity | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | The Master of Divinity (M.Div) degree at Truett Seminary intends to provide graduate theological education that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include THEO 7453 Hebrew, THEO 7346 New Testament Greek 1, THEO 7347 New Testament Greek 2, THEO 7V54 or 7V48 Hebrew Language Reading or MSSN 7376 The Story of Christian Missions, MSSN 7380 Biblical and Theological Themes in Missions, MSSN 7381 Religion and Worldviews, MSSN 7383 Cross Cultural Living and Communication, MSSN 7377 The Missional Church, MSSN 7384 Ethnographic Research Methodology, MSSN 7382 Principles, Methods and Strategies, MSSN 7378 Church Planting, MSSN 7386 Urban Mission Issues, MSSN 7387 Community Development and Ministry, MSSN 7389 Studies in Mission Theology and Practice. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | George W. Truett Theological Seminary, 1100 S 3rd Street, One Bear Place #97126, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3755 | As a professional school of Baylor University, George W. Truett Theological Seminary subscribes to the university’s mission statement “to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. The seminary’s purpose is to provide theological education leading to the Master of Divinity or the Doctor of Ministry degrees that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Divinity - Theology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | The Master of Divinity (M.Div) degree at Truett Seminary intends to provide graduate theological education that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include THEO 7453 Hebrew, THEO 7346 New Testament Greek 1, THEO 7347 New Testament Greek 2, THEO 7V54 or 7V48 Hebrew Language Reading or PRCH 7317 Preaching 2, PRCH 7321 Texts and Communication, PAST 7336 Life and Work of the Pastor, MENT 7V00 Mentoring in Ministry. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | George W. Truett Theological Seminary, 1100 S 3rd Street, One Bear Place #97126, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3755 | As a professional school of Baylor University, George W. Truett Theological Seminary subscribes to the university’s mission statement “to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. The seminary’s purpose is to provide theological education leading to the Master of Divinity or the Doctor of Ministry degrees that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Divinity - Youth and Student Ministry | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | The Master of Divinity (M.Div) degree at Truett Seminary intends to provide graduate theological education that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include CRED 7350 Christian Education: Youth and Student Ministry, CRED 7352 Seminar in Youth Ministry, CRED 7354 Seminar in College Ministry, CRED 7358 Ministry with Parents and Families or CRED 7358 Youth Culture and Mass Media, CRED 7300 Introduction to Christian Education, CRED 4395 Principles of Church Recreation, LEAD 7309 Church Administration, LEAD 7V21 Studies in Leadership, PRCH 7317 Preaching II or PAST 7336 Life and Work of the Pastor, MENT 7V00 Mentoring in Ministry. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | George W. Truett Theological Seminary, 1100 S 3rd Street, One Bear Place #97126, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3755 | As a professional school of Baylor University, George W. Truett Theological Seminary subscribes to the university’s mission statement “to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. The seminary’s purpose is to provide theological education leading to the Master of Divinity or the Doctor of Ministry degrees that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Divinity/Master of Music | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Music | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include THEO 7290 Music and Worship, THEO 7291 Congregational Song, THEO 7292 Seminar in Music Ministry, THEO 7293 Choral/Vocal Music Ministries in the Church, THEO 7294 History of American Church Music, THEO 7295 Turning Points in Church Music, THEO 7296 Comparative Liturgies. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music | School of Music, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Divinity/Master of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Social Work | This Program prepares students to provide leadership and service through congregations, religiously affiliated organizations and faith communities. Church agencies - family and children's agencies, gerontology programs, and community ministries in urban areas and international missions - need professional social workers. In many of these settings, the MDiv degree strengthens social workers' preparation for church leadership. Often an MDiv or other graduate seminary degree is a requirement to hold congregational leadership positions, including that of chief executive officer at church-related agencies. This degree program provides dual competency in these areas. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Bear Place # 97320, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6400 | The mission of the School of Social Work is to prepare social workers in a Christian context for worldwide service and leadership. The School of Social Work strives to prepare graduates to be professional social workers who practice with the highest standards of competence. Students will be prepared to function in the context of human diversity, including spirituality and religion, integrating the values, ethics, knowledge and skills of the social work profession with their own beliefs with ethical integrity and from a strengths-oriented perspective. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | This Program is for students who wish to extend their undergraduate education and might like to take some MBA level business courses. This program is ideal for students interested in consulting work, product development, or appropriate technology for developing countries. The latter often involves traveling to the developing country to understand requirements and constraints, with anticipated return trips to assist in initial deployment. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Engineering/Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | MBA | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Environmental Studies (M.E.S.) - Practicum Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies, One Bear Place # 97266, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6566 | The Department of Environmental Studies is dedicated in training students who can steward the planet's soil, air and water resources as well as maintaining the great diversity of species occupying the biosphere. The Department is committed in teaching students to consider the political and social issues inherent in environmental management, and to exercise love for the neighbors through care for the earth and all humankind. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Environmental Studies (M.E.S.) - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies, One Bear Place # 97266, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6566 | The Department of Environmental Studies is dedicated in training students who can steward the planet's soil, air and water resources as well as maintaining the great diversity of species occupying the biosphere. The Department is committed in teaching students to consider the political and social issues inherent in environmental management, and to exercise love for the neighbors through care for the earth and all humankind. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of International Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | The M.I.J degree, designed to prepare for careers in foreign correspondence or in international mass media, is an interdisciplinary degree. The M.I.J. is a professional journalism degree and multidisciplinary in nature, requiring 30 semester hours of course work and a 6-hour internship abroad. Students complete an examination before starting the international internship and must also demonstrate proficiency in a language other than their native one. Language instruction is available at Baylor and most students study their chosen language further before demonstrating proficiency. MIJ students have conducted internships in Europe, South America, Asia and Africa with news, public relations, government and faith-based organizations. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Journalism, One Bear Place # 97353, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6322 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Music in Church Music | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Music, Department of Church Music | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include 5302 Analytical Techniques, 5320 Introduction to Graduate Study, 5321 The Middles Ages, or 5322 The Renaissance, or 5323 The Baroque, or 5325 The Classic Period, or 5326 The Romantic Period, or 5327 Music Since 1945, or 5328 The Twentieth Century | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Church Music | School of Music, Department of Church Music, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Music in Organ Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Music, Department of Organ | Applicants graduated from a private high school (including home school) not officially recognized by the state in which the school is located (by the country if an international school) must normally be 17 before the first day of class unless the GED certificate is submitted prior to registration. Eligibility for consideration for admission to Baylor is established by competitive high school performance and by competitive scores on either the American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT). In connection with these admissions criteria, it should be noted that Baylor students as a group demonstrate well above average academic achievement and potential. Students should have an official statement of the completion of one year of full-time study at a school where English is the official language of instruction, or an official SAT Verbal score of 470 or ACT English score of 20, or an official TOEFL score of 540 on the paper-based test or 207 on the computer based test or 76 on the internet based TOEFL (iBT), or an official ILETS score of 6.0. | Masters | Baylor University | The modules include MUS 4210 Organ Methods (2),MUS 4213 Service Playing (2), MUS 4322 Keyboard Literature (3), MUS 4343/44 Organ Literature I, II (33), MUS 5201 Pedagogy of Theory (2), MUS 4202 Advanced Keyboard Harmony (2), MUS 4203 Electronic Studio or Composition (2), MUS 5240 Worship in the Church (2), MUS 5241 Congregational Song (2), MUS 5244 History of American Church Music (2), MUS 5245 Turning Points in Church Music (2), MUS 5246 Comparative Liturgies (2). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Music, Department of Organ | School of Music, Department of Organ, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97408, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3571 | The mission of the School of Music is to educate men and women for the music professions of the church and of the world by providing them with an integrated educational and artistic atmosphere which preserves and transmits the religious and cultural values of this culture's artistic traditions, religious beliefs expressed through those traditions, and a sense of beauty inherent to those traditions. The School of Music of Baylor University is a member of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Texas Association of Music Schools. Degree programs leading to the bachelor of music education degree conform to certification requirements of the Texas Education Agency. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | The Master of Science degree in Biology, focuses on the preparation of a research thesis. Graduates who earn the Master of Science degree should possess an academic background adequate to enable them to proceed into advanced academic (doctoral) or professional (e.g., medical, dental, or other health-related programs) programs, or to enter the work force in an array of biological contexts (e.g., government agencies, environmental consulting, teaching, biological products development and marketing). | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include EGR 4370 Biomaterials - Form and Function, EGR 4374 Biomechanics, EGR 4451 Digital Signal Processing, EGR 5360 Introduction to Biomedical Engineering, EGR 5375 Biomechanical Computer Modeling, EGR 4382 Selection of Materials and Manufacturing Processes in Design, EGR 5301 Engineering Analysis, EGR 5324 Advanced Dynamics, EGR 5326 Advanced Solid Mechanics with Introduction to Finite Element Analysis, EGR 5380 Mechanical Properties of Polymers and Polymeric Composites, EGR 5382 Life-Prediction and Failure Analysis in Engineering Comp. and Systems, BIOL 4402 Transmission Electron Microscopy, BIOL 4403 Scanning Electron Microscopy, MTH 5380 Statistical Methods for Researchers, REL 4395 Bioethics, EGR 4396 Special Topics in Engineering, EGR 4V97 Special Projects in Engineering, EGR 5396 Special Topics in Engineering, EGR 5390 Research Methods and Project Formulation, EGR 5397 Special Projects in Engineering, EGR 5V98 Master's Project, EGR 5V99 Master's Thesis. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | M.S. student must take a prescribed number of core courses selected from among the following areas: analytical, biochemical, inorganic, organic, and physical as set forth below. There is no foreign language requirement. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Baylor University Sciences Building, One Bear Place #97348, WACO, Texas, 76706, +1 254 710 3311 | The Department is housed in the modern, Baylor University Sciences Building, the Department is well-equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation to support the research efforts of its faculty, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate researchers. Modern, well-equipped individual research labs are supported by excellent departmental facilities, including a Bruker 360 MHz NMR, a Varian 500 MHz NMR, a VG/Fisons ProSpec high-resolution GC/mass spectrometer, and an Enraf-Nonius CAD4-F single-crystal and Bruker-Nonius X8 Apex X-ray diffractometer. Major Departmental equipment is supervised and maintained by a full-time Director of Instrumentation, Dr. James Karban, who also provides training and instruction in instrumental operation. The Department has a fully supported chemical and biochemical stockroom. In addition, a fully equipped machine shop, staffed by a full-time machinist, is available for the fabrication of specialized research equipment. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, One Bear Place 97334, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2961 | This is a vibrant and busy department, with over 600 undergraduate majors, 50 or more doctoral students, 15 tenure system faculty, and 4 instructors/lecturers, along with a wide range of intriguing and cutting-edge laboratories. This is an exciting time for the Department, with a recent move to the new Baylor Science Building (BSB), one of the most outstanding facilities in the country. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | The Master of Science program is designed to provide students with greater skills in software systems. In addition to at least 15 hours of graduate course work, the student is expected to complete a research project in the form of a thesis or a software program. Only students who are expected to complete the program are admitted with financial aid. Therefore, a complete evaluation is needed. The Master of Science program in computer science has two options, a thesis option and a project option. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include CSI 4336 Introduction to Computation Theory, CSI 4344 or CSI 5324 Software Engineering, CSI 5350 Algorithms, CSI 5010 Graduate Seminar, CSI 5V92 Master's Research (3 hours), CSI 5V99 Thesis (3 hours). Electives, CSI 4321 Digital Networks, CSI 4335 Database Design I, CSI 4337 Operating Systems | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, Department of Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3876 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Economics - Non-thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include 5001 Research Seminar, 5002 Research Seminar, 5310 Macroeconomics Analysis in the Global Economy, 5315 Microeconomics Theory and Business Decisions, 5343 History of Economic Thought. And the Elective Courses are 4320 The Economics of Government, 4321 Energy Economics, 4323 The Environment and Economic Analysis, 4325 Urban and Regional Economic Analysis, 4332 Economics Problems in Latin America, 4334 Economic Development, 4336 Economics of Labor, 4343 History of Economic Thought, 4345 Mathematical Analysis in Economics, 4347 Econometrics, 5300 Foundations of American Economy, 5307 Economics of Aging, 5317 Contemporary Government and Business Relations, 5319 Economics for Business Decisions and Resource Valuations, 5320 The Economics of Government, 5321 Energy Economics, 5325 Seminar in Regional Economics, 5365 Investment Management, 5368 Seminar in Financial Markets, 5370 Commercial Bank Management. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics, 1311 S 5th Street One Bear Place #98003, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2263 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Economics - Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include 5001 Research Seminar, 5002 Research Seminar, 5310 Macroeconomics Analysis in the Global Economy, 5315 Microeconomics Theory and Business Decisions, 5343 History of Economic Thought. And the Elective Courses are 4320 The Economics of Government, 4321 Energy Economics, 4323 The Environment and Economic Analysis, 4325 Urban and Regional Economic Analysis, 4332 Economics Problems in Latin America, 4334 Economic Development, 4336 Economics of Labor, 4343 History of Economic Thought, 4345 Mathematical Analysis in Economics, 4347 Econometrics, 5300 Foundations of American Economy, 5307 Economics of Aging, 5317 Contemporary Government and Business Relations, 5319 Economics for Business Decisions and Resource Valuations, 5320 The Economics of Government, 5321 Energy Economics, 5325 Seminar in Regional Economics, 5365 Investment Management, 5368 Seminar in Financial Markets, 5370 Commercial Bank Management. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics, 1311 S 5th Street One Bear Place #98003, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2263 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Education - Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4796 | The Department of Educational Psychology (EDP) offers a wide array of exciting opportunities for both undergraduate and graduate students. At the graduate level, the Department offers a Ph.D. degree-program in Educational Psychology, an Educational Specialist (Ed.S.) degree-program in School Psychology, as well Master's degree in Educational Psychology and Gifted and Talented. For undergraduates, the EDP offers teacher-certification programs in Special Education and Gifted and Talented. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Education - Gifted and Talented Education | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | This Education gives Students a chance to become a member of a highly professional group of qualified educators of exceptional children. The program will help Students gain new skills and a better understanding of gifted and talented students. It gives Students a chance to enhance their competency. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include ENG 1302 Thinking and Writing ENG 1304 Thinking, Writing, and Research,REL 1310 The Christian Scriptures REL 1350 The Christian Heritage , MTH 1315 Patterns, Relationships and Number , MTH 1316 Geometry and Measurement Concepts ,Fine Arts (2-3 hrs from ART 1300, MUS 1220, THEA 1206) TED 1312 Introduction to Teaching I (Rollin’s section), HED 1145 Health and Human Performance HP 1134 Fitness Theory and Practice Chapel (CR). | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology | School of Education, Department of Educational Psychology, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4796 | The Department of Educational Psychology (EDP) offers a wide array of exciting opportunities for both undergraduate and graduate students. At the graduate level, the Department offers a Ph.D. degree-program in Educational Psychology, an Educational Specialist (Ed.S.) degree-program in School Psychology, as well Master's degree in Educational Psychology and Gifted and Talented. For undergraduates, the EDP offers teacher-certification programs in Special Education and Gifted and Talented. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Education Student Affairs Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Educational Administration | The program at Baylor University distinctively balances career experience and academic rigor to prepare professionals who desire to have a meaningful, lasting influence on students' lives in higher education settings. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Educational Administration | School of Education, Department of Educational Administration, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97312, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3050 | The Department of Educational Administration is dedicated to the development of educational leaders. Graduates of the programs work in both public and private institutions of higher education as well as K-12 institutions throughout the state and country. Consistent with Baylor University's 2012 Vision, the Department of Educational Administration is undergoing revisions of it's graduate programs. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Electrical and Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Environmental Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | The Master of Science in Environmental Biology is a specialized degree for students who wish to receive advanced education in environmental aspects of biology. The degree is administered through the Department of Biology, but the student takes course work in Biology and in Environmental Studies and in other appropriate supporting fields. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies, One Bear Place # 97266, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6566 | The Department of Environmental Studies is dedicated in training students who can steward the planet's soil, air and water resources as well as maintaining the great diversity of species occupying the biosphere. The Department is committed in teaching students to consider the political and social issues inherent in environmental management, and to exercise love for the neighbors through care for the earth and all humankind. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Information Systems (MSIS) | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | The Master of Science in Information Systems (MSIS) is a degree option that allows students to gain the technical knowledge that is so crucial in the rapidly changing worlds of business and information technology. The MSIS degree gives its graduates the expertise to begin new careers in information systems through a single year of course work. This program have two tracks: Information Systems Development, and Information Systems Security. The Development track is ideal for candidates with little or no prior background in information systems or computer science. The Security track assumes the candidate already possesses a degree in a technical field. Both tracks include a mix of business courses and technical, hands-on computer courses. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems, One Bear Place #98005, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2258 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in International Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Students may earn the Master of Science in International Economics by completing 30 hours of course work plus a six-hour. Training is provided in general economics or international economics before pursuing professional careers in the public or private sector in the U.S. or abroad. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include ECO 5333 Foreign Exchange Markets and International Monetary Institutions, ECO 5338 Seminar in World Economic Systems. Secondary Core Courses (12 credit hours): ECO 5001 Research Seminar, ECO 5002 Research Seminar, ECO 5310 Macroeconomic Analysis in the Global Economy, ECO 5315 Microeconomic Theory and Business Decisions, ECO 5343 History of Economic Thought, ECO 5347 Econometrics. Electives from the following (9 credit hours): ECO 5321 Energy Economics, BL 5305 Legal Aspects of Management Decisions, FIN 5331 Seminar in International Finance, FIN 5360 Seminar in Corporate Finance, FIN 5368 Seminar in Financial Markets, FIN 5370 Commercial Bank Management, ENV 5310 Agricultural Ecology, SY 5315 Net Systems Development, PSC 5324 Seminar in Comparative Politics, PSC 5325 Seminar in International Relations, MKT 5315 Seminar in Comparative Marketing, MGT 5325 International Management | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Economics, 1311 S 5th Street One Bear Place #98003, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2263 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engage a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Limnology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | The Master of Science in Limnology is a specialized degree for students who wish to receive advanced education in limnology. . As limnology is a field comprising not only biological, but also physical, chemical, geological, and other sub disciplines, each student's curriculum will be designed to match the student's background and career orientation. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, One Bear Place # 97264, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | The Degree program requires thirty-three semester hours of approved graduate courses that takes an average of two years to complete. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97328, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3561 | The Department of Mathematics has much to offer to both students and prospective faculty. With excellent facilities housed in the newly renovated and centrally located Sid Richardson building, the department has a faculty and staff dedicated to helping students. The faculty (21 tenured or tenure-track, 10 lecturers) pride themselves with their 'easy access' attitude when helping students. It offers a wide variety of courses leading to a B.S. degree in mathematics, a B.S. degree in applied mathematics, and a B.A. degree in mathematics. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Engineering and Computer Science | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include EGR 4382 Selection of Materials and Manufacturing Processes in Design, EGR 5324 Advanced Dynamics, EGR 5326 Advanced Solid Mechanics with Introduction to Finite Element Analysis, EGR 4301 Mathematical Methods in Engineering, EGR 5340 Intermediate Fluid Mechanics, EGR 5341 Intermediate Heat Transfer, MTH 5380 Statistical Methods for Research, EGR 4330 Introduction to Robotics, EGR 4335 Analysis and Design of Propulsion Systems, EGR 4338 Computational Methods in Thermo-Fluids, EGR 4343 Wave Propagation in Fluids, EGR 4370 Biomaterials - Form and Function, EGR 4374 Biomechanics, EGR 5342 Inviscid Flows, EGR 5344 Compressible Fluid Dynamics, EGR 5345 Turbulent Flow and Transport, EGR 5346 Boundary Layers and Modeling, EGR 5347 Gas Turbine Engines, EGR 5348 Analytical Methods in Thermo-Fluid Mechanics, EGR 5349 Experimental Methods in Thermo-Fluid Mechanics, EGR 5360 Introduction to Biomedical Engineering, EGR 5375 Biomechanical Computer Modeling, EGR 5380 Polymer and Polymeric Composite Material Properties, EGR 5382 Life-Prediction and Failure Analysis in Engineering Comp. and Systems, EGR 5384 Advanced Strength of Materials, BIOL 4403 Scanning Electron Microscopy, MTH 5325 Theory of Differential Equations, MTH 5326 Theory of Partial Differential Equations, MTH 5380 Statistical Methods for Research, EGR 4396 Special Topics in Engineering, EGR 4V97 Special Projects in Engineering, EGR 5396 Special Topics in Engineering, EGR 5390 Research Methods and Project Formulation, EGR 5397 Special Projects in Engineering, EGR 5V98 Master's Project, EGR 5V99 Master's Thesis. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Engineering and Computer Science | School of Engineering and Computer Science, One Bear Place # 97356, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4817 | The mission of the Engineering Departments is to educate students, within a caring Christian environment, in the discipline of engineering, by combining a strong technical foundation with an emphasis on professional, moral, ethical and leadership development. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Nursing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Louise Herrington School of Nursing | The Graduate Studies Program offers part or full-time study in one of three advanced practice majors: Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP), Advanced Neonatal Nursing (NNP) and Nurse Midwifery (CNM). | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GRE general test or MAT. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Louise Herrington School of Nursing | Louise Herrington School of Nursing, 3700 Worth Street, Baylor University, DALLAS, Texas, 75246, +1 214 820 3361 | With Baylor University's Louise Herrington School of Nursing in Dallas located nearly 100 miles from Baylor's main Waco campus, providing a high speed optical network for education and research proved to be a challenge for Baylor and its nursing school. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Nursing degree with a Major in Advanced Neonatal Nursing. | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Louise Herrington School of Nursing | The Neonatal Nursing track is a 37 credit hour curriculum designed to prepare experienced registered nurses for the blended advanced practice nursing roles of Neonatal Nurse Practitioner (NNP) and Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS). The curriculum emphasizes advanced nursing care of newborns and infants from birth through the first year of life. The spectrum of health from promotion of wellness to management of acute and chronic illness in a variety of settings is incorporated into the program. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GRE general test or MAT. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Louise Herrington School of Nursing | Louise Herrington School of Nursing, 3700 Worth Street, Baylor University, DALLAS, Texas, 75246, +1 214 820 3361 | With Baylor University's Louise Herrington School of Nursing in Dallas located nearly 100 miles from Baylor's main Waco campus, providing a high speed optical network for education and research proved to be a challenge for Baylor and its nursing school. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include 5320 Classical Mechanics I, 5330 Electromagnetic Theory I, 5331 Electromagnetic Theory II, 5340 Statistical Mechanics, 5360 Mathematical Physics I, 5370 Quantum Mechanics I, 5371 Quantum Mechanics II. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, One Bear Place 97316, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2511 | The College of Arts and Sciences at Baylor University offers a liberal arts experience of tremendous breadth and depth to more than 7,000 students each year. As a dynamic academic community, arts and sciences engages in the discovery and application of knowledge in the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social and behavioral sciences. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Science of Education | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | The MSEd is a 36 semester hour program that includes a 15 hour minor in educational foundations, instructional technology, language and literacy, mathematics education or other approved areas. . | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Baylor University, One Bear Place #97304, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6122 | The School of Education enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students and 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, commitment to faith based learning and desire to see students become successful individuals and professionals distinguish the Baylor School of Education as a special place to pursue bachelor, master, and doctoral studies. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Social Work | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $9,495 a year | School of Social Work | The Program provides students with the foundation for direct counseling (clinical) practice, administration and community development. Students begin their internship during their second semester. In the second year, they choose a concentration in an area such as families and children or physical and mental health. Students also may choose to specialize in one field within their concentration, such as services to children and their families, gerontology, death and grief, international social work and cross-cultural practice. After completing a second internship during the final semester, students participate in a three-week capstone seminar before graduating. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Bear Place # 97320, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6400 | The mission of the School of Social Work is to prepare social workers in a Christian context for worldwide service and leadership. The School of Social Work strives to prepare graduates to be professional social workers who practice with the highest standards of competence. Students will be prepared to function in the context of human diversity, including spirituality and religion, integrating the values, ethics, knowledge and skills of the social work profession with their own beliefs with ethical integrity and from a strengths-oriented perspective. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Taxation (MTax) | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | The Master of Taxation (MTax) is designed to provide students who already have an undergraduate accounting degree with the advanced knowledge in taxation required for a successful career in tax planning and consulting. In addition, the degree will provide students with the additional knowledge and hours required above an undergraduate degree to sit for the CPA exam. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include Introductory Financial Accounting 3, Introductory Managerial Accounting 3, Intermediate Financial Accounting 6, Income Taxation 3, Cost Accounting 3, Accounting Information Systems 3 Auditing. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Accounting and Business Law, One Bear Place # 98002, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6138 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. The Department engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Theological Studies (M.T.S.) | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | The Master of Theological Studies (M.T.S.) degree at George W. Truett Theological Seminary provides basic foundation in biblical and theological disciplines and a concentration in a particular area of study and practice. It is designed to provide students with both a general theological education and the opportunity to concentrate in subjects important to their interests or ministries. It consists of a minimum of 48 credit hours and normally requires at least two years of full-time study to complete. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include THEO 7340 Introduction to Scripture, THEO 7343 Introduction to Christian History, THEO 7345 Introduction to Christian Theology, THEO 7370 Christian Scriptures 1, THEO 7372 Christian Scriptures 2, THEO 7371 Christian Scriptures 3, THEO 7373 Christian Scriptures 4, THEO 7360 Christian Texts and Traditions 1, THEO 7361 Christian Texts and Traditions 2, THEO 7362 Christian Texts and Traditions 3, THEO 7385 Christian World Mission, THEO 7396 Baptist Identity. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | George W. Truett Theological Seminary | George W. Truett Theological Seminary, 1100 S 3rd Street, One Bear Place #97126, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3755 | As a professional school of Baylor University, George W. Truett Theological Seminary subscribes to the university’s mission statement “to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. The seminary’s purpose is to provide theological education leading to the Master of Divinity or the Doctor of Ministry degrees that is centered in the gospel of Jesus Christ and consistent with historic Baptist commitments to prepare persons to carry this gospel to the churches and the world. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Master of Theological Studies/Master of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Social Work | This Program provides an interdisciplinary option for students to develop competency in Christian scriptures and theology, global missions, and Baptist identity, as well as in advanced social work practice in congregations and religiously-affiliated organizations. The MTS-MSW dual degree program provides these students with an opportunity to prepare for community ministry through mastery of advanced social work knowledge and practice that is grounded in foundational Christian theology, scriptures, traditions, missions, and Baptist identity. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Bear Place # 97320, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6400 | The mission of the School of Social Work is to prepare social workers in a Christian context for worldwide service and leadership. The School of Social Work strives to prepare graduates to be professional social workers who practice with the highest standards of competence. Students will be prepared to function in the context of human diversity, including spirituality and religion, integrating the values, ethics, knowledge and skills of the social work profession with their own beliefs with ethical integrity and from a strengths-oriented perspective. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Masters Degree in Athletic Training | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | The Graduate Athletic Training Education Program (GATEP) is for entry level professionals who are BOC certified or eligible to sit for the examination. The mission of the program is to educate athletic trainers in the orthopedic rehabilitation and reconditioning of individuals across the lifespan and to prepare them to function as educators, researchers, administrators and practitioners using current evidence based literature in order to make best practice decisions. The MSEd degree in Athletic Training is a 36 hour program with 21-24 hours in the athletic training core, 6 hours of research and statistics, 3 hours of either a thesis or internship/project, and 3-6 hours of restricted electives with a comprehensive examination at the end of the program. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include HP/HED 5379 Research Methods in HHPR, EDP 5334 Statistical Methods or STAT 5300 Statistical Methods. Athletic Training Core (21-24 hours), HP 5360 - Assessment and Rehabilitation of the Lower Extremities and Spine, HP 5361 - Assessment and Rehabilitation of the Upper Extremities and Spine, HP 5362 - Orthopedic Rehabilitation and Re-conditioning for Diverse Populations, HP 5363 - Manual Therapies in Orthopedic Rehabilitation, HP 5352 - Advanced Principles of Exercise and Sport Nutrition, HP 5354 - Advanced Methods of Strength Training and Conditioning, HP 5V75 - Seminar in HHPR, HP 5V94 – Practicum in HHPR | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Masters Degree in Exercise Physiology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | The Exercise Physiology Program at Baylor University is designed to prepare students for careers as exercise physiologists, strength and conditioning specialists serving in fitness centers, hospital-based wellness and clinical rehabilitation centers, schools, and universities. In addition, the program prepares students for advanced study in a doctoral research program. Students can take programs emphasizing general exercise physiology or strength and conditioning. Students have an a thesis or internship option as a culminating experience and must pass a comprehensive examination at the end of their program. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include HP 5379 - Research Methods in HHPR, STAT 5300 - Statistical Methods. Required Emphasis Core (21 hours), HP 5328 - Physiology of Exercise I - Neuromuscular, HP 5330 - Physiology of Exercise II - Cardiopulmonary, HP 5333 - Exercise Testing and Prescription, HP 5340 - Advanced Biochemistry in Exercise Science, HP 5352 - Advanced Principles of Exercise and Sport Nutrition, HP 5354 - Advanced Methods of Strength and Conditioning, HP 5357 - Advanced Methods of Exercise Programming for Individuals with Chronic Diseases and Disabilities | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Masters Degree in Sport Management | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include Statistics Core (6 hours), HP/HED 5379 - Research Methods in HHPR, EDP 5334 - Statistical Methods or STAT 5300 Statistical Methods. Ethics Core, HP 5398 – Contemporary Ethical Issues In Sport, Finance Core, FIN 5362 – Seminar in Corporate Short-Term Financial Management, Fin 5367 – Seminar in Financial Planning, HP 5327 – Financial Management in Sport. Management Core, HP 5373 - Sport Management, HP 5375 - Governance in Sport, MGT 5310 - Management of Organizational Behavior. Public Relations Core, HP 5338 – Public Relations in Sport | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Masters Degree in Sport Pedagogy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | This Program prepares students for careers in teaching physical education and coaching. Students have also used this program to specialize in strength and conditioning as well as sport psychology. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include HP/HED 5379 - Research Methods in HHPR EDP 5334 - Statistical Methods or STAT 5300 Statistical Methods. Emphasis Core (15 hours), HP 5368 – Motor Learning, HP 5335 – Sport Pedagogy, HP 5354 – Advanced Methods of Strength and Conditioning, HP 5370 – Sport Psychology, HP 5377 - Issues and Trends in Human Performance/Sport Management, HP 5384 – Biomechanics. Field Experience Core (3-6 hours) HP 5V90 - Internship, HP 5V94 - Practicum. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Masters of Arts in Communication Sciences and Disorders | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders | The Program is offered for those students who are interested in obtaining greater research experience or who are planning on continuing on for their Ph.D. Degree. Typically the M.A. Degree requires an additional semester to perform the research and writing requirements. If interested in this track, please contact the Graduate Program Director to discuss the advantages. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include CSD 4302 Language Therapy or CSD 5324 Language Learning Disabilities, CSD 4312 Clinical Audiology or CSD 5304 Advanced Aural Rehabilitation, CSD 5149 Clinical Practicum, CSD 5311 Aphasia, CSD 5312 Fluency Disorders, CSD 5314 Voice Pathology, CSD 5316 Motor Speech Disorders, CSD 5318 Methods in Graduate Study, CSD 5328 Dysphagia, CSD 5V49 Clinical Internship. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders, One Bear Place # 97368, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | The mission of the Department of Communication Studies at Baylor University is to achieve excellence in teaching and research through a balance of theory and practice-providing students with a broad-based understanding of the processes in the society, while serving and encouraging those students with professional aspirations to become ethical, articulate, creative and innovative leaders in the field of communication. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Masters of Science in Communication Sciences and Disorders | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders | The Masters of Science in Communication Sciences and Disorders is the most common degree for those students who wish to become a Professional Speech-Language Pathologist. The Graduate requirements are designed to integrate outstanding academic and clinical experiences. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include CSD 4302 Language Therapy or CSD 5324 Language Learning Disabilities, CSD 4312 Clinical Audiology or CSD 5304 Advanced Aural Rehabilitation, CSD 5149 Clinical Practicum, CSD 5311 Aphasia, CSD 5312 Fluency Disorders, CSD 5314 Voice Pathology, CSD 5316 Motor Speech Disorders, CSD 5318 Methods in Graduate Study, CSD 5328 Dysphagia, CSD 5V49 Clinical Internship. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Communication Science and Disorders, One Bear Place # 97368, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6920 | The mission of the Department of Communication Studies at Baylor University is to achieve excellence in teaching and research through a balance of theory and practice-providing students with a broad-based understanding of the processes in the society, while serving and encouraging those students with professional aspirations to become ethical, articulate, creative and innovative leaders in the field of communication. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include BIO 4100 Genetics Seminar, 4 semester hours BIO 5412 Biometrics, 6 semester hours BMS 5100 Biomedical Seminar, 3 semester hours BMS 5304 Biochemical and Molecular Genetics, 3 semester hours BMS 5308 Biotechnology and Cell Biomedicine, 3 semester hours BMS 5310 Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2 semester hours CHE 4248 General Biochemistry Laboratory, 3 semester hours CHE 4341 General Biochemistry, 3 semester hours CHE 4342 Topics of Human Biochemistry, 3 semester hours CHE 5346 Enzymology. Biochemistry Track (Example II), BIO 4107 Laboratory Studies in Cell Physiology, BIO 4402 Electron Microscopy, BIO 5412 Biometrics, BMS 5100 Biomedical Seminar, BMS 5306 Structure and Function of Muscle, CHE 4248 General Biochemistry Laboratory, 3 semester hours CHE 4341 General Biochemistry, 3 semester hours CHE 4342 Topics of Human Biochemistry, CHE 5346 Biotechnology, CHE 5348 Enzymology. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies, One Bear Place # 97224, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2514 | The Institute of Biomedical Studies at Baylor University offers a interdisciplinary program in biomedically-related areas of science leading to the PhD Degree. This program benefits from the participation of an extremely diverse faculty who are actively involved in basic as well as translational research, on the home campus of Baylor University in Waco, at the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, and at Mary Crowley Medical Research Center in Dallas. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D in Biological Sciences - Cell Biology Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include BIO 4100 Genetics Seminar, BIO 4107 Laboratory Studies in Cell Physiology, BIO 4301 Immunology, BIO 4307 Cellular Physiology,BIO 4402 Electron Microscopy, BIO 4426 Vertebrate Histology, BIO 5201 Research Methods/Biology I, BIO 5202 Research Methods/Biology II, BIO 5400 (Seven courses available), BIO 5403 Virology, BIO 5406 Cytogenetics, BIO 5412 Biometrics, BMS 5100 Biomedical Seminar, BMS 5308 Biotechnology and Cell Biomedicine. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies, One Bear Place # 97224, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2514 | The Institute of Biomedical Studies at Baylor University offers a interdisciplinary program in biomedically-related areas of science leading to the PhD Degree. This program benefits from the participation of an extremely diverse faculty who are actively involved in basic as well as translational research, on the home campus of Baylor University in Waco, at the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, and at Mary Crowley Medical Research Center in Dallas. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D in Biological Sciences - Genetics Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include BIO 4100 Genetics Seminar, BIO 4301 Immunology, BIO 4330 Behavioral Genetics,BIO 4401 General Bacteriology, BIO 5201 Research Methods/Biology I, BIO 5202 Research Methods/Biology II, BIO 5302 Current Concepts in Immunology, BIO 5306 Molecular Evolution, BIO 5400 Population Genetics, BIO 5406 Cytogenetics, BIO 5412 Biometrics, BMS 5100 Biomedical Seminar, BMS 5304 Biochemical and Molecular Genetics, BMS 5403 Virology. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies, One Bear Place # 97224, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2514 | The Institute of Biomedical Studies at Baylor University offers a interdisciplinary program in biomedically-related areas of science leading to the PhD Degree. This program benefits from the participation of an extremely diverse faculty who are actively involved in basic as well as translational research, on the home campus of Baylor University in Waco, at the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, and at Mary Crowley Medical Research Center in Dallas. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D in Biological Sciences - Immunology Option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include BIO 4100 Genetics Seminar, BIO 4107 Laboratory Studies in Cell Physiology, BIO 4301 Immunology, BIO 4307 Cellular Physiology,BIO 4401 General Bacteriology, BIO 5201 Research Methods/Biology I, BIO 5202 Research Methods/Biology II, BIO 5400 (Seven courses available), BIO 5403 Virology, BIO 5412 Biometrics, BMS 5100 Biomedical Seminar, BMS 5302 Current Concepts in Immunology. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Studies, One Bear Place # 97224, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2514 | The Institute of Biomedical Studies at Baylor University offers a interdisciplinary program in biomedically-related areas of science leading to the PhD Degree. This program benefits from the participation of an extremely diverse faculty who are actively involved in basic as well as translational research, on the home campus of Baylor University in Waco, at the Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, and at Mary Crowley Medical Research Center in Dallas. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D in Ecological, Earth and Environmental Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | The Distinctiveness of this Program relative to other national programs in integrative earth and environmental resource sciences is the intentional curricular program directed at creating students with multiple competencies in the core fields of this degree. No other national program adequately accomplishes this goal, which has been identified as a national priority in earth system education. Mentoring and matriculating doctoral students is one of Baylor University's most tangible means of influencing leadership in academia, government, and society. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Environmental Studies, One Bear Place # 97266, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 6566 | The Department of Environmental Studies is dedicated in training students who can steward the planet's soil, air and water resources as well as maintaining the great diversity of species occupying the biosphere. The Department is committed in teaching students to consider the political and social issues inherent in environmental management, and to exercise love for the neighbors through care for the earth and all humankind. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion | The Doctor of Philosophy with a major in religion provides an opportunity for qualified students to do graduate work in this discipline at the highest level and in the university setting. It provides preparation for research and teaching in graduate theological education and in the college and university setting where religion is taught as one of the liberal arts and in relation to other such disciplines, particularly the humanities, the social sciences, and the natural sciences. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion, One Bear Place # 97284, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3735 | The Department of Religion offers students the opportunity to study the biblical, historical, practical, and theological traditions of Christianity, and other world religions, as well. Here faculty and students journey together in pursuit of truth. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D. in Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | The Department of Geology offers graduate work leading to the Doctor of Philosophy in Geology. Opportunities for research and specialization include theses in: hydrogeology and hydrology, environmental geology, urban geology, geomorphology, geographic information systems, wetlands, geophysics, petroleum geology and stratigraphy, structural geology and tectonics, sedimentology, sedimentary petrology, sedimentary geochemistry and diagenesis, invertebrate paleontology, paleoecology, and modern carbonate environments, igneous petrology and volcanology, geoarchaeology. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, One Bear Place #97354, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2361 | The mission of the Geology Department at Baylor University is to develop, apply and transmit scientific knowledge about the Earth and Earth's systems throughout its 4.6 billion year history. The mission includes: provision of high-quality undergraduate and graduate education, including development of techniques for enhancing geoscience education; development of geoscience students as scientists and as highly competent practitioners; education of Baylor's general student population about Earth and its natural systems; development of new knowledge through scientific research; effective communication of new knowledge to the global geoscience community; application of geoscience knowledge to address practical problems affecting human society, including stewardship of the natural world; service as a source of reliable geoscience information within the university community and beyond; and maintenance of an environment within the Geology Department characterized by mutual support, respect and kindness. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D. in Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | The PhD in Information Systems seeks to train future researchers, scholars and teachers to analyze and understand the multi-faceted impact of information and communications technologies on individuals, organizations, and society. The majority of those graduating with a PhD degree will accept tenure track positions in academia. The program will target the placement of students in top academic institutions with strong research programs. The PhD program takes a broad perspective, favoring an approach in which the impact of information systems is examined from multiple perspectives, including, but not limited to, organizational theories. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students should have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems | Hankamer School of Business, Department of Information Systems, One Bear Place #98005, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 2258 | The culture of the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University is guided by Christian commitment and champions life-long learning, highly-regarded scholarship and service to others as its highest ideals. The School seeks to produce business leaders with recognized integrity, superior theoretical knowledge and practical skills of modern global business developed through an experiential learning environment. It engages a diverse group of undergraduate, graduate, and executive students and alumni in a curriculum that produces graduates of value to business organizations and to their communities. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D. in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | Doctoral study in philosophy at Baylor University is a professional apprenticeship that ends with the highest degree granted in the field of philosophy. Doctoral graduates of the Baylor University philosophy department will be mentored to do basic research in philosophy using all customary scholarly sources, to publish their research in philosophy journals or other public forums, to teach effectively, and to engage in critical conversation about central traditions in Western philosophy with peers and students in a wide range of contexts. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, One Bear Place # 97273, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3368 | The Baylor University philosophy department has been an independent academic department since the early 1940s. The Department's graduate program has been in place since 1950. Graduates of the department, at both the BA and the MA levels, have gone on to further work and distinguished academic achievement at many of the most prestigious universities in the world. The Department is well-represented by graduates who are among the faculty and administration of major universities, leaders in business, distinguished attorneys and judges, and influential theologians and religious leaders. In 2003, the Baylor philosophy department began to offer graduate work leading to the Ph.D. degree in philosophy. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | Ph.D. in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | The modules include STA 5380 Statistical Methods for Research, STA 5381 Regression Analysis, STA 5382 Theory of Linear Models, STA 5383 Multivariate Statistical Analysis, STA 5365 Topics in Biostatistics, STA 5353 Theory of Statistics III, STA 6351 Advanced Statistical Inference I, STA 6352 Advanced Statistical Inference II, STA 6384 Categorical Data Analysis. | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Statistical Science, P O Box 97140, Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1699 | The Department of Statistical Science was created in June 2004 when it replaced the Institute of Statistics as the home for graduate statistics programs at Baylor University. The Ph.D. and M.A. degrees in statistics were first administered in 1991. Since that time the program has produced approximately 35 doctoral and 40 master level students. The degree programs are designed to provide a balance between statistical theory and applications of statistical methods with an emphasis being placed on acquiring research, consulting, and teaching skills that were applicable to the biomedical, industrial, and academic careers. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | PhD in English | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97404, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1768 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | ||
| 223232 | Baylor University | PhD in English - Religion and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The Concentration in Religion and Literature is designed to give students the opportunity to pursue interests in the academic study of religion while obtaining a degree that will equip them to fill a traditional position in an English department. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | Baylor University | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97404, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 1768 | Baylor University in Waco, Texas, is a private Baptist university, and a nationally ranked liberal arts institution. Chartered in 1845 by the Republic of Texas, Baylor is the oldest, continually operating university in the state. In this University 80 percent of the students come from within Texas. The University is the home to students from all 50 states, and 80 countries. The mission of Baylor University is to educate men and women for worldwide leadership and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment within a caring community. | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 223232 | Baylor University | PhD in Exercise, Nutrition and Preventive Health | Full Time | Variable | US $9,495 a year | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | The program is uniquely designed to train researchers to conduct multidisciplinary clinical research evaluating the role of exercise and nutrition on health, disease, rehabilitation, and performance. A minimum of 72 hours will be required. The program will have a 27 hour core of courses providing a foundation to conduct exercise, nutrition and health intervention research by providing a strong foundation in statistics, experimental design, research methods, and laboratory skills. | Students must have completed either a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or proof of equivalent training at a foreign institution of higher learning. Applicants are expected to have a record of undergraduate study and experience that is predictive of success in graduate study. A minimum grade point average or standardized test score is not specified. Standardized testing measures of academic preparedness for graduate study are an important component of the admissions process. Students should have obtained the scores of GMAT or GRE. International students must have TOEFL or IELTS with minimum scores of 550 on the paper-based, 213 on the computer based, or 80 on the internet-based Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), or attain a minimum overall band score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Applicants to doctoral programs who submit an internet-based TOEFL score are required to score a minimum of 23 on the speaking section of the test. | Doctoral | BAYLOR UNIVERSITY | Baylor University | Jo Murphy, Chair in International Education | 14614 | Baylor University, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 3588 | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation | School of Education, Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, One Bear Place # 97313, WACO, Texas, 76798, +1 254 710 4003 | The School of Education, recognized nationally for its excellent academic programs, is committed to academic excellence with a Christian mission. The School enrolls approximately 1,024 undergraduate students, 320 graduate students. The caring nature of its 72 faculty, devotion to faith based learning, and desire to see students become successful individuals as well as professionals makes the School of Education a special place to pursue an academic degree. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). | Yes | Housing is available on campus to students. A variety of traditional single-gender residence halls are available for first-year students and are designed to assist students in their transition and success. Separate housing is offered to men and women. Men’s housing is offered at Martin hall and Penland hall, women’s housing at Collins hall, North Russell and South Russell. Each hall is furnished with furniture, telephone, television and has kitchen facility, laundry facility, and bathroom facility. Students can bring their personal computers with them. A resident is provided with one high-speed Ethernet data port to connect personal computers to the residential network. They can also check out laptops at the front desk for a period of 4 hours. Laptops are renewable unless there is a waiting list. All laptops must be returned by 2 am. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | B S in Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Finance | This program is the study of the purchase and sale of assets by individuals and institutions and the methods used to fund these transactions. Finance majors develop a broad array of analytical skills, attain a thorough understanding of the finance function in different kinds of organizations and gain a global perspective of the institutions and markets in which finance operates. Required finance courses focus on the financial environment of business, the decision-making process of corporations, the key principles underlying the investment process, and the expanding international context of financial analysis, portfolio construction, and trading. Finance majors also spend much time outside of the classroom in the Hughey Center of Financial Services. The Trading Room is essentially an information technology laboratory wherein students can access real time financial data and witness markets at work. Finance majors focus on the applications of information processing technology in financial analysis and risk management. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Bachelor degree | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: FI 305 Principles of Accounting and Finance, FI 320 Financial Markets , FI 351 International Finance, FI 380 Advanced Managerial Finance, FI XXX Four Finance Electives , Finance Electives: FI 312 Advanced Topics in Investments, FI 318 Estate Investment Decisions , FI 319 Mortgages and Mortgage Markets , FI 325 Operations of Financial Institutions , FI 327 Insurance and Risk Management , FI 330 Seminar in Equity Trading , FI 331 Capital Markets , FI 340 Introduction to Professional Financial Planning , FI 370 Seminar in Financial Institutions , FI 385 Corporate Treasury in Finance , FI 392 International Project Finance , FI 398 Advanced Topics in Financial Planning , FI 401 Directed Study in Finance , FI 402 Seminar/Special Topics in Finance , FI 411 Research Seminar in Finance , FI 421 Internship in Finance. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Finance | Department of Finance, Adamian Academic Center, Room 215, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2772 | In today's competitive global market, companies search for competent business and financial leaders to make the right decisions promptly and effectively to achieve success. To meet such needs, the Bentley University finance programs prepare today's and tomorrow's leaders with the skills to excel in the marketplace. Through Bentley's leading-edge facilities-including the Trading Room in the Hughey Center for Financial Services and the Accounting Center for Electronic Learning and Business Measurement (ACELAB) - students gain hands-on experience in financial analysis, risk management and decision-making with the latest information technology and software programs. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | B S in Finance Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Finance | This program is designed to provide students with the skills they need to begin a successful career in corporate finance. The widespread application of information technology by companies in the United States and around the globe has dramatically changed the nature of corporate finance. Numerous studies show that corporate finance professional have experienced dramatic reduction in the time they spend processing transactions, while giving increased attention to cost and profitability analysis, strategic planning, process improvement and performance evaluation. Familiarity with Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software is built into several courses to allow students an opportunity to better understand the integrated IT systems that most major companies in the United States and the world use to process transactions, prepare statutory and management reports and evaluate operations throughout the organization. Leveraging the college’s long-respected traditions in accounting and finance, this new program offers students the opportunity to learn how to integrate technology into corporate finance and accounting practices. Bentley students graduate with a solid understanding of finance and accounting concepts and methodologies, advanced course work in communication, and exposure to the information technology systems used by leading corporations. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Bachelor degree | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: AC 311 Financial Accounting and Reporting I, AC 312 Financial Accounting and Reporting II, AC 310 Cost Management, FI 305 Principles of Accounting and Finance, FI 351 International Finance, FI 380 Advanced Managerial Finance, AF 450 Performance Measurement and Evaluation, AC or FI (Recommended Elective), AC or FI (Recommended Elective), IDCC 320 Managerial Communication, Recommended Finance Accounting Electives, AC 315 Advanced Topics in Cost Management, AC 340 Accounting Information Systems, AC 352 Federal Taxation, FI 320 Financial Markets, FI 385 Corporate Treasury in Finance, Finance Electives, FI 312 Advanced Topics in Investments, FI 318 Estate Investment Decisions, FI 319 Mortgages and Mortgage Markets, FI 325 Operations of Financial Institutions, FI 327 Insurance and Risk Management, FI 330 Seminar in Equity Trading, FI 331 Capital Markets, FI 340 Intro. to Professional Financial Planning, FI 370 Seminar in Financial Institutions, FI 398 Advanced Topics in Financial Planning, FI 401 Directed Study in Finance, FI 402 Selected Topics in Finance, FI 411 Research Seminars in Finance, and FI 421 Internship in Finance. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Finance | Department of Finance, Adamian Academic Center, Room 215, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2772 | In today's competitive global market, companies search for competent business and financial leaders to make the right decisions promptly and effectively to achieve success. To meet such needs, the Bentley University finance programs prepare today's and tomorrow's leaders with the skills to excel in the marketplace. Through Bentley's leading-edge facilities-including the Trading Room in the Hughey Center for Financial Services and the Accounting Center for Electronic Learning and Business Measurement (ACELAB) - students gain hands-on experience in financial analysis, risk management and decision-making with the latest information technology and software programs. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | B S in Finance Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Finance | The economics-finance major integrates the disciplines of economics and finance. They have a natural relationship to each other that makes them an outstanding combination within a degree program. Economics provides the fundamental analytical tools to study business programs and issues. It analyzes the forces which determine the factors of vital importance to business such as employment, inflation, interest rates, investments, business fluctuations, and international economic issues. Finance examines capital and money markets and provides the tools of analysis to deal with financial charges arising from an ever changing economy. This major provides students with a solid grounding in economics and financial institutions and a conceptual framework which can be applied to industry, banking or government. The major is ideally suited for those wish to enter the financial services field, since it provides them with a strong base in both economics and financial analysis. Past graduates have taken positions in management and financial training programs, banking services, and government. The degree is also an excellent preparation for graduate study. Internship opportunities are available for qualified students. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Bachelor degree | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: AC 312 Financial AC and Reporting II, EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics Analysis, EC 391 Monetary Economics , EC Two Electives , FI 305 Principles of Accounting and Finance , FI 320 Financial Markets , FI XXX Two Electives , Finance Electives, FI 312 Advanced Topics in Investments , FI 318 Estate Investment Decisions , FI 319 Mortgages and Mortgage Markets , FI 325 Operations of Financial Institutions , FI 327 Insurance and Risk Management , FI 330 Seminar in Equity Trading , FI 331 Capital Markets , FI 340 Introduction to Professional Financial Planning , FI 370 Seminar in Financial Institutions , FI 398 Advanced Topics in Financial Planning, FI 401 Directed Study in Finance , FI 402 Selected Topics in Finance , FI 411 Research Seminar in Finance , FI 421 Internship in Finance , Only One (FI 401 or FI 421) can be used as a finance, elective, not both. Economics Electives: EC 211 Money and Banking , EC 231 Industrial and Labor Relations , EC 232 The Economics of Human Recourses , EC 245 Business Forecasting , EC 251 Development of Economic Thoughts , EC 261 Public Finance , EC 270 Industrial Organization and Markets , EC 271 Economics of Regulation and Antitrust , EC 311 International Economics , EC 315 The Economics of Multinational , EC 321 International Economic Growth and Development , EC 331 Modern Economic Systems , EC 335 Transition Economics , EC 341 Urban and Regional Economics , EC 343 Health Economics , ,EC 346 Environmental Economics, EC 351 Contemporary Economic Issues , EC 361 Introduction to Econometrics , EC 371 Mathematical Tools in Economics , EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Finance | Department of Finance, Adamian Academic Center, Room 215, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2772 | In today's competitive global market, companies search for competent business and financial leaders to make the right decisions promptly and effectively to achieve success. To meet such needs, the Bentley University finance programs prepare today's and tomorrow's leaders with the skills to excel in the marketplace. Through Bentley's leading-edge facilities-including the Trading Room in the Hughey Center for Financial Services and the Accounting Center for Electronic Learning and Business Measurement (ACELAB) - students gain hands-on experience in financial analysis, risk management and decision-making with the latest information technology and software programs. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Finance Honors Internship Program | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Department of Finance | The Finance Honors Internship Program offers eligible finance majors the rare opportunity to apply classroom learning to address realistic financial issues in an organization. In addition, internships offer students the possibility to enhance employment opportunities after graduation. Students are encouraged to pursue an internship, for credit, when it adds to the quality of their learning experience. All interns must: attend meetings with the office of career planning and placement and the internship coordinator for the department of finance; obtain course approval from the coordinators; keep daily logs of activities performed; complete written assignments; and complete post-internship evaluations. | Senior standing with an overall GPA of 2.7 is eligible. Students must have completed nine credit hours of finance courses before the beginning of the internship period. Internships are open to superior full-time students, selected by the finance faculty, who have completed their junior year. | Bachelor degree | Bentley University | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Finance | Department of Finance, Adamian Academic Center, Room 215, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2772 | In today's competitive global market, companies search for competent business and financial leaders to make the right decisions promptly and effectively to achieve success. To meet such needs, the Bentley University finance programs prepare today's and tomorrow's leaders with the skills to excel in the marketplace. Through Bentley's leading-edge facilities-including the Trading Room in the Hughey Center for Financial Services and the Accounting Center for Electronic Learning and Business Measurement (ACELAB) - students gain hands-on experience in financial analysis, risk management and decision-making with the latest information technology and software programs. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Liberal Arts Major with a Concentration in English | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of English | This program chooses from a variety of courses in literature, cinema studies, creative writing, or communication. An English concentration is flexible, allowing students to design a program appropriate for graduate study in a field such as Literature or Communication or to develop the communication skills and broad cultural background knowledge critical to success in business. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score f 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. |
Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of English | Department of English, Adamian Academic Center 091, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2651 | This department aim to foster creation and critical analysis of cultural texts, including visual media and literary works, and to guide students toward a complex understanding of the personal, social, cultural, historical, political, economic, and institutional contexts in which these texts are produced and interpreted. Offerings include closely-linked courses in Literature and Film, Media and Culture, and Writing and Communication. The department’s Media and Culture Program, supported by state-of-the-art Media and Culture Labs and Studios, reflects our commitment to promoting intellectual inquiry and creativity through students’ engagement with theoretical principles, experiential learning, and media production. In support of academic and creative activity across the campus, the department also houses the Creative Writers and Artists Forum, Writing Center, and ESOL Center, and co-sponsors the International Film Series. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Liberal Studies Major (LSM) in Media Arts and Society | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of English | This program chooses from a variety of courses in literature, cinema studies, creative writing, or communication. An English concentration is flexible, allowing students to design a program appropriate for graduate study in a field such as Literature or Communication or to develop the communication skills and broad cultural background knowledge critical to success in business. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score f 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. |
Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of English | Department of English, Adamian Academic Center 091, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2651 | This department aim to foster creation and critical analysis of cultural texts, including visual media and literary works, and to guide students toward a complex understanding of the personal, social, cultural, historical, political, economic, and institutional contexts in which these texts are produced and interpreted. Offerings include closely-linked courses in Literature and Film, Media and Culture, and Writing and Communication. The department’s Media and Culture Program, supported by state-of-the-art Media and Culture Labs and Studios, reflects our commitment to promoting intellectual inquiry and creativity through students’ engagement with theoretical principles, experiential learning, and media production. In support of academic and creative activity across the campus, the department also houses the Creative Writers and Artists Forum, Writing Center, and ESOL Center, and co-sponsors the International Film Series. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Accountancy | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Accountancy | This program with an accounting background, offers additional technical training and advanced analytical skills. In consultation with the faculty adviser, students choose courses in areas such as financial accounting, managerial accounting, taxation, auditing, and accounting information systems. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: AC 611 Financial Accounting Problems I, AC 612 Financial Accounting Problems II, AC 621 Cost Accounting, AC 701 Internship in Accounting Practice, AC 713 Advanced Topics in Financial Accounting, AC 714 Business Reporting and Analysis, AC 722 Advanced Topics in Managerial Accounting, AC 730 Business Process and Systems Assessment, AC 731 Advanced AIS: Modeling Effective, Accounting Information Systems, AC 741 Financial Statement Auditing, AC 742 IT Auditing, AC 744 Internal Auditing, AC 750 Federal Income Taxation, AC 753 Tax Factors in Business Decisions, AC 766 Risk and Performance Measurement, AC 771 Governmental Accounting, Reporting and Auditing, AC 772 Principles of Fraud Investigation, AC 773 Fraud and Forensic Accounting, AC 781 International Dimensions of Accounting, AC 793 Professional Accounting Research and Policy. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Accountancy | Department of Accountancy, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2087 | Founded in 1917 as the Bentley School of Accounting and Finance, Bentley has a respected tradition of preparing students for accounting careers in the public and private sectors. State-of-the-art facilities and an innovative curriculum challenge students to learn how to integrate technology into current and developing accounting practices and apply it to management situations. A core value of the university and the Department of Accountancy is to take a leading position in applying information technology across the curriculum, including the requirement that every freshman have a portable computer with appropriate software. The Accountancy Department prepares students for rewarding professional, business, and academic careers. We produce basic, applied, and instructional scholarly research to improve the classroom experience and advance accounting knowledge. We strive to have the high caliber of our education and research recognized by business professionals and fellow academics. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Business Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,500 a year | Department of Economics | This program helps students develop analytical and quantitative skills that complement the general management orientation of the MBA curriculum. Economic analysis can be applied in a variety of business contexts dealing with pricing decisions, forecasting, analysis of markets, and examination of the national and global economic environment in which firms function. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Economics and Financial Markets | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Economics | This program enhances economic forces of prime importance to business, such as employment, inflation, interest rates, and monetary and fiscal policy. In the realm of finance, the concentration focuses on corporate decision-making; key principles of the investment process; and the expanding international context of financial analysis, portfolio construction, and trading. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses: EC 611 The Macroeconomics of Financial Markets, FI 625 Corporate Finance: Theories, Tools and Concepts, Elective Courses--Select two, One elective must be from Economics and one must be from Finance, EC 621 Business and Economic Forecasting, EC 631 Market Structure and Firm Strategy, EC 655 The Economics of Globalization, FI 627 Corporate Finance: Applications and Advanced Topics, FI 635 Fixed Income Valuation and Strategies, I 640 Equity Valuations, FI 645 Derivatives, FI 649 Seminars in Equity Training, ID 790 International Short-Term Program. |
Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Entrepreneurship | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program develops an entrepreneurial mindset that students can apply in any business situation, to find and maximize opportunities. In gaining a customer-centric view of a business venture, students learn to rally people and resources around the entrepreneur's vision and to validate key assumptions about the customer and business model. These and other skills enable students to develop a viable business model that conserves critical resources. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses: ES 600 Entrepreneurial Thinking, ES 601 Planning and Financing New Ventures and one of the following: ES 701 Entrepreneurship Practicum (with a prerequisite of ES 600), ES 702 Research on the Entrepreneurial Process (with a prerequisite of ES 600), Elective Courses--Select one: GBE 790 Global Business Experience, MG 620 Business of Biotechnology, MG 635 Negotiating, MG 640 Managing Collaborative Relationships, MG 652 Management of Innovation, MK 715 New Products: Planning, Development and Marketing. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Finance | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Finance | This program builds a focus in either corporate finance or quantitative financial analysis, through a required finance course and three elective courses. Covering the full range of topics in finance, electives include Mergers and Acquisitions; International Finance; Equity Valuation; Fixed Income Valuation and Strategies; and Derivatives. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses: FI 625 Corporate Finance: Theory, Tools and Concepts, Elective Courses--Select up to three (nine credits): FI 603 Short-term Financial Management, FI 627 Corporate Finance: Applications and Advanced Topics, FI 635 Fixed Income Valuation and Strategies, FI 640 Equity Valuation, FI 645 Derivatives, FI 649 Seminar in Equity Trading, FI 650 Advanced Portfolio Theory and Practice, FI 685 Financial Strategy, FI 710 Enterprise Risk Management, FI 730 Management of Financial Institutions, FI 735 Mergers and Acquisitions, FI 745 Real Estate Investment Analysis, FI 751 International Financial Management, FI 787 Large Investments and International Project Finance, o focus your concentration in Corporate Finance select courses from the list below: FI 603 Short-Term Financial Management, FI 627 Corporate Finance: Applications and Advanced Topics, FI 730 Management of Financial Institutions, FI 735 Mergers and Acquisitions, FI 745 Real Estate Investment Analysis, FI 751 International Financial Management, FI 787 Large Investments and International Project Finance, To focus your concentration in Global Financial Analysis select courses from the list below: FI 635 Fixed Income Valuation and Strategies, FI 640 Equity Valuation, FI 645 Derivatives, FI 649 Seminar in Equity Trading, FI 650 Advanced Portfolio Theory and Practice. |
Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Finance | Department of Finance, Adamian Academic Center, Room 215, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2772 | In today's competitive global market, companies search for competent business and financial leaders to make the right decisions promptly and effectively to achieve success. To meet such needs, the Bentley University finance programs prepare today's and tomorrow's leaders with the skills to excel in the marketplace. Through Bentley's leading-edge facilities-including the Trading Room in the Hughey Center for Financial Services and the Accounting Center for Electronic Learning and Business Measurement (ACELAB) - students gain hands-on experience in financial analysis, risk management and decision-making with the latest information technology and software programs. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Financial Planning | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning | This program provides the requisite background for helping individuals achieve their financial goals through proper planning and wealth management. Students gain a thorough grounding in decision-making related to investments, income taxes, and estate planning. Courses are taught by working professionals who understand how classroom lessons translate into real-world opportunities. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses: FP 600 Professional Financial Planning Practice, FP 601 Investments and Capital Accumulation, FP 620 Trusts, Gifts and Estates, Elective Courses--Select one: FP 610 Benefits, Compensation and Retirement, FP 700 Investment Vehicles, FP 701 Portfolio Management, FP 703 Marriage, Separation and Divorce, FP 704 Financial Planning for Non-Traditional Families, FP 705 Elder Planning Techniques, FP 706 Psychology in Financial Planning, FP 710 Insurance and Wealth Preservation Planning Techniques, FP 720 Charitable and Estate Planning Techniques, FP 755 Special Topics Seminar in Financial Planning, FP 781 Internship in Financial Planning Practice, GBE 790 Global Business Experience. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2915 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Global Business and Markets | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | In this program students explore the impact of political, legal and cultural forces on global businesses, and study choices of global strategies and organizational structures. Courses examine marketing, finance, accounting and management from an international vantage point, to build understanding of the operational decisions of multinational corporations. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Course - Select One: MG 601 Competing in a Global Marketplace: Analysis of the Business Environment, MG 671 Management of the Transnational Corporation, Elective Courses - Select three: AC 781 International Dimensions of Accounting, EC 655 The Economics of Globalization, FI 751 International Financial Management, GBE 790 Global Business Experience, IB 701 Internship in International Business, LA 715 International Business Law, MG 601 Competing in a Global Marketplace: Analysis of the Business Environment, MG 640 Managing Collaborative Relationships, MG 661 International Management Behavior, MG 671 Management of the Transnational Corporation, MK 716 International Marketing. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Human Factors in Information Design | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program prepares students to understand product usability and user experience design, and the relevance of these concepts relate to overall competitive strategy. The concentration emphasizes human behavior related to learning and using systems, methodologies for collecting user requirements that inform product design, and strategies for evaluating system usability. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses: HF 700 Foundations in Human Factors, HF 750 Testing and Assessment Programs, HF 780 Field Methods in HCI, Elective Courses--Select one: CS 603 Object-Oriented Application Development, CS 605 Data Management and Systems Modeling, CS 607 Technology Infrastructure of Information Systems, GBE 790 Global Business Experience, HF 710 Managing a User Centered Design Team ,HF 720 Localization and the Global Market, HF 730 Visualizing Information, HF 740 Information Architecture: User-Centered Design for the World Wide Web, HF 751 Measuring the User Experience, HF 755 Special Topics in Human-Computer Interaction, HF 760 Intelligent User Interfaces, HF 765 Advanced User Interface Design, HF 770 Prototyping Theory and Practice, HF 790 Internship in HFID, IDCC 610 Effective Speaking, IDCC 620 Managerial Communication, IDCC 711 Argumentation Strategies for Business, LA 725 Cyber law, MG 632 Managing Effective Work Teams, MG 635 Negotiating, MG 645 Managing Organizational Change, MG 646 Management of Technology, MG 651 Project Management, MG 652 Management of Innovation, MG 750 E-Business Strategy, ST 635 Intermediate Statistical Modeling for Business, ST 625 Quantitative Analysis for Business and Finance. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Information Technology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Computer Information Systems | This program focuses on the analysis, design and implementation of IT solutions that provide the highest possible business value. Students gain expert preparation for consulting and management positions in IT departments and high-tech organizations. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Concentration Courses-- Select four: CS 603 Object-Oriented Application Development, CS 605 Data Management and Systems Modeling, CS 607 Technology Infrastructure of Information Systems, CS 610 Enterprise Architecture, CS 612 Web-Based Application Design, CS 620 Global IT Project Management, CS 630 Object-Oriented Analysis and Design, CS 640 Data Communications, CS 650 Data Management Architectures, CS 660 Enterprise-Class Business Applications, CS 701 Internship in Information Technology, CS 753 Data Warehousing and Data Mining, CS 795 Special Topics Seminar, CS 801 IT Policy, IPM 723 Information Security, Controls and Ethics, The following courses may be selected with the permission of the concentration advisor: GBE 790 Global Business Experience, HF 700 Foundations in Human Factors, HF 710 Managing a User Centered Design Team, HF 720 Localization and the Global Market, HF 730 Visualizing Information, HF 740 Information Architecture: User-Centered Design, HF 750 Testing and Assessment Programs, HF 760 Intelligent User Interfaces, HF 770 Prototyping Theory and Practice ,LA 725 Cyber law ,ST 635 Intermediate Statistical Modeling for Business for the World Wide Web, ST 625 Quantitative Analysis for Business and Finance. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Computer Information Systems | Department of Computer Information Systems, Smith Academic Technology Center, Room 415, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2584 | Computer Information Systems is one of the top majors on campus in terms of average starting salary and job placement. A CIS Major prepares you for a variety of careers and industries, including: Project Management; Change Management; Design and Implementation of New Systems; IT Consulting; IT Auditing; IT marketing and Sales. Effective use of information technology is the mark of a successful enterprise in the 21st century. Virtually every business-policy decision is intertwined with the application of information technology to plan, produce, market, manage and service business functions. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Information and Process Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program provides a foundation in using information technology to create business innovation, for managers and knowledge professionals who do not intend to pursue specialist careers in IT. Concentration candidates include entrepreneurs, financial specialists with responsibility for financial systems operations, marketing professionals charged with e-commerce strategy, general managers in global corporations, and accountants with an interest in corporate risk management. The concentration also serves IT specialists who are interested in careers in information management. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses: IPM 652 Information Management (formerly CS 652) AND one of the three courses below: IPM 722 Information Privacy: Policy and Strategy, IPM 723 Information Security, Controls and Ethics, CS 801 IT Policy, Elective Courses--Select two: CS 620 Global IT Project Management, CS 753 Data Warehousing and Data Mining, CS 801 IT Policy, GBE 790 Global Business Experience, HF 730 Visualizing Information, IPM 700 Directed Study Seminar, IPM 701 Internship in Information and Process Management, IPM 722 Information Privacy, Policy and Strategy, IPM 723 Information Security, Control and Ethics, IPM 755 Special Topics in Information and Process Management, MG 651 Project Management. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program fosters the people management skills and understanding of complex systems that help individuals build and contribute to effective organizations. Professionals in fields such as engineering, information systems, and health care delivery often choose this concentration to prepare for a career move into management. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Concentration Courses : Select four: ES 600 Entrepreneurial Thinking, ES 601 Planning and Financing New Ventures, GBE 790 Global Business Experience, MG 601 Competing in a Global Marketplace: Analysis of the Business Environment, MG 620 Business of Biotechnology, MG 630 Interpersonal Behavior in Management, MG 632 Managing Effective Work Teams , MG 635 Negotiating, MG 640 Managing Collaborative Relationships, MG 645 Managing Organizational Change, MG 646 Management of Technology, MG 651 Project Management, MG 652 Management of Innovation, MG 653 Service Management and Science, MG 654 Managing Quality in Service, MG 656 Managing Workers in a Service Environment, MG 661 International Management Behavior, MG 670 Managing in a Diverse Workplace, MG 671 Management of the Transnational Corporation, MG 701 Internship in Management, MG 704 Management Consulting Skills , MG 705 Field Project in Change Management , MG 755 Special Topics in Management, Or select no more than one of the following courses: EC 631 Market Structure and Firm Strategy, IDCC 610 Effective Speaking, IDCC 620 Managerial Communication, IDCC 711 Argumentation Strategies for Business. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Management of Operations and Technology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | In this program Equips students with the concepts, tools and techniques for managing effectively in a business world fueled by technology. Courses cover a range of business functions (R and D and manufacturing, for example) and a range of fields (financial services, health care, government). Students develop the skills and managerial perspective critical for succeeding in a technology-oriented enterprise environment. | Applicant must have a U.S. bachelor’s degree or its equivalent is required for admission. Have a Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT)/Graduate Record Examination (GRE). The MSIT, MSHFID and MSF programs accept the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) General Test in place of the GMAT. The MST and MSFP programs will waive the GMAT for those who have passed all of the certified public accountant exam or a state bar examination. Certificate program requirements differ for each program. International students must demonstrate proficiency in English through submission of a TOEFL score. This test is required of all applicants whose native language is not English and who have not earned a bachelor’s or master’s degree from an institution where the curriculum is delivered entirely in English. Bentley prefers a TOEFL score of 250 on the computer-based test, 600 on the paper-based test, or 100 on the Internet-based test, for admission consideration. Results of the International English Language Testing Systems (IELTS) of 7 or higher may be substituted for the TOEFL. | MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows; Required Courses: MG 646 Management of Technology, MG 651 Project Management, PLUS select one from the list below: MG 653 Service Management and Science Management, MG 654 Managing Quality in Service, OM 661 Operations Strategy, OM 701 Internship in Operations Management, OM 740 World Class Operations, OM 790 Special Projects in Operations Management, Elective Courses- select one: AC 730 Business Process and Systems Assessment, AC 731 Advanced AIS: Modeling Effective Accounting Systems, CS 620 Global IT Project Management, CS 801 IT Policy, GBE 790 Global Business Experience, MG 620 Business of Biotechnology, MG 640 Managing Collaborative Relationships, MG 652 Management of Innovation, MG 653 Service Management and Science, MG 654 Managing Quality in Service, MG 671 Management of the transnational Corporation, MG 719 Special Topics in the Management of Technology, MG 825 Management of Technology Field Research Project, OM 661 Operations Strategy, OM 701 Internship in Operations Management ,OM 740 World-Class Operations, OM 790 Special Projects in Operations Management. |
Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Marketing | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program provides a solid grasp of marketing knowledge and skills, emphasizing the importance of satisfying customer need to meet organizational goals. Students learn how factors such as price, promotion and distribution affect a product’s image and success among the target market. Hands-on experience teaches students to collect relevant data, and turn the information into strategies that promote long-term relationships with customers. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses--Complete two: MK 612 Strategic Marketing, MK 726 Customer Data Analysis and Relationship Marketing, Elective Courses--Select two: To focus your concentration in Marketing Analytics, choose MK 711 and one elective from the following list: GBE 790 Global Business Experience, MK 701 Internship in Marketing, MK 711 Market Research and Analysis, MK 712 Consumer and Buyer Behavior, MK 713 Marketing Promotion and Communication, MK 714 Marketing Channels and Logistics, MK 715 New Products: Planning Developing and Marketing, MK 716 International Marketing, MK 717 Business-to-Business Marketing, MK 718 Marketing of Services, MK 725 E-Marketing, MK 755 Special Topics in Marketing, MK 755A Marketing Plan Design and Development, MK 755B Pricing Strategies. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Quantitative Methods for Business Decisions | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program helps professionals gain a competitive advantage through the sound use of data resources. Courses offer a solid grounding in applied statistical methods, emphasizing use of appropriate software tools. Students also have an opportunity to see how these methods are used in current practice in a particular business area. Exposure to real data takes place in concentration courses, an optional internship, and other graduate courses where students with quantitative skills contribute to group consulting projects. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Course: ST 625 Quantitative Analysis for Business and Finance, Elective Courses--Select three: At least one from the following methodology courses: EC 621 Business and Economic Forecasting, MA 611 Analysis of Financial Time Series, MA 631 Mathematical Foundation of Quantitative Finance, ST 635 Intermediate Statistical Modeling for Business, Plus two more courses from the above list or the following applications: CS 603 Object Oriented Application Development, CS 605 Data Management and Systems Modeling, CS 753 Data Warehousing and Data Mining, EC 611 Macroeconomics of Financial Markets, EC 631 Market Structure and Firm Strategy, FI 635 Fixed Income Valuation and Strategies, FI 640 Equity Valuation, FI 645 Derivatives, GBE 790 Global Business Experience , MA 639 Asset Valuation and Derivative Pricing, MA 710 Data Mining, MA 731 Applied Modeling, MK 711 Marketing Research and Analysis ,MK 726 Customer Data Analysis and Relationship Marketing, ST 701 Internship in Business Data Analysis. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Real Estate Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program has to develop the specialized skills that real estate professionals need in a global marketplace. Students gain a solid understanding of business processes for planning, organizing and controlling real estate holdings and acquisitions, along with the leadership and interpersonal skills key to building a meaningful career in the industry. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses: RE 601 Real Estate Management I, RE 602 Real Estate Management II, Elective Courses--Select two: EC 611 The Macroeconomics of Financial Markets, ETH 700 Ethical Issues in Corporate Life, FI 625 Corporate Finance: Theory, Tools, and Concepts, FI 745 Real Estate Investment Analysis, GBE 790 Global Business Experience, IDCC 610 Effective Speaking, IDCC 620 Managerial Communication, IDCC 711 Argumentation Strategies for Business, LA 730 Real Estate Law, MG 630 Interpersonal Behavior, MG 635 Negotiating, MK 612 Strategic Marketing, MK 711 Marketing Research and Analysis, MK 713 Marketing Promotion and Communication, MK 717 Business-to-Business Marketing, MK 718 Marketing of Services, RE 781 Internship in Real Estate Management. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Risk Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program prepares students to address the risks that are an inherent part of any business environment. Examines internal and external factors related to risk, including the ability of the organization to recognize and control potential risks. Students learn strategies for guarding against risk in a particular business, and for addressing the associated ethical and governance issues. The concentration offers three tracks: enterprise risk management; security, privacy and regulation; and IT/IS risk management. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Course: AC 766 Risk and Performance Measurement, Elective Courses--Select three: Required Course: AC 742 IT Auditing, AC 744 Internal Auditing, CS 605 Data Management and Systems Modeling, CS 607 Technology Infrastructure of Information Systems, CS 610 Enterprise Architecture, CS 620 Global IT Project Management, CS 801 IT Policy, ETH 700 Ethical Issues in Corporate Life, ETH 750 Managing Ethics in Organizations, FI 685 Financial Strategy, FI 710, Enterprises Risk Management, IPM 722 Information Privacy, Policy and Strategy, IPM 723 Information Security, Controls and Ethics, LA 720 Law and Ethics, LA 725 Cyber law. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Service Management and Science | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program focuses on providing students with the ability to analyze, evaluate, and manage the co-creation of value that involves both the firm and the customer in the service delivery process. Courses will introduce students to the theories and concepts of service management and science and demonstrate how they are applied in world class businesses. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Course: MG 653 Service Management and Science, Required Courses - select two: MG 654 Managing Quality in Service, MG 656 Managing Human Resources in a Customer-Focused Environment, MK 718 Marketing of Services, Elective Course- select one (course may also be chosen from the above list): GBE 790 Global Business Experience, IPM 652 Information Management, MG 640 Managing Collaborative Relationships, MG 645 Managing Organizational Change, MG 651 Project Management, MG 652 Management of Innovation, MG 701 Internship in Management, OM 740 World Class Operations, ST 625 Quantitative Analysis for Business and Finance. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Taxation | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning | This program provides the requisite background for students to move with expertise and confidence amid the growing complexities of the taxation field. The concentration builds skills in critical thinking, while encouraging students to exercise ethical responsibility in developing and implementing successful tax strategies. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses - complete three: TX 600 Professional Tax Practice, TX 601 Federal Taxation of Income, TX 604 Multi-Jurisdictional Taxation, Elective Courses--Select one: GBE 790 Global Business Experience , TX 602 Transactions, TX 603 Corporations and Shareholders, TX 704 Federal Taxation of Income from Trusts and Estates, TX 707 Pass-Through Entities and Closely Held Businesses, TX 711 Mergers and Acquisitions, TX 731 Investment Companies, TX 732 Intellectual Properties, TX 741 Tax Accounting Problems, TX 742 Affiliated Corporations, TX 751 Tax Dispute Resolution, TX 752 Research Methodology, TX 755 Special Topics Seminar in Taxation, TX 761 State and Local Tax Practice, TX 771 International Tax Practice, TX 781 Internship in Tax Practice, TX 791 Practicum in Low-Income Tax-Payer Clinic. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2915 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration with Master of Science in Human Factors in Information Design | Full Time | 21 Month(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: YEAR ONE: Business Fundamental Courses: Five Courses (15 credit hours): GR 521 Managerial Statistics, GR 522 Economic Environment of the Firm, GR 523 Marketing Management, GR 524 Accounting for Decision Making, GR 525 Financial Statement Analysis for Decision Making. Required MBA Courses: Seven Courses (21 credit hours): GBE 790 Global Business Experience, GR 610A Business Process Management I , GR 610B Business Process Management II , GR 620A Info Technology for Competitive Advantage I , GR 620B Info Technology for Competitive Advantage II , GR 630 Team Effectiveness: Theory and Skills, GS 604 Global Strategy. YEAR TWO: Required MBA Courses: Three Courses (9 credit hours): GR 730A Management Consulting Teams I , GR 730B Management Consulting Teams II , GS 603 Leadership, Ethics and Corporate Responsibilities , Required HF Courses/HF Electives , Seven Courses (21 credit hours), HF 700 Foundations in Human Factors , HF 750 Testing and Assessment Programs , HF Elective , HF Elective , HF Elective , HF Elective , HF Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA - Master of Business Administration with Master of Science in Information Technology | Full Time | 21 Month(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: YEAR ONE: Business Fundamental Courses: Five Courses (15 credit hours): GR 521 Managerial Statistics, GR 522 Economic Environment of the Firm, GR 523 Marketing Management, GR 524 Accounting for Decision Making, GR 525 Financial Statement Analysis for Decision Making. Required MBA Courses: Seven Courses (21 credit hours): GBE 790 Global Business Experience, GR 610A Business Process Management I , GR 610B Business Process Management II , GR 620A Info Technology for Competitive Advantage I , GR 620B Info Technology for Competitive Advantage II , GR 630 Team Effectiveness: Theory and Skills , GS 604 Global Strategy. Required IT Course: One Course (3 credit hours): CS 603 Object-Oriented Application Development. YEAR TWO: Required MBA Courses: Three Courses (9 credit hours): GR 730A Management Consulting Teams I , GR 730B Management Consulting Teams II , GS 603 Leadership, Ethics and Corporate Responsibilities, Required IT Courses: Four Courses (12 credit hours): CS 605 Data Management and Systems Modeling , CS 607 Technology Infrastructure of Information Systems , CS 610 Enterprise Architecture , CS 630 Object-Oriented Analysis and Design, Elective Courses, Two Courses (6 credit hours), CS Elective , CS Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MBA in Business Ethics and Social Responsibility | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program builds knowledge and skills relevant for working with an organizational ethics office or corporate social responsibility program. Study options include Managing Ethics in Organizations – a course designed for and populated largely by ethics practitioners; faculty includes ethics officers at major corporations. Students also may pursue ethics-related internships and research. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
MBA | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Required Courses: ETH 700 Ethical Issues in Corporate Life and one of the following: ETH 750 Managing Ethics in Organizations, ETH 810 Research in Business Ethics, Elective Courses--Select two: AC 766 Risk and Performance Measurement, ETH 701 Internship in Business Ethics, ETH 750 Managing Ethics in Organizations, ETH 810 Research in Business Ethics, IPM 722 Information Privacy, Policy and Strategy, IPM 723 Information Security, Controls and Ethics, LA 720 Law and Ethics, MG 630 Interpersonal Behavior in Management, MG 645 Managing Organizational Change, MG 656 Managing Workers in a Service Environment, MG 661 International Management Behavior, MG 670 Managing in a Diverse Workplace, MG 671 Management of the Transnational Corporation. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MS in Corporate Finance | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Department of Finance | The full-time MS Corporate Finance (MSCF) candidates with no professional-level work experience in the field of finance have an opportunity in the MSCF to acquire a measure of practical experience in a financial environment as an integral part of their education. The internship affords these individuals a chance to assess their personal strengths and weaknesses in light of the demands they are apt to encounter in their prospective field. In that way, it provides them with a base of some experience with which they can realistically plan the start of their careers. In addition, it often gives interns an opportunity to demonstrate their professional potential to prospective employers. | The option of participating in an MSCF is open only to full-time MSCF candidates; enter the program with no professional-level work experience in the field of finance. To be eligible, the student should be well into his or her graduate program, have taken at least four finance courses at the 600 level or higher and have a cumulative GPA of at least 3.25. | Masters | Bentley University | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Finance | Department of Finance, Adamian Academic Center, Room 215, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2772 | In today's competitive global market, companies search for competent business and financial leaders to make the right decisions promptly and effectively to achieve success. To meet such needs, the Bentley University finance programs prepare today's and tomorrow's leaders with the skills to excel in the marketplace. Through Bentley's leading-edge facilities-including the Trading Room in the Hughey Center for Financial Services and the Accounting Center for Electronic Learning and Business Measurement (ACELAB) - students gain hands-on experience in financial analysis, risk management and decision-making with the latest information technology and software programs. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | MS in Global Financial Analysis | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Department of Finance | The full-time MS Global Financial Analysis (MSGFA) candidates with no professional-level work experience in the field of finance have an opportunity in the MSGFA to acquire a measure of practical experience in a financial environment as an integral part of their education. The internship affords these individuals a chance to assess their personal strengths and weaknesses in light of the demands they are apt to encounter in their prospective field. In that way, it provides them with a base of some experience with which they can realistically plan the start of their careers. In addition, it often gives interns an opportunity to demonstrate their professional potential to prospective employers. | The option of participating in an MSGFA is open only to full-time MSGFA candidates; enter the program with no professional-level work experience in the field of finance. To be eligible, the student should be well into his or her graduate program, have taken at least four finance courses at the 600 level or higher and have a cumulative GPA of at least 3.25. | Masters | Bentley University | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Finance | Department of Finance, Adamian Academic Center, Room 215, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2772 | In today's competitive global market, companies search for competent business and financial leaders to make the right decisions promptly and effectively to achieve success. To meet such needs, the Bentley University finance programs prepare today's and tomorrow's leaders with the skills to excel in the marketplace. Through Bentley's leading-edge facilities-including the Trading Room in the Hughey Center for Financial Services and the Accounting Center for Electronic Learning and Business Measurement (ACELAB) - students gain hands-on experience in financial analysis, risk management and decision-making with the latest information technology and software programs. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Accountancy | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Accountancy | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: In addition to the two introductory courses that are part of the business core, the accounting major requires the following courses: AC 310 Cost Management, AC 311 Financial Accounting and Reporting I , AC 312 Financial Accounting and Reporting II , AC 340 Accounting Information Systems , AC 350 Federal Taxation , AC 412 Advanced Accounting , AC 470 Financial Statement Auditing or AC 472 Internal Auditing , Select one accounting elective: AC 331 Government and Not For Profit Reporting , AC 332 Fraud Examination , AC 381 International Accounting , AC 410 Advanced Topics in Cost Management , AC 421 Internship , AC 440 Design and Control of Enterprise Systems , AC 450 Advanced Federal Taxation AC 475 Information Technology Auditing. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Accountancy | Department of Accountancy, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2087 | Founded in 1917 as the Bentley School of Accounting and Finance, Bentley has a respected tradition of preparing students for accounting careers in the public and private sectors. State-of-the-art facilities and an innovative curriculum challenge students to learn how to integrate technology into current and developing accounting practices and apply it to management situations. A core value of the university and the Department of Accountancy is to take a leading position in applying information technology across the curriculum, including the requirement that every freshman have a portable computer with appropriate software. The Accountancy Department prepares students for rewarding professional, business, and academic careers. We produce basic, applied, and instructional scholarly research to improve the classroom experience and advance accounting knowledge. We strive to have the high caliber of our education and research recognized by business professionals and fellow academics. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | ||
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Corporate Finance and Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Accountancy | This program is a ten course major jointly offered and jointly delivered by the Departments of Accountancy and Finance. It aims to help students develop the key skills required of finance professionals, namely: accounting skills, finance skills, business analysis skills, communication skills, team skills, and business process skills. The combination of courses in accountancy and finance offers students a unique academic background with which to enter the business world. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | These program modules are as follows: AC 311 Financial Accounting and Reporting I, AC 312 Financial Accounting and Reporting II, AC 310 Cost Management, FI 305 Principles of Accounting and Finance, FI 351 International Finance, FI 380 Advanced Managerial Finance, AF 450 Performance Measurement and Evaluation, Two AC or FI electives IDCC 320 Managerial Communication. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Accountancy | Department of Accountancy, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2087 | Founded in 1917 as the Bentley School of Accounting and Finance, Bentley has a respected tradition of preparing students for accounting careers in the public and private sectors. State-of-the-art facilities and an innovative curriculum challenge students to learn how to integrate technology into current and developing accounting practices and apply it to management situations. A core value of the university and the Department of Accountancy is to take a leading position in applying information technology across the curriculum, including the requirement that every freshman have a portable computer with appropriate software. The Accountancy Department prepares students for rewarding professional, business, and academic careers. We produce basic, applied, and instructional scholarly research to improve the classroom experience and advance accounting knowledge. We strive to have the high caliber of our education and research recognized by business professionals and fellow academics. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Economics-Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program develops solid skills in financial statement analysis along with a strong foundation in micro economic and macroeconomic theory. They receive broad exposure to the financial system, including the expanding international financial markets. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory, EC 391 Monetary Economics, FI 305 Principles of Accounting Finance, and FI 320 Financial Markets II. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Global Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Global Studies | This program helps students develop a comprehensive understanding of the globalization process by focusing on the world’s political, economic, and social interactions. The major is built upon required INT courses: Global Regions, Cross-Cultural Understanding, and Global Issues followed by upper-division courses, in additional to the business minor. Three elective courses round out the major, selected from various academic areas. Majors are required to work closely with their adviser because the curriculum presents some unique scheduling challenges in completing the business minor and fulfilling the foreign language and study abroad requirements. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Major Requirements: GLS 101 or 110-119, GLS 101 or 110-119, GLS 200 or above, GLS 200 or above, GLS Elective, GLS Elective, GLS Elective, Economics Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Global Studies | Department of Global Studies, Morison 204, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 3151 | In today’s global economy, change is fast paced and constant. College graduates must understand a broad range of cultural perspectives and economic issues to achieve personal and professional success. Bentley strives to provide students with an experiential understanding of international cultures and business practices in order to best meet the demands of their increasingly global economy and modern life. The global studies major at Bentley provides students with a comprehensive understanding of the technology-driven globalization process with a focus on commercial, economic and social interactions. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in History | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of History | This program promotes critical thinking, analysis of data and communication skills. It provides excellent preparation for careers in academic and professional fields such as law, business, journalism, and government. Majors work closely with the history faculty to develop a coherent program. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of History | Department of History, Adamian Academic Center 127, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2814 | The department includes specialists in modern Europe, modern China, modern India, the Caribbean, U.S. labor and business, U.S. foreign policy, American religion, and women’s history. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Information Design and Corporate Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Information Design and Corporate Communication | This program prepares students for careers in the increasingly competitive communications industry. Graduates have moved into positions in the public and private sector in public relations, technical writing and editing, journalism, managerial communication, marketing communication, content development, and web design. Students may choose to focus on one of three major course concentrations: information design, public relations, or web design. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | Bentley University | The program modules are as follows: COM 210 Effective Speaking, IDCC 370 Web Design I: Information Design Principles and Practice. Information Design: IDCC 230 Fundamentals of Content Development, IDCC 240 Fundamentals of Visual Communication, IDCC 330 Advanced Content Development. Public Relations: IDCC 250 Public Relations Theory and Practice, IDCC 255 Public Relations Writing, IDCC 355 Strategies in International Corporate Communication, IDCC 350 Journalism for the Web, IDCC 360 Public Relations and Information Technology. Web Design: IDCC 370 Web Design I: Information Design Principles and Practices, IDCC 380 Web Design II: Information Architecture and Site Management. Other IDCC course offerings include: IDCC 320 Managerial Communication, IDCC 390 Selected Topics in Information Design and Corporate Communication, COM 320 Intercultural Communication, COM 321 Mass Communication, COM 322 Theories of Persuasion, COM 323 Small-Group Communication, COM 324 Design as Communication, COM 325 Introduction to Linguistics. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Information Design and Corporate Communication | Information Design and Corporate Communication, LaCava 265A, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2216 | Studying Information Design and Corporate Communication (IDCC) at Bentley College provides the unique opportunity to learn from skilled practitioners with solid reputations in the business world. The faculty draw on years of experience in communication, usability, information architecture, web design and public relations. In today's global marketplace, business is communication. The Information Design and Corporate Communication (IDCC) program examines the critical role of communication in the world of business - and in people's lives in general. | Yes | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Information Systems Audit and Control | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Accountancy | This program joins together the skill sets of two areas experiencing rapid growth and change: accounting and information technology. Technology-intensive innovations have created new challenges and opportunities for accountants who also have expertise in information systems. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: AC 311 Financial Accounting and Reporting I, AC 312 Financial Accounting and Reporting II, AC 340 Accounting Information Systems, AC 470 Financial Statement Auditing, AC 475 Information Technology Auditing, AC 440 Design and Control of Enterprise Systems, IPM 210 Information Security and Computer Forensics, CS 360 business systems Analysis and Modeling, Two AC, CS, or IPM Electives. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Accountancy | Department of Accountancy, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2087 | Founded in 1917 as the Bentley School of Accounting and Finance, Bentley has a respected tradition of preparing students for accounting careers in the public and private sectors. State-of-the-art facilities and an innovative curriculum challenge students to learn how to integrate technology into current and developing accounting practices and apply it to management situations. A core value of the university and the Department of Accountancy is to take a leading position in applying information technology across the curriculum, including the requirement that every freshman have a portable computer with appropriate software. The Accountancy Department prepares students for rewarding professional, business, and academic careers. We produce basic, applied, and instructional scholarly research to improve the classroom experience and advance accounting knowledge. We strive to have the high caliber of our education and research recognized by business professionals and fellow academics. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Management | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Management | This program provides a generalist orientation, with the opportunity to develop a specialized focus in areas such as human resources management, entrepreneurship, global business management, and technology management. Special emphasis is placed on developing knowledge and skills that are increasingly useful to managers, such as conceptual, analytical, communication, interpersonal, and leadership skills. Students learn to diagnose organizational issues in a way that reflects an understanding of multiple, interacting levels of organizational analysis, including current environmental and global forces. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: MG 240 Interpersonal Relations in Management, MG 345 Organizations and Environment, 4 Management electives, 2 Management-related electives. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Management | Department of Management, Room 320, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2089 | Bentley educates students and generates new knowledge by uniting the rigor, relevance, creativity and intellectual dynamics of business and the liberal arts. It seeks distinction by emphasizing in their curricula and research those fields of knowledge emerging at the intersection of business and the liberal arts, such as: Arts and Sciences, Business and Information Technology, Business Ethics and Social Responsibility, Global Commerce and Culture; continuing to lead in the integration of information technology into business education; engaging in pedagogy that emphasizes student-centered learning and field-based experiences firmly grounded in theory; developing and supporting a faculty that embraces cross-disciplinary endeavors while immersed in the primary disciplines of business and liberal arts; refreshing their curricula and disseminating new knowledge by undertaking leading-edge applied research, often in partnership with external organizations; continuously improving a sophisticated technology and associated support infrastructure. | Yes | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | This program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides you with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, EC Elective, In addition, managerial economics majors must take at least three courses within their concentration: Accounting Concentration, AC 311 Financial Accounting and Reporting I, AC 310 Cost Management, AC Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Economic Analysis | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, and EC Elective. Economic Analysis Concentration: EC 245 Business Forecasting, EC 270 Industrial Organization, EC Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Entrepreneurship | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, and EC Elective. Entrepreneurship Concentration: MG 335 Entrepreneurial Thinking, MG 336 New Venture Planning and Financing, MG 360 Negotiating. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Human Resources | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, and EC Elective. Human Resources Concentration: MG 250 Human Resources Management, Two of the following: EC 233 Personnel Economics, MG 350 Human Resource Strategy, MG 360 Negotiating. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Information Design and Corporate Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, and EC Elective. Information Design and Corporate Communication Concentration: COM 210 Effective Speaking, IDCC 320 Managerial Communication, IDCC Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Information Technology | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, and EC Elective. Information Technology Concentration: EC 272 Economics of Information Technology, CS 150 Introduction to Data and Information Management, One of the following: CS 213 the World Wide Web, CS 359 Business Information Systems Analysis and Design. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - International Business | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, and EC Elective. International Business Concentration: EC 311 International Economics, MG 331 Management of International Operations, IDCC Elective, Elective from the following: FI 351 International Finance, LA 308 International Business Law, MK 367 International Marketing. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Law | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, and EC Elective. Law Concentration: Select three of the following, LA 300 Cyber law, LA 308 International Business Law, LA 315 Alternative Dispute Resolution in Business, LA Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Management | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, EC Elective, Management Concentration: MG 240 Interpersonal Relations in Management, MG 345 Organizations and Environment, MG Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | The program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides them with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, EC Elective, Marketing Concentration, MK 400 Marketing Management: MK Elective, MK Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Managerial Economics - Quantitative Analysis | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Economics | This program provides students with the flexibility to combine economics with a non-finance discipline. The common body of business core courses provides you with an excellent foundation in all business areas, but more depth is needed for specialization. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Managerial Economics Course Requirements: EC 224 Intermediate Price Theory, EC 225 Intermediate Macroeconomics, EC 381 Research in Managerial Economics, EC Elective, EC Elective, Quantitative Analysis Concentration: MA 233 Calculus III, MA 239 Linear Algebra, MA Elective. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Adamian Academic Center, Room 177, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2029 | The study of economics provides an understanding of the environment in which all businesses operate. It also equips students with the tools, skills and intuition necessary to make sound business decisions. The Department of Economics offers BS degree programs in economics-finance and managerial economics. Students who enjoy economics and want to strengthen their background in another area may find one of these majors to be right for them. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Marketing | This program are equipped to pursue positions in sales and business development, advertising, retailing, marketing research, marketing planning and product development, and eMarketing. It has considerable flexibility through marketing and related electives to generalize or specialize as desired. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: MK 322 Marketing Research, MK 400 Marketing Management, 4 MK electives, 2 MK-related electives. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Marketing | Department of Marketing, Morison Hall, Room 216, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2043 | Bentley educates students and generates new knowledge by uniting the rigor, relevance, creativity and intellectual dynamics of business and the liberal arts. It seeks distinction by emphasizing in their curricula and research those fields of knowledge emerging at the intersection of business and the liberal arts, such as: Arts and Sciences, Business and Information Technology, Business Ethics and Social Responsibility, Global Commerce and Culture; continuing to lead in the integration of information technology into business education; engaging in pedagogy that emphasizes student-centered learning and field-based experiences firmly grounded in theory; developing and supporting a faculty that embraces cross-disciplinary endeavors while immersed in the primary disciplines of business and liberal arts; refreshing their curricula and disseminating new knowledge by undertaking leading-edge applied research, often in partnership with external organizations; continuously improving a sophisticated technology and associated support infrastructure. | Yes | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Mathematical Sciences | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: MA 233 Calculus III, MA 239 Linear Algebra, MA 252 Mathematical Statistics, MA 263 Continuous Probability, and Four MA Electives. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Mathematical Sciences | Department of Mathematical Sciences, Morison Hall, Room 361, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2496 | The Mathematical Sciences Department offers a wide range of courses, most of which involve the fields of mathematics that are heavily used in business, such as actuarial mathematics, statistics and management science. Students who complete the major in mathematical sciences receive a bachelor of science degree. | Yes | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Media and Culture | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Department of English | This program is designed to prepare students for a career in media industries, the English Department's media and culture major combines creative arts with business and information technology. The major addresses the need for creative and business professionals to gain an understanding of the past, present and future of media forms and contents. Unlike media studies programs at other institutions, this program requires a business minor and culminates in a media-related internship or capstone project. Students in the major take hands-on media production courses that focus on contemporary media, as well as business English courses that emphasize theory, analytical thinking and critical reading skills, and the study of important literary, filmic, digital and other cultural texts in historical contexts. Possible career paths include: Media Production, Film Distribution, Sound Design, Media Advertising, Film Editing, Media Finance, Digital Archiving, Game Design, Entertainment Law, Motion Graphics Design, Media Management, Screenwriting, Media Policy Analysis, Lighting Design, and Media Marketing. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: MC 200 Principles of Media and Culture, MC 220 Principles of Media Production, MC 250 Principles of Globalization and the Media, Production Elective: Design and Time-Based Media, Digital Photography, Introduction to Video Production, Making Documentaries, Sound Design for New Media. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of English | Department of English, Adamian Academic Center 091, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2651 | This department aim to foster creation and critical analysis of cultural texts, including visual media and literary works, and to guide students toward a complex understanding of the personal, social, cultural, historical, political, economic, and institutional contexts in which these texts are produced and interpreted. Offerings include closely-linked courses in Literature and Film, Media and Culture, and Writing and Communication. The department’s Media and Culture Program, supported by state-of-the-art Media and Culture Labs and Studios, reflects our commitment to promoting intellectual inquiry and creativity through students’ engagement with theoretical principles, experiential learning, and media production. In support of academic and creative activity across the campus, the department also houses the Creative Writers and Artists Forum, Writing Center, and ESOL Center, and co-sponsors the International Film Series. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Natural and Applied Sciences - Earth, Environment and Global Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Natural and Applied Sciences | This program will provide humanity with one of its biggest challenges for the foreseeable future. Scientific and technological solutions to environmental problems will be dependent on economic, political, and social constructs that will require global cooperation. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Natural and Applied Sciences | Department of Natural and Applied Sciences, Room 100C, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2046 | The Natural and Applied Sciences Department at Bentley University (which includes psychology) offers courses that focus on the interests of business students, enabling them to apply knowledge of scientific principles, methods, and recent discoveries to their personal and professional lives. | Yes | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Natural and Applied Sciences - Health and Industry | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Natural and Applied Sciences | This program allows students to explore the broad implications of health from a core course in human biology through its multifaceted applications to individuals, industry, and society. This program exposes students to both scientific and humanistic aspects of human biology, psychology, health and disease that have applications in personal development, health, and wellness. Students also have the opportunity to develop interdisciplinary skills that can advance careers that touch on aspects of healthcare such as leading biopharmaceutical development, marketing healthcare products or services, administering health plans or benefits, managing healthcare providers, and institutions, financing companies in the healthcare or biopharmaceutical sectors, and contributing the increasing complex issues of public health and the economic implications of an aging population | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Natural and Applied Sciences | Department of Natural and Applied Sciences, Room 100C, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2046 | The Natural and Applied Sciences Department at Bentley University (which includes psychology) offers courses that focus on the interests of business students, enabling them to apply knowledge of scientific principles, methods, and recent discoveries to their personal and professional lives. | Yes | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Major in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Philosophy | This program examine fundamental human questions through rigorous study emphasizing clarity of thought and expression, careful reasoning and problem solving, and synthesizing diverse viewpoints. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: PH 111 Introduction to Logic, PH 215 Ancient & Medieval or PH 216 Modern Philosophy, PH 251 Ethics, PH 252 Theories of Knowledge or PH 253 Theories of Reality, 4 PH Electives. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Philosophy | Department of Philosophy, Adamian Academic Center, Room 109, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2240 | The application of philosophy to business is emphasized in Bentley University's nationally recognized program in business ethics. For more than 30 years, the Center for Business Ethics at Bentley has been a leader in the field of business ethics. The center organizes national conferences on business ethics, publishes research on ethical problems in business, and serves as a clearinghouse for a variety of groups concerned with ethics in business. Philosophy students at Bentley can take several different courses in business ethics, and can participate in other activities the center sponsors. The center provides a unique setting for thinking through the practical business implications of ethical reasoning. | Yes | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Accountancy | Full Time | 30 Credit-hour(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Accountancy | In this program candidates are required to demonstrate they have the equivalent of two semesters of intermediate financial accounting and one semester of cost accounting, as well as academic preparation in economics, finance and statistics. Candidates without the appropriate background in these areas may be required to complete approved courses. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: AC 730 Business Process and Systems Assessment, AC 741 Financial Statement Auditing, AC 750 Federal Income Taxation, AC 793 Professional Accounting Research and Policy Formulation. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Accountancy | Department of Accountancy, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2087 | Founded in 1917 as the Bentley School of Accounting and Finance, Bentley has a respected tradition of preparing students for accounting careers in the public and private sectors. State-of-the-art facilities and an innovative curriculum challenge students to learn how to integrate technology into current and developing accounting practices and apply it to management situations. A core value of the university and the Department of Accountancy is to take a leading position in applying information technology across the curriculum, including the requirement that every freshman have a portable computer with appropriate software. The Accountancy Department prepares students for rewarding professional, business, and academic careers. We produce basic, applied, and instructional scholarly research to improve the classroom experience and advance accounting knowledge. We strive to have the high caliber of our education and research recognized by business professionals and fellow academics. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Accountancy (Five-Year Program) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | McCallum Graduate School of Business | This program is designed for motivated students with high academic standing, wished to earn a graduate degree with an additional year of study. Through the Five-Year Master's Candidate program, current students can combine a Bentley bachelor’s degree in business or the arts and sciences with a choice of Master of Science in Accountancy program offered at the McCallum Graduate School of Business. This innovative program allows for starting graduate work in a student's fourth year at Bentley, trimming the typical time commitment for earning two degrees. | Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | McCallum Graduate School of Business | McCallum Graduate School of Business, Morison Hall, Room 303, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2799 | The McCallum School is among the top ranked graduate business schools in the United States. Widely recognized for its commitment to producing accountable leaders and ranked first in the nation by The Princeton Review for its state-of-the-art campus facilities, Bentley fosters a culture that emphasizes progressive thinking, ethical conduct and global understanding. They invite students to learn more about this dynamic community where students and faculty work together to find innovative ways of addressing complex business issues. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | ||
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Accountancy (Five-Year Program) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Accountancy | In this five-year program students can earn a bachelor’s degree and within one additional year complete a Master of Science in Accountancy. | Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Accountancy | Department of Accountancy, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2087 | Founded in 1917 as the Bentley School of Accounting and Finance, Bentley has a respected tradition of preparing students for accounting careers in the public and private sectors. State-of-the-art facilities and an innovative curriculum challenge students to learn how to integrate technology into current and developing accounting practices and apply it to management situations. A core value of the university and the Department of Accountancy is to take a leading position in applying information technology across the curriculum, including the requirement that every freshman have a portable computer with appropriate software. The Accountancy Department prepares students for rewarding professional, business, and academic careers. We produce basic, applied, and instructional scholarly research to improve the classroom experience and advance accounting knowledge. We strive to have the high caliber of our education and research recognized by business professionals and fellow academics. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | ||
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $32,500 a year | Department of Finance | This program provides specialized skills in financial analysis and decision-making for individuals with a professional interest in finance. The program develops students’ analytical and critical-thinking skills through the use of state-of-the-art information assessment and analysis software, and other resources available in the Hughey Center for Financial Services at Bentley. Students gain an additional competitive advantage in the marketplace through a rigorous curriculum that integrates mathematics, economics, accounting and associated disciplines with the theories and application of finance. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Core Courses -18 credits required: FI 625 Corporate Finance: Theory, Tools and Concepts, FI 635 Fixed Income Valuation and Strategies, FI 640 Equity Valuation, FI 685 Financial Strategy, FI 751 International Financial Management, ST 625 Quantitative Analysis for Business and Finance. Elective Courses - 12 credits required: FI 603 Short-term Financial Management, FI 627 Corporate Finance: Applications and Advanced Topics, FI 645 Derivatives, FI 649 Seminar in Equity Trading, FI 650 Advanced Portfolio Theory and Practice, FI 710 Enterprise Risk Management, FI 730 Management of Financial Institutions, FI 735 Mergers and Acquisitions, FI 745 Real Estate Investment Analysis, FI 787 Large Investments and International Project Finance. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Finance | Department of Finance, Adamian Academic Center, Room 215, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2772 | In today's competitive global market, companies search for competent business and financial leaders to make the right decisions promptly and effectively to achieve success. To meet such needs, the Bentley University finance programs prepare today's and tomorrow's leaders with the skills to excel in the marketplace. Through Bentley's leading-edge facilities-including the Trading Room in the Hughey Center for Financial Services and the Accounting Center for Electronic Learning and Business Measurement (ACELAB) - students gain hands-on experience in financial analysis, risk management and decision-making with the latest information technology and software programs. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Finance (Five-Year Program) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | McCallum Graduate School of Business | This program is designed for motivated students with high academic standing, wished to earn a graduate degree with an additional year of study. Through the Five-Year Master's Candidate program, current students can combine a Bentley bachelor’s degree in business or the arts and sciences with a choice of Master of Science in Finance program offered at the McCallum Graduate School of Business. This innovative program allows for starting graduate work in a student's fourth year at Bentley, trimming the typical time commitment for earning two degrees. | Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | McCallum Graduate School of Business | McCallum Graduate School of Business, Morison Hall, Room 303, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2799 | The McCallum School is among the top ranked graduate business schools in the United States. Widely recognized for its commitment to producing accountable leaders and ranked first in the nation by The Princeton Review for its state-of-the-art campus facilities, Bentley fosters a culture that emphasizes progressive thinking, ethical conduct and global understanding. They invite students to learn more about this dynamic community where students and faculty work together to find innovative ways of addressing complex business issues. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | ||
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Financial Planning | Full Time | Variable | US $32,500 a year | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning | This program prepares financial planning professionals to succeed in today’s business environment, which is dominated by the flow of information and technology. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2915 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Financial Planning (Five-Year Program) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | McCallum Graduate School of Business | This program is designed for motivated students with high academic standing, wished to earn a graduate degree with an additional year of study. Through the Five-Year Master's Candidate program, current students can combine a Bentley bachelor’s degree in business or the arts and sciences with a choice of Master of Science in Financial Planning program offered at the McCallum Graduate School of Business. This innovative program allows for starting graduate work in a student's fourth year at Bentley, trimming the typical time commitment for earning two degrees. | Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | McCallum Graduate School of Business | McCallum Graduate School of Business, Morison Hall, Room 303, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2799 | The McCallum School is among the top ranked graduate business schools in the United States. Widely recognized for its commitment to producing accountable leaders and ranked first in the nation by The Princeton Review for its state-of-the-art campus facilities, Bentley fosters a culture that emphasizes progressive thinking, ethical conduct and global understanding. They invite students to learn more about this dynamic community where students and faculty work together to find innovative ways of addressing complex business issues. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | ||
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Human Factors in Information Design | Full Time | Variable | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program is working professionals learn innovative approaches to product development that integrate the goals of the business and the end-user. This innovative program is housed within a business school, giving students the unique ability to see the role that design plays in the larger organizational structure. This powerful combination puts MSHFID students in high demand for senior-level positions at leading companies. This program emphasizes human behavior relative to product design, universal accessibility, usability and the user experience; Prepares students for careers as an interface designer, information architect, usability engineer or user experience specialist; Integrates user-centered design processes in the larger business organization; Gives students the opportunity to interact with professionals in diverse organizations. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Core Courses: Four Courses (12 credit hours): HF 700 Foundations in Human Factors, HF 750 Testing and Assessment Programs , Plus choose one of the following options below: Option 1: HF 710 Managing a User Centered Design Team AND GS 602 Business Process Management , Option 2: GR 610A Business Process Management I AND GR 610B Business Process Management II , HF Electives: Five Courses (15 credit hours): HF 710 Managing a User Centered Design Team , HF 720 Localization and the Global Market ,HF 730 Visualizing Information , HF 740 Information Architecture: User-Centered Design for the World Wide Web , HF 751 Measuring the User Experience , HF 755 Special Topics in Human Computer Interaction (HCI) , HF 760 Intelligent User Interfaces , HF 765 Advanced User Interface Design , HF 770 Prototyping Theory and Practice , HF 780 Field Methods , HF 790 Internship in HFID. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Human Factors in Information Design | Full Time | Variable | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program is working professionals learn innovative approaches to product development that integrate the goals of the business and the end-user. This innovative program is housed within a business school, giving students the unique ability to see the role that design plays in the larger organizational structure. This powerful combination puts MSHFID students in high demand for senior-level positions at leading companies. This program emphasizes human behavior relative to product design, universal accessibility, usability and the user experience; Prepares students for careers as an interface designer, information architect, usability engineer or user experience specialist; Integrates user-centered design processes in the larger business organization; Gives students the opportunity to interact with professionals in diverse organizations. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Core Courses: Four Courses (12 credit hours): HF 700 Foundations in Human Factors, HF 750 Testing and Assessment Programs , Plus choose one of the following options below: Option 1: HF 710 Managing a User Centered Design Team AND GS 602 Business Process Management , Option 2: GR 610A Business Process Management I AND GR 610B Business Process Management II , HF Electives: Five Courses (15 credit hours): HF 710 Managing a User Centered Design Team , HF 720 Localization and the Global Market ,HF 730 Visualizing Information , HF 740 Information Architecture: User-Centered Design for the World Wide Web , HF 751 Measuring the User Experience , HF 755 Special Topics in Human Computer Interaction (HCI) , HF 760 Intelligent User Interfaces , HF 765 Advanced User Interface Design , HF 770 Prototyping Theory and Practice , HF 780 Field Methods , HF 790 Internship in HFID. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Information Technology | Full Time | 30 Credit-hour(s) | US $32,500 a year | Department of Computer Information Systems | This program prepares professionals for careers that require the integration of information systems knowledge with a strong understanding of the global business environment. The graduates often start to work as consultants, risk analysts, business analysts, systems analysts, project managers, or systems architects and advance quickly in technical and managerial careers. The program equips its graduates to work in and/or lead teams that analyze, architect, integrate and implement IT-based business solutions in an increasingly diverse, globally interdependent, and technically complex environment. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: are CS603 Object-Oriented Application Development, CS605 Data Management and Systems Modeling, CS607 Technology Infrastructure of Information Systems, CS610 Enterprise Architecture, CS630 Object-Oriented Analysis and Design, (Prerequisites: CS603, CS605), GS602 Business Process Management. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Computer Information Systems | Department of Computer Information Systems, Smith Academic Technology Center, Room 415, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2584 | Computer Information Systems is one of the top majors on campus in terms of average starting salary and job placement. A CIS Major prepares you for a variety of careers and industries, including: Project Management; Change Management; Design and Implementation of New Systems; IT Consulting; IT Auditing; IT marketing and Sales. Effective use of information technology is the mark of a successful enterprise in the 21st century. Virtually every business-policy decision is intertwined with the application of information technology to plan, produce, market, manage and service business functions. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Information Technology (Five-Year Program) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | McCallum Graduate School of Business | This program is designed for motivated students with high academic standing, wished to earn a graduate degree with an additional year of study. Through the Five-Year Master's Candidate program, current students can combine a Bentley bachelor’s degree in business or the arts and sciences with a choice of Master of Science in Information Technology program offered at the McCallum Graduate School of Business. This innovative program allows for starting graduate work in a student's fourth year at Bentley, trimming the typical time commitment for earning two degrees. | Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | McCallum Graduate School of Business | McCallum Graduate School of Business, Morison Hall, Room 303, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2799 | The McCallum School is among the top ranked graduate business schools in the United States. Widely recognized for its commitment to producing accountable leaders and ranked first in the nation by The Princeton Review for its state-of-the-art campus facilities, Bentley fosters a culture that emphasizes progressive thinking, ethical conduct and global understanding. They invite students to learn more about this dynamic community where students and faculty work together to find innovative ways of addressing complex business issues. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | ||
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Marketing Analytics | Full Time | Variable | US $32,500 a year | Bentley University | This program offers hands-on exposure to advanced marketing technologies, with a firm grounding in the essentials of strategic marketing for an information economy. Developed in consultation with marketing, database, and market research firms, the MSMA develops the fundamental skills required of successful marketing professionals. Students in the program: Learn to make informed marketing decisions and determine the financial impact of those decisions; Employ SPSS, SAS and other software tools to transform raw data into usable information; Build a strong quantitative framework for analyzing customer profiles and market data; Make strategic use of information technology to improve marketing decision-making and empower customers. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Core Courses - 15 credits required: Required Marketing Courses (three courses): MK 612 Strategic Marketing, MK 711 Marketing, Research and Analysis, MK 726 Customer Data Analysis and Relationship Marketing, Required Quantitative Courses (two courses): ST 635 Intermediate Statistical Modeling for Business, ST 625 Quantitative Analysis for Business and Finance, Elective Courses - 15 credits required: MK 701 Internship in Marketing, MK 712 Consumer and Buyer Behavior, MK 713 Marketing Promotion and Communication, MK 714 Marketing Channels and Logistics, MK 715 New Products: Planning, Developing and Marketing, MK 716 International Marketing, MK 717 Business-to-Business Marketing, MK 718 The Marketing of Services, MK 725 marketing, MK 755 Special Topics in Marketing. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Bentley University | Bentley University, 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2000 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Marketing Analytics (Five-Year Program) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | McCallum Graduate School of Business | This program is designed for motivated students with high academic standing, wished to earn a graduate degree with an additional year of study. Through the Five-Year Master's Candidate program, current students can combine a Bentley bachelor’s degree in business or the arts and sciences with a choice of Master of Science in Marketing Analytics program offered at the McCallum Graduate School of Business. This innovative program allows for starting graduate work in a student's fourth year at Bentley, trimming the typical time commitment for earning two degrees. | Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | McCallum Graduate School of Business | McCallum Graduate School of Business, Morison Hall, Room 303, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2799 | The McCallum School is among the top ranked graduate business schools in the United States. Widely recognized for its commitment to producing accountable leaders and ranked first in the nation by The Princeton Review for its state-of-the-art campus facilities, Bentley fosters a culture that emphasizes progressive thinking, ethical conduct and global understanding. They invite students to learn more about this dynamic community where students and faculty work together to find innovative ways of addressing complex business issues. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | ||
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Taxation | Full Time | Variable | US $32,500 a year | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning | This program offers exceptional opportunities to gain the academically based professional knowledge that is critical for success in today’s business environment, which is dominated by the flow of information and technology. | Students should have completed minimum a four-year degree equivalent to the U.S. bachelor’s degree. Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 for written exams, 250 for the computerized tests and 100 for the IBT; GPA score of .43; GMAT score of 610; IELTS score are also required. |
Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: TX 600 Professional Tax Practice, TX 602 Transactions, TX 604 Multi-Jurisdictional Taxation, TX 707 Pass-Through Entities and Closely Held Businesses, TX 731 Investment Companies, TX 733 Tax Aspects of Buying and Selling a Business, TX 742 Affiliated Corporations, TX 752 Research Methodology, TX 761 State and Local Tax Practice, TX 781 Internship in Tax Practice, TX 601 Federal Taxation of Income, TX 603 Corporations and Shareholders, TX 704 Federal Taxation of Income from Trusts and Estates, TX 711 Mergers and Acquisitions, TX 732 Intellectual Properties, TX 741 Tax Accounting Problems, TX 751 Tax Dispute Resolution, TX 755 Special Topics Seminar in Taxation, TX 771 International Tax Practice, TX 791 Practicum in Low-Income Taxpayer Clinic. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning | Department of Law Taxation and Financial Planning, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2915 | Bentley University is one of the nation's leading business schools, dedicated to preparing a new kind of business leader and one with the deep technical skills, the broad global perspective and the high ethical standards required to make a difference in an ever-changing world. Bentley University is distinctive among U.S. and international universities in having two faculties, in business and in the arts and sciences, which are unified in their educational mission. Bentley may therefore be understood as a university within a business school- a university because of the character and scope of its education and research agendas, and a business school because of its orientation. Bentley graduates excel in complex and dynamic environments through their capacity to initiate, lead, and effect value-creating change. As responsible and ethical individuals, they recognize and take into account the broader social, political, and environmental context within which all organizations operate. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Master of Science in Taxation (Five-Year Program) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | McCallum Graduate School of Business | This program is designed for motivated students with high academic standing, wished to earn a graduate degree with an additional year of study. Through the Five-Year Master's Candidate program, current students can combine a Bentley bachelor’s degree in business or the arts and sciences with a choice of Master of Science in Taxation program offered at the McCallum Graduate School of Business. This innovative program allows for starting graduate work in a student's fourth year at Bentley, trimming the typical time commitment for earning two degrees. | Masters | BENTLEY COLLEGE | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | McCallum Graduate School of Business | McCallum Graduate School of Business, Morison Hall, Room 303, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2799 | The McCallum School is among the top ranked graduate business schools in the United States. Widely recognized for its commitment to producing accountable leaders and ranked first in the nation by The Princeton Review for its state-of-the-art campus facilities, Bentley fosters a culture that emphasizes progressive thinking, ethical conduct and global understanding. They invite students to learn more about this dynamic community where students and faculty work together to find innovative ways of addressing complex business issues. | Yes | Bentley University offers on-campus housing facilities. Undergraduate residential buildings: Slade Hall is a traditional residence hall comprised of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Smoking is prohibited in all Bentley residence halls. Nathan R. Miller Hall is a traditional residence hall with appeal to residents of all classes. It offers a choice of single, double, triple and quad (four-person) rooms. Facilities: Recycling center on first floor in main lobby; Kitchen with stove, oven, and refrigerator on first floor. The Trees Complex is a network of 7 traditional co-ed residence halls: Alder, Birch, Cedar, Elm, Maple, and Spruce. Each floor houses a single sex and bathrooms on those floors are also single sex. The complex is comprised mostly of double and triple rooms, with triple rooms located on the ground floor. Kresge Hall consists of four, five, and six-person suites. The corner suites each contain 3 bedrooms, while the inner suites contain 2 doubles. Each suite also has one large storage closet. Facilities: 2 lounges in basement; 1 Residence Assistant per floor except the 2nd floor which has 2; Resident Assistant rooms are singles in 5 person suites; Laundry facilities; Behind building are grills, tables, and a sand volleyball court. Copley Suites provide two, three, four, and six-person suites. The buildings are located near the Dana Center. There are 3 buildings in the Falcone Complex; East, North and West. With the exception of one two-person apartment in Falcone North, the remainder of these apartments is all five-person units with either 2 or 3 bedrooms. Rhodes Hall is comprised of two and four-person apartments. Bentley University's graduate housing is located in the North Campus Apartments. Adjacent parking is available and meal plans are optional. Students enrolled in the 5th year program are considered graduate students and must live on North Campus. | ||
| 164739 | Bentley University | Mathematical Sciences Concentration in Actuarial Science | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | Department of Mathematical Sciences | This program prepares students for a career in the actuarial field. Actuaries are in great demand by the insurance, financial services and consulting industries. Graduates are recruited for leadership development in top insurance companies. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 213 computer-based, 550 paper-based, or 80 Internet-based with a score of 20; IELTS score of 7.0 and SAT or ACT scores are also required. | Major | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Foundational courses: MA131 Calculus I, MA139 Calculus II, MA233 Calculus III, and MA239 Linear Algebra. Application Courses: MA243 Discrete Probability, MA252 Mathematical Statistics, MA263 Continuous Probability for Risk Management, MA335 Financial Calculus, MA343 Discrete Option Pricing, MA310 Actuarial Topics in Probability and Risk Management, MA357 Interest Theory, Courses that have been approved by the Society of Actuaries for VEE credit: VEE Economics: EC111 and EC112, VEE Applied Statistical Methods: MA252, VEE Corporate Finance: (GB301 and MA335) or (FI320 and FI380). Additional Recommended Courses: FI327 Insurance and Risk Management, MA421 Honors Internship in Mathematics (Actuarial Science). | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | Department of Mathematical Sciences | Department of Mathematical Sciences, Morison Hall, Room 361, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2496 | The Mathematical Sciences Department offers a wide range of courses, most of which involve the fields of mathematics that are heavily used in business, such as actuarial mathematics, statistics and management science. Students who complete the major in mathematical sciences receive a bachelor of science degree. | Yes | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Ph.D. in Accountancy | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | PhD Programs Office | The program will probe some of the most compelling issues in business today, all under the interdisciplinary umbrella theme of business, technology and society. It provides with an in-depth disciplinary foundation: Financial Accountancy, Auditing and Assurance, Managerial Control Systems, Judgment and Decision-Making and an Accountancy Workshop that considers special topics in accounting research. | Students should have an MBA or other master’s degree from an appropriately accredited institution; professional work experience, including some in a managerial or supervisory capacity, is preferred. The experience can be in business, government, or the nonprofit sector. In addition to this they should have obtained a TOEFL score of 600 or above; GMAT score of 650 and GRE score of 1300. | Doctoral | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Accountancy Core: Financial Accounting, Auditing and Assurance, Managerial Control Systems, judgment and Decision-Making, Accountancy Workshop, Methodology Courses: Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Quantitative Research Methods I, Qualitative Research Methods I, Quantitative Analysis I and Quantitative Analysis II, Quantitative Analysis III or Qualitative Methods II, Signature Seminar Courses, Globalization, Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility, Teaching Workshop (Year 1 and Year 2): noncredit-bearing, Specialized Elective, Independent study in specialist area of research, year 3: Teaching assignment (normally one course per semester), Dissertation proposal submitted and defended: upgrade to ‘PhD Candidate’ status. Year 4: Teaching assignment (normally one course per semester), Dissertation submitted and examined. | Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | PhD Programs Office | PhD Programs Office, Bentley University, Morison Hall175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2404 | The Mathematical Sciences Department offers a wide range of courses, most of which involve the fields of mathematics that are heavily used in business, such as actuarial mathematics, statistics and management science. Students who complete the major in mathematical sciences receive a bachelor of science degree. | No | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. |
| 164739 | Bentley University | Ph.D. in Business | Full Time | Variable | US $35,580 a year | PhD Programs Office | This program will probe some of the most compelling issues in business today, all under the interdisciplinary umbrella theme of business, technology and society. It provides an in-depth understanding of the chosen subject area as well as a broad appreciation of business in the context of the global economy. | Students should have an MBA or other master’s degree from an appropriately accredited institution; professional work experience, including some in a managerial or supervisory capacity, is preferred. The experience can be in business, government, or the nonprofit sector. In addition to this they should have obtained a TOEFL score of 600 or above; GMAT score of 650 and GRE score of 1300. | Doctoral | BENTLEY COLLEGE | The program modules are as follows: Inter-disciplinary Core: Information Systems, Organizational Theory, Microeconomic Theory, Business Workshop, Methodology Courses: Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Quantitative Research Methods I, ualitative Research Methods I, Quantitative Analysis I and Quantitative Analysis II, Quantitative Analysis III and/or Qualitative Methods II, Signature Seminar Courses: Globalization, Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility, Teaching Workshop (year 1 and year 2) – noncredit-bearing, Specialized Electives, Specialist Elective I, Specialist Elective II, Specialist Elective III, Year Three: Teaching assignment (normally one course per semester), Dissertation proposal submitted and defended: Upgrade to ‘PhD Candidate’ status, Year Four: Teaching assignment (normally one course per semester), Dissertation submitted and examined. |
Bentley University | Papa Sarr, Director | 5664 | 175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2108 | PhD Programs Office | PhD Programs Office, Bentley University, Morison Hall175 Forest Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02452, +1 781 891 2404 | The Mathematical Sciences Department offers a wide range of courses, most of which involve the fields of mathematics that are heavily used in business, such as actuarial mathematics, statistics and management science. Students who complete the major in mathematical sciences receive a bachelor of science degree. | No | Graduate students looking for comfortable, convenient on-campus housing will find it on Bentley’s North Campus. Situated a half-mile from the main grounds, North Campus is home to four beautiful apartment buildings. The buildings offer a mix of two- and four-person apartments, all with full baths. Graduate students are typically paired up in two-bedroom, one-bath apartments. However, as a cost-effective alternative, we do have four person apartments available. All apartments come fully furnished, with amenities including a full kitchen, onsite laundry, phone and cable hookups, high-speed wireless Internet access, and walk-in storage closets. All buildings are handicapped accessible and require security cards for access. There is ample parking and, for students without personal transportation, limited shuttle service to the main campus. The cost for a two-bedroom, two-person apartment is $10,730 per person for the academic year (September to May), payable $5,365 per semester. About 80 percent of full-time Bentley undergraduates make their home on campus. Freshmen live in traditional dormitory residence halls with double, triple or quad occupancy. Later, upperclassman options include multiperson suites and one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with bathrooms and kitchenettes. All students benefit from individual access to the Internet and the college network in their rooms. Other perks include on-site laundry facilities, air conditioning, vending machines and, in some dorms, game rooms and workout facilities. |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Anthropology - Applied Anthropology | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | School of Intercultural Studies | This program provide students with the ability to apply anthropological research in the area of solving human problems. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 215 - Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH 310 - Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture and Society, ANTH 345 - Ethnographic Field Methods, ANTH 350 - Anthropological Field Practicum, ANTH 401 - History of Anthropological Theory, ANTH 400 - Political Anthropology, ANTH 403 - Economy, Society and Values, ANTH 420 - Topics in Urban Anthropology, INCS 345 - Introduction to International Development, INCS 347 - Micro Issues in Relief and Development, INCS 430 - Seminar: Topics in Intercultural Health Care, INCS 433 - Community Development Models and Strategies, INCS 435 - Project Design and Assessment, SOCI 348 - Social Change in the Developing World. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Anthropology - Archaeology | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | School of Intercultural Studies | This program provides students with training in archaeological methods and research. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 215 - Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH 310 - Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture and Society, ANTH 345 - Ethnographic Field Methods, ANTH 350 - Anthropological Field Practicum, ANTH 401 - History of Anthropological Theory, ANTH 215 - Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH 312 - Archaeology Methods and Theories, ANTH 315 - Field Methods in Archaeology, ANTH 321 - Prehistoric Cultures of North America, ANTH 330 - California Native Americans, ANTH 366 - Biblical Archaeology: Palestine, ANTH 410 - Topics in Archaeology, ANTH 430 - Field Excursion: Turkey, Greece and Rome, ANTH 432 - Field Excursion: Israel, ANTH 450 - Internship in Archaeology. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Anthropology - Linguistic Anthropology | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | School of Intercultural Studies | This program is designed for students interested in the relationship of language in culture. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 215 - Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH 310 - Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture and Society, ANTH 345 - Ethnographic Field Methods, ANTH 350 - Anthropological Field Practicum, ANTH 401 - History of Anthropological Theory, ANTH 215 - Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH 312 - Archaeology Methods and Theories, ANTH 315 - Field Methods in Archaeology, ANTH 321 - Prehistoric Cultures of North America, ANTH 330 - California Native Americans, ANTH 366 - Biblical Archaeology: Palestine, ANTH 410 - Topics in Archaeology, ANTH 430 - Field Excursion: Turkey, Greece and Rome, ANTH 432 - Field Excursion: Israel, ANTH 450 - Internship in Archaeology. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Anthropology - Physical Anthropology | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | School of Intercultural Studies | This program provides students the opportunity to study the variation and adaptation of human biology within its cultural context. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 215 - Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH 310 - Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture and Society, ANTH 345 - Ethnographic Field Methods, ANTH 350 - Anthropological Field Practicum, ANTH 401 - History of Anthropological Theory, ANTH 303 - Human Variation, ANTH 304 - Human Osteology, ANTH 405 - Human Paleontology, ANTH 406 - Bioarcheology, ANTH 440 - Topics in Biological Anthropology. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Anthropology - Socio-cultural Anthropology | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | School of Intercultural Studies | This program provides students with a broad understanding of human behavior through a cross-cultural perspective. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 215 - Introduction to Archaeology, ANTH 310 - Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture and Society, ANTH 345 - Ethnographic Field Methods, ANTH 350 - Anthropological Field Practicum, ANTH 401 - History of Anthropological Theory, ANTH 303 - Human Variation, ANTH 304 - Human Osteology, ANTH 405 - Human Paleontology, ANTH 406 - Bioarcheology, ANTH 440 - Topics in Biological Anthropology. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Communication - Communication Studies | Full Time | 39 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This concentration is an excellent preparation for advanced graduate work in the discipline of communication studies. In addition, the Communication Studies degree provides excellent general preparation for careers in fields such as the ministry, human resources, sales, education or law. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - COMM 170 - Small Group Communication, COMM 181 - Introduction to Argumentation and Debate, COMM 263 - Beginning Acting, COMM 280 - Oral Interpretation, COMM 282 - Intercollegiate Forensics, COMM 363 - Intermediate Acting, COMM 382 - Intercollegiate Forensics, COMM 387 - Organizational Communication, COMM 440 - Communication Internship, COMM 450 - Communication Practicum, COMM 461 - Readers Theatre, COMM 463 - Advanced Acting Workshop, COMM 465 - Rhetorical Criticism, COMM 468 - Drama for Christian Ministry, COMM 470 - Communication Seminar, COMM 472 - Intercultural Communication, COMM 473 - Multi-Cultural Communication, COMM 474 - Advanced Studies in Communication Behavior, COMM 480 - Directed Research, MCOM 104 - History of Cinema, MCOM 111 - Introduction to Public Relations, MCOM 389 - Advanced Public Relations, MCOM 392 - Principles of Advertising, MCOM 433 - Mass Media Law and Ethics, MCOM 470 - Mass Communication Seminar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Communication - Interdisciplinary Studies | Full Time | 42 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This concentration will provide students maximum latitude in creating a course of study to suit their particular needs. Students choosing this option, begin by consulting with an advisor from the Communication Studies Department. An advisor will help students choose appropriate courses, which may include courses from other departments. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - COMM 170 - Small Group Communication, COMM 181 - Introduction to Argumentation and Debate, COMM 263 - Beginning Acting, COMM 280 - Oral Interpretation, COMM 282 - Intercollegiate Forensics, COMM 363 - Intermediate Acting, COMM 382 - Intercollegiate Forensics, COMM 387 - Organizational Communication, COMM 440 - Communication Internship, COMM 450 - Communication Practicum, COMM 461 - Readers Theatre, COMM 463 - Advanced Acting Workshop, COMM 465 - Rhetorical Criticism, COMM 468 - Drama for Christian Ministry, COMM 470 - Communication Seminar, COMM 472 - Intercultural Communication, COMM 473 - Multi-Cultural Communication, COMM 474 - Advanced Studies in Communication Behavior, COMM 480 - Directed Research, MCOM 104 - History of Cinema, MCOM 111 - Introduction to Public Relations, MCOM 389 - Advanced Public Relations, MCOM 392 - Principles of Advertising, MCOM 433 - Mass Media Law and Ethics, MCOM 470 - Mass Communication Seminar, COMM 458 - Introduction to Communication Research, COMM 478 - Pragmatic Social Theories of Communication. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Communication - Speech/Drama | Full Time | 42 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This program focuses upon the development of theatrical skills with practical uses for dramatic expression, oral communication and writing. Graduates may pursue careers in teaching, community theatre management, graduate work in theatre arts or seminary training. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - COMM 170 - Small Group Communication, COMM 181 - Introduction to Argumentation and Debate, COMM 254 - Communication Theory, COMM 270 - Interpersonal Communication, COMM 280 - Oral Interpretation, COMM 282 - Intercollegiate Forensics, COMM 382 - Intercollegiate Forensics, COMM 383 - Survey of Rhetorical Theories, COMM 386 - Forms of Public Communication, COMM 387 - Organizational Communication, COMM 391 - Directing Theatre, COMM 435 - Writing for Performance, COMM 440 - Communication Internship, COMM 450 - Communication Practicum, COMM 458 - Introduction to Communication Research, COMM 461 - Readers Theatre, COMM 463 - Advanced Acting Workshop, COMM 465 - Rhetorical Criticism, COMM 470 - Communication Seminar, COMM 473 - Multi-Cultural Communication, COMM 474 - Advanced Studies in Communication Behavior, COMM 480 - Directed Research, MCOM 104 - History of Cinema, MCOM 351 - Broadcast Anchoring and Announcing, MCOM 433 - Mass Media Law and Ethics, MCOM 470 - Mass Communication Seminar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music | Full Time | 54 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is intended for the student who wishes to study music within the liberal arts degree framework. This program is appropriate for those who do not have specific professional career goals in the performance, composition, or teaching of music, but who wish to use a degree in music as a foundation for a wide range of career options and/or graduate study in areas such as musicology, law, theology, church music, etc. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 211 - Improvisation: Concepts / Practice, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 300 - Concert Music, MUSC 307 - Music History and Literature: Medieval Through Early Baroque, MUSC 308 - Music History and Literature: Mid-Baroque Through Classic, MUSC 309 - Music History and Literature: Late Romantic Through Early 20th Century, MUSC 312 - Music Theory / History and Literature of the 20th Century, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 410 - Music Cultures of the World, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 440 - Church Music. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music - Organ | Full Time | 54 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is intended for the student who wishes to study music within the liberal arts degree framework. This program is appropriate for those who do not have specific professional career goals in the performance, composition, or teaching of music, but who wish to use a degree in music as a foundation for a wide range of career options and/or graduate study in areas such as musicology, law, theology, church music, etc. This program also provides training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Organ majors at Biola receive the training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Biola has a longstanding tradition in training organists. Under the direction of Janet Harms, organ majors survey the great tradition of organ literature and develop church music playing skills. Organ students also have access to the 3-manual, 26 rank, Schantz pipe organ. The organ which features over 1,625 pipes has been acclaimed as one of the premier instruments found in southern California. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 211 - Improvisation: Concepts / Practice, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 300 - Concert Music, MUSC 307 - Music History and Literature: Medieval Through Early Baroque, MUSC 308 - Music History and Literature: Mid-Baroque Through Classic, MUSC 309 - Music History and Literature: Late Romantic Through Early 20th Century, MUSC 312 - Music Theory / History and Literature of the 20th Century, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 410 - Music Cultures of the World, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 440 - Church Music. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music - Piano | Full Time | 54 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is intended for the student who wishes to study music within the liberal arts degree framework. This program is appropriate for those who do not have specific professional career goals in the performance, composition, or teaching of music, but who wish to use a degree in music as a foundation for a wide range of career options and/or graduate study in areas such as musicology, law, theology, church music, etc. This program also allows students to learn not only how to develop their technical and interpretive skills, but also to develop their knowledge of solo and chamber repertoire, as well as developing their ability to be strong teachers. Students have opportunity to perform standard solo literature, play in chamber ensembles, and accompany vocalists and instrumentalists. Biola University piano students also have ample opportunity to participate in competitions both on and off campus. Twice a year, the piano department holds solo competitions, the winners of which are given additional music scholarships. Also each year, a concerto competition is held, the winner being given the honor of performing in concert with the Biola Symphony Orchestra. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 211 - Improvisation: Concepts / Practice, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 300 - Concert Music, MUSC 307 - Music History and Literature: Medieval Through Early Baroque, MUSC 308 - Music History and Literature: Mid-Baroque Through Classic, MUSC 309 - Music History and Literature: Late Romantic Through Early 20th Century, MUSC 312 - Music Theory / History and Literature of the 20th Century, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 410 - Music Cultures of the World, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 440 - Church Music. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music - String | Full Time | 54 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is intended for the student who wishes to study music within the liberal arts degree framework. This program is appropriate for those who do not have specific professional career goals in the performance, composition, or teaching of music, but who wish to use a degree in music as a foundation for a wide range of career options and/or graduate study in areas such as musicology, law, theology, church music, etc. The Biola University string faculty is dedicated to guiding and encouraging students to achieve the highest artistic and intellectual standard of which they are capable. This occurs through large ensembles, chamber music, and individual instruction. The faculty seeks to provide a base of artistic and pedagogical understanding that will motivate and equip students to find their own, unique voice as musicians. The faculty seek to prepare students for a variety of career options in traditional and emerging fields. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 211 - Improvisation: Concepts / Practice, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 300 - Concert Music, MUSC 307 - Music History and Literature: Medieval Through Early Baroque, MUSC 308 - Music History and Literature: Mid-Baroque Through Classic, MUSC 309 - Music History and Literature: Late Romantic Through Early 20th Century, MUSC 312 - Music Theory / History and Literature of the 20th Century, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 410 - Music Cultures of the World, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 440 - Church Music. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music - Voice | Full Time | 54 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is intended for the student who wishes to study music within the liberal arts degree framework. This program is appropriate for those who do not have specific professional career goals in the performance, composition, or teaching of music, but who wish to use a degree in music as a foundation for a wide range of career options and/or graduate study in areas such as musicology, law, theology, church music, etc. This program also provides opportunities to students to develop strong vocal and musical interpretation skills. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 211 - Improvisation: Concepts / Practice, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 300 - Concert Music, MUSC 307 - Music History and Literature: Medieval Through Early Baroque, MUSC 308 - Music History and Literature: Mid-Baroque Through Classic, MUSC 309 - Music History and Literature: Late Romantic Through Early 20th Century, MUSC 312 - Music Theory / History and Literature of the 20th Century, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 410 - Music Cultures of the World, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 440 - Church Music. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music - Winds and Percussion | Full Time | 54 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is intended for the student who wishes to study music within the liberal arts degree framework. This program is appropriate for those who do not have specific professional career goals in the performance, composition, or teaching of music, but who wish to use a degree in music as a foundation for a wide range of career options and/or graduate study in areas such as musicology, law, theology, church music, etc. Performance opportunities in both large and small ensembles will challenge and stretch the best players. The atmosphere which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 211 - Improvisation: Concepts / Practice, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 300 - Concert Music, MUSC 307 - Music History and Literature: Medieval Through Early Baroque, MUSC 308 - Music History and Literature: Mid-Baroque Through Classic, MUSC 309 - Music History and Literature: Late Romantic Through Early 20th Century, MUSC 312 - Music Theory / History and Literature of the 20th Century, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 410 - Music Cultures of the World, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 440 - Church Music. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Biblical and Theological Studies | Full Time | 39 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Biblical and Theological Studies | The mission of this program is to provide the student with a foundational knowledge of the history, literature, and theology of the Old and New Testaments, of systematic and historical theology, and of methods for further biblical and theological studies - equipping men and women in mind and character to impact the world for the Lord Jesus Christ. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BBST 103 - Biblical Interpretation and Spiritual Formation, BBST 105 - Foundations of Christian Thought, BBST 109 - Old Testament History and Literature, BBST 110 - New Testament History and Literature, BBST 251 - Theology I, BBST 254 - Theology II, BBST 306 - Early Christian History - Acts, BBST 465 - Integration Seminar, BLGR 101 - Elementary Greek Grammar I, BLGR 102 - Elementary Greek Grammar II, BLGR 201 - Intermediate Greek Grammar and Exegesis, BLGR 202 - Intermediate Greek Grammar and Exegesis, BLHE 101 - Elementary Hebrew Grammar, BLHE 102 - Elementary Hebrew Grammar, BLHE 201 - Intermediate Hebrew Grammar, BLHE 202 - Intermediate Hebrew Grammar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Biblical and Theological Studies | Department of Biblical and Theological Studies, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | The objectives of the undergraduate Philosophy Department center on intellectual content and skills becoming part of the student's life and character: (1) development of the habit of reflective and evaluative thinking; (2) growth in the ability to read and understand philosophic literature and to write well about this material; (3) gaining an acquaintance with the intellectual tradition of the West; (4) acquiring the ability to apply philosophical concepts to life's problems; (5) making serious progress in formulating one's own world and life view; and (6) advancing towards full intellectual and personal integration of academic studies with Christian teaching. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Christian Education Ministries - Youth | Full Time | 64 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Christian Education Ministries | This program provides opportunities that include a local church youth director or minister, a club director for youth parachurch agencies, a youth camp director, a Christian education director in a church that emphasizes youth or an assistant or associate pastor with responsibilities for youth. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CEED 150 - Foundations of Ministry, CEED 252 - Foundations of Teaching Ministry, CEED 260 - Foundations of Interpersonal Relationships, CEED 261 - Foundations of Development, CEED 271 - Evangelism and Follow-up, CEED 351 - Leadership for Christian Ministry, CEED 380 - Internship I:Career Development, CEED 382 - Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Education, CEED 415 - Organization and Administration of Christian Education, CEED 426 - Foundations for Counseling Ministry, CEED 461 - Internship II: Student Teaching Ministry, CEED 462 - Internship III: Leadership Development, CEED 373 - Christian Education of Youth. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Christian Education Ministries | Christian Education Ministries, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | Christian Education Ministries program is major at Biola that focuses on training for church and parachurch vocational ministry service. It prepares dedicated Christian servant-leaders for work with children, youth, and adults in local churches, camps, missions, schools, and a variety of unique settings. Besides general education and biblical studies the course work focuses on teaching, leading, administrating, counseling, evangelizing, and discipline. The degree takes a hands-on approach to preparation, employing a three-semester internship at a ministry site under an experienced supervisor to maximize experiential learning. Many of the graduates continue study in seminary or pursue other advanced degrees. It has one of the finest Christian education faculties in the country—all have professional ministry experience and are engaged in publishing and leading edge research. Students and their preparation to pursue God’s will for their lives and ministries come first with us. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Christian Education Ministries – Adult and Family | Full Time | 64 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Christian Education Ministries | This program provides opportunities that include director / pastor of adult and family ministries or associate pastor with responsibilities in these areas. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CEED 150 - Foundations of Ministry, CEED 252 - Foundations of Teaching Ministry, CEED 260 - Foundations of Interpersonal Relationships, CEED 261 - Foundations of Development, CEED 271 - Evangelism and Follow-up, CEED 351 - Leadership for Christian Ministry, CEED 380 - Internship I:Career Development, CEED 382 - Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Education, CEED 415 - Organization and Administration of Christian Education, CEED 426 - Foundations for Counseling Ministry, CEED 461 - Internship II: Student Teaching Ministry, CEED 462 - Internship III: Leadership Development, CEED 373 - Christian Education of Youth. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Christian Education Ministries | Christian Education Ministries, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | Christian Education Ministries program is major at Biola that focuses on training for church and parachurch vocational ministry service. It prepares dedicated Christian servant-leaders for work with children, youth, and adults in local churches, camps, missions, schools, and a variety of unique settings. Besides general education and biblical studies the course work focuses on teaching, leading, administrating, counseling, evangelizing, and discipline. The degree takes a hands-on approach to preparation, employing a three-semester internship at a ministry site under an experienced supervisor to maximize experiential learning. Many of the graduates continue study in seminary or pursue other advanced degrees. It has one of the finest Christian education faculties in the country—all have professional ministry experience and are engaged in publishing and leading edge research. Students and their preparation to pursue God’s will for their lives and ministries come first with us. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Christian Education Ministries – Children | Full Time | 64 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Christian Education Ministries | This program provides opportunities that include children’s director or minister in a local church, a staff member with organizations that minister to children in the United States or on a mission field, a writer of materials for use with children. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CEED 150 - Foundations of Ministry, CEED 252 - Foundations of Teaching Ministry, CEED 260 - Foundations of Interpersonal Relationships, CEED 261 - Foundations of Development, CEED 271 - Evangelism and Follow-up, CEED 351 - Leadership for Christian Ministry, CEED 380 - Internship I:Career Development, CEED 382 - Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Education, CEED 415 - Organization and Administration of Christian Education, CEED 426 - Foundations for Counseling Ministry, CEED 461 - Internship II: Student Teaching Ministry, CEED 462 - Internship III: Leadership Development, CEED 373 - Christian Education of Youth. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Christian Education Ministries | Christian Education Ministries, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | Christian Education Ministries program is major at Biola that focuses on training for church and parachurch vocational ministry service. It prepares dedicated Christian servant-leaders for work with children, youth, and adults in local churches, camps, missions, schools, and a variety of unique settings. Besides general education and biblical studies the course work focuses on teaching, leading, administrating, counseling, evangelizing, and discipline. The degree takes a hands-on approach to preparation, employing a three-semester internship at a ministry site under an experienced supervisor to maximize experiential learning. Many of the graduates continue study in seminary or pursue other advanced degrees. It has one of the finest Christian education faculties in the country—all have professional ministry experience and are engaged in publishing and leading edge research. Students and their preparation to pursue God’s will for their lives and ministries come first with us. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Christian Education Ministries – Diversified | Full Time | 64 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Christian Education Ministries | This program is for those who wish to design a specialization unique to their interests, such as church-related camping, counseling, communication, business, music, computer science, etc. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CEED 150 - Foundations of Ministry, CEED 252 - Foundations of Teaching Ministry, CEED 260 - Foundations of Interpersonal Relationships, CEED 261 - Foundations of Development, CEED 271 - Evangelism and Follow-up, CEED 351 - Leadership for Christian Ministry, CEED 380 - Internship I:Career Development, CEED 382 - Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Education, CEED 415 - Organization and Administration of Christian Education, CEED 426 - Foundations for Counseling Ministry, CEED 461 - Internship II: Student Teaching Ministry, CEED 462 - Internship III: Leadership Development. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Christian Education Ministries | Christian Education Ministries, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | Christian Education Ministries program is major at Biola that focuses on training for church and parachurch vocational ministry service. It prepares dedicated Christian servant-leaders for work with children, youth, and adults in local churches, camps, missions, schools, and a variety of unique settings. Besides general education and biblical studies the course work focuses on teaching, leading, administrating, counseling, evangelizing, and discipline. The degree takes a hands-on approach to preparation, employing a three-semester internship at a ministry site under an experienced supervisor to maximize experiential learning. Many of the graduates continue study in seminary or pursue other advanced degrees. It has one of the finest Christian education faculties in the country—all have professional ministry experience and are engaged in publishing and leading edge research. Students and their preparation to pursue God’s will for their lives and ministries come first with us. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Christian Education Ministries – Elementary Teaching Credential Program | Full Time | 64 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Christian Education Ministries | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BBST 320 - Inductive Bible Study, CEED 150 - Foundations of Ministry, CEED 260 - Foundations of Interpersonal Relationships, CEED 261 - Foundations of Development, CEED 271 - Evangelism and Follow-up, CEED 351 - Leadership for Christian Ministry, CEED 372 - Christian Education of Children, CEED 380 - Internship I:Career Development, CEED 382 - Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Education, LEDU 301 - Introduction to Teaching, LEDU 330 - Psychological Foundations of Education, LEDU 341 - Methods of Teaching Linguistically Diverse Students, LEDU 420 - Elementary Reading/Language Arts, LEDU 430 - Elementary Curriculum, LEDU 440 - Elementary Student Teaching I, LEDU 442 - Elementary Student Teaching II. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Christian Education Ministries | Christian Education Ministries, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | Christian Education Ministries program is major at Biola that focuses on training for church and parachurch vocational ministry service. It prepares dedicated Christian servant-leaders for work with children, youth, and adults in local churches, camps, missions, schools, and a variety of unique settings. Besides general education and biblical studies the course work focuses on teaching, leading, administrating, counseling, evangelizing, and discipline. The degree takes a hands-on approach to preparation, employing a three-semester internship at a ministry site under an experienced supervisor to maximize experiential learning. Many of the graduates continue study in seminary or pursue other advanced degrees. It has one of the finest Christian education faculties in the country—all have professional ministry experience and are engaged in publishing and leading edge research. Students and their preparation to pursue God’s will for their lives and ministries come first with us. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Christian Education Ministries – Intercultural | Full Time | 64 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Christian Education Ministries | This program provides opportunities that include service on a foreign mission field or service in one of the many subcultures in the United States. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CEED 150 - Foundations of Ministry, CEED 252 - Foundations of Teaching Ministry, CEED 260 - Foundations of Interpersonal Relationships, CEED 261 - Foundations of Development, CEED 271 - Evangelism and Follow-up, CEED 351 - Leadership for Christian Ministry, CEED 380 - Internship I:Career Development, CEED 382 - Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Education, CEED 415 - Organization and Administration of Christian Education, CEED 426 - Foundations for Counseling Ministry, CEED 461 - Internship II: Student Teaching Ministry, CEED 462 - Internship III: Leadership Development. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Christian Education Ministries | Christian Education Ministries, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | Christian Education Ministries program is major at Biola that focuses on training for church and parachurch vocational ministry service. It prepares dedicated Christian servant-leaders for work with children, youth, and adults in local churches, camps, missions, schools, and a variety of unique settings. Besides general education and biblical studies the course work focuses on teaching, leading, administrating, counseling, evangelizing, and discipline. The degree takes a hands-on approach to preparation, employing a three-semester internship at a ministry site under an experienced supervisor to maximize experiential learning. Many of the graduates continue study in seminary or pursue other advanced degrees. It has one of the finest Christian education faculties in the country—all have professional ministry experience and are engaged in publishing and leading edge research. Students and their preparation to pursue God’s will for their lives and ministries come first with us. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in English – Literature | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of English | This program equips students to explore, from a faith-informed perspective, the complex narrative worlds of both literature and life that they might live out their callings more intelligently and compassionately. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ENGL 251 - English Literature to 1798, ENGL 252 - English Literature Since 1798, ENGL 281 - American Literature I, ENGL 282 - American Literature II, ENGL 110A - Studies in Critical Thinking and Writing, ENGL 110B - Studies in Critical Thinking and Writing, ENGL 281 - American Literature I, ENGL 251 - English Literature to 1798, ENGL 252 - English Literature Since 1798, ENGL 282 - American Literature II, ENGL 360 - Studies in American Literature, ENGL 370 - Studies in English Literature, ENGL 400 - Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL 451 - History of Critical Theory: Plato to T.S. Eliot, ENGL 452 - Contemporary Literary Theory. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of English | Department of English, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4824 | The Department of English equips students to explore, from a faith-informed perspective, the complex narrative worlds of both literature and life that they might live out their callings more intelligently and compassionately. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in English – Secondary Credential | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of English | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ENGL 251 - English Literature to 1798, ENGL 252 - English Literature Since 1798, ENGL 282 - American Literature II, ENGL 320 - Studies in Grammar and Language, ENGL 340 - Advanced Composition, ENGL 360 - Studies in American Literature, ENGL 370 - Studies in English Literature, ENGL 400 - Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL 451 - History of Critical Theory: Plato to T.S. Eliot, ENGL 452 - Contemporary Literary Theory, ENGL 351 - General English Linguistics, ENGL 353 - Introduction to TESOL: Adult, ENGL 354 - Introduction to TESOL: K–12, LEDU 341 - Methods of Teaching Linguistically Diverse Students, COMM 363 - Intermediate Acting, COMM 367 - Conceptions of Stagecraft, COMM 383 - Survey of Rhetorical Theories, COMM 461 - Readers Theatre, COMM 463 - Advanced Acting Workshop, COMM 473 - Multi-Cultural Communication, ENGL 343 - Creative Writing: Poetry, ENGL 344 - Creative Writing: Fiction, ENGL 420 - Studies in Comparative Literature, ENGL 430 - Special Studies in Literature, ENGL 440 - Studies in Major Authors, ENGL 460 - Studies in Literary Genre, MCOM 335 - Magazine and Free-Lance Writing, MCOM 454 - Reviewing the Creative Arts, MCOM 470 - Mass Communication Seminar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of English | Department of English, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4824 | The Department of English equips students to explore, from a faith-informed perspective, the complex narrative worlds of both literature and life that they might live out their callings more intelligently and compassionately. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in English – Writing | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of English | This program enables students to supplement their study of literature with theoretical and vocational training in writing. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ENGL 251 - English Literature to 1798, ENGL 252 - English Literature Since 1798, ENGL 282 - American Literature II, ENGL 340 - Advanced Composition, ENGL 360 - Studies in American Literature, ENGL 370 - Studies in English Literature, ENGL 400 - Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL 451 - History of Critical Theory: Plato to T.S. Eliot, ENGL 452 - Contemporary Literary Theory, ENGL 360 - Studies in American Literature, ENGL 370 - Studies in English Literature, ENGL 410 - Studies in Specialized Writing, ENGL 420 - Studies in Comparative Literature, ENGL 430 - Special Studies in Literature, ENGL 440 - Studies in Major Authors, ENGL 460 - Studies in Literary Genre, ENGL 343 - Creative Writing: Poetry, ENGL 344 - Creative Writing: Fiction, MCOM 300 - Journalism Practicum, MCOM 305 - Information Gathering and Database Analysis, MCOM 335 - Magazine and Free-Lance Writing, MCOM 431 - Investigative Reporting, MCOM 445 - Opinion Journalism, MCOM 454 - Reviewing the Creative Arts. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of English | Department of English, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4824 | The Department of English equips students to explore, from a faith-informed perspective, the complex narrative worlds of both literature and life that they might live out their callings more intelligently and compassionately. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Film/TV/Radio – Media Management | Full Time | 45 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Mass Communications Department | By combining classes in Mass Comm and Business, students will be equipped to serve as the decision makers who run the entertainment industry. Executives control the content pipeline, in music, movies, TV, sports, fashion, and advertising. They work in marketing, accounting, development, programming, exhibition and distribution. The ‘suits’ decide what shows go on the air and what movies get a greenlight. Media Management also offers future producers grounding in the bottom line decisions that make or break a project’s profitability. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - COMM 387 - Organizational Communication, MCOM 202 - Introduction to Mass Media, MCOM 204 - The Entertainment Business, MCOM 301 - New Media, MCOM 359 - Motion Picture Production, MCOM 433 - Mass Media Law and Ethics, MCOM 440 - Mass Communication Internship, MCOM 455 - Media Management, MCOM 456 - Senior Media Project, MCOM 458 - Mass Communication Research, MCOM 470 - Mass Communication Seminar, BUSN 211 - Principles of Accounting I, MCOM 101 - The Art of Storytelling, BUSN 212 - Principles of Accounting II, MCOM 302 - Production Management, MCOM 355 - History of Television Programming, MCOM 449 - The Role of the Producer, MCOM 358 - Motion Picture / Pre-Production, MCOM 452 - Motion Picture Post-Production, BUSN 230 - Introduction to Marketing, MCOM 392 - Principles of Advertising. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Mass Communications Department | Mass Communications Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 777 4052 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Film/TV/Radio – Production | Full Time | 45 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Mass Communications Department | This program offers students a thorough grounding in the creation of film, television or audio-based media. Students are encouraged to develop their technical skills, training for positions as director, cinematographer, gaffer, editor, sound designer, recording engineer, and/or production designer. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MCOM 101 - The Art of Storytelling, MCOM 102 - Visual Aesthetics, MCOM 104 - History of Cinema, MCOM 202 - Introduction to Mass Media, MCOM 251 - Audio Recording, MCOM 262 - Directing for TV and Film, MCOM 301 - New Media, MCOM 302 - Production Management, MCOM 303 - Cinematography, MCOM 315 - Editing for Film and Television, MCOM 359 - Motion Picture Production, MCOM 440 - Mass Communication Internship, MCOM 456 - Senior Media Project, MCOM 358 - Motion Picture / Pre-Production, MCOM 452 - Motion Picture Post-Production. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Mass Communications Department | Mass Communications Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 777 4052 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Film/TV/Radio – Screen Writing | Full Time | 45 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Mass Communications Department | This program covers the fundamental elements of storytelling-from conception (the pitch and the outline), to execution (the script), to the all-important rewriting and polishing process. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MCOM 101 - The Art of Storytelling, MCOM 102 - Visual Aesthetics, MCOM 103 - Introduction to TV and Film Production, MCOM 104 - History of Cinema, MCOM 202 - Introduction to Mass Media, MCOM 204 - The Entertainment Business, MCOM 320 - Advanced Studies in Criticism, MCOM 355 - History of Television Programming, MCOM 356 - Screen Writing, MCOM 440 - Mass Communication Internship, MCOM 447 - Advanced Screen Writing, MCOM 456 - Senior Media Project, MCOM 470 - Mass Communication Seminar, ENGL 344 - Creative Writing: Fiction, MCOM 364 - Acting for Film and Television. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Mass Communications Department | Mass Communications Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 777 4052 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | The courses offered within the History major allow students the chance to gain a wide range of historical insight, and to narrow their focus to the study of one particular geographical region. The regional emphases offered by the department are Asia (including the Middle East), Africa, the Americas and Europe. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - HIST 107 - United States History, HIST 208 - World Civilizations II, HIST 327 - Historiography, HIST 480 - Research Seminar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | Department of History, Government, and Social Science, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 944 0351 | The department emphasizes depth and breadth in history and the social sciences as the foundation for understanding of the world. History as a contextual discipline sheds light on all world civilizations, and illuminates the human condition while at the same time providing insight into the present. The program, therefore, places emphasis on in-depth study of global geographical regions, themes, and eras. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Humanities – English | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of English | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ENGL 251 - English Literature to 1798, ENGL 252 - English Literature Since 1798, ENGL 281 - American Literature I, ENGL 282 - American Literature II. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of English | Department of English, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4824 | The Department of English equips students to explore, from a faith-informed perspective, the complex narrative worlds of both literature and life that they might live out their callings more intelligently and compassionately. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Humanities – History | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - HIST 207 - World Civilizations I, HIST 208 - World Civilizations II, HIST 480 - Research Seminar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | Department of History, Government, and Social Science, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 944 0351 | The department emphasizes depth and breadth in history and the social sciences as the foundation for understanding of the world. History as a contextual discipline sheds light on all world civilizations, and illuminates the human condition while at the same time providing insight into the present. The program, therefore, places emphasis on in-depth study of global geographical regions, themes, and eras. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Humanities – Philosophy | Full Time | 33 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Philosophy Department | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - PHIL 301 - Greek and Roman Philosophy, PHIL 302 - Medieval Philosophy, PHIL 303 - Modern Philosophy, PHIL 414 - Philosophy of Religion. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Philosophy Department | Philosophy Department, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | The objectives of the undergraduate Philosophy Department center on intellectual content and skills becoming part of the student's life and character: (1) development of the habit of reflective and evaluative thinking; (2) growth in the ability to read and understand philosophic literature and to write well about this material; (3) gaining an acquaintance with the intellectual tradition of the West; (4) acquiring the ability to apply philosophical concepts to life's problems; (5) making serious progress in formulating one's own world and life view; and (6) advancing towards full intellectual and personal integration of academic studies with Christian teaching. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – Anthropology | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 200 - General Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 300 - Magic, Witchcraft and Sorcery, ANTH 310 - Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture and Society, ANTH 361 - Anthropology of Gender, ANTH 400 - Political Anthropology, ANTH 401 - History of Anthropological Theory, ANTH 402 - Family, Kinship and Gender, ANTH 403 - Economy, Society and Values. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – Applied Linguistics | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - INAL 301 - General Articulatory Phonetics, INAL 403 - Introduction to Phonology, INAL 405 - Introduction to Syntax, INAL 437 - Introduction to Literacy, INAL 446 - Introduction to Sociolinguistics, INAL 452 - Field Methods in Linguistics, INAL 453 - Introduction to Bible Translation, INAL 454 - Field Methods in Second Language and Culture Learning, INCS 310 - General Linguistics, INCS 313 - Language and Culture Learning. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – Area Studies | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This program provides students with personal cross-cultural experience by studying abroad for one semester in one of the eight programs offered at Biola. Areas of study include: Belize, China, Costa Rica, Egypt, Honduras, Japan, Russia, the South Pacific, Uganda. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – Church Planting | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 200 - General Cultural Anthropology, INCS 233 - Foundations for Global Studies, INCS 322 - Interpersonal and Intercultural Adjustment, INCS 350A - Field Internship, INCS 350B - Field Internship, INCS 457 - Urban Research, INCS 458 - Village and Tribal Cultures, INCS 333 - Discipleship Multiplication, INCS 334 - Church Planting Models and Strategies, INCS 338 - Urban Church Planting Models: L.A. Excursion, INCS 451 - Principles of Church Growth, INCS 460 - Urban Practicum. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – Cross-cultural Healthcare | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 200 - General Cultural Anthropology, INCS 233 - Foundations for Global Studies, INCS 322 - Interpersonal and Intercultural Adjustment, INCS 350A - Field Internship, INCS 350B - Field Internship, INCS 345 - Introduction to International Development, INCS 347 - Micro Issues in Relief and Development. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – Global Stewardship Program | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 200 - General Cultural Anthropology, INCS 233 - Foundations for Global Studies, INCS 322 - Interpersonal and Intercultural Adjustment, INCS 350A - Field Internship, INCS 350B - Field Internship, INCS 457 - Urban Research, INCS 458 - Village and Tribal Cultures, ANTH 403 - Economy, Society and Values. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – International Development | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 403 - Economy, Society and Values, HIST 400 - Studies in Developing Nations, INCS 345 - Introduction to International Development, INCS 347 - Micro Issues in Relief and Development, INCS 433 - Community Development Models and Strategies, INCS 435 - Project Design and Assessment, INCS 455 - Poverty and the City, INCS 485 - Topics in Intercultural Studies. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – Religious Studies | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ANTH 330 - California Native Americans, INCS 425 - Spiritual Conflicts in Cross-cultural Context, INCS 445 - New Religious Movements, INCS 453 - Christianity and Culture, INCS 456 - World Religions, SOCI 402 - Religion and Society. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - INCS 310 - General Linguistics, INTE 309 - English Pronunciation and Grammar for TESOL, INTE 421 - Introduction to TESOL: Adult, INTE 427 - Materials Evaluation and Preparation, INTE 441 - Intercultural Communication for Teachers, INTE 460 - Communicating Values Through TESOL, INTE 492 - Practicum in TESOL I. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Intercultural Studies – Theory of Missions | Full Time | 36 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - INCS 331 - Peoples of Ethnic America, INCS 332 - Peoples of the World, INCS 333 - Discipleship Multiplication, INCS 420 - Intercultural Communication, INCS 446 - History of the Expansion of Christianity, INCS 453 - Christianity and Culture, INCS 468 - Women in Missions, INCS 470 - Seminar / Intercultural Studies: Selected Topics and Issues in Missions. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Journalism - Broadcast News | Full Time | 45 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Mass Communications Department | This program provides knowledge about the theory, history and concepts of deadline news | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MCOM 106 - Convergent Journalism, MCOM 107 - Convergent Journalism II, MCOM 110 - Contemporary Issues in Mass Media, MCOM 202 - Introduction to Mass Media, MCOM 225 - Introduction to Photography and Photo Editing, MCOM 231 - Public Affairs Reporting, MCOM 233 - Photojournalism for Broadcast News, MCOM 300 - Journalism Practicum, MCOM 336 - Broadcast Journalism I, MCOM 337 - Broadcast Journalism Il, MCOM 433 - Mass Media Law and Ethics, MCOM 440 - Mass Communication Internship, MCOM 461 - Philosophy of Journalism, MCOM 467 - Media Career Readiness. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Mass Communications Department | Mass Communications Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 777 4052 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Journalism - Print News | Full Time | 45 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Mass Communications Department | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MCOM 106 - Convergent Journalism, MCOM 107 - Convergent Journalism II, MCOM 110 - Contemporary Issues in Mass Media, MCOM 202 - Introduction to Mass Media, MCOM 225 - Introduction to Photography and Photo Editing, MCOM 231 - Public Affairs Reporting, MCOM 233 - Photojournalism for Broadcast News, MCOM 300 - Journalism Practicum, MCOM 336 - Broadcast Journalism I, MCOM 337 - Broadcast Journalism Il, MCOM 433 - Mass Media Law and Ethics, MCOM 440 - Mass Communication Internship, MCOM 461 - Philosophy of Journalism, MCOM 467 - Media Career Readiness. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Mass Communications Department | Mass Communications Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 777 4052 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Journalism – Public Relations | Full Time | 45 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Mass Communications Department | In this program, students will learn how to understand audiences and convey messages through a wide range of media. They will learn the techniques of both feature and news writing, and study how to use photos, graphics, audio and video messages and strategic Web sites to improve communication between people and organizations. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MCOM 106 - Convergent Journalism, MCOM 107 - Convergent Journalism II, MCOM 110 - Contemporary Issues in Mass Media, MCOM 111 - Introduction to Public Relations, MCOM 202 - Introduction to Mass Media, MCOM 225 - Introduction to Photography and Photo Editing, MCOM 232 - Writing for Public Relations, MCOM 300 - Journalism Practicum, MCOM 332 - Principles, Practices of Editing and Design, MCOM 389 - Advanced Public Relations, MCOM 433 - Mass Media Law and Ethics, MCOM 440 - Mass Communication Internship, MCOM 458 - Mass Communication Research, MCOM 461 - Philosophy of Journalism, MCOM 467 - Media Career Readiness. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Mass Communications Department | Mass Communications Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 777 4052 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Journalism – Visual Journalism | Full Time | 45 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Mass Communications Department | In this program, students will develop the artistic, technical and business skills needed to harness the power of images and succeed as a visual journalist. Visual journalists in the changing world of media must be prepared to blend traditional techniques - still camera work and print media - with new expressions such as blogging, podcasting and digital visual documentaries. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MCOM 106 - Convergent Journalism, MCOM 107 - Convergent Journalism II, MCOM 110 - Contemporary Issues in Mass Media, MCOM 202 - Introduction to Mass Media, MCOM 225 - Introduction to Photography and Photo Editing, MCOM 231 - Public Affairs Reporting, MCOM 249 - Desktop Publishing, MCOM 300 - Journalism Practicum, MCOM 347 - Introduction to Photojournalism, MCOM 433 - Mass Media Law and Ethics, MCOM 440 - Mass Communication Internship, MCOM 461 - Philosophy of Journalism, MCOM 466 - Advanced Photojournalism, MCOM 467 - Media Career Readiness. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Mass Communications Department | Mass Communications Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 777 4052 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Studies | Full Time | 34 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | School of Education | This program is ideal for those who plan to teach in an elementary school classroom. The program is also an option for students who want a broad liberal arts education before entering careers in business or government or moving on to seminary or law school. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ARTS 306 - Elementary Art Workshop, BBST 109 - Old Testament History and Literature, HIST 403 - California History, INCS 331 - Peoples of Ethnic America, LEDU 335 - Child Development: Birth through Adolescence, LEDU 341 - Methods of Teaching Linguistically Diverse Students, LEDU 380 - Children’s Literature, MATH 104 - College Algebra, MATH 118 - Fundamentals of Mathematics for Elementary Teachers II, MUSC 310 - Elementary Music Workshop, PHSC 101 - Physical Science Survey - Lecture, PHSC 102 - Physical Science Survey - Laboratory. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Philosophy Department | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - PHIL 210: Introduction to Logic, PHIL 214: Introduction to Philosophy, PHIL 216: Introduction to Philosophy and Aesthetics, PHIL 301: Greek and Roman Philosophy, PHIL 302: Medieval Philosophy, PHIL 303: Modern Philosophy, PHIL 312: Symbolic Logic, PHIL 350: Philosophy Seminar, PHIL 411: Metaphysics, PHIL 412: Epistemology, PHIL 413: Ethics, PHIL 414: Philosophy of Religion, PHIL 415: Advanced Studies in the History of Philosophy, PHIL 425: Advanced Studies in the Divisions of Philosophy, PHIL 435: Advanced Studies in Philosophical Topics, PHIL 450: Advanced Philosophy seminar/Senior Thesis, PHIL 460: Readings in Philosophy, PHIL 480: Directed Research. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Philosophy Department | Philosophy Department, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | The objectives of the undergraduate Philosophy Department center on intellectual content and skills becoming part of the student's life and character: (1) development of the habit of reflective and evaluative thinking; (2) growth in the ability to read and understand philosophic literature and to write well about this material; (3) gaining an acquaintance with the intellectual tradition of the West; (4) acquiring the ability to apply philosophical concepts to life's problems; (5) making serious progress in formulating one's own world and life view; and (6) advancing towards full intellectual and personal integration of academic studies with Christian teaching. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | This program enables students to understand the fundamental socio-political institutions of society, and their effect on contemporary life; to participate in and contribute to the political process; to assess the propriety of political issues and government policies; and to recognize and help meet the needs of the local, state, national and international community; all in a manner consistent with biblical Christianity. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - HIST 207 - World Civilizations I, HIST 208 - World Civilizations II, POSC 225 - Survey of American Government, POSC 203 - Politics and Economics, POSC 320 - The American Presidency, POSC 305 - Comparative Government, POSC 350 - Political Philosophy – Ancient. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | Department of History, Government, and Social Science, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 944 0351 | The department emphasizes depth and breadth in history and the social sciences as the foundation for understanding of the world. History as a contextual discipline sheds light on all world civilizations, and illuminates the human condition while at the same time providing insight into the present. The program, therefore, places emphasis on in-depth study of global geographical regions, themes, and eras. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Psychology | Full Time | 35 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Psychology | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - PSYC 200 - Introduction to Psychology, PSYC 206 - Psychology and Christian Thought, PSYC 209 - Statistics with Computer Applications, PSYC 211 - Statistics with Computer Applications Lab, PSYC 305 - Experimental Psychology, PSYC 320 - Developmental Psychology: Lifespan, PSYC 365 - Cognitive Psychology, PSYC 411 - Theories of Personality, Human Sexuality, Abnormal Psychology, Developmental Psychology: Child or Adolescence, Psychology of Family. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Psychology | Department of Psychology, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4738 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Social Science | Full Time | 30 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | The multidisciplinary nature of this program allows student's to focus on one specific social science and to take classes in two other disciplines, thereby strengthening broad understanding of the academic study of society and culture. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | Department of History, Government, and Social Science, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 944 0351 | The department emphasizes depth and breadth in history and the social sciences as the foundation for understanding of the world. History as a contextual discipline sheds light on all world civilizations, and illuminates the human condition while at the same time providing insight into the present. The program, therefore, places emphasis on in-depth study of global geographical regions, themes, and eras. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Arts in Spanish | Full Time | 39 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Modern Languages | The objectives of this program are: 1) to develop the Spanish language and cultural skills of students who seek to be servants in Spanish-speaking environments in the US and abroad; 2) to provide significant hands-on experience in serving in these environments; and 3) to guide the students' development of the holistic integrative reasoning that is necessary to successfully serve others. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Admission to the Spanish major program requires: Complete Spanish 210 or 220 in the semester prior to admission with a grade of B or higher or a satisfactory score on a normed placement exam given by the department, and File an application, with an essay in Spanish to the department. An interview with department faculty is required. This process normally should be completed by the end of the Freshman year. Prerequisite coursework or approved equivalents are: Spanish 210 or 220 and Anthropology 200 (to fulfill the Behavioral Science requirement). | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - HUFS 315 - Spanish Conversation and Composition, HUFS 320 - Spanish Conversation, Grammar and Composition, HUFS 460 - Studies in Spanish American Culture, HUFS 470 - Teaching Assistant Practicum, HUFS 485 - Internship, HUFS 490 - Seminar in Hispanic Studies, COMM 280 - Oral Interpretation, HIST 312 - History of Latin America. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Modern Languages | Department of Modern Languages, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | The Modern Language Department seeks to provide effective language training in the context of the Christian faith and the cultures of the respective languages that it offers. At the general education level it desires to provide an understanding of the nature of language as well as a moderate level of command of the selected language (French and Spanish). For the student who is serious about developing a mastery of a language, it offers a Spanish major and minor that are strongly focused on preparation for service in Spanish-speaking contexts. The objectives of the Spanish major are: 1) to develop the Spanish language and cultural skills of students who seek to be servants in Spanish-speaking environments in the US and abroad; 2) to provide significant hands-on experience in serving in these environments; and 3) to guide the students’ development of the holistic integrative reasoning that is necessary to successfully serve others. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art - Design | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Art | This program integrates a fine arts perspective into a curriculum that promotes conceptual thinking while developing technical proficiency and allows students to work in a variety of areas including graphic design, web-design and motion graphics. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ARTS 107 - Drawing I, ARTS 108 - Figure Studies I, ARTS 109 - Digital Tools, ARTS 110 - 2-D Design, ARTS 111 - 3-D Design, ARTS 112 - 4-D Design, ARTS 116 - History of Western Art I: Prehistoric Through Gothic, ARTS 126 - History of Western Art II: Renaissance through Romanticism, ARTS 311 - Modernity: Realism to Surrealism, ARTS 315 - Contemporary Art Trends, ARTS 433 - Global Art Paradigms, ARTS 440 - Senior Seminar, ARTS 450 - Internship, ARTS 475 - Culmination, ARTS 312 - Letters and Symbols, ARTS 314 - Integrated Design I, ARTS 321 - Historical Development of Design, ARTS 423 - Integrated Design II, ARTS 429 - Integrated Design III. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Art | Department of Art, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | At Biola University the art professors are committed to training students so they are equipped with the aesthetic, technical and conceptual skills necessary for success in contemporary society. The University’s location in the midst of Los Angeles, an international melting pot of ideas, images and realities, makes it a wonderful place to learn about and respond to contemporary visual arts culture—its social, political, philosophical and spiritual concerns. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art - Interdisciplinary | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Art | This program allows students to design their own curriculum choosing a variety of upper-level courses. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ARTS 107 - Drawing I, ARTS 108 - Figure Studies I, ARTS 109 - Digital Tools, ARTS 110 - 2-D Design, ARTS 111 - 3-D Design, ARTS 112 - 4-D Design, ARTS 116 - History of Western Art I: Prehistoric Through Gothic, ARTS 126 - History of Western Art II: Renaissance through Romanticism, ARTS 311 - Modernity: Realism to Surrealism, ARTS 315 - Contemporary Art Trends, ARTS 433 - Global Art Paradigms, ARTS 440 - Senior Seminar, ARTS 450 - Internship, ARTS 475 - Culmination, ARTS 210 - Sculpture I, ARTS 211 - Ceramics I, ARTS 213 - Painting I, ARTS 221 - Photography I, ARTS 314 - Integrated Design I, ARTS 326 - Printmaking, ARTS 331 - Digital Photography I, ARTS 341 - Animation I, ARTS 348 - Video Art I. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Art | Department of Art, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | At Biola University the art professors are committed to training students so they are equipped with the aesthetic, technical and conceptual skills necessary for success in contemporary society. The University’s location in the midst of Los Angeles, an international melting pot of ideas, images and realities, makes it a wonderful place to learn about and respond to contemporary visual arts culture—its social, political, philosophical and spiritual concerns. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art - Painting | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Art | This program embraces traditional and non-traditional approaches to drawing and painting while engaging students in current discourses within the discipline. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ARTS 107 - Drawing I, ARTS 108 - Figure Studies I, ARTS 109 - Digital Tools, ARTS 110 - 2-D Design, ARTS 111 - 3-D Design, ARTS 112 - 4-D Design, ARTS 116 - History of Western Art I: Prehistoric Through Gothic, ARTS 126 - History of Western Art II: Renaissance through Romanticism, ARTS 311 - Modernity: Realism to Surrealism, ARTS 315 - Contemporary Art Trends, ARTS 433 - Global Art Paradigms, ARTS 440 - Senior Seminar, ARTS 450 - Internship, ARTS 475 - Culmination, ARTS 213 - Painting I, ARTS 308 - Painting II, ARTS 408 - Drawing III, ARTS 413 - Painting III. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Art | Department of Art, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | At Biola University the art professors are committed to training students so they are equipped with the aesthetic, technical and conceptual skills necessary for success in contemporary society. The University’s location in the midst of Los Angeles, an international melting pot of ideas, images and realities, makes it a wonderful place to learn about and respond to contemporary visual arts culture—its social, political, philosophical and spiritual concerns. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art - Photography | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Art | This program focuses on integrating the skills of black and white darkroom techniques with contemporary digital color practices to produce conceptually-driven, photo-based art. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ARTS 107 - Drawing I, ARTS 108 - Figure Studies I, ARTS 109 - Digital Tools, ARTS 110 - 2-D Design, ARTS 111 - 3-D Design, ARTS 112 - 4-D Design, ARTS 116 - History of Western Art I: Prehistoric Through Gothic, ARTS 126 - History of Western Art II: Renaissance through Romanticism, ARTS 311 - Modernity: Realism to Surrealism, ARTS 315 - Contemporary Art Trends, ARTS 433 - Global Art Paradigms, ARTS 440 - Senior Seminar, ARTS 450 - Internship, ARTS 475 - Culmination, ARTS 221 - Photography I, ARTS 322 - Photography II, ARTS 323 - Photography III, ARTS 331 - Digital Photography I, ARTS 345 - Digital Photography II. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Art | Department of Art, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | At Biola University the art professors are committed to training students so they are equipped with the aesthetic, technical and conceptual skills necessary for success in contemporary society. The University’s location in the midst of Los Angeles, an international melting pot of ideas, images and realities, makes it a wonderful place to learn about and respond to contemporary visual arts culture—its social, political, philosophical and spiritual concerns. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art - Sculpture | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Art | This program equips students to think creatively while developing proficiency in a variety of three-dimensional fabrication techniques - including additive and subtractive processes, modeling, carving, mold-making and casting. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - ARTS 107 - Drawing I, ARTS 108 - Figure Studies I, ARTS 109 - Digital Tools, ARTS 110 - 2-D Design, ARTS 111 - 3-D Design, ARTS 112 - 4-D Design, ARTS 116 - History of Western Art I: Prehistoric Through Gothic, ARTS 126 - History of Western Art II: Renaissance through Romanticism, ARTS 311 - Modernity: Realism to Surrealism, ARTS 315 - Contemporary Art Trends, ARTS 433 - Global Art Paradigms, ARTS 440 - Senior Seminar, ARTS 450 - Internship, ARTS 475 - Culmination, ARTS 210 - Sculpture I, ARTS 211 - Ceramics I, ARTS 305 - Sculpture II, ARTS 415 - Sculpture III. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Art | Department of Art, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | At Biola University the art professors are committed to training students so they are equipped with the aesthetic, technical and conceptual skills necessary for success in contemporary society. The University’s location in the midst of Los Angeles, an international melting pot of ideas, images and realities, makes it a wonderful place to learn about and respond to contemporary visual arts culture—its social, political, philosophical and spiritual concerns. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Composition | Full Time | 48 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | The Composition degree is one of the most exciting areas of study within the Biola Conservatory. It will give hands on experience in composing concert and film music. Each year students will learn to write in a wide variety of styles and will enjoy live performances of their pieces. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 120 - Keyboard IV, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 181 - Introduction to Composition, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 340 - Special Studies: Theory / Composition, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 342 - Orchestration, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 344 - Form and Analysis II, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Composition - Organ | Full Time | 48 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program provides training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Organ majors at Biola receive the training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Biola has a longstanding tradition in training organists. Under the direction of Janet Harms, organ majors survey the great tradition of organ literature and develop church music playing skills. Organ students also have access to the 3-manual, 26 rank, Schantz pipe organ. The organ which features over 1,625 pipes has been acclaimed as one of the premier instruments found in southern California. The Composition degree is one of the most exciting areas of study within the Biola Conservatory. It will gives students hands on experience in composing concert and film music. Each year they will learn to write in a wide variety of styles and will enjoy live performances of their pieces. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 120 - Keyboard IV, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 181 - Introduction to Composition, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 340 - Special Studies: Theory / Composition, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 342 - Orchestration, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 344 - Form and Analysis II, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Composition - Piano | Full Time | 48 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program allows students to learn not only how to develop their technical and interpretive skills, but also to develop their knowledge of solo and chamber repertoire, as well as developing their ability to be strong teachers. The Composition degree is one of the most exciting areas of study within the Biola Conservatory. It will give hands on experience in composing concert and film music. Each year students will learn to write in a wide variety of styles and will enjoy live performances of their pieces. Biola University piano students also have ample opportunity to participate in competitions both on and off campus. Twice a year, the piano department holds solo competitions, the winners of which are given additional music scholarships. Also each year, a concerto competition is held, the winner being given the honor of performing in concert with the Biola Symphony Orchestra. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 120 - Keyboard IV, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 181 - Introduction to Composition, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 340 - Special Studies: Theory / Composition, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 342 - Orchestration, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 344 - Form and Analysis II, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Composition - String | Full Time | 48 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program provides guidance and encouragement for students to achieve the highest artistic and intellectual standard of which they are capable. The Composition degree is one of the most exciting areas of study within the Biola Conservatory. It will give hands on experience in composing concert and film music. Each year students will learn to write in a wide variety of styles and will enjoy live performances of their pieces. The Biola University string faculty is dedicated to guiding and encouraging students to achieve the highest artistic and intellectual standard of which they are capable. This occurs through large ensembles, chamber music, and individual instruction. The faculty seeks to provide a base of artistic and pedagogical understanding that will motivate and equip students to find their own, unique voice as musicians. The faculty seek to prepare students for a variety of career options in traditional and emerging fields. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 120 - Keyboard IV, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 181 - Introduction to Composition, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 340 - Special Studies: Theory / Composition, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 342 - Orchestration, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 344 - Form and Analysis II, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Composition - Voice | Full Time | 48 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program provides opportunities to students to develop strong vocal and musical interpretation skills. The Composition degree is one of the most exciting areas of study within the Biola Conservatory. It will give hands on experience in composing concert and film music. Each year students will learn to write in a wide variety of styles and will enjoy live performances of their pieces. In addition, weekly group study in the form of a voice workshop, participation in one or more of several outstanding choral ensembles, and the opportunity to be a part of a dynamic opera workshop program are all part of the singer's exhilarating experience at Biola. The atmosphere, which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God, will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 120 - Keyboard IV, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 181 - Introduction to Composition, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 340 - Special Studies: Theory / Composition, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 342 - Orchestration, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 344 - Form and Analysis II, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Composition - Winds and Percussion | Full Time | 48 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | The Composition degree is one of the most exciting areas of study within the Biola Conservatory. It will give hands on experience in composing concert and film music. Each year students will learn to write in a wide variety of styles and will enjoy live performances of their pieces. Performance opportunities in both large and small ensembles will challenge and stretch the best players. The atmosphere which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 120 - Keyboard IV, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 181 - Introduction to Composition, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 340 - Special Studies: Theory / Composition, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 342 - Orchestration, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 344 - Form and Analysis II, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Music Education | Full Time | 55 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This degree is intended for the student who desires to pursue a career in teaching elementary, junior high or high school music. The preparational emphasis includes the general core of music courses, the acquisition of performance skills in a major performing medium, and rehearsal, conducting, and musical interpretive skills necessary to work as a music leader in an educational context. These goals are achieved through private lessons, formal and informal recitals, large and small ensembles, basic and advanced conducting, instrumental and choral literature courses, and music education workshops in woodwinds, brass, percussion, stringed instruments, and in music drama. Ensemble student conductor positions, teaching assistantships, student observation and student teaching provide opportunities for "hands on" experience. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 205 - Introduction to Music Education, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 320G - Marching Band Lab, MUSC 324 - Advanced Studies in Conducting, MUSC 328 - General Music Methods, MUSC 332 - Music for Children, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 348 - Vocal and Instrumental Arranging for Schools, MUSC 390 - Opera Workshop, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 470 - Senior Recital / Final Project. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Music Education - Organ | Full Time | 55 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This degree is intended for the student who desires to pursue a career in teaching elementary, junior high or high school music. The preparational emphasis includes the general core of music courses, the acquisition of performance skills in a major performing medium, and rehearsal, conducting, and musical interpretive skills necessary to work as a music leader in an educational context. These goals are achieved through private lessons, formal and informal recitals, large and small ensembles, basic and advanced conducting, instrumental and choral literature courses, and music education workshops in woodwinds, brass, percussion, stringed instruments, and in music drama. Ensemble student conductor positions, teaching assistantships, student observation and student teaching provide opportunities for "hands on" experience. Organ majors at Biola receive the training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Biola has a longstanding tradition in training organists. Under the direction of Janet Harms, organ majors survey the great tradition of organ literature and develop church music playing skills. Organ students also have access to the 3-manual, 26 rank, Schantz pipe organ. The organ which features over 1,625 pipes has been acclaimed as one of the premier instruments found in southern California. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 205 - Introduction to Music Education, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 320G - Marching Band Lab, MUSC 324 - Advanced Studies in Conducting, MUSC 328 - General Music Methods, MUSC 332 - Music for Children, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 348 - Vocal and Instrumental Arranging for Schools, MUSC 390 - Opera Workshop, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 470 - Senior Recital / Final Project. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Music Education - Piano | Full Time | 55 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This degree is intended for the student who desires to pursue a career in teaching elementary, junior high or high school music. The preparational emphasis includes the general core of music courses, the acquisition of performance skills in a major performing medium, and rehearsal, conducting, and musical interpretive skills necessary to work as a music leader in an educational context. These goals are achieved through private lessons, formal and informal recitals, large and small ensembles, basic and advanced conducting, instrumental and choral literature courses, and music education workshops in woodwinds, brass, percussion, stringed instruments, and in music drama. Ensemble student conductor positions, teaching assistantships, student observation and student teaching provide opportunities for "hands on" experience. Biola University piano students also have ample opportunity to participate in competitions both on and off campus. Twice a year, the piano department holds solo competitions, the winners of which are given additional music scholarships. Also each year, a concerto competition is held, the winner being given the honor of performing in concert with the Biola Symphony Orchestra. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 205 - Introduction to Music Education, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 320G - Marching Band Lab, MUSC 324 - Advanced Studies in Conducting, MUSC 328 - General Music Methods, MUSC 332 - Music for Children, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 348 - Vocal and Instrumental Arranging for Schools, MUSC 390 - Opera Workshop, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 470 - Senior Recital / Final Project. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Music Education - String | Full Time | 55 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This degree is intended for the student who desires to pursue a career in teaching elementary, junior high or high school music. The preparational emphasis includes the general core of music courses, the acquisition of performance skills in a major performing medium, and rehearsal, conducting, and musical interpretive skills necessary to work as a music leader in an educational context. These goals are achieved through private lessons, formal and informal recitals, large and small ensembles, basic and advanced conducting, instrumental and choral literature courses, and music education workshops in woodwinds, brass, percussion, stringed instruments, and in music drama. Ensemble student conductor positions, teaching assistantships, student observation and student teaching provide opportunities for "hands on" experience. The Biola University string faculty is dedicated to guiding and encouraging students to achieve the highest artistic and intellectual standard of which they are capable. This occurs through large ensembles, chamber music, and individual instruction. The faculty seeks to provide a base of artistic and pedagogical understanding that will motivate and equip students to find their own, unique voice as musicians. The faculty seek to prepare students for a variety of career options in traditional and emerging fields. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 205 - Introduction to Music Education, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 320G - Marching Band Lab, MUSC 324 - Advanced Studies in Conducting, MUSC 328 - General Music Methods, MUSC 332 - Music for Children, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 348 - Vocal and Instrumental Arranging for Schools, MUSC 390 - Opera Workshop, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 470 - Senior Recital / Final Project. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Music Education - Voice | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This degree is intended for the student who desires to pursue a career in teaching elementary, junior high or high school music. The preparational emphasis includes the general core of music courses, the acquisition of performance skills in a major performing medium, and rehearsal, conducting, and musical interpretive skills necessary to work as a music leader in an educational context. These goals are achieved through private lessons, formal and informal recitals, large and small ensembles, basic and advanced conducting, instrumental and choral literature courses, and music education workshops in woodwinds, brass, percussion, stringed instruments, and in music drama. Ensemble student conductor positions, teaching assistantships, student observation and student teaching provide opportunities for "hands on" experience. In addition, weekly group study in the form of a voice workshop, participation in one or more of several outstanding choral ensembles, and the opportunity to be a part of a dynamic opera workshop program are all part of the singer's exhilarating experience at Biola. The atmosphere, which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God, will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 205 - Introduction to Music Education, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 320G - Marching Band Lab, MUSC 324 - Advanced Studies in Conducting, MUSC 328 - General Music Methods, MUSC 332 - Music for Children, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 348 - Vocal and Instrumental Arranging for Schools, MUSC 390 - Opera Workshop, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 470 - Senior Recital / Final Project. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Music Education - Winds and Percussion | Full Time | 55 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This degree is intended for the student who desires to pursue a career in teaching elementary, junior high or high school music. The preparational emphasis includes the general core of music courses, the acquisition of performance skills in a major performing medium, and rehearsal, conducting, and musical interpretive skills necessary to work as a music leader in an educational context. These goals are achieved through private lessons, formal and informal recitals, large and small ensembles, basic and advanced conducting, instrumental and choral literature courses, and music education workshops in woodwinds, brass, percussion, stringed instruments, and in music drama. Ensemble student conductor positions, teaching assistantships, student observation and student teaching provide opportunities for "hands on" experience. The atmosphere which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 205 - Introduction to Music Education, MUSC 320 - Music Education, MUSC 320G - Marching Band Lab, MUSC 324 - Advanced Studies in Conducting, MUSC 328 - General Music Methods, MUSC 332 - Music for Children, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 348 - Vocal and Instrumental Arranging for Schools, MUSC 390 - Opera Workshop, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 470 - Senior Recital / Final Project. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Performance | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is for students who wish to pursue a career as a professional performer; or teach privately or on the college/university level; or concentrate on developing their performance skill to the highest level possible. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 280 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 350A - Advanced Keyboard Skills, MUSC 360 - Piano Accompanying, MUSC 370 - Junior Recital, MUSC 380 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 430 - Pedagogy, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Performance - Organ | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is for students who wish to pursue a career as a professional performer; or teach privately or on the college/university level; or concentrate on developing their performance skill to the highest level possible. This program also provides training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Organ majors at Biola receive the training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Biola has a longstanding tradition in training organists. Under the direction of Janet Harms, organ majors survey the great tradition of organ literature and develop church music playing skills. Organ students also have access to the 3-manual, 26 rank, Schantz pipe organ. The organ which features over 1,625 pipes has been acclaimed as one of the premier instruments found in southern California. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 280 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 350A - Advanced Keyboard Skills, MUSC 360 - Piano Accompanying, MUSC 370 - Junior Recital, MUSC 380 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 430 - Pedagogy, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Performance - Piano | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is for students who wish to pursue a career as a professional performer; or teach privately or on the college/university level; or concentrate on developing their performance skill to the highest level possible. This program also allows students to learn not only how to develop their technical and interpretive skills, but also to develop their knowledge of solo and chamber repertoire, as well as developing their ability to be strong teachers. Biola University piano students also have ample opportunity to participate in competitions both on and off campus. Twice a year, the piano department holds solo competitions, the winners of which are given additional music scholarships. Also each year, a concerto competition is held, the winner being given the honor of performing in concert with the Biola Symphony Orchestra. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 280 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 350A - Advanced Keyboard Skills, MUSC 360 - Piano Accompanying, MUSC 370 - Junior Recital, MUSC 380 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 430 - Pedagogy, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Performance - String | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is for students who wish to pursue a career as a professional performer; or teach privately or on the college/university level; or concentrate on developing their performance skill to the highest level possible. This program also provides guidance and encouragement for students to achieve the highest artistic and intellectual standard of which they are capable. The Biola University string faculty is dedicated to guiding and encouraging students to achieve the highest artistic and intellectual standard of which they are capable. This occurs through large ensembles, chamber music, and individual instruction. The faculty seeks to provide a base of artistic and pedagogical understanding that will motivate and equip students to find their own, unique voice as musicians. The faculty seek to prepare students for a variety of career options in traditional and emerging fields. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 118 - Keyboard II, MUSC 119 - Keyboard III, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 211 - Improvisation: Concepts / Practice, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 300 - Concert Music, MUSC 307 - Music History and Literature: Medieval Through Early Baroque, MUSC 308 - Music History and Literature: Mid-Baroque Through Classic, MUSC 309 - Music History and Literature: Late Romantic Through Early 20th Century, MUSC 312 - Music Theory / History and Literature of the 20th Century, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 410 - Music Cultures of the World, MUSC 421 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 440 - Church Music. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Performance - Voice | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is for students who wish to pursue a career as a professional performer; or teach privately or on the college/university level; or concentrate on developing their performance skill to the highest level possible. This program also provides opportunities to students to develop strong vocal and musical interpretation skills. In addition, weekly group study in the form of a voice workshop, participation in one or more of several outstanding choral ensembles, and the opportunity to be a part of a dynamic opera workshop program are all part of the singer's exhilarating experience at Biola. The atmosphere, which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God, will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 280 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 350A - Advanced Keyboard Skills, MUSC 360 - Piano Accompanying, MUSC 370 - Junior Recital, MUSC 380 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 430 - Pedagogy, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Music Degree in Performance - Winds and Percussion | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is for students who wish to pursue a career as a professional performer; or teach privately or on the college/university level; or concentrate on developing their performance skill to the highest level possible. The atmosphere which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 102 - Voice Class, MUSC 142 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 260A - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 260B - Keyboard Sight Reading, MUSC 280 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 341 - Counterpoint, MUSC 343 - Form and Analysis I, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 350A - Advanced Keyboard Skills, MUSC 360 - Piano Accompanying, MUSC 370 - Junior Recital, MUSC 380 - Performance Seminar, MUSC 420 - Special Studies in Music Literature, MUSC 422 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 423 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 430 - Pedagogy, MUSC 490 - Senior Recital. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree Human Biology - Pre-Chiropractic | Full Time | 71 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | A Bachelor of Science degree in Human Biology with an emphasis in pre-Chiropractic is offered in cooperation with Los Angeles College of Chiropractic at the Southern California University of Health Sciences upon completion of the university baccalaureate and major requirements. Students attend Biola for three years taking courses in biology, chemistry, physics, biblical studies and the liberal arts. The upper division biology courses are taken at Los Angeles College of Chiropractic the final year. Upon successful completion of the program, the student receives a B.S. degree with a major in Human Biology from Biola. Upon successful completion of the entire chiropractic program and examinations the student receives the D.C. degree from Los Angeles College of Chiropractic. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BIOS 282 - Microbiology, BIOS 301 - Vertebrate Biology, BIOS 310 - Prosection, BIOS 332 - Genetics, BIOS 402 - Parasitology, BIOS 411 - Biochemistry I, BIOS 412 - Biochemistry II, BIOS 422A - Laboratory in Biochemistry, BIOS 422B - Laboratory in Biochemistry, BIOS 442 - Immunology, BIOS 460 - Practicum, CHEM 302 - Organic Chemistry, CHEM 312 - Laboratory in Organic Chemistry, PEED 301 - Kinesiology, PEED 302 - Exercise Physiology, PSYC 309 - Abnormal Psychology, PSYC 320 - Developmental Psychology: Lifespan, PSYC 325 - Developmental Psychology: Childhood and Adolescence. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree Human Biology - Pre-Health Care Professional | Full Time | 71 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | A Bachelor of Science degree in Human Biology for Pre-Health Care Professions careers, especially Pre-Physical Therapy and Pre-Physician’s Assistant is offered upon the completion of the university baccalaureate and major requirements in consultation with an academic advisor. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BIOS 282 - Microbiology, BIOS 301 - Vertebrate Biology, BIOS 310 - Prosection, BIOS 332 - Genetics, BIOS 402 - Parasitology, BIOS 411 - Biochemistry I, BIOS 412 - Biochemistry II, BIOS 422A - Laboratory in Biochemistry, BIOS 422B - Laboratory in Biochemistry, BIOS 442 - Immunology, BIOS 460 - Practicum, CHEM 302 - Organic Chemistry, CHEM 312 - Laboratory in Organic Chemistry, PEED 301 - Kinesiology, PEED 302 - Exercise Physiology, PSYC 309 - Abnormal Psychology, PSYC 320 - Developmental Psychology: Lifespan, PSYC 325 - Developmental Psychology: Childhood and Adolescence. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Communication Disorders | Full Time | 56 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Communication Disorders | This program is a pre-professional degree that provides the student with a foundation in normal communication and an understanding of the complexities of communication disorders. It is the aim of the department to set this knowledge within the framework of a Christian perspective. Students completing this major should be fully prepared for the graduate work necessary for certification and licensure in the fields of Speech-Language Pathology or Audiology. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CODS 210 - Introduction to Human Disabilities, CODS 318 - Neurology and Neurological Conditions, CODS 321 - Clinical Phonetics and Phonology, CODS 324 - Anatomy and Physiology of Speech, CODS 325 - Speech and Hearing Science, CODS 326 - Speech and Language Development, CODS 327 - Childhood and Adolescent Language Disorders, CODS 328 - Fluency Disorders, CODS 418 - Multi-Cultural Issues in Communication Disorders, CODS 422 - Neurogenic Communication Disorders, CODS 424 - Aural Rehabilitation, CODS 425 - Audiology, CODS 429 - Clinical Practicum: Biola Speech / Language Clinic, CODS 432 - Dysphagia, CODS 439 - Articulation and Phonological Problems, CODS 441 - Diagnostic Methods, CODS 442 - Therapeutic Methods, CODS 444 - Voice and Craniofacial Disorders, CODS 466 - Capstone Research Project in Communication Disorders. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Communication Disorders | Department of Communication Disorders, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 777 4072 | The mission of the department of Communication Disorders at Biola University is to prepare Christian men and women with the proper foundation for graduate studies in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, so they can one day serve with excellence the millions of people whose lives are affected by various speech, language, hearing, cognitive, and swallowing disorders, problems that touch sense of humanness. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Music in Worship | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is a core of traditional music courses including two years of theory and aural skills; studies in music history, keyboard, guitar, voice, and basic conducting; and classical applied lessons. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 185 - Worship Foundations, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 346 - Pop Theory for Contemporary Worship, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 386 - Spiritual Formation and Worship, MUSC 387 - Designing and Leading Worship, MUSC 440 - Church Music, MUSC 452 - Worship Music Seminar, MUSC 453 - Worship Internship. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Music in Worship - Organ | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is a core of traditional music courses including two years of theory and aural skills; studies in music history, keyboard, guitar, voice, and basic conducting; and classical applied lessons. This program also provides training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Organ majors at Biola receive the training in performance and literature that will provide thorough preparation for a church music position or further organ study at the graduate level. Biola has a longstanding tradition in training organists. Under the direction of Janet Harms, organ majors survey the great tradition of organ literature and develop church music playing skills. Organ students also have access to the 3-manual, 26 rank, Schantz pipe organ. The organ which features over 1,625 pipes has been acclaimed as one of the premier instruments found in southern California. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 185 - Worship Foundations, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 346 - Pop Theory for Contemporary Worship, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 386 - Spiritual Formation and Worship, MUSC 387 - Designing and Leading Worship, MUSC 440 - Church Music, MUSC 452 - Worship Music Seminar, MUSC 453 - Worship Internship. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Music in Worship - Piano | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is a core of traditional music courses including two years of theory and aural skills; studies in music history, keyboard, guitar, voice, and basic conducting; and classical applied lessons. This program also allows students to learn not only how to develop their technical and interpretive skills, but also to develop their knowledge of solo and chamber repertoire, as well as developing their ability to be strong teachers. Biola University piano students also have ample opportunity to participate in competitions both on and off campus. Twice a year, the piano department holds solo competitions, the winners of which are given additional music scholarships. Also each year, a concerto competition is held, the winner being given the honor of performing in concert with the Biola Symphony Orchestra. Students have opportunity to perform standard solo literature, play in chamber ensembles, and accompany vocalists and instrumentalists. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 185 - Worship Foundations, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 346 - Pop Theory for Contemporary Worship, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 386 - Spiritual Formation and Worship, MUSC 387 - Designing and Leading Worship, MUSC 440 - Church Music, MUSC 452 - Worship Music Seminar, MUSC 453 - Worship Internship. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Music in Worship - String | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is a core of traditional music courses including two years of theory and aural skills; studies in music history, keyboard, guitar, voice, and basic conducting; and classical applied lessons. This program also provides guidance and encouragement for students to achieve the highest artistic and intellectual standard of which they are capable. The Biola University string faculty is dedicated to guiding and encouraging students to achieve the highest artistic and intellectual standard of which they are capable. This occurs through large ensembles, chamber music, and individual instruction. The faculty seeks to provide a base of artistic and pedagogical understanding that will motivate and equip students to find their own, unique voice as musicians. The faculty seek to prepare students for a variety of career options in traditional and emerging fields. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 185 - Worship Foundations, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing andDictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 346 - Pop Theory for Contemporary Worship, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 386 - Spiritual Formation and Worship, MUSC 387 - Designing and Leading Worship, MUSC 440 - Church Music, MUSC 452 - Worship Music Seminar, MUSC 453 - Worship Internship. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Music in Worship - Voice | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is a core of traditional music courses including two years of theory and aural skills; studies in music history, keyboard, guitar, voice, and basic conducting; and classical applied lessons. This program also provides opportunities to students to develop strong vocal and musical interpretation skills. In addition, weekly group study in the form of a voice workshop, participation in one or more of several outstanding choral ensembles, and the opportunity to be a part of a dynamic opera workshop program are all part of the singer's exhilarating experience at Biola. The atmosphere, which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God, will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 185 - Worship Foundations, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 346 - Pop Theory for Contemporary Worship, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 386 - Spiritual Formation and Worship, MUSC 387 - Designing and Leading Worship, MUSC 440 - Church Music, MUSC 452 - Worship Music Seminar, MUSC 453 - Worship Internship. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Music in Worship - Winds and Percussion | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Conservatory of Music | This program is a core of traditional music courses including two years of theory and aural skills; studies in music history, keyboard, guitar, voice, and basic conducting; and classical applied lessons. Performance opportunities in both large and small ensembles will challenge and stretch the best players. The atmosphere which acknowledges the Lordship of Christ in the life of a Christian and the stewardship of one's musical talent in the worship of God will encourage the growth of the whole person: spiritual, intellectual and social, as well as musical. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a conservatory audition, including a basic musicianship examination designed to demonstrate university level music study readiness. All students seeking admission must demonstrate musical background and performance strengths necessary for successful completion of the stated curriculum. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - MUSC 113A - Sight-Singing and Dictation I, MUSC 113W - Music Theory I, MUSC 114A - Sight-Singing and Dictation II, MUSC 114W - Music Theory Il, MUSC 141 - Applied Music: Private, MUSC 185 - Worship Foundations, MUSC 200 - Concert Music, MUSC 213A - Sight-Singing and Dictation III, MUSC 213W - Music Theory III, MUSC 214A - Sight-Singing and Dictation IV, MUSC 214W - Music Theory IV, MUSC 323 - Basic Conducting, MUSC 346 - Pop Theory for Contemporary Worship, MUSC 347 - Music Technology and Production, MUSC 386 - Spiritual Formation and Worship, MUSC 387 - Designing and Leading Worship, MUSC 440 - Church Music, MUSC 452 - Worship Music Seminar, MUSC 453 - Worship Internship. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Conservatory of Music | Conservatory of Music, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4892 | The Conservatory has a longstanding tradition of academic and performance excellence. The faculty includes graduates from the most prestigious university music programs and conservatories in the country, and critically acclaimed Los Angeles-based musicians active in film, television, and the recording industry. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Nursing | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Nursing | The program is designed to prepare graduates for a career in professional nursing. Graduates of licensed vocational, diploma and associate degree nursing programs may be admitted as transfer students and evaluated individually. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Pre- Nursing students must have a cumulative GPA of 3.3 and a science GPS of 2.5 and have taken at least four full-time semesters. Before being accepted, students must complete the prerequisite college courses with a minimum grade of "C" (2.00). These courses include anatomy, inorganic and organic/biochemistry, communication (100, 170, 181 or 280), English 110A and 110B, first aid, microbiology, physiology, and psychology. Students also are required to earn a cumulative GPA of 3.00 on all pre-nursing college course work. Students with a cumulative GPA of 2.80 to 2.99 may be considered for admission on provisional status if space is available in the program and if there is reason to anticipate the student will be able to complete the program successfully. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - NURS 110 - First Aid/CPR, NURS 201A - Nursing of the Client/Family I-Theory, NURS 201B - Nursing of the Client/Family I-Clinical, NURS 201C - Nursing of the Client/Family I-Nursing Application Lab, NURS 202A - Nursing of the Client/Family II-Theory, NURS 202B - Nursing of the Client/Family II-Clinical, NURS 202C - Nursing of the Client/Family II-Nursing Application Lab, NURS 204 - Essentials of Clinical Nursing Pharmacology, NURS 303A - Nursing Assessment of the Client-Theory, NURS 303B - Nursing Assessment of the Client-Clinical, NURS 340A - Mental Health Nursing of the Client/Family-Theory, NURS 340B - Mental Health Nursing of the Client/Family-Clinical, NURS 342A - Nursing of the Childbearing Family-Theory, NURS 342B - Nursing of the Childbearing Family-Clinical, NURS 344A - Nursing of the Older Adult Client/Family-Theory, NURS 344B - Nursing of the Older Adult Client/Family-Clinical, NURS 362A - Nursing of the Childrearing Family-Theory, NURS 362B - Nursing of the Childrearing Family-Clinical, NURS 364A - Advanced Nursing: A Pathophysiological Approach- Theory, NURS 364B - Advanced Nursing: A Pathophysiological Approach-Clinical, NURS 366A - Critical Care Nursing:A Pathophysiological Approach-Theory, NURS 366B - Critical Care Nursing: A Pathophysiological Approach-Clinical, NURS 441 - Introduction to Nursing Research, NURS 442 - Applied Nursing Research, NURS 450 - Leadership/Management in Nursing-Theory, NURS 451 - Leadership/Management in Nursing: Team Leading-Clinical, NURS 452 - Leadership/Management in Nursing: Elective Setting -Clinical, NURS 460A - Nursing in the Community-Theory, NURS 460B - Nursing in the Community-Clinical. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Nursing | Department of Nursing, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | Biola is a nationally ranked university and provides a premier education that integrates the Bible in over 30 majors (including 10 Bible courses). For 100 years, Biola has prepared students to impact the world for Christ in their chosen careers while fostering spiritual life transformation in a community where all faculty, staff, and students are professing Christians. Founded in 1908, Biola represents 100 strong years of experience in Christian higher education. Biola University offers an intellectually challenging environment where students can examine important issues with the help of top Christian thinkers. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry | Full Time | 62 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This program is for those students planning a career in the health professions. . There are excellent opportunities for careers in biotechnical, pharmaceutical and environmental related businesses and governmental agencies. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BIOS 111 - General Biology I, BIOS 111L - General Biology I : Laboratory, BIOS 112 - General Biology II, BIOS 112L - General Biology II: Laboratory, CHEM 105 - General Chemistry I, CHEM 106 - General Chemistry II, MATH 105 - Calculus I, PHSC 111 - Physics I, PHSC 111L - Physics I Laboratory, PHSC 112 - Physics II, PHSC 112L - Physics II Laboratory, PHSC 132 - General Physics I: Mechanics and Heat, PHSC 132L - General Physics I Laboratory, PHSC 233 - General Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism, PHSC 233L - General Physics II Laboratory, BIOS 312 - Cell and Molecular Biology, BIOS 411 - Biochemistry I, BIOS 412 - Biochemistry II, CHEM 301 - Organic Chemistry, CHEM 302 - Organic Chemistry, CHEM 311 - Laboratory in Organic Chemistry, CHEM 312 - Laboratory in Organic Chemistry, CHEM 350 - Analytical Chemistry, CHEM 402 - Physical Chemistry, CHEM 422A - Laboratory in Biochemistry, CHEM 422B - Laboratory in Biochemistry, PHSC 460 - Physical Science Seminar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Biological Science | Full Time | 68 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This major will develop a basic competence in the areas of the scientific method, various biological disciplines, and the integration of biological facts with spiritual principles. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. High school requirements are: 1 year – Biology, 1 year – Chemistry, 3 years – Mathematics, 2 years - Foreign Language. One year of Physics is desirable. Deficiencies can be fulfilled with permission from the Department of Biological Science. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BIOS 111 - General Biology I, BIOS 111L - General Biology I : Laboratory, BIOS 112 - General Biology II, BIOS 112L - General Biology II: Laboratory, BIOS 222 - Botany, BIOS 281 - Physiology, BIOS 282 - Microbiology, BIOS 312 - Cell and Molecular Biology, BIOS 322 - Laboratory in Cell and Molecular Biology, BIOS 401 - General Ecology, BIOS 450 - Directed Research, BIOS 470 - Seminar in Advanced Biology. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Accounting | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Crowell School of Business | The Accounting emphasis prepares students for careers in public accounting, industry, government and not-for-profit. The work performed by accountants would include preparation and auditing of financial statements, preparation of tax returns, tax and financial planning and consulting. Accounting graduates are eligible to sit for the uniform C.P.A. Exam and to become licensed as a Certified Public Accountant. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a minimum requirement of 30 hours of General Education (including Bible) with an overall GPA of 2.5. Students must accomplish an overall cumulative GPA of 2.5 in all college level course work completed at the time of formal application to the School of Business. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BUSN 190 - Business Statistics, BUSN 201 - Principles of Macroeconomics, BUSN 202 - Writings in Microeconomics, BUSN 211 - Principles of Accounting I, BUSN 212 - Principles of Accounting II, BUSN 220 - Management Information Systems, BUSN 223 - Calculus for Management Sciences, BUSN 230 - Introduction to Marketing, BUSN 232 - Organizational Behavior, BUSN 301 - Business Writing and Case Analysis, BUSN 327 - Production and Operations Management, BUSN 361 - Business Law, BUSN 370 - Business Finance, BUSN 470 - Strategic Management, BUSN 311 - Intermediate Accounting I, BUSN 312 - Intermediate Accounting II, BUSN 313 - Cost Accounting, BUSN 314 - Federal Income Tax For Individuals, BUSN 315 - Federal Income Tax for Partnerships, Corporations and Estates, BUSN 411 - Advanced Accounting, BUSN 412 - Auditing. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Crowell School of Business | Crowell School of Business, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4770 | The Crowell School of Business prepares students academically with a foundational business education while nurturing their Christian commitment through solid biblical integration in courses and contact with faculty and staff. The goal is to prepare graduates to be leaders in their profession, impacting the culture for Christ. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Crowell School of Business | This program is similar to the Computer Science/Systems Analysis program with an emphasis on the business application of computers. Specific careers include: business consultant, business analyst, programmer, systems developer, or business software developer. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must complete a minimum requirement of 30 hours of General Education (including Bible) with an overall GPA of 2.5. Students must accomplish an overall cumulative GPA of 2.5 in all college level course work completed at the time of formal application to the School of Business. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BUSN 190 - Business Statistics, BUSN 201 - Principles of Macroeconomics, BUSN 202 - Writings in Microeconomics, BUSN 211 - Principles of Accounting I, BUSN 212 - Principles of Accounting II, BUSN 220 - Management Information Systems, BUSN 223 - Calculus for Management Sciences, BUSN 230 - Introduction to Marketing, BUSN 232 - Organizational Behavior, BUSN 301 - Business Writing and Case Analysis, BUSN 327 - Production and Operations Management, BUSN 361 - Business Law, BUSN 370 - Business Finance, BUSN 470 - Strategic Management, BUSN 105 - Programming and Data Structures for Business, BUSN 305 - Information Technology, Hardware and System Software, BUSN 306 - System Analysis and Design, BUSN 402 - Data Base Management, BUSN 403 - E-Business Strategy, BUSN 405 - MIS Project Management, CSCI 430 - Computer Communications. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Crowell School of Business | Crowell School of Business, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4770 | The Crowell School of Business prepares students academically with a foundational business education while nurturing their Christian commitment through solid biblical integration in courses and contact with faculty and staff. The goal is to prepare graduates to be leaders in their profession, impacting the culture for Christ. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration – Management | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Crowell School of Business | The Management major prepares the student for managerial positions in virtually any business, both technical and non-technical. It is particularly appropriate for students who are unsure about pursuing specializations in Marketing, Accounting or Computer Information Systems. Because the Management major is broad in scope, it opens opportunities to many occupations in marketing and financial areas, while being most appropriate for students seeking administrative positions in both large and small enterprises in non-profit as well as profit sectors. The Management major provides that knowledge necessary to succeed in supervisory positions in retailing, a variety of small businesses and governmental agencies. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BUSN 190 - Business Statistics, BUSN 201 - Principles of Macroeconomics, BUSN 202 - Writings in Microeconomics, BUSN 211 - Principles of Accounting I, BUSN 212 - Principles of Accounting II, BUSN 220 - Management Information Systems, BUSN 223 - Calculus for Management Sciences, BUSN 230 - Introduction to Marketing, BUSN 232 - Organizational Behavior, BUSN 301 - Business Writing and Case Analysis, BUSN 327 - Production and Operations Management, BUSN 361 - Business Law, BUSN 370 - Business Finance, BUSN 470 - Strategic Management, BUSN 318 - Human Resource Management, BUSN 344 - Global Marketing Management, BUSN 421 - Managerial Negotiation and Leadership, BUSN 453 - Web-site Development for Marketing, BUSN 464 - Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Crowell School of Business | Crowell School of Business, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4770 | The Crowell School of Business prepares students academically with a foundational business education while nurturing their Christian commitment through solid biblical integration in courses and contact with faculty and staff. The goal is to prepare graduates to be leaders in their profession, impacting the culture for Christ. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration – Marketing | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Crowell School of Business | The Marketing major is designed to equip students with a high level of competency in today's competitive marketplace. Emphasis is on advanced, practical techniques utilizing real-world situations. The Marketing concentration prepares the student for a number of careers involving the strategic marketing of a wide range of products and services, including: Marketing Management, Marketing Research, Consumer Behavior, Non-Profit Marketing, Promotion/Advertising, Business to Business Sales and International Marketing, Small Business Marketing. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Crowell School of Business | Crowell School of Business, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4770 | The Crowell School of Business prepares students academically with a foundational business education while nurturing their Christian commitment through solid biblical integration in courses and contact with faculty and staff. The goal is to prepare graduates to be leaders in their profession, impacting the culture for Christ. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | 53 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Computer Science Department | This program curriculum follows the guidelines recommended by the Joint Task Force on Computing Curricula of IEEE Computer Society and Association for Computing Machinery. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are- CSCI 105 - Introduction to Computer Science, CSCI 106 - Data Structures, CSCI 202 - Assembly Language Programming, CSCI 230 - Programming Languages, CSCI 301 - Software Engineering, CSCI 302 - Computer Organization, CSCI 311 - Operating Systems, CSCI 400 - Theory of Algorithms, CSCI 430 - Computer Communications, CSCI 440 - Topics in Computer Science, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 106 - Calculus II, MATH 112 - Discrete Structures, MATH 291 - Linear Algebra, MATH 321 - Numerical Analysis, MATH 333 - Operations Research. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Computer Science Department | Computer Science Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | The Computer Science Department endeavors to equip the students with a foundational understanding of the theories and practice of computing, the capability of effective problem solving based on the solid foundational understanding, and a holistic integration of faith and learning into their perspective of computing to impact the world for Christ. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science – Information Systems | Full Time | 57 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Computer Science Department | This program curriculum follows the guidelines recommended by the Joint Task Force on Computing Curricula of IEEE Computer Society and Association for Computing Machinery. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CSCI 105 - Introduction to Computer Science, CSCI 106 - Data Structures, CSCI 202 - Assembly Language Programming, CSCI 230 - Programming Languages, CSCI 301 - Software Engineering, CSCI 302 - Computer Organization, CSCI 311 - Operating Systems, CSCI 400 - Theory of Algorithms, CSCI 430 - Computer Communications, CSCI 440 - Topics in Computer Science, BUSN 202 - Writings in Microeconomics, BUSN 211 - Principles of Accounting I, BUSN 212 - Principles of Accounting II, BUSN 370 - Business Finance, MATH 103 - Calculus for Management Sciences, MATH 112 - Discrete Structures, MATH 210 - Introduction to Probability and Statistics. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Computer Science Department | Computer Science Department, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 6000 | The Computer Science Department endeavors to equip the students with a foundational understanding of the theories and practice of computing, the capability of effective problem solving based on the solid foundational understanding, and a holistic integration of faith and learning into their perspective of computing to impact the world for Christ. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering Physics | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This degree is awarded to students who complete the 3/2 engineering program at Biola and an approved engineering school. The degree requires completion of all the general education and Bible requirements at Biola along with a minimum of 50 pre-engineering units and completion of an accredited engineering program. Special arrangement has been made with the University of Southern California for this five-year, dual-degree program in liberal arts / sciences and engineering. Students attend Biola for three years taking courses in physics, chemistry, biblical studies and the liberal arts. The final two years are taken at the University of Southern California School of Engineering. Upon successful completion of the five-year program, a student receives a B.S. degree in Engineering Physics from Biola and a B.S. degree in Engineering from USC. Students interested in this 3/2 program with USC, or who choose to attend another accredited engineering school following a similar pattern, must plan their course of study under the supervision of the engineering advisor and with the approval of the department. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CHEM 105 - General Chemistry I, CSCI 105 - Introduction to Computer Science, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 106 - Calculus II, MATH 205 - Calculus III, MATH 435 - Differential Equations, PHSC 121 - Introduction to Engineering, PHSC 124 - Data Analysis and Presentation, PHSC 132 - General Physics I: Mechanics and Heat, PHSC 132L - General Physics I Laboratory, PHSC 233 - General Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism, PHSC 233L - General Physics II Laboratory, PHSC 234 - General Physics III:Waves, Optics and Modern Physics, PHSC 311 - Computer Techniques in Science and Engineering, PHSC 313 - Statics, PHSC 321 - Circuits and Instrumentation I. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Human Biology: Pre-Chiropractic | Full Time | 74 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This program is offered in cooperation with Los Angeles College of Chiropractic at the Southern California University of Health Sciences upon completion of the university baccalaureate and major requirements. Students attend Biola for three years taking courses in biology, chemistry, physics, biblical studies and the liberal arts. The upper division biology courses are taken at Los Angeles College of Chiropractic the final year. Upon successful completion of the program, the student receives a B.S. degree with a major in Human Biology from Biola. Upon successful completion of the entire chiropractic program and examinations the student receives the D.C. degree from Los Angeles College of Chiropractic. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BIOS 111 - General Biology I, BIOS 111L - General Biology I : Laboratory, BIOS 112 - General Biology II, BIOS 112L - General Biology II: Laboratory, BIOS 252 - Human Anatomy, BIOS 281 - Physiology, CHEM 105 - General Chemistry I, CHEM 106 - General Chemistry II, CHEM 301 - Organic Chemistry, CHEM 302 - Organic Chemistry, CHEM 311 - Laboratory in Organic Chemistry, CHEM 312 - Laboratory in Organic Chemistry, PHSC 111 - Physics I, PHSC 111L - Physics I Laboratory, PHSC 112 - Physics II, PHSC 112L - Physics II Laboratory, PSYC 200 - Introduction to Psychology, MATH 101 - Precalculus Mathematics, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 210 - Introduction to Probability and Statistics. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology - Exercise Science and Health Promotion | Full Time | 54 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This program is ideal for students who wish to work in health and fitness, wellness promotion or strength and conditioning, and serves as preparation for graduate study in exercise physiology, athletic training, and other kinesiology–related disciplines. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BIOS 252 - Human Anatomy, BIOS 281 - Physiology, PEED 205 - History and Philosophy of Physical Education, PEED 301 - Kinesiology, PEED 302 - Exercise Physiology, PEED 303 - Exercise Physiology Laboratory, PEED 307 - Measurement and Evaluation in Kinesiology, PEED 335 - Health Education, PEED 401 - Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries, PEED 408 - Motor Learning, PEED 420 - Sociology and Psychology in Physical Education and Sport, PEED 440 - Nutrition for Health and Sport, PEED 480 - Directed Study. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology - Pre-Physical Therapy | Full Time | 55 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This program is for students who plan to pursue a graduate degree (master’s or doctoral) in physical therapy, occupational therapy or other programs in allied / sports health care. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - BIOS 252 - Human Anatomy, BIOS 281 - Physiology, CHEM 106 - General Chemistry II, PEED 301 - Kinesiology, PEED 302 - Exercise Physiology, PEED 303 - Exercise Physiology Laboratory, PEED 335 - Health Education, PEED 401 - Care and Prevention of Athletic Injuries, PEED 408 - Motor Learning, PEED 420 - Sociology and Psychology in Physical Education and Sport, PEED 440 - Nutrition for Health and Sport, PEED 480 - Directed Study, PHSC 112 - Physics II, PHSC 112L - Physics II Laboratory. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematical Sciences: Applied Mathematics | Full Time | 47 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Mathematics | This program is for students who are interested in preparing for careers in business or industry. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CSCI 105 - Introduction to Computer Science, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 106 - Calculus II, MATH 112 - Discrete Structures, MATH 205 - Calculus III, MATH 291 - Linear Algebra, MATH 305 - Advanced Calculus, MATH 315 - Modern Algebra, MATH 321 - Numerical Analysis, MATH 331 - Probability, MATH 332 - Statistics, MATH 333 - Operations Research, MATH 370 - Readings in Mathematics, MATH 435 - Differential Equations, MATH 440 - Complex Variables. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Mathematics | Department of Mathematics, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4741 | The department endeavors to provide a strong foundational core curriculum for the student desiring to pursue graduate study in both the pure and applied fields of mathematical science, and through course work and training students are well prepared for applied mathematical sciences (statistics, computer science, operations research and actuarial science) and the field of teaching. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematical Sciences: Computer Science | Full Time | 53 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Mathematics | This program allows a mathematics major the opportunity to focus on the more mathematical aspects of computer science. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CSCI 105 - Introduction to Computer Science, CSCI 106 - Data Structures, CSCI 202 – Assembly language Programming, CSCI 400 - Theory of Algorithms, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 106 - Calculus II, MATH 112 - Discrete Structures, MATH 205 - Calculus III, MATH 291 - Linear Algebra, MATH 305 - Advanced Calculus, MATH 315 - Modern Algebra, MATH 321 - Numerical Analysis, MATH 331 - Probability, MATH 332 - Statistics, MATH 333 - Operations Research, MATH 370 - Readings in Mathematics. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Mathematics | Department of Mathematics, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4741 | The department endeavors to provide a strong foundational core curriculum for the student desiring to pursue graduate study in both the pure and applied fields of mathematical science, and through course work and training students are well prepared for applied mathematical sciences (statistics, computer science, operations research and actuarial science) and the field of teaching. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematical Sciences: Mathematics | Full Time | 47 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Mathematics | This emphasis allows the student flexibility in the selection of upper-division courses. The student planning to pursue mathematics in graduate school would find this particularly appropriate. A faculty advisor will aid the student in making these choices. This emphasis must complete: Math 105, 106, 112, 205, 291, 305, 315, two units of 370; Computer Science 105; and six courses (18 units) in math at the 300 or 400 level. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CSCI 105 - Introduction to Computer Science, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 106 - Calculus II, MATH 112 - Discrete Structures, MATH 205 - Calculus III, MATH 291 - Linear Algebra, MATH 305 - Advanced Calculus, MATH 315 - Modern Algebra, MATH 370 - Readings in Mathematics. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Mathematics | Department of Mathematics, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4741 | The department endeavors to provide a strong foundational core curriculum for the student desiring to pursue graduate study in both the pure and applied fields of mathematical science, and through course work and training students are well prepared for applied mathematical sciences (statistics, computer science, operations research and actuarial science) and the field of teaching. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematical Sciences: Secondary Teaching | Full Time | 63 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of Mathematics | This program is for students who wish to prepare to teach mathematics at the high school level. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CSCI 105 - Introduction to Computer Science, LEDU 301 - Introduction to Teaching, LEDU 330 - Psychological Foundations of Education, LEDU 341 - Methods of Teaching Linguistically Diverse Students, LEDU 425 - Secondary Content Area Reading, LEDU 435 - Secondary Curriculum, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 106 - Calculus II, MATH 112 - Discrete Structures, MATH 205 - Calculus III, MATH 291 - Linear Algebra, MATH 305 - Advanced Calculus, MATH 315 - Modern Algebra, MATH 331 - Probability, MATH 332 - Statistics, MATH 341 - Classical Geometry, MATH 370 - Readings in Mathematics, MATH 415 - Number Theory and the History of Mathematics. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of Mathematics | Department of Mathematics, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4741 | The department endeavors to provide a strong foundational core curriculum for the student desiring to pursue graduate study in both the pure and applied fields of mathematical science, and through course work and training students are well prepared for applied mathematical sciences (statistics, computer science, operations research and actuarial science) and the field of teaching. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Physical Education - Secondary Teaching | Full Time | 52 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This program is designed for students who wish to teach physical education in schools. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - PEED 101 - Health ad Wellness, PEED 180 - Recreation Leadership and Programming, PEED 201 - Elementary Physical Education Methods ad Activities, PEED 205 - History ad Philosophy of Physical Education, PEED 301 - Kinesiology, PEED 302 - Exercise Physiology, PEED 303 - Exercise Physiology Laboratory, PEED 307 - Measurement ad Evaluation in Kinesiology, PEED 331 - Analysis of Teaching Individual ad Dual Sports, PEED 332 - Analysis of Teaching Team Sports, PEED 335 - Health Education, PEED 400 - Administration of Physical Education ad Sports Programs, PEED 401 - Care ad Prevention of Athletic Injuries, PEED 405 - Adapted Physical Education, PEED 408 - Motor Learning, PEED 412 - Physical Education Methodology, PEED 420 - Sociology ad Psychology in Physical education ad Sport, LEDU 301 - Introduction to Teaching, LEDU 330 - Psychological Foundations of Education, LEDU 341 - Methods of Teaching Linguistically Diverse Students, LEDU 425 - Secondary Content Area Reading, LEDU 435 - Secondary Curriculum. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Physical Science: Chemistry | Full Time | 60 Credit-hour(s) More Variable |
$27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CHEM 105 - General Chemistry I, CHEM 106 - General Chemistry II, CHEM 301 - Organic Chemistry, CHEM 302 - Organic Chemistry, CHEM 311 - Laboratory in Organic Chemistry, CHEM 312 - Laboratory in Organic Chemistry, CHEM 350 - Analytical Chemistry, CHEM 402 - Physical Chemistry, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 106 - Calculus II, PHSC 124 - Data Analysis and Presentation, PHSC 132 - General Physics I: Mechanics and Heat, PHSC 132L - General Physics I Laboratory, PHSC 233 - General Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism, PHSC 233L - General Physics II Laboratory, PHSC 234 - General Physics III:Waves, Optics and Modern Physics, PHSC 460 - Physical Science Seminar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Bachelor of Science in Physical Science: Physics | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | This degree is awarded to students who complete the 3/2 engineering program at Biola and an approved engineering school. The degree requires completion of all the general education and Bible requirements at Biola along with a minimum of 50 pre-engineering units and completion of an accredited engineering program. Special arrangement has been made with the University of Southern California for this five-year, dual-degree program in liberal arts / sciences and engineering. Students attend Biola for three years taking courses in physics, chemistry, biblical studies and the liberal arts. The final two years are taken at the University of Southern California School of Engineering. Upon successful completion of the five-year program, a student receives a B.S. degree in Engineering Physics from Biola and a B.S. degree in Engineering from USC. Students interested in this 3/2 program with USC, or who choose to attend another accredited engineering school following a similar pattern, must plan their course of study under the supervision of the engineering advisor and with the approval of the department. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - CHEM 105 - General Chemistry I, CHEM 106 - General Chemistry II, CSCI 105 - Introduction to Computer Science, MATH 105 - Calculus I, MATH 106 - Calculus II, MATH 205 - Calculus III, MATH 291 - Linear Algebra, MATH 435 - Differential Equations, PHSC 124 - Data Analysis and Presentation, PHSC 132 - General Physics I: Mechanics and Heat, PHSC 132L - General Physics I Laboratory, PHSC 233 - General Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism, PHSC 233L - General Physics II Laboratory, PHSC 234 - General Physics III: Waves, Optics and Modern Physics, PHSC 318 - Classical Mechanics, PHSC 321 - Circuits and Instrumentation I, PHSC 460 - Physical Science Seminar, PHSC 480 - Advanced Physics Laboratory. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Doctor of Ministry | Full Time | 6 Year(s) | $10500 approximately | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot's Doctor of Ministry program has two parts; residency course work and the writing of a thesis project. The residency work is completed in an uninterrupted sequence of two weeks per year over three years. During their first three years, students will spend two continuous weeks per year in intensive course work. At the end of the third year, students will submit their thesis-project proposal and begin writing their thesis-project. Students have a maximum time frame of six years to complete the entire program. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biola's Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Doctoral | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Doctor of Missiology | Full Time | 10 Year(s) | $28800 | School of Intercultural Studies | The Doctor of Missiology degree is designed to enhance people, partnerships and publications that will advance the missions enterprise to a higher level of scholarship, spirituality, service, and sacrifice through the critical reflection of cross-disciplines; church history, theology, the social sciences, and missions strategies. It is the goal of the program to promote the development of researchers, teachers, administrators, consultants, Bible translators, church multipliers, curriculum developers, community developers, member care professionals, and business persons who shall be able to conduct cross-cultural ministries with conviction, clarity, competence, and compassion, without compromising the sacred Scriptures. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Doctoral | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Doctor of Philosophy in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $754 per unit | Rosemead School of Psychology | Ph.D. students must complete a minimum of 78 semester hours of psychology in addition to a doctoral dissertation. These 78 units include 50 required units, 12 units of practicum that must be taken in residence, 4 units of Masters-level research apprenticeship, and 12 units of psychology electives. Students may apply up to 6 units of graduate coursework from the School of Intercultural Studies toward the total psychology hours requirement. Students in the Ph.D. track must complete at least 12 units selected from psychotherapy lab courses. These are taken during the second, third and fourth years. All students must complete a minor in theology which includes a minimum of 17 semester units. All students participate in a series of seminars (14 units) devoted to the integration of a variety of theological and psychological concepts in research, theory and practice. 12 units of dissertation research are required prior to granting the Ph.D. A masters program is awarded in the progress in Doctor of psychology program. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Doctoral | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Rosemead School of Psychology | Rosemead School of Psychology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Rosemead provides aspiring evangelical psychologists with an expansive integration of psychology and theology from an APA accredited university-based program. Rosemead prepares them to minister within clinical settings, lead in research and teaching within academia, and impact the lives of individuals within the local church and throughout the world. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Doctor of Psychology in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $754 per unit | Rosemead School of Psychology | Psy.D. students must complete a minimum of 76 semester hours of psychology. These 76 units must include 46 required psychology units, 18 units of practicum and 12 units of elective psychology courses. Students may apply up to 6 units of graduate coursework from the School of Intercultural Studies toward the total psychology hours requirement. Students in the Psy.D. track must complete 21 units selected from psychotherapy lab courses. These are taken in the second, third and fourth years. Students in Rosemeads Psy.D. track may fulfill the 5 unit research component of their program either by writing a dissertation or by successfully completing a research consumer ship sequence which includes a year-long doctoral research seminar, a doctoral paper consisting of a critical review of research literature on a clinical topic, and a proficiency examination for consumers of clinical research. A masters degree ibs awarded in the progress of Doctoral Program. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Doctoral | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Rosemead School of Psychology | Rosemead School of Psychology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Rosemead provides aspiring evangelical psychologists with an expansive integration of psychology and theology from an APA accredited university-based program. Rosemead prepares them to minister within clinical settings, lead in research and teaching within academia, and impact the lives of individuals within the local church and throughout the world. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Ed.D. in Educational Studies | Full Time | Variable | $27306 | Talbot School of Theology | The doctoral course of study is designed for men and women to enhance their leadership roles in a variety of educational ministries within Gods Kingdom—the local church, educational institutions, par church, and ministry organizations throughout the world. Students come to the programs already having completed a graduate degree and significant ministry experience in the field of educational ministry. In general, doctoral students are established within a particular ministry organization and return following completion of the program. A few students are in transition in their career path. The curriculum particularly encourages critical thinking, integrative synthesis of Scripture and social science data, and original research. Courses typically follow a graduate seminar format requiring student initiative for significant participation in class discussion. Small class sizes of 8-12 students permit such a dialogical format, an important element for promoting critical and integrative thinking. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Doctoral | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | DE 801 Philosophical Issues in Educational Studies, DE 806 Theological Integration for Educational Studies, Select one course from three: TTDE 807 Educational Research Methods, TTDE 860 Qualitative Research, TTDE 808 Statistical Methods in Educational Research. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | History Honors Program | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | This program is designed for senior history majors and for those who have history concentrations in social science and humanities. It is designed as a year-long, independent research project under faculty supervision. Students who are a few units short of senior standing may petition the chairman for admission into the Honors Program. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. Students must have 15 units of upper division history. History majors with a departmental GPA of 3.5 or better are eligible. | Bachelor degree | Biola University | The courses are - HIST 107 - United States History, HIST 208 - World Civilizations II, HIST 327 - Historiography, HIST 480 - Research Seminar. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | Department of History, Government, and Social Science, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 944 0351 | The department emphasizes depth and breadth in history and the social sciences as the foundation for understanding of the world. History as a contextual discipline sheds light on all world civilizations, and illuminates the human condition while at the same time providing insight into the present. The program, therefore, places emphasis on in-depth study of global geographical regions, themes, and eras. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. Spiritual Formation Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The program is experiential and theoretical in nature with respect to spiritual growth and the dynamic processes involved, the M.A. Emphasis in Spiritual Formation draws upon an interdisciplinary faculty from both Talbot and Rosemead School of Psychology. It includes both in-depth theoretical and integrative coursework, employing the creation disciplines such as theology, philosophy, psychology and education as well as experiential-relational soul work in classes and co-curricular requirements to aid in understanding the spiritual life mentoring. Note also that this more academic MA with an emphasis in Spiritual Formation is to be distinguished from the more professional M.A. in Spiritual Formation and Soul Care, the latter being fashioned more along the lines of an Apprentice Training Model which includes training, supervision and service components in spiritual direction and mentoring. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTTH 511 Theology I - Revelation & Nature of God, TTBE 517 Hermeneutics and the Word in Spiritual Formation, TTSF 521 Introduction to Christian Spirituality and Prayer, TTSF 524 History and Theory of Christian Soul Care and Direction, TTSF 543 Personal Foundations of Spirituality and Retreat, TTSF 585 Personal Spiritual Direction. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Anthropology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $21474 | School of Intercultural Studies | The Master of Arts in Anthropology degree is designed for those students who desire advanced training in the study of people in culture preparatory to careers in the teaching of anthropology, serving as anthropological consultants to cross-cultural agencies or research into and the application of anthropological methods of inquiry to contemporary issues associated with globalization, development, public health or other social conditions. The Master of Art in Anthropology has been designed as a generalized degree that requires students to be familiar with all five fields of anthropological inquiry: cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, archeology, and applied anthropology. A distinctive of the Master of Arts in Anthropology degree is the manner in which a Christian perspective is integrated into every aspect of the courses offered. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Anthropology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $21474 | School of Intercultural Studies | The Master of Arts in Anthropology degree is designed for those students who desire advanced training in the study of people in culture preparatory to careers in the teaching of anthropology, serving as anthropological consultants to cross-cultural agencies or research into and the application of anthropological methods of inquiry to contemporary issues associated with globalization, development, public health or other social conditions. The Master of Art in Anthropology has been designed as a generalized degree that requires students to be familiar with all five fields of anthropological inquiry: cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, archeology, and applied anthropology. A distinctive of the Master of Arts in Anthropology degree is the manner in which a Christian perspective is integrated into every aspect of the courses offered. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Applied Linguistics | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $21474 | School of Intercultural Studies | The M.A. in Applied Linguistics goes beyond the certificate courses by providing Christian professionals with advanced training in various areas of language analysis and by developing a multidisciplinary approach within which to seek appropriate solutions to real-world problems. Students may pursue either a generalist track or a specialized one by concentrating their electives in language surveys, linguistics, literacy, TESOL or translation. Students satisfactorily completing the TESOL concentration will receive the graduate Certificate in TESOL. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Bible Exposition | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The Master of Arts degree, with emphases in Bible Exposition, Old Testament, New Testament, Theology, Philosophy of Religion and Ethics, Spiritual Formation and Biblical / Theological Studies-Diversified (non-language), has been developed for those whose calling to Christian service is to positions of leadership for which the Master of Divinity or other professional degrees are not normally required. It is structured to provide: An understanding of Scriptures for students anticipating Christian ministries that would include church administrators, par church organization leadership, counselors, "tent-making" occupations in other cultures, lay leaders in the local church and others. A biblical background for those who are preparing for teaching in non-theological fields. An academic background for those who find the Master of Arts degree ample for a teaching position either at home or in a foreign country. A program of study for missionaries who have only a brief furlough time in which to pursue formal study of the Scriptures. Sustainable skills in specific ministries further developing students abilities and spiritual gifts and strengthening their areas of weakness. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTBE 517 Hermeneutics/Bible Study Methods, TTBE 519 Survey of Genesis — Malachi, TTTH 511 Theology I — Introduction: Revelation and Nature of God, TTPT 706 Personal Foundations of Ministry, TTSS 510 Theological Research Methodologies. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Biblical and Theological Studies | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The Master of Arts degree, with emphases in Bible Exposition, Old Testament, New Testament, Theology, Philosophy of Religion and Ethics, Spiritual Formation and Biblical / Theological Studies-Diversified (non-language), has been developed for those whose calling to Christian service is to positions of leadership for which the Master of Divinity or other professional degrees are not normally required. It is structured to provide: An understanding of Scriptures for students anticipating Christian ministries that would include church administrators, par church organization leadership, counselors, "tent-making" occupations in other cultures, lay leaders in the local church and others. A biblical background for those who are preparing for teaching in non-theological fields. An academic background for those who find the Master of Arts degree ample for a teaching position either at home or in a foreign country. A program of study for missionaries who have only a brief furlough time in which to pursue formal study of the Scriptures. Sustainable skills in specific ministries further developing students abilities and spiritual gifts and strengthening their areas of weakness. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Christian Education | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | As a graduate degree of the Department of Christian Education, the mission of the M.A.C.E. program is to develop and equip experienced church and par church servant-leaders in mind, character, and ability to serve God and further His kingdom through biblically-based educational ministries, according to a particular area of specialization. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTCE 521 Foundations of the Teaching / Learning Process, TTCE 633 Christian Education Research and Writing, TTCE 552 Lifespan Development in Ministry, TTTH 511 Theology I - Introduction: Revelation and Nature of God, TTCE Specialization course. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Christian Ministry and Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The Master of Arts Womens Ministries emphasis is designed to equip students for a specific ministry to women in a local church context. It is set up to develop strengths in both Bible / theology and counseling / teaching. The program emphasizes preparation, enrichment, equipping and renewing ministries in such classes as Counseling Ministry, Group Counseling, Women and Men in Ministry, Sex Roles in Society, and Psychology of Women. A major focus is on actual practice in womens ministries in local churches. The purpose of the college is to provide local churches with specialists in the field of Womens Ministries who have built their counseling, administrative and teaching skills upon a solid biblical and theological base. The program will prepare students for such professional positions as director of womens ministries or associate pastor of Christian education, while providing special emphasis in the area of womens concerns. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTBE 517 Hermeneutics/Bible Study Methods, TTBE 519 Survey of Genesis — Malachi, TTTH 511 Theology I — Introduction: Revelation and Nature of God, TTPT 706 Personal Foundations of Ministry, TTSS 510 Theological Research Methodologies. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Education | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | School of Education | The Master of Arts degree in Science and Religion is designed to provide individuals with the essential background in theology, history, and philosophy necessary to integrate evangelical Christianity with modern science. The curriculum is designed for students who already have a basic training in a natural science, consequently the course work emphasizes the critical tools from other disciplines that are necessary for providing the proper context and foundation for understanding and working comfortably with issues that relate to both Christianity and the sciences. Advanced seminars focus on current theological issues within specific scientific disciplines so that students will understand the contemporary dynamic and learn to integrate their thinking in a mentored setting. | Applicants must submit a bachelors degree from an accredited college or university. A grade point average (GPA) equivalent to a "B" average or higher. A limited number of applicants with lower GPAs may be admitted with probationary status. A minimum of three years managerial or leadership experience. A completed MOL application submitted by the stated deadlines. Three references (on forms provided in application packet) from people qualified to assess the applicants potential for leadership and organizational excellence. A statement of career objectives indicating how participating in the program will contribute toward growth and development toward stated goals. A current resume. A personal interview. International Students are required to submit scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | SR 510 Research Methodologies, SR 514 History of Christian Thought, SR 517 Interpretative Issues and Methods, SR 519 Old Testament / Hebrew Literature, SR 520 New Testament Literature, SR 541 Christian Thought I, SR 542 Christian Thought II. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Intercultural Studies | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $21474 | School of Intercultural Studies | The Master of Arts in Intercultural Studies degree is designed for those students who desire advanced training for careers or ministries that require adjustment to living, working and communicating in another culture or in multicultural contexts. Drawing upon insights from theology, sociology, anthropology, history, and communication theory students will be encouraged to analyze contemporary global concerns, to formulate Christian perspectives, and to explore better solutions to apply to today’s cross-cultural problems. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Linguistics and Biblical Languages | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $21474 | School of Intercultural Studies | The purpose of the M.A. in Linguistics and Biblical Languages (MA LBL) is to meet the needs of agencies involved in Bible translation, such as SIL International, for Christians who are well-trained in biblical languages and exegetical knowledge. While the M.A. in Applied Linguistics provides broad perspectives on issues such as translation, literacy, orthography, and language planning, the M.A. in Linguistics and Biblical Languages has a more specific focus on linguistics, exegesis and biblical languages. Students who complete the M.A. in Linguistics and Biblical Languages program will be able to accurately analyze either Hebrew or Greek, understand the relevant historical and cultural background, exegete the Scriptures, and apply sound linguistic and biblical principles in the translation of the Scriptures. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Missions | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $21474 | School of Intercultural Studies | The Master of Arts in Missions is designed for individuals who have been in Christian missions ministry for a number of years and have not had the opportunity to earn a baccalaureate degree. The program aims to provide graduate level training in three areas: Core Curriculum of Missiology and Intercultural Studies; Bible/Theology; and Electives. Students admitted without the B.A. or its equivalent must have at least 3 years of Bible School training, or 2 years of college equivalency courses. This degree is not a stepping stone to a Ph.D. program and in most cases it is a terminal degree. However, exceptional students may petition for probationary entrance into the Doctor of Missiology program. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | ISCL 520 Interpersonal Adjustment, ISCL 555 Introduction to World Missions, ISCL 622 Intercultural Communication, ISCL 640 Applied Anthropology, ISCL 727 Principles of Church Multiplication, ISCL 747 Christianity and Culture, ISCL 875 Strategies in Library Research. ISCL 751 Theology of Mission, ISCL 752 Acts: Biblical and Missiological, ISCL 724 Issues in Spiritual Warfare. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in New Testament | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The Master of Arts degree, with emphases in Bible Exposition, Old Testament, New Testament, Theology, Philosophy of Religion and Ethics, Spiritual Formation and Biblical / Theological Studies-Diversified (non-language), has been developed for those whose calling to Christian service is to positions of leadership for which the Master of Divinity or other professional degrees are not normally required. It is structured to provide: An understanding of Scriptures for students anticipating Christian ministries that would include church administrators, par church organization leadership, counselors, "tent-making" occupations in other cultures, lay leaders in the local church and others. A biblical background for those who are preparing for teaching in non-theological fields. An academic background for those who find the Master of Arts degree ample for a teaching position either at home or in a foreign country. A program of study for missionaries who have only a brief furlough time in which to pursue formal study of the Scriptures. Sustainable skills in specific ministries further developing students abilities and spiritual gifts and strengthening their areas of weakness. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTBE 517 Hermeneutics/Bible Study Methods, TTBE 519 Survey of Genesis — Malachi, TTTH 511 Theology I — Introduction: Revelation and Nature of God, TTPT 706 Personal Foundations of Ministry, TTSS 510 Theological Research Methodologies. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Old Testament | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The Master of Arts degree, with emphases in Bible Exposition, Old Testament, New Testament, Theology, Philosophy of Religion and Ethics, Spiritual Formation and Biblical / Theological Studies-Diversified (non-language), has been developed for those whose calling to Christian service is to positions of leadership for which the Master of Divinity or other professional degrees are not normally required. It is structured to provide: An understanding of Scriptures for students anticipating Christian ministries that would include church administrators, par church organization leadership, counselors, "tent-making" occupations in other cultures, lay leaders in the local church and others. A biblical background for those who are preparing for teaching in non-theological fields. An academic background for those who find the Master of Arts degree ample for a teaching position either at home or in a foreign country. A program of study for missionaries who have only a brief furlough time in which to pursue formal study of the Scriptures. Sustainable skills in specific ministries further developing students abilities and spiritual gifts and strengthening their areas of weakness. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTBE 517 Hermeneutics/Bible Study Methods, TTBE 519 Survey of Genesis — Malachi, TTTH 511 Theology I — Introduction: Revelation and Nature of God, TTPT 706 Personal Foundations of Ministry, TTSS 510 Theological Research Methodologies. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Philosophy of Religion and Ethics | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The main purpose of this emphasis is to help the student become an apologist and develop the skills involved in doing apologetics with special focus on philosophy and social ethics. The attitudes and character traits of an apologist will be fostered by department activities, professional modeling, and teaching techniques. The skills necessary for the craft of apologetics will be developed by equipping the student to think for himself or herself, do research and understand the necessary philosophical and ethical concepts for spelling out what Christians believe and why they hold those beliefs. The program is aimed at developing ability to do apologetics in various ministry programs such as Para church and local church evangelism, as well as preparing the student for further graduate work in philosophy, ethics, religious studies, law, political science and theology. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTBE 517 Hermeneutics/Bible Study Methods, TTBE 519 Survey of Genesis — Malachi, TTTH 511 Theology I — Introduction: Revelation and Nature of God, TTPT 706 Personal Foundations of Ministry, TTSS 510 Theological Research Methodologies. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Spiritual Formation and Soul Care | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The program is shaped around promoting growth in the believers inner life of faith and prayer with God in the context of a shared community and developed knowledge-base in the Word, spiritual formation and soul care. It focuses specifically on ways to deepen ones knowledge and openness to God and His work as well as understanding of ones self and others in order to grow toward conformity of character and inner life in the image of Christ. In turn, it trains leaders in soul care to be spiritual mentors, directors and teachers who will assist others in their journey of growth in Christ and His body. In order to accomplish this, the program has a substantial emphasis on understanding the dynamics of the Indwelling Holy Spirit as they interface human personality and relational dynamics. These integrative endeavors are enhanced by the Institutes diverse university-wide faculty which draws particularly upon Rosemead School of Psychology and Talbot School of Theology, bringing a wide range of expertise and experience to bear upon the process of human spiritual growth and soul care. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTTH 511 Theology I - Revelation & Nature of God, TTBE 517 Hermeneutics and the Word in Spiritual Formation, TTSF 521 Introduction to Christian Spirituality and Prayer, TTSF 524 History and Theory of Christian Soul Care and Direction, TTSF 543 Personal Foundations of Spirituality and Retreat, TTSF 585 Personal Spiritual Direction. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in TESOL | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Office of Graduate Admissions | Biola is in the process of developing an online MA TESOL for experienced teachers. Students who have two or more years of experience teaching ESL/EFL and are interested in this degree, must submit a form for more information. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Graduate Admissions | Office of Graduate Admissions, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in TESOL | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $21474 | School of Intercultural Studies | English has become the most widely used language in the world today, particularly in the areas of science, commerce and education. Tens of thousands of students in developing countries are required to learn English in school. Thousands more study English in order to pursue careers or educational programs demanding English language skills. Refugees and immigrants to the United States desire English to survive and to establish themselves in their new homeland. There is thus a considerable demand for qualified teachers of English both here and abroad. The M.A. in TESOL encompasses the goal of the certificate program plus the additional goal of broader academic training. Teachers are equipped for work in and beyond the classroom in administration, training, course design, etc. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A. in Theology | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The Master of Arts degree, with emphases in Bible Exposition, Old Testament, New Testament, Theology, Philosophy of Religion and Ethics, Spiritual Formation and Biblical / Theological Studies-Diversified (non-language), has been developed for those whose calling to Christian service is to positions of leadership for which the Master of Divinity or other professional degrees are not normally required. It is structured to provide: An understanding of Scriptures for students anticipating Christian ministries that would include church administrators, par church organization leadership, counselors, "tent-making" occupations in other cultures, lay leaders in the local church and others. A biblical background for those who are preparing for teaching in non-theological fields. An academic background for those who find the Master of Arts degree ample for a teaching position either at home or in a foreign country. A program of study for missionaries who have only a brief furlough time in which to pursue formal study of the Scriptures. Sustainable skills in specific ministries further developing students abilities and spiritual gifts and strengthening their areas of weakness. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | TTBE 517 Hermeneutics/Bible Study Methods, TTBE 519 Survey of Genesis — Malachi, TTTH 511 Theology I — Introduction: Revelation and Nature of God, TTPT 706 Personal Foundations of Ministry, TTSS 510 Theological Research Methodologies. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A.Ed. Programs | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | The Master of Arts in Education is a research-oriented degree that prepares students to work in a variety of academic settings and sets the stage for a doctorate. Its emphasis on professional writing, research and theory distinguishes it from the Master of Arts in Teaching, which focuses primarily on classroom practices. Three emphases are offered: Teaching, Faith-Based Issues and Personalized. The first is meant for new teachers who need to earn a clear credential. The latter are ideal for seasoned educators looking for a program that can be customized to their diverse interests. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A.T. Transitioning Biola Undergraduate | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | If a student is trained to be a teacher as an undergraduate at Biola, they were already well on their way to a Master of Arts in Teaching. For most undergraduates who have participated in the Teacher Preparation Program, the masters degree can be completed in as few as 12–18 months. A typical undergraduate working toward a teaching credential finishes their senior year needing only to complete student teaching as a graduate. In the M.A.T. program, students start with one semester of student teaching, and then take courses such as classroom management and spiritual formation. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A.T. for Transfer Students | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | If students were working toward a clear credential through an induction program at their school, they can receive 12 units of credit by attending class one Saturday a month throughout their program. If they need a clear credential but work at a private school where an induction program is not offered, the Fifth Year Program will earn them the credential and 12 units of credit. If students do not need a clear credential, they can handpick 12 units of elective classes that fit their educational interests. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A.T. with Multiple Subject Credential | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | The Master of Arts in Teaching program, paired with a Multiple Subject Teaching Credential, offers convenient, state-certified training that will prepare students for the challenges and opportunities of teaching at the elementary school level. The program starts with a slate of courses that instruct them how to teach effectively. As students develop a foundation in lesson planning, classroom technology, psychology and reading, they will receive repeated opportunities to observe firsthand the methods used by other teachers. This teacher preparation coursework is followed by a semester of student teaching, after which students will receive their California Preliminary Multiple Subject Teaching Credential. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | M.A.T. with Single Subject Credential | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | The Master of Arts in Teaching program, paired with a Single Subject Teaching Credential, offers convenient, state-certified training that will prepare students for the challenges and opportunities of teaching at the junior high or high school level. The program starts with a slate of courses that instruct students how to teach effectively. As they develop a foundation in lesson planning, classroom technology, psychology and reading, they will receive repeated opportunities to observe firsthand the methods used by other teachers. This teacher preparation coursework is followed by a semester of student teaching, after which they will receive their California Preliminary Single Subject Teaching Credential. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts Degree Program in Science and Religion | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | School of Professional Studies | The new Master of Arts degree in Science and Religion is designed to provide scientifically literate individuals with the essential background in theology, history, and philosophy that is necessary to integrate evangelical Christianity with modern science. One highlight of the program is advanced seminars that will focus on current theological issues within specific scientific disciplines. Here students will grapple with the contemporary dynamic and learn to integrate their thinking in a mentored setting. Many of the advanced seminars will be taught by internationally-known visiting scholars on the topic, such as William Dembski on Intelligent Design, and William Lane Craig on the philosophy of Cosmology, which will provide students with "front row" access to the best contemporary work in these areas. Other faculty in the program are drawn from Biolas theology, philosophy, and sciences departments. | Applicants must submit a bachelors degree from an accredited college or university. A grade point average (GPA) equivalent to a "B" average or higher. A limited number of applicants with lower GPAs may be admitted with probationary status. A minimum of three years managerial or leadership experience. A completed MOL application submitted by the stated deadlines. Three references (on forms provided in application packet) from people qualified to assess the applicants potential for leadership and organizational excellence. A statement of career objectives indicating how participating in the program will contribute toward growth and development toward stated goals. A current resume. A personal interview. International Students are required to submit scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Professional Studies | School of Professional Studies, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90638, +1 562 903 4781 | Biolas BOLD adult degree programs are an innovative degree completion program for working adults who have completed at least two years of college and desire an accredited Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree in Organizational Leadership, or a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Psychology. These programs are offered at seven locations throughout Southern California: Chino, Inglewood, La Mirada, San Bernardino, San Diego County, south Orange County, and Thousand Oaks. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Christian Apologetics | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit | Office of Graduate Admissions | The remaining 16 units needed for the degree are acquired through specialized distance courses that can be completed from their own home. For many of these classes, students will receive audio recordings by cutting-edge lecturers, and they will be able to complete assignments by submitting them on-line or mailing them to the office. Other classes are conducted asynchronously in an on-line bulletin board system. Their personal faculty mentor also guides students through these stimulating classes. | Applicants must submit a bachelors degree from an accredited college or university. A grade point average (GPA) equivalent to a "B" average or higher. A limited number of applicants with lower GPAs may be admitted with probationary status. A minimum of three years managerial or leadership experience. A completed MOL application submitted by the stated deadlines. Three references (on forms provided in application packet) from people qualified to assess the applicants potential for leadership and organizational excellence. A statement of career objectives indicating how participating in the program will contribute toward growth and development toward stated goals. A current resume. A personal interview. International Students are required to submit scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | SR 510 Research Methodologies, SR 514 History of Christian Thought, SR 517 Interpretative Issues and Methods, SR 519 Old Testament / Hebrew Literature, SR 520 New Testament Literature, SR 541 Christian Thought I, SR 542 Christian Thought II. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Graduate Admissions | Office of Graduate Admissions, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Christian Apologetics | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | School of Professional Studies | Biola Universitys M.A. in Christian Apologetics is a premier graduate degree in the defense of the Christian faith. Currently, there are no other degree programs like this one. The accredited 36-unit curriculum is flexible and offers students the opportunity to study broadly in the field of Christian apologetics. Modular classes are offered in a combination of distance learning through online and correspondence courses and short campus visits. Both delivery formats are designed to meet the needs of people with families, careers and active lives | Applicants must submit a bachelors degree from an accredited college or university. A grade point average (GPA) equivalent to a "B" average or higher. A limited number of applicants with lower GPAs may be admitted with probationary status. A minimum of three years managerial or leadership experience. A completed MOL application submitted by the stated deadlines. Three references (on forms provided in application packet) from people qualified to assess the applicants potential for leadership and organizational excellence. A statement of career objectives indicating how participating in the program will contribute toward growth and development toward stated goals. A current resume. A personal interview. International Students are required to submit scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | SR 510 Research Methodologies, SR 514 History of Christian Thought, SR 517 Interpretative Issues and Methods, SR 519 Old Testament / Hebrew Literature, SR 520 New Testament Literature, SR 541 Christian Thought I, SR 542 Christian Thought II. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Professional Studies | School of Professional Studies, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90638, +1 562 903 4781 | Biolas BOLD adult degree programs are an innovative degree completion program for working adults who have completed at least two years of college and desire an accredited Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree in Organizational Leadership, or a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Psychology. These programs are offered at seven locations throughout Southern California: Chino, Inglewood, La Mirada, San Bernardino, San Diego County, south Orange County, and Thousand Oaks. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $754 per unit | Rosemead School of Psychology | A masters degree is awarded as a student progresses in the doctoral program. Special application for a terminal masters degree must be approved on an individual basis. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Rosemead School of Psychology | Rosemead School of Psychology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Rosemead provides aspiring evangelical psychologists with an expansive integration of psychology and theology from an APA accredited university-based program. Rosemead prepares them to minister within clinical settings, lead in research and teaching within academia, and impact the lives of individuals within the local church and throughout the world. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Faith-Based Issues Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | The faith-based issues M.A.Ed. is designed for experienced classroom teachers or administrators who desire to strengthen their knowledge of spiritual formation issues, world religions and competing legal and ethical issues in education. This program is taught by professors who are deeply entrenched in these issues as former or current teachers, professors and administrators. The faith-based issues concentration is particularly valuable for those students who wish to more deeply explore their faith in the context of education. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Personalized Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | The Personalized M.A.Ed. is a flexible program that is tailor-made to students interests and professional background. Designed for experienced classroom teachers and administrators, this is the most popular M.A.Ed. program due to its flexible 15-unit concentration. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Personalized Emphasis in Concentration with Apologetics | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | This concentration is designed for individuals who desire academic and practical preparation for proclaiming and defending the historic doctrines of the Christian faith. Students are prepared to articulate a Christian worldview reverently, with intelligence, confidence and compassion. The program fosters personal spiritual growth and maturity through guided study of the Scriptures and theology, mutual encouragement in the Christian life and intellectual rigor. Required courses include: Survey of Matthew–Revelation, Scripture: Authority, Canon, and Criticism, Essential Christian Doctrine I, Essential Christian Doctrine II, Six units of any additional Apologetics electives. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Personalized Emphasis in Concentration with History and Philosophy of Science | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | This concentration is designed to help experienced educators who already have a basic training in a natural science. Consequently, the coursework emphasizes the critical tools from other disciplines that are necessary for providing the proper context and foundation for understanding and working comfortably with issues that relate to both Christianity and the sciences. Required courses include: Historical Perspectives in Science and Religion, Darwin, Evolution and Design, Metaphysics and Epistemology, The Theology and Philosophy of Science, Modern Physics, Cosmology and Design, Advanced Seminar: Special Topics, Advanced Seminar: Special Topics. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Personalized Emphasis in Concentration with Linguistics and Intercultural Studies | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | This concentration is particularly useful for teachers interested in strengthening teaching methods for English learners in grades K-12. Students will learn about common teaching methods used in California classrooms to teach English to students from a variety of language backgrounds. Cultures of California are also explored, including field trips to local places of interest in Los Angeles, such as the Museum of Tolerance, Chinatown or Olvera Street. The classes are as follows: Research in Culture and Intercultural Instruction, Foundation of Language Education, Methods of Teaching Linguistically Diverse Students, Language Assessment and Evaluation, Interpersonal and Intercultural Adjustment or Intercultural Communication. Graduate students can also blend courses from the Linguistics and Intercultural Studies concentration with the TESOL concentration. Students who blend coursework must file a personalized concentration. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Personalized Emphasis in Concentration with Organizational Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | This concentration is designed to equip experienced teachers and administrators to lead and transform 21st century organizations. Principles and practices emphasized in this program enhance personal knowledge, character and skills for business, non-profit and ministry leadership. Graduate students prepare to deal with the growing complexity and challenges that leaders face daily as they guide people towards shared goals. Required courses include: Practical Leadership Theory, Character and Leadership, Leadership Challenge Program, Leadership and Group Behavior, Communication for Leaders, Leadership and Organizational Development, The Inner Leader I, The Inner Leader II, Ethical Decision Making. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Personalized Emphasis in Concentration with Personalized Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | The personalized concentration allows students to take a 15-unit concentration that is specifically tailored to their professional goals. So, for example, graduate students can combine courses from various concentrations and take electives from the School of Education catalog. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Personalized Emphasis in Concentration with Teaching English as a Second Language (TESOL) | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | This concentration is valuable for teachers who are interested in teaching English as a foreign language to adults. In this program, students explore the structure of English, methods of teaching English, and curriculum and values taught in classroom context. The classes are as follows: Structure of English, Introduction to TESOL, Materials Evaluation and Preparation, Communicating Values Through TESOL, Second Language Acquisition, Intercultural Communication for Teachers or Practicum in TESOL. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Education with a Teaching Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | The M.A.Ed. with a Teaching Emphasis program is a highly appealing option for current classroom teachers who already have a preliminary credential but still need to earn a clear credential. Simply earning the clear credential while at Biola either through an employer-provided induction program or through fifth year program if an induction program isnt available to students, it gets students about a third of the way to the masters degree; 12 of the 38 units needed to earn the degree can be achieved by completing either the induction or fifth year program. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Organizational Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $18000 | School of Professional Studies | The M.A. in Organizational Leadership is a masters degree designed to equip Christian working professionals to become effective leaders with integrity in their organizations, companies and churches. Biolas MOL is set apart by its integration of Christian faith and biblical character development into the teaching of best practices in leadership and business principles. This graduate degree is offered on Biolas main Southern California campus or in a modular (distance/online) format. MOL students come from a variety of fields, including management, ministry, human resources and administration. For more information contact the BOD degree Completion program, 12625 S. La Mirada Blvd., Ste. 101, La Mirada, CA 90638 or call at 562.903.4712, and email at bold@biola.edu. | Applicants must submit a bachelors degree from an accredited college or university. A grade point average (GPA) equivalent to a "B" average or higher. A limited number of applicants with lower GPAs may be admitted with probationary status. A minimum of three years managerial or leadership experience. A completed MOL application submitted by the stated deadlines. Three references (on forms provided in application packet) from people qualified to assess the applicants potential for leadership and organizational excellence. A statement of career objectives indicating how participating in the program will contribute toward growth and development toward stated goals. A current resume. A personal interview. International Students are required to submit scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Professional Studies | School of Professional Studies, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90638, +1 562 903 4781 | Biolas BOLD adult degree programs are an innovative degree completion program for working adults who have completed at least two years of college and desire an accredited Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree in Organizational Leadership, or a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Psychology. These programs are offered at seven locations throughout Southern California: Chino, Inglewood, La Mirada, San Bernardino, San Diego County, south Orange County, and Thousand Oaks. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Arts in Organizational Leadership | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Office of Graduate Admissions | The M.A. in Organizational Leadership is a masters degree designed to equip Christian working professionals to become effective leaders with integrity in their organizations, companies and churches. Biolas MOL is set apart by its integration of Christian faith and biblical character development into the teaching of best practices in leadership and business principles. This graduate degree is offered on Biolas main Southern California campus or in a modular (distance/online) format. MOL students come from a variety of fields, including management, ministry, human resources and administration. The M.A. in Organizational Leadership focuses on the human component of organizations, in addition to the economic. Integrating solid credentials and character development with a firm biblical foundation, the MOL can give students the tools to meet and exceed the challenges of todays marketplace. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Graduate Admissions | Office of Graduate Admissions, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Business Administration (MBA) | Full Time | Variable | $29000 | Crowell School of Business | The MBA degree is designed for those individuals who understand that putting Christ first will provide proper perspective, and who also know that the accomplishment of this requires high levels of faith, knowledge and integrity. The program attracts individuals who are seeking a rigorous program of study in the full range of business topics necessary for a complete understanding of the modern organization. In every course, the business topics are integrated with each other and with Scripture, so that those who participate can correctly and confidently become change management leaders within their organizations. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | MBA | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Crowell School of Business | Crowell School of Business, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4770 | The Crowell School of Business prepares students academically with a foundational business education while nurturing their Christian commitment through solid biblical integration in courses and contact with faculty and staff. The goal is to prepare graduates to be leaders in their profession, impacting the culture for Christ. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Divinity (M.Div.) | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The Master of Divinity curriculum at Talbot School of Theology is designed to foster the purposes for which the seminary was established - preparation for the propagation of the faith. This purpose entails an accurate knowledge of the Word of God—the source of faith and the effective means of its communication. The course of study is therefore designed around these two basic foci. Believing firmly that God in love and grace has provided an answer for the needs of the world in Jesus Christ, and that this Jesus is the Christ of the Scriptures, Talbot School of Theology emphasizes a knowledge of the content of the Word of God. So that the Word may be known and expounded accurately and authoritatively, matters of biblical background, including the languages of the Old and New Testaments, are studied. Sound principles of literary interpretation are also explored as a basis for the interpretation of the Scriptures. On the basis of such interpretation there comes systematic study so as to organize various parts of the Word into theological categories. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Two biblical languages are required: Greek and Hebrew. Either may be taken first. Greek: TTNT 503, TTNT 604 and TTNT 605 required beyond beginning Greek. A qualifying examination is available to all interested students. Those who pass the examination may enroll directly in TTNT 503; others must take TTNT 501 and TTNT 502 (two units each) as prerequisites to TTNT 503. Hebrew: TTOT 603, TTOT 604 and TTOT 705 are required. A qualifying examination is available to interested students. Those who pass the examination may take TTOT 604 plus 3-4 units of Hebrew electives instead of TTOT 603. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $406 per unit for summer, $406 per unit for Fall and Spring, $406 per unit for Interterm and $50 for Audit fee. | School of Education | The Master of Arts in Teaching is a practitioners degree, designed to give students the advanced skills and understanding for classroom application. The M.A.T. focuses on classroom practices, such as classroom management, distinguishing it from the Master of Arts in Education, which includes a greater emphasis on professional writing, research, theory and preparation for Ph.D. studies. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Education | School of Education, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4843 | The School of Education serves a diverse student body, consisting of more than 285 undergraduate students and 205 graduate students. The fully doctored, full-time faculty is made up of outstanding professionals with decades of combined experience in classroom and administrative settings. At the undergraduate level, the School of Education is home to the liberal studies major, which consistently ranks among the five most popular undergraduate majors at Biola. At the graduate level, the School of Education offers the flexible Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) and Master of Arts in Education (M.A.Ed.) programs, which can be tailored to meet the individual interests of new and experienced teachers alike. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Master of Theology (Th.M.) | Full Time | Variable | $20880 | Talbot School of Theology | The Master of Theology curriculum is a challenging post-graduate degree program designed to equip students with specialized academic knowledge and advanced professional skills in one of the theological disciplines. The Th.M. program is of special interest to students who aspire to teach, whether in the church, a Bible college or seminary, an extension center, or in a cross-cultural setting. This is in accord with both A.T.S. (Association of Theological Schools) and A.A.B.C. (American Association of Bible Colleges) which consider the Th.M. degree the minimum educational credential for teaching biblical and theological subjects at accredited seminaries and Bible schools. The Master of Theology program also provides an excellent preparation for those who anticipate further study at the Ph.D. and Th.D. level. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Masters | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Ph.D. in Educational Studies | Full Time | Variable | $27306 | Talbot School of Theology | The doctoral course of study is designed for men and women to enhance their leadership roles in a variety of educational ministries within Gods Kingdom—the local church, educational institutions, par church, and ministry organizations throughout the world. Students come to the programs already having completed a graduate degree and significant ministry experience in the field of educational ministry. In general, doctoral students are established within a particular ministry organization and return following completion of the program. A few students are in transition in their career path. The curriculum particularly encourages critical thinking, integrative synthesis of Scripture and social science data, and original research. Courses typically follow a graduate seminar format requiring student initiative for significant participation in class discussion. Small class sizes of 8-12 students permit such a dialogical format, an important element for promoting critical and integrative thinking. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. | Doctoral | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | DE 801 Philosophical Issues in Educational Studies, DE 806 Theological Integration for Educational Studies, Select one course from three: TTDE 807 Educational Research Methods, TTDE 860 Qualitative Research, TTDE 808 Statistical Methods in Educational Research. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology | Talbot School of Theology, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Talbot School of Theology is ideally situated on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, only minutes from Southern California beaches, mountains, bike paths, art galleries and amusement parks. In addition to the wealth of cultural, educational and recreational opportunities, Southern California provides a wide array of ministry opportunities for seminary students to pursue. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Ph.D. in Intercultural Education | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $28800 | School of Intercultural Studies | The Doctor of Philosophy degree in Intercultural Education equips Christians for professional careers in the field of formal, non-formal, and informal arenas of education. The chief goal in the program is to produce graduates who can think Christianly about their field, and engage in research and writing which helps contribute to new understandings of cross-cultural issues in education. The skills gained in pursuit of the degree involve teaching, academic mentoring, research, and writing. The Ph.D. in Intercultural Education allows the student to pursue knowledge and understanding of the cultural components of the educational process in diverse contexts. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university with a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point average. Application completed with application fee of US $45, Official transcripts of all colleges, universities or seminaries attended. The transcripts must be sent directly from the school to Biolas Office of Graduate Admissions to be official, TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) scores of 80 IBT or above. If TOEFL score is less than 80 IBT, students may be admitted to the English Language Study Program. For information about TOEFL, contact either: American Embassies and Consulates, United Information, Test of English as a Foreign Language, Box 6154, Princeton, NJ 08541-6154, USA. Three References, Affidavit of Support for each individual source of funding. The forms must be notarized and sent with supporting bank statements or copies of income tax return forms. Admission is competitive and based upon a committee review of each applicants undergraduate grade point average, GMAT score, and personal/professional background. The Crowell School of Business utilizes a formula for an index score: GMAT + [200 x undergrad G.P.A.] = index. | Doctoral | BIOLA UNIVERSITY | ISCL 815 Educational Philosophies in the Great Religious Traditions, ISCL 765 Cross-cultural Leadership, ISCL 823 Cross-cultural Teaching / Learning Strategies for Curriculum, ISCL 816 Educational Theory, ISCL 825 Comparative Human Development. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | School of Intercultural Studies | School of Intercultural Studies, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 903 4844 | The School of Intercultural Studies was founded to further the Great Commission. To take the story and tell it to all people, in all places. As Biola's founding fathers declared during the early 1900s, "There are thousands of unoccupied fields throughout the land, and more than half of the earth's inhabitants have never heard the Gospel." Biola's mission since 1908 to impact the world for Jesus Christ has not changed. Missions has always been - and continues to be - at the heart of all programs at Biola University. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Athletic Training | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Chiropractor | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Chiropractic medicine is based on the human body’s ability to heal itself without the use of drugs or surgery. It focuses on the relationship between the body's structure (primarily the vertebral column and spine) and function (as coordinated by the nervous system) and how that relationship affects the preservation and restoration of health. The chiropractic approach to healthcare is holistic, stressing the patient's overall health and wellness. It recognizes that many factors impact a patient’s health, including exercise, diet, rest, environment, and genetics. Chiropractic doctors are most well known for the different hands-on techniques they employ to adjust misalignments in the patient’s skeletal system, particularly focusing on the back. A career as a chiropractor offers real personal satisfaction and rewarding income. In addition, doctors of chiropractic are usually their own managers, establishing their own hours and work habits. Chiropractors enjoy the advantages of a profession that is well established: one that is recognized for its service to others, does not limit a person in opportunity, income or challenge, yet offers opportunities of security and community leadership. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Dentistry | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Preparation for entrance into dental school is similar to preparation for medical school. Students should contact the dental schools of their choice for specific entrance requirements. Informaton on the American Dental Association Dental Admission Test can be obtained from the secretary in the Science Building. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Biola’s pre-engineering program is a 3 + 2 cooperative degree completion program in which a student takes three years of classes at Biola, including the foundational science and mathematics courses of a typical engineering program. In addition, the student takes the biblical studies and general education courses to meet Biola’s requirements. Biola has a formal arrangement with the University of Southern California that permits the student, if qualified, to complete the remaining two years of an engineering curriculum at USC and receive both the Bachelor of Science degree from Biola in Engineering Physics, and the Bachelor of Engineering degree from USC. Some students in this program elect to transfer to an engineering school other than USC; students interested in this option should contact the school of their choice no later than the beginning of their sophomore year. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Law | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | aw schools are seeking students with excellent reading comprehension, strong analytical and critical thinking skills, the ability to write clear and effective prose, oral communication skills and experience in serving other people. They also seek students who have a breadth of knowledge that includes an understanding of history, human behavior, and social and political institutions. For a Christian planning a career in the legal field, Biola’s curriculum composed of an undergraduate major, general education and a biblical studies requirement provides a solid foundation. The 30-unit biblical studies program contributes a biblical and theological framework on which to build a Christian perspective on the practice of law, especially in the areas of values and ethics. The implications of a Christian worldview are further developed in the general education curriculum, which can be customized for the pre-law student. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | The modules include ENGL 281 - American Literature I, PHIL 210 - Introduction to Logic, PHIL 214 - Introduction to Philosophy, POSC 225 - Survey of American Government. | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Department of History, Government, and Social Science | Department of History, Government, and Social Science, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 562 944 0351 | The department emphasizes depth and breadth in history and the social sciences as the foundation for understanding of the world. History as a contextual discipline sheds light on all world civilizations, and illuminates the human condition while at the same time providing insight into the present. The program, therefore, places emphasis on in-depth study of global geographical regions, themes, and eras. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | |
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Medicine | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students who wish to pursue a career in medicine should plan to build a strong foundation in the sciences and mathematics. Courses in biology, chemistry and physics form the core of this preparation. While most students at Biola who are preparing to enter medical school major in biological science or biochemistry with a pre-med emphasis, other majors are possible if the student completes all of the core science courses required by the medical school. Medical schools also expect a broad background in the liberal arts such as is provided by Biola’s program in general education. In addition, Biola’s biblical and theological studies requirement and its integration of a biblical perspective in all courses equips the prospective Christian health professional in mind and character to impact the world for Jesus Christ. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Optometry | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Optometrists are the primary health professionals for the eyes. They examine, diagnose, treat, and manage diseases, injuries, and disorders of the entire visual system. Optometrists, licensed as Doctors of Optometry (O.D. degree) can prescribe ocular medications and participate in vision rehabilitation, vision therapy, spectacle lenses, contact lenses, and perform certain limited surgical procedures. Optometrists counsel their patients regarding eye care options that meet their visual needs related to their occupations, avocations, and lifestyle. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Pharmacy | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Pharmacists are health professionals who practice the art and science of pharmacy, which is the dispensing of prescription drugs to individuals. They also advise their patients, as well as physicians and other health providers, on the selection, dosages, interactions, and side effects of medications. Pharmacists monitor the health and progress of patients to ensure the safe and effective use of medication. Pharmacists work in a variety of clinical environments. Some pharmacists work in a community setting, such as a retail drugstore, where they dispense medications and counsel patients on the use of prescription and over-the-counter medications. They also advise patients about general health topics such as diet, exercise, and stress management, and provide information on products such as durable medical equipment or home health care supplies. Some community pharmacists provide specialized services to help patients with conditions such as diabetes, asthma, and high blood pressure; while others participate in smoking cessation interventions and vaccinations. Biola offers an excellent educational foundation, and individualized advising/preparation, for any student interested in becoming a pharmacist. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Physical Therapy | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students interested in a career in physical therapy have the opportunity to pursue one of two program options at Biola. Both of these options are designed to meet the entrance requirements of master’s degree programs in Physical Therapy. (A master’s degree in Physical Therapy would be required to work in this field.) The options contain a common core of courses, but differ in the courses which complement this core. The choice between the two options depends on a student’s interests, abilities and ultimate career goals. Physical therapy can be practiced in a variety of settings, from sports to schools to hospitals. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Physician Assistant | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Physician assistants (PAs) are health professionals licensed to practice medicine under the supervision of a physician. PAs are extensively trained to provide diagnostic, therapeutic, and preventive healthcare services. Working as members of the healthcare team, physician assistants can take medical histories, perform physical exams, order and interpret laboratory tests, diagnose and treat illnesses, counsel patients, assist in surgery, and set fractures. PAs can also work as the principal health providers in rural or inner city clinics, where a physician is on the premises for only 1 or 2 days each week. In these types of clinical work environments, the PA confers with the supervising physician and other medical professionals as needed or as required by law. hysician assistants are educated as generalists in medicine, thus most of the PA graduate programs emphasize primary care in their training. Although their education and credentialing are based on a primary care foundation, PAs can also work in specialty fields like cardiovascular surgery, orthopedics, and emergency medicine. Nonetheless, the largest proportion of PAs opt for the primary care specialty areas of family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics, and obstetrics and gynecology. Biola offers an excellent educational foundation, and individualized advising/preparation, for any student interested in becoming a physician assistant (PA). |
Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Seminary Training | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Biola University provides an excellent background in undergraduate education for seminary training. Students would be greatly assisted in preparing for their graduate studies by undergraduate courses in areas such as biblical studies, philosophy, logic, history of Western civilization and advanced composition. The pre-seminary student should compare the program at Biola University with the requirements of the particular seminary the student plans to enter. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Speech / Language Pathology and Pre-Audiology | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Student wishing to prepare for careers as a speech-language pathologist or audiologist should choose the Communication Disorders major. Coursework in this major follows the guidelines of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) and provides students with an understanding of both normal communication processes as well as communication disorders. Students have the opportunity to begin their clinical training in the on-campus Biola Speech and Language Clinic that provides speech-language assessment and treatment for members of the local community in a carefully supervised setting. Students who complete this major are prepared for the graduate studies necessary to obtain professional credentials. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre - Veterinarian | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Doctors of Veterinary Medicine are medical professionals whose primary responsibility is protecting the health and welfare of animals and the people in their environment. Veterinarians, working in a variety of clinical settings, diagnose and control animal diseases, treat sick and injured animals, prevent the transmission of animal diseases to people, and advise owners on proper care of pets and livestock. In addition, veterinarians are involved in maintaining the health of food animals (to ensure a safe food supply), pharmaceutical research, wildlife preservation/conservation and public health of the human population. Biola offers an excellent educational foundation, and individualized advising/preparation, for any student interested in becoming a veterinarian. | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 110097 | Biola University | Pre-Bible Translation | Full Time | Variable | $27744 for 12 - 18 units | Office of Admissions | Students interested in working in Bible translation, linguistics or literacy with organizations such as the Wycliffe Bible Translators are able to get Wycliffe-approved undergraduate courses in these areas. These courses are taught by members of SIL and Wycliffe in the Department of Applied Linguistics and TESOL (ALT). | Students must have graduated from secondary school or earned an equivalent degree (GED). Students must have at least a 3.0 unweighted high school GPA. Students must have one of the following: 920 Critical Reading / Math score on the SAT; Composite 19 score on the ACT; 600 Paper / 250 Computer / 100 internet based test score on the TOEFL. The student must be an evangelical believer in the Christian faith. | Pre-professional | Biola University | Biola University | Sung Lee, Director | 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Office of Admissions | Office of Admissions, Biola University, 13800 Biola Avenue, LA MIRADA, California, 90639, +1 800 652 4652 | Biola University is a private Christian university located in Southern California. For nearly 100 years, Biola has stood out as an institution grounded on biblically centered education, intentional spiritual development, and career preparation, where all faculty, staff and students are professing Christians. With more than 145 academic programs through its seven schools, Biola offers degrees ranging from B.A. to Ph.D. | Yes | Biola provides furnished, shared housing for full-time single graduate students. There are a limited number of openings available each semester. New international and out of state students have first priority for housing. Furnished housing is provided in houses and apartment units owned or leased by Biola within walking distance of campus. These two-bedroom apartments and three-to-four bedroom houses are furnished with major kitchen appliances (refrigerator and stove/oven), residence-hall style bedroom furniture, couch and dinette set. Residents pay a per-person monthly rate, based on the number of occupants per bedroom. The rate includes basic utilities except for telephone, cable-TV and internet service. There is a no pets policy in all graduate housing. Biola University owns three apartment complexes with one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments for married couples and families. The complexes are located on Rosecrans Avenue, within walking distance of campus. These apartments are unfurnished; stove/ovens and refrigerators are provided. The monthly housing fee is per apartment unit; residents pay for their own utilities and telephone service. For married couples to qualify at least one spouse must be enrolled full-time in a Biola University graduate or undergraduate program. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | (M.A./M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry and Counseling (Dual Degree Program) | Full Time | 42 Credit-hour(s) | Contact provider | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program was developed by the school of theology and ministry (STM) and the lynch school of education (LSOE). It is designed for individuals who wish to pursue graduate studies that combine theories and practice in counseling and psychology with studies in religion and exploration of the pastoral dimensions of care giving. It combines the foundational studies and faculty resources of the existing MA in pastoral ministry with the MA in Counseling Psychology (Mental Health Counselor track). Students pursuing the dual degree may do so in one of two concentrations within the MA in pastoral ministry degree: pastoral care and spirituality. Both concentrations enable the student to bring pastoral spiritual dimensions into a counseling setting and/or to practice as a pastoral counselor. The Spirituality concentration also prepares the student to practice the art of spiritual direction. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department | This program offers the student an opportunity to develop a knowledge and understanding of visual culture throughout history. The study of art offers many opportunities for integrating a thorough understanding of visual culture from other areas of inquiry, and art history faculty and students participate in many interdisciplinary programs across the university. Department courses provide both a broad foundation in the humanities as well as preparation for graduate work leading to professional involvement in the arts. Potential careers include teaching and research, art criticism, museum curatorship, art conservation, museum directorship, and art appraising. The student is also prepared to hold positions in commercial galleries and auction houses. Students majoring in Art History plan integrated programs in consultation with their departmental advisors. They are encouraged to take courses in history, philosophy, foreign languages, and other fields related to their specialization. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include FA101 Art: Prehistoric to Middle Ages; FA102 Art: Renaissance to Modern Times; FA103 Art History Workshop I; FA104 Art History Workshop II; FA107 History of Architecture; FA108 Great Art Capitals of Europe; ;FA109 Clues to Seeing; FA174 Islamic Civilization; FA207 Ruins of Ancient America: Temples and Tombs; FA221 Mysteries and Visions: Early Medieval Art; FA222 Imagination and Imagery: Later Medieval Art; FA231 Early Renaissance Art in Italy; FA251 Modern Architecture; FA256 Impressionism and Neo-Impressionism; FA257 Nineteenth-Century Art; FA258 Modern Art: Nineteenth and Twentieth Century; FA263 American Icons: Nineteenth-Century Images of National Identity; FA264 American Modern: The Triumph of U.S. Art; FA267 From Salt-Box to Skyscraper: Architecture in America Seventeenth to Twentieth Century’s; FA280 Masterpieces of Islamic Art; FA285 History of Photography; FA294 Visual Perception in Art and Science; FA311 Greek Art and Archaeology; FA314 The Art and Archaeology of Egypt and the Ancient Near East; FA315 Arts of Islamic Spain; FA316 Eastern Influences on Western Art; FA335 Italian Palaces From 1450 to 1650; FA340 Rebels and Revolutionaries: Expressionism; FA342 Age of Rembrandt; FA347 Age of Baroque: Seventeen Century Art in Italy; FA350 The Art of the Object/Islamic Art; FA356 Art Since 1945; FA370 The Art Museum: History, Philosophy and Practice; FA401 Seminar in Art Historical Research; FA403 Independent Work I; FA404 Independent Work II; FA409 The Art of the Islamic Book; FA451 Symbolism and Art Nouveau; FA453 Art of the Mind; FA458 Surrealism; FA461 Frank Lloyd Wright; FA480 History, Literature, and Art of Early Modern Rome; FA799 Independent Research. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department, Devlin Hall 434, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4295 | The Boston College Fine Arts Department is located in Devlin Hall. The building houses Art studios as well as faculty offices, a slide library of about 100,000 slides, and classrooms of various sizes equipped for audiovisual projection for art history classes. There are studios for painting and drawing, as well as facilities for teaching photography and filmmaking in Devlin Hall. Additional studios for ceramics and senior studios are available in two nearby carriage houses. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Classics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | The major includes courses in Latin and/or Greek language and literature, from the elementary to the advanced level, and courses in ancient civilization and culture. Readings in the latter courses are in English. The program is designed to be flexible in response to the interests and prior experience of individual students. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CL 010-011 Elementary Latin I and II; CL 020-021 Elementary Ancient Greek I and II; CL 052-053 Intermediate Ancient Greek I and II; CL 056-057 Intermediate Latin I and II; CL 166 Modern Greek Drama in English; CL 208 Art and Myth in Ancient Greece; CL 217 Heroic Poetry: Homer, Virgil, and Beyond; CL 230 Classical Mythology; CL 390-391 Reading and Research I and II; CL 394 Senior Thesis; CL 399 Advanced Independent Research. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 2800 | The Department of Classical Studies is small and congenial, with a faculty that enjoys teaching while at the same time being active in research and publication. The department possesses its own Classics library and seminar room and provides access to valuable Boston institutions such as the Museum of Fine Arts. Over the course of the academic year, the department sponsors various lectures and discussion groups, bringing in scholars from other universities and supporting talks by the own faculty and graduate students. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Communication - Broadcasting | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | This program of study has led graduating majors to careers in communication industries and to success in fields related to communication such as business, education, government / politics, health, international relations and negotiations, and social and human services. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CO 010 The Rhetorical Tradition; CO 020 Survey of Mass Communication; CO 030 Public Speaking; CO 350 Research Methods; CO 249 Communication Law; CO 250 Mass Communication Ethics; CO 253 Interpersonal Communication; CO 255 Media Aesthetics; CO 260 American Public Address; CO 263 Media, Law, and Society; CO 268 Business of Electronic Media; CO 369 Social Protest Theory; CO 372 Mass Communication Theory; CO 374 Human Communication Theory; CO 375 Argumentation Theory; CO 377 Visual Communication Theory; CO 378 Rhetorical Theory; CO 425 Broadcast Century Issues; CO 426 Television and Society; CO 427 Culture, Communication, and Power; CO 429 Globalization and the Media; CO 433 Sonic Society; CO 435 Rhetoric, Resistance, and Protest; CO 438 Rhetoric and Public Memory; CO 440 Communication and Theology; CO 442 Intercultural Communication; CO 445 Freedom of Expression; CO 447 Communication Criticism; CO 448 Television Criticism; CO 449 Crisis Communication; CO 451 Gender Roles and Communication; CO 456 Relational Communication; CO 458 Radio in Culture and Society; CO 459 Dark Side of Communication: Personal Relationships; CO 462 Popular Music and Identity; CO 463 Media and Popular Culture; CO 464 Violence and Media; CO 465 Health Communication; CO 466 Nonverbal Communication; CO 467 Communication and Culture in the Workplace; CO 470 Capstone: Conflict, Decision, and Communication; CO213 Fundamentals of Audio I; CO214 Fundamendals of Audio II; CO215 Soundcasting Media; CO222 Studio Television Production; CO223 Television Field Production; CO224 Digital Nonlinear Editing; CO227 Broadcast Writing; CO268 Business of Electronic Media; CO280 Broadcast Programming and Production; CO400 Advanced Video Production; CO249 Communication Law - cluster; CO250 Mass Communication Ethics - cluster; CO372 Mass Communication Theory - theory course; CO425 Broadcast Century Issues - writing-intensive seminar; CO426 Television and Society - writing-intensive seminar; CO429 Globalization and the Media - writing-intensive seminar; CO447 Communication Criticism - writing-intensive seminar; CO448 Television Criticism - writing-intensive seminar; CO458 Radio Culture and Society - writing-intensive seminar; CO464 Violence and the Media - writing-intensive seminar. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department, 21 Campanella Way, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4280 | The Communication Department is located on the fifth (5th) floor of 21 Campanella Way, a building located on the main campus in Chestnut Hill. The department is concerned with the study, criticism, research, teaching and application of the artistic, humanistic, and scientific principles of communication. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Communication - Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | This program of study has led graduating majors to careers in communication industries and to success in fields related to communication such as business, education, government / politics, health, international relations and negotiations, and social and human services. This program is designed to help students develop an understanding and appreciation of the ethical standards, legal boundaries and everyday practice in the field of journalism, as well as to give students the knowledge and skills necessary to succeed as professionals in the field. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CO 010 The Rhetorical Tradition; CO 020 Survey of Mass Communication; CO 030 Public Speaking; CO 350 Research Methods; CO 249 Communication Law; CO 250 Mass Communication Ethics; CO 253 Interpersonal Communication; CO 255 Media Aesthetics; CO 260 American Public Address; CO 263 Media, Law, and Society; CO 268 Business of Electronic Media; CO 369 Social Protest Theory; CO 372 Mass Communication Theory; CO 374 Human Communication Theory; CO 375 Argumentation Theory; CO 377 Visual Communication Theory; CO 378 Rhetorical Theory; CO 425 Broadcast Century Issues; CO 426 Television and Society; CO 427 Culture, Communication, and Power; CO 429 Globalization and the Media; CO 433 Sonic Society; CO 435 Rhetoric, Resistance, and Protest; CO 438 Rhetoric and Public Memory; CO 440 Communication and Theology; CO 442 Intercultural Communication; CO 445 Freedom of Expression; CO 447 Communication Criticism; CO 448 Television Criticism; CO 449 Crisis Communication; CO 451 Gender Roles and Communication; CO 456 Relational Communication; CO 458 Radio in Culture and Society; CO 459 Dark Side of Communication: Personal Relationships; CO 462 Popular Music and Identity; CO 463 Media and Popular Culture; CO 464 Violence and Media; CO 465 Health Communication; CO 466 Nonverbal Communication; CO 467 Communication and Culture in the Workplace; CO 470 Capstone: Conflict, Decision, and Communication; CO227 Broadcast Writing; CO230 News Writing; CO231 Feature Writing; CO233 Advanced Journalism; CO235 - Introduction to Advertising; CO240 - Introduction to Public Relations; CO249 - Communication Law; CO250 - Mass Communication Ethics; CO268 - Business of Electronic Media; CO298 - World Wide Web and Digital Media; CO425 - Broadcast Century Issues; CO426 - Television and Society; CO429 - Globalization and the Media; CO448 - Television Criticism; CO458 - Radio in Culture and Society; CO485 - Advanced Intercultural Study abroad. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department, 21 Campanella Way, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4280 | The Communication Department is located on the fifth (5th) floor of 21 Campanella Way, a building located on the main campus in Chestnut Hill. The department is concerned with the study, criticism, research, teaching and application of the artistic, humanistic, and scientific principles of communication. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Communication - Pre-Law | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | This program of study has led graduating majors to careers in communication industries and to success in fields related to communication such as business, education, government / politics, health, international relations and negotiations, and social and human services. In its "preparation for legal education," the American Bar Association (ABA) does not recommend a particular course of study for pre-law majors. Nor is there any evidence that law schools give preference to a specific undergraduate major. Law students come from every conceivable area of study; communication majors from Boston College have attended many prestigious law schools. If students are considering a career in law, select courses that will help them to develop the skills necessary to succeed as an attorney. To facilitate this selection process, the ABA has identified the following skills analytical thinking; critical reading; oral communication; problem solving; research; task organization and management; and writing. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CO 010 The Rhetorical Tradition; CO 020 Survey of Mass Communication; CO 030 Public Speaking; CO 350 Research Methods; CO 249 Communication Law; CO 250 Mass Communication Ethics; CO 253 Interpersonal Communication; CO 255 Media Aesthetics; CO 260 American Public Address; CO 263 Media, Law, and Society; CO 268 Business of Electronic Media; CO 369 Social Protest Theory; CO 372 Mass Communication Theory; CO 374 Human Communication Theory; CO 375 Argumentation Theory; CO 377 Visual Communication Theory; CO 378 Rhetorical Theory; CO 425 Broadcast Century Issues; CO 426 Television and Society; CO 427 Culture, Communication, and Power; CO 429 Globalization and the Media; CO 433 Sonic Society; CO 435 Rhetoric, Resistance, and Protest; CO 438 Rhetoric and Public Memory; CO 440 Communication and Theology; CO 442 Intercultural Communication; CO 445 Freedom of Expression; CO 447 Communication Criticism; CO 448 Television Criticism; CO 449 Crisis Communication; CO 451 Gender Roles and Communication; CO 456 Relational Communication; CO 458 Radio in Culture and Society; CO 459 Dark Side of Communication: Personal Relationships; CO 462 Popular Music and Identity; CO 463 Media and Popular Culture; CO 464 Violence and Media; CO 465 Health Communication; CO 466 Nonverbal Communication; CO 467 Communication and Culture in the Workplace; CO 470 Capstone: Conflict, Decision, and Communication; CO010 Rhetorical Tradition; CO105 Elements of Debate; CO249 Communication Law; CO259 Cyber law; CO263 Media, Law and Society; CO375 Argumentation Theory; CO445 Seminar on Freedom of Expression. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department, 21 Campanella Way, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4280 | The Communication Department is located on the fifth (5th) floor of 21 Campanella Way, a building located on the main campus in Chestnut Hill. The department is concerned with the study, criticism, research, teaching and application of the artistic, humanistic, and scientific principles of communication. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Communication - Visual Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | This program of study has led graduating majors to careers in communication industries and to success in fields related to communication such as business, education, government / politics, health, international relations and negotiations, and social and human services. This program is designed to utilize students' broad liberal arts and communication background, to give students insight into their visual environment, to develop a command of basic visual language as it is used in mass media and to raise critical awareness of visual strategies and manipulative techniques. Applied technical courses give students experience in designing messages for visual communication in a variety of media. Applied theory courses extend visual understanding to include aesthetic considerations in specific media or social implications, or both. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CO 010 The Rhetorical Tradition; CO 020 Survey of Mass Communication; CO 030 Public Speaking; CO 350 Research Methods; CO 249 Communication Law; CO 250 Mass Communication Ethics; CO 253 Interpersonal Communication; CO 255 Media Aesthetics; CO 260 American Public Address; CO 263 Media, Law, and Society; CO 268 Business of Electronic Media; CO 369 Social Protest Theory; CO 372 Mass Communication Theory; CO 374 Human Communication Theory; CO 375 Argumentation Theory; CO 377 Visual Communication Theory; CO 378 Rhetorical Theory; CO 425 Broadcast Century Issues; CO 426 Television and Society; CO 427 Culture, Communication, and Power; CO 429 Globalization and the Media; CO 433 Sonic Society; CO 435 Rhetoric, Resistance, and Protest; CO 438 Rhetoric and Public Memory; CO 440 Communication and Theology; CO 442 Intercultural Communication; CO 445 Freedom of Expression; CO 447 Communication Criticism; CO 448 Television Criticism; CO 449 Crisis Communication; CO 451 Gender Roles and Communication; CO 456 Relational Communication; CO 458 Radio in Culture and Society; CO 459 Dark Side of Communication: Personal Relationships; CO 462 Popular Music and Identity; CO377 Visual Communication Theory; CO379 Advanced Visual Theory and Aesthetics; CO460 Seminar on Fiction, Film and Video; cCO204 - Art and Digital Communication; CO224 - Digital Nonlinear Editing; CO236 - Advertising Copy and Layout; CO400 - Advanced Video Production; CO478 - Producing Documentaries; CO250 - Mass Communication Ethics; CO447 - Communication Criticism; CO448 - Television Criticism; CO235 – Advertising; CO240 - Public Relations; CO245 - Advanced Pubic Relations; CO300 - Advanced Advertising. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department, 21 Campanella Way, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4280 | The Communication Department is located on the fifth (5th) floor of 21 Campanella Way, a building located on the main campus in Chestnut Hill. The department is concerned with the study, criticism, research, teaching and application of the artistic, humanistic, and scientific principles of communication. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program provides a critical examination of how the economic system works in the United States and throughout the world. The introductory courses are surveys of economic problems, policies, and theory, and the required courses in micro theory and macro theory give a deeper analytical foundation. Electives permit further study in a wide range of fields, including money and banking, international trade and finance, public sector economics, capital theory, labor economics, industrial organization, environmental economics, law and economics, health economics, energy economics, urban economics, economic development, and various topics in advanced theory. The economics major provides a general background that is useful to those planning careers in law, government service, and business as well as those planning careers as professional economists. Professional economists work as college teachers, as researchers for government agencies, businesses, and consulting firms, and as administrators and managers in a wide range of fields. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include EC 131 Principles of Economics I - Micro; EC 132 Principles of Economics II - Macro; EC 151 Economic Statistics; EC 155 Statistics - Honors; EC 199 Economics Internship; EC 201 Microeconomic Theory; EC 202 Macroeconomic Theory; EC 203 Microeconomic Theory - Honors; EC 204 Macroeconomic Theory - Honors; EC 210 Behavioral Economics; EC 215 Numerical Methods and Scientific Computation; EC 228 Econometric Methods; EC 229 Economic and Business Forecasting; EC 233 History of Economic Thought; EC 242 Public Policy in an Aging Society; EC 261 Money, Banking, and Financial Markets; EC 273 Development Economics; EC 275 Economic Development: The Experience of El Salvador; EC 278 Environmental Economics; EC 299 Independent Study; EC 308 Game Theory in Economics; EC 311 Mathematics for Economists; EC 327 Financial Econometrics; EC 329 Decisions: Theory and Experiments; EC 338 Law and Economics; EC 340 Labor Economics; EC 345 Labor Relations and Human Resources; EC 352 Economics of the Firm; EC 355 Topics and Case Studies in Antitrust Law and Economics; EC 361 Monetary Theory and Policy. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3670 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This prepares students for teaching children without disabilities and children with mild disabilities in regular classrooms, grades one-six. The major requirements for the elementary program include foundation and professional courses. Foundation courses focus on building understanding in areas such as child growth, learning, diversity, and development from cultural and historical perspectives. Professional courses are viewed as an integrated approach to the subject matter of the elementary classroom that includes reading, language, literature, mathematics, science, and social studies. In addition to the mastery of program content, students are instructed in learning theories; instructional strategies and models; curriculum and school organizational practices; educational technology; and effective assessment procedures and instruments. Students also develop competencies in working with diverse learners. Instruction enables students to effectively integrate children with disabilities into regular classrooms. Students have opportunities to engage in problem-solving and reflective practice, work with parents and communities, and apply knowledge to research projects. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PY030 Child Growth and Development; PY031 Family, School and Society; ED039 Learning and Curriculum in the Elementary School (Take with ED104); ED104 Teaching Reading (take with ED039); ED044 Working with Special Needs Students; ED101 Teaching Language Arts (take with ED108); ED108 Teaching Mathematics and Technology (take with ED101); ED105 Teaching Social Science and the Arts (take with ED109); ED109 Teaching about the Natural World (take with ED105); MT191 Fundamentals of Mathematics II (required for Class of 2012 and beyond); ED151,152,153 Pre-practica (1 cr each) (Inquiry Seminar is a co-requisite); ED131,132,133 Undergraduate Inquiry Seminar I, II, III (1 credit each); ED154 and ED134 International Pre-practicum (optional); ED231 Senior Inquiry Seminar (SIS) (co-requisite ED250); ED250 Full Practicum Lynch School Students (co-requisite ED231). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in English | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, English Department | This program is designed to introduce students to a wide range of expression in the literary traditions of the past and present. It aims to help undergraduate students develop a strengthened ability to work critically and sensitively with texts in poetry and prose, to write with clarity and grace, and to articulate judgments about literature with an awareness of various critical approaches. English majors will become familiar with some of the major developments in the history of British and American literature and will have the opportunity to choose from an array of courses covering topics from the medieval period to contemporary cultural studies. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include EN 010 First Year Writing Seminar; EN 052 Introductory College Writing; EN 079 Literary Forms for English Language Learners; EN 080 Literary Forms; EN 081 Literary Themes; EN 082 Literature and Society; EN 083 Literature: Traditions and Counter Traditions; EN 084 Literatures of the World; EN 093-094 An Introduction to Modern Irish I and II; EN 097-098 Continuing Modern Irish I and II; EN 101 Celtic Heroic Age; EN 123 Language and Ethnicity; EN 125 Introduction to Feminisms; EN 131 Studies in Poetry; EN 133 Narrative and Interpretation; EN 141 American Literary History I; EN 142 American Literary History II; EN 143 American Literary History III; EN 170 Introduction to British Literature and Culture I; EN 171 Introduction to British Literature and Culture II; EN 175 Jewish Writers in Russia and America; EN 220 Classical Mythology; EN 241 Playwriting; EN 249 Contemporary Theatre and Drama; EN 261 Writing The Self; EN 267 Modern German Novels in Translation; EN 272 The Short Story Tradition. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, English Department | College of Arts and Sciences, English Department, Boston College, Carney Hall140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3716 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Film Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department | This program has arisen out of a need and desire to assist students in developing critical and technical skills in the area of film. Video, photography, and television also play a supportive role in the development of these skills. As a part of the film studies program a student can pursue any of the electives dealing with the above aspects of communications. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include FM171 Filmmaking I; FM202 Introduction to Film Art; FM220 Holocaust and the Arts; FM230 Introduction to Video Art; FM273 Filmmaking II; FM274 Digital Non-Linear Editing; FM275 Final Cut Pro Editing; FM280 American Film History: Early Years; FM281 American Film History: Studio Years; FM282 Political Fiction Film; FM283 History of European Cinema; FM301 Screenwriter; FM302 Adaptation: Fiction Into Film; FM303 Advanced Screenwriting; FM310 The Working Cinematographer: On the Set; FM314 Cinema of the Greater Middle East; FM315 Film Noir; FM325 The Comic Film; FM332 Maverick Hollywood Directors; FM382 Documentary Film; FM385 French Cinema; FM389 American Directors Series; FM393 American Classic Auteurs; FM395 Teaching Assistantship; FM396 Advanced Screenwriting II; FM440 Independent Study; FM461 Filmaking III; FM499 Advanced Independent Research; FM598 Teaching Assistantship. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department, Devlin Hall 434, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4295 | The Boston College Fine Arts Department is located in Devlin Hall. The building houses Art studios as well as faculty offices, a slide library of about 100,000 slides, and classrooms of various sizes equipped for audiovisual projection for art history classes. There are studios for painting and drawing, as well as facilities for teaching photography and filmmaking in Devlin Hall. Additional studios for ceramics and senior studios are available in two nearby carriage houses. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in French | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures | This program is designed to help students attain a high linguistic proficiency in at least one romance language and broad insight into the literature and culture of other nations. Graduates with RLL majors are currently employed in many different fields including law, interpreting, and international business. For students interested in graduate studies, the major offers solid preparation and guidance. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include RL 305 Introduction to Drama and Poetry; RL 306 Introduction to Narrative Forms; RL 307 Masterpieces of French Literature; RL 308 Advanced Language Studies in French; RL 309 Topics in French Culture and Civilization; RL 210 French Composition, Conversation, and Reading II; RL 572 Comparative Development of the Romance Languages; RL 595 (ED 303) Teaching Foreign Languages: Topics in Second Language Acquisition; RL 210 French Composition, Conversation and Reading II. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Lyons Hall 304, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3820 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in German Studies - Business Track | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, German Studies Department | This program is designed to give the student an active command of the German language, an insight into German literature and culture, and to provide the background for graduate study in the field. The business track concentration allows students to combine a dual interest in business and German in a program of study which prepares them for an international career. Business German is an outgrowth of the overall globalization of business, in particular between Germany and the United States. The thriving German economy makes Central and Eastern Europe a strong market for American products, and has enabled German companies to open branches in the United States. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include GM001 German A (Elementary I) (Fall: 3); GM002 German A (Elementary II) (Spring: 3); GM003 Elementary German Practicum I (Fall: 1); GM004 Elementary German Practicum II (Spring: 1); GM050 Intermediate German I (Fall: 3); GM051 Intermediate German II (Spring: 3); GM063 Triumphs and Failings of Modern Man (Spring/biennially: 3); GM065 Playing the Game (Spring/periodically: 3); GM066 The Quest for Justice: Kafka and Kleist (Fall/biennially: 3); GM068 The Quest for Justice Practicum (Fall: 1); GM067 The Romantic Experience (Spring: 3); GM133 Kleine Uebung: Geist und Gnade (Fall/periodically: 2); GM175 Business German (Spring: 3); GM201 German Composition and Conversation I (Fall: 3); GM202 German Composition and Conversation II (Spring: 3); GM210 History of German Literature I (Fall/biennially: 3); GM211 History of German Literature II (Spring/biennially: 3); GM214 The Poetic Mind of Germany (Spring: 3); GM215 German Romanticism (Spring/periodically: 3); GM216 Shooting Nazis: German Film from 1933-1945 (Spring/periodically: 3); GM218 German Feature Films: A Survey (Spring/biennially: 3); GM220 Goethe und Schiller (Fall/biennially: 3); GM222 Music and Word: The German Musical Heritage (Fall/biennially: 3); GM223 Contemporary German Short Fiction (Fall/Spring/periodically: 3); GM224 Modern German Novels in Translation (Fall/periodically: 3); GM225 Modern German Novels Practicum (Fall/periodically: 1); GM226 "Ach Europa!" Hyphenated Germans Write About Their Host Country; GM233 Between Imperial Germany and Hitler's Reich (Spring/periodically: 3); GM238 Passion, Politics and Poetry in the Middle Ages (Fall/periodically: 3); GM239 Knights, Castles and Dragons (Spring/biennially: 3); GM240 King Arthur in German Literature (Spring/biennially: 3); GM242 Germany Divided and Reunited (Fall/biennially: 3); GM247 German Exile Writers Against Hitler 1933-45 (Fall/periodically: 3); GM290 Advanced Reading in German (Spring: 3); GM299 Reading and Research (Fall/Spring: 3); GM310 Middle High German - Mittelhochdeutsch (Spring/periodically: 3); GM501 Internship (Fall/Spring/Summer: 1); GM601 Advanced Independent Research (Fall/Spring: 6); GM699 Honors Thesis (Fall/Spring: 3). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, German Studies Department | College of Arts and Sciences, German Studies Department, Lyons Hall 201, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3740 | The German Department is a small, student-focused department in the College of Arts and Sciences that provides courses in German language, culture, business and history from the Middle Ages to the present. In addition, the department offers opportunities for contact with German-speaking Europe and for study abroad in Austria and Germany, as well as the possibility of teaching in Germany following graduation. The department is known for its student’s first attitude, as the faculty members provide personal attention to student needs, and foster a positive learning experience within the classroom. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Hispanic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures | This program is designed to help students attain a high linguistic proficiency in at least one romance language and broad insight into the literature and culture of other nations. Graduates with RLL majors are currently employed in many different fields including law, interpreting, and international business. For students interested in graduate studies, the major offers solid preparation and guidance. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include Pre-1800 Peninsular literature and culture; Pre-1800 Latin American literature and culture; Post-1800 Peninsular literature and culture; Post-1800 Latin American literature and culture. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Lyons Hall 304, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3820 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in History | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department | This program prepares students for any of a broad spectrum of possible careers. Graduates found employment in areas as diverse as education, law, museum studies, editing and publishing, archival research, journalism, historic preservation, public service, library science, and records management. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include HS 001-002 Europe in the World I and II; HS 005-006 Asia in the World I and I; HS 011-012 Atlantic World I and II; HS 019-020 Democracy, Rights, and Empire I and II; HS 023-024 Eurasia in the World I and II; HS 031-032 Europe and the Modern World I and II; HS 035-036 Europe and the Modern World I and II; HS 041-042 Europe in the World I and II; HS 051-052 Europe in the World I and II; HS 081-082 Modern History I and II; HS 093-094 Modern History I and II; HS 104 American Presidency; HS 106 Teaching History Content Lab; HS 107 Internship; HS 111 America’s War in Vietnam; HS 120 Introduction to African Diaspora Studies; HS 121 People and Nature: History and Future of Human Impact/Planet; HS 131 American Icons - Nineteenth-Century Images of National Identity; HS 148 Introduction to Feminisms; HS 163 Roman Law and Family; HS 166 Arts of Islamic Spain; HS 171 Islamic Civilization; HS 172 Post-Slavery History of the Caribbean; HS 247 Irish Material Culture. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department, Boston College, 21 Campanella Way140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 2267 | The Department of History is one of the largest departments in the College of Arts and Sciences, with 35 full-time faculty members and over 600 history majors. The offices for faculty and staff in this department are located in 21 Campanella Way, on the 4th floor. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Human Development - Community Advocacy and Social Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program prepares students for work in social and community service and/or for graduate study in counseling, human development, educational psychology, and related fields. The curriculum offers a theoretical base in developmental and counseling psychology with a focus on understanding psychological processes in context. Students in human development have obtained employment in educational, human service, and business settings. A practicum experience provides students with an opportunity to develop important professional skills and explore career opportunities. The 10-course major gives a strong background in the area of developmental psychology and an introduction to the field of counseling. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PY030 Child Growth and Development; PY031 Family, School and Society; PY032 Psychology of Learning; PY242 Personality Theories: Behavior in Context; PY041 Adolescent Psychology or PY244 Adult Psychology; PY216 Research Methods and Analyses; PY348 Culture, Community and Change; PY241 Interpersonal Relations and Family Dynamics; PY248 Gender Roles; PY397 Social Issues and Social Policy; SC041/BK151 Race Relations; PY244 Adult Psychology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Human Development - Human Services | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program prepares students for work in social and community service and/or for graduate study in counseling, human development, educational psychology, and related fields. The curriculum offers a theoretical base in developmental and counseling psychology with a focus on understanding psychological processes in context. Students in human development have obtained employment in educational, human service, and business settings. A practicum experience provides students with an opportunity to develop important professional skills and explore career opportunities. The 10-course major gives a strong background in the area of developmental psychology and an introduction to the field of counseling. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PY030 Child Growth and Development; PY031 Family, School and Society; PY032 Psychology of Learning; PY242 Personality Theories: Behavior in Context; PY041 Adolescent Psychology OR PY244 Adult Psychology; PY216 Research Methods and Analyses; PY241 Interpersonal Relations and Family Dynamics; PY230 Abnormal Psychology (pre-requisite PY242); PY243 Counseling Theories (pre-requisite PY230). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Human Development - Organizational Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program prepares students for work in social and community service and/or for graduate study in counseling, human development, educational psychology, and related fields. The curriculum offers a theoretical base in developmental and counseling psychology with a focus on understanding psychological processes in context. Students in human development have obtained employment in educational, human service, and business settings. A practicum experience provides students with an opportunity to develop important professional skills and explore career opportunities. The 10-course major gives a strong background in the area of developmental psychology and an introduction to the field of counseling. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PY030 Child Growth and Development; PY031 Family, School and Society; PY032 Psychology of Learning; PY242 Personality Theories: Behavior in Context; PY041 Adolescent Psychology or PY244 Adult Psychology; PY216 Research Methods and Analyses; MB021 Organizational Behavior; PY244 Adult Psychology (assuming that it was not taken as one of the 6 required courses); PY241 Interpersonal Relations and Family Dynamics; PY397 Social Issues and Social Policy; PY348 Culture, Community and Change; PY248 Gender Roles; SC041/BK151 Race Relations.. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in International Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, International Studies Program | This program offers an interdisciplinary curriculum to students interested in the international aspects of arts and sciences disciplines. Both a major and a minor are available to qualified students. Course offerings under the program are drawn from nearly all departments in the college of arts and sciences. A key goal of the program is to provide students with the opportunity to combine insights from different disciplines so as to develop a broad understanding of international affairs. The Program encourages study abroad and advanced study of a foreign language. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include EC 131 Microeconomics; EC 132 Macroeconomics; HS 005-006 Asia in the World I and II; HS 055-056 Globalization I and II; HS 059-060 Islam and Global Modernity’s I and II; HS 067-068 Latin America in the World I and II; HS 572 U.S. Foreign Policy II/1945-present; SC 003 Introductory Anthropology; SC 040 Global Sociology; TH 161-162 The Religious Quest; TH 386 Ethics in a Comparative Perspective; TH 507 Introduction to Comparative Theology; EC 271 International Economic Relations; EC 371 International Trade; EC 372 International Finance; EC/IN 374 Development Economics and Policy; EC 375 Economic Growth and Development; PL 440 Historical Intro. to Western Moral Theory; PL 500 Philosophy of Law; PL 524 Ethics: An Introduction; PL 594 Foundations of Ethics; PO 648 Natural Justice and Moral Relativism; TH 160 The Challenge of Justice; TH 373 Fundamental Moral Theology; TH 496 The Moral Dimensions of the Christian Life; TH 507 Introduction to Comparative Theology ; HS 300 Study and Writing of History; IN 540 Research Methods in International Studies; PO 415 Models of Politics; PO 422 Comparative Social Movements; EC 234 Economics and Catholic Social Teaching; EC 271 International Economic Relations; SC 003 Introduction to Anthropology; SC 093 Comparative Social Change; SC 215 Social Theory; EN 551 Intro to Literary and Cultural Theory; EN 232 Literature and Social Change; FA 109 Aspects of Art; FM 381 Propaganda Film; PS 254 Cultural Psychology; SC 003 Introductory Anthropology; SC 093 Comparative Social Change; HP 134 Twentieth Century and the Tradition II; HS 300 Study and Writing of History; IN 540 Research Methods in International Studies; SC 210 Research Methods; SC 509 Feminist Approaches to Theory and Methodology; SC 511 Ethnography and Field Research; SL 279 Language and Ethnicity. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, International Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, International Studies Program, Carney Hall 147, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3272 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Islamic Civilization and Societies | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Islamic Civilization and Societies | This program encompasses faculty and courses from across the university. The program prepares students for careers in diplomacy, journalism, business, government, social service, as well as graduate academic or professional study. Students who complete the major will attain proficiency in Arabic or another language related to the region, along with valuable skills and broader horizons that only an interdisciplinary major can provide. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include EC277 Economics of the Middle East; EN408 Islamic Women's Writing; FA174 Islamic Art and Civilization; FA176 Jerusalem through the Ages; FA203 Great Cities of the Islamic Lands; FA213 Introduction to Islamic Art and Architecture; FA214 The Art of the Silk Road; FA234 Mosques, Minarets and Madresas; FA235 The Arts of Persia: Peacocks, Pavilions, and Paradise; FA276 Islamic Art; FA280 Masterpieces of Islamic Art; FA350 The Art of the Object/Islamic Art; FA409 The Art of the Islamic Book; FA410 Orientalism; FA412 / 01 Cairo: City of 1001 Lights; FM314 Cinema of the Greater Middle East; HS207 / FA174 / TH174 Islamic Civilization in the Middle East; HS208 Middle East in the Twentieth Century; HS300.22 Study and Writing of History: Arabian Nights; HS / TH315 Islam in South Asia; HS326 History of Modern Iran; HS339 Byzantium and Islam; HS343 Rise and Fall of the Ottoman Empire; HS344 History and Historiography of the Arab-Israeli Conflict; HS353 Africa, Islam, and Europe; HS385 Modern South Asia; HS412 The Crusades; HS465 Odysseys in the Western and Islamic Traditions; HS610 The City in the Pre-Modern Eastern Mediterranean; HS666 Travelers and Spices: Lawrence of Arabia; HS667 Jews and Islamic Civilization; PO403 Rise and Rule of Islamic States; PO414 Politics and Society in Central Eurasia; PO449 Domestic Politics in Postwar Europe; PO450 Seminar: France and the Muslim World; PO475 Politics and Oil in the Gulf; PO502 U.S-Iran Relations; PO516 American Foreign Policy; PO517 Liberalism, Democracy, and American Foreign Policy; PO524 Russia, Eurasia and the World; PO638 Islamic Political Philosophy; PO806 Political Cultures of the Middle East; PO812 State-Church Relations in Modern Europe; PO813 Islam in Europe; RL299 Harmony and Dissonance: Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Medieval Spain; RL360 Literature and Culture Francophones; RL611 Epocas I: Medieval Spain, Crossroads of the World; SL017 / 018 Elementary Arabic I and II; SL089 / 90 Intermediate Arabic I and II; SL037 / 2 Modern Hebrew I and II; SL091 Biblical History; SL097 Independent Language Study: Turkish (Fall); SL099 Independent Language Study: Dari (Fall); SL103 Turkish Language Workshop; SL110 Spoken Arabic Language Workshop (Spring); SL138 Independent Language Study: Tajik (Fall); SL147 / SC148 Language, Memory and Identity in the Middle East; SL148 Modern Middle Eastern and Arabic Literature; SL150 States and Minorities in the Middle East; SL171/172 Third-Year Arabic I and II; SL181 Persian for Scholars I (Spring); SL232 Literature of the other Europe in Translation; SL249 Women of Eastern Europe at War and For Peace; SL250 Conversion, Islam, and Politics in the Balkans; SL251 / 252 Advanced Arabic; SL000 Fourth Year Arabic; SL272 War and Peace in Yugoslavia; SL / SC280 Society and National Identity in the Balkans; SL283 / TH383 / CL268 The Christian East: Orientale Lumen; SL286 / EN252 Exile and Literature; SL291 Near East Civilization; SL314 Old Persian and Avestan; SL328 Classical Armenian; SL359 The Structure of Biblican Hebrew; SL381 Newspaper Arabic (Spring). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Islamic Civilization and Societies | College of Arts and Sciences, Islamic Civilization and Societies, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4170 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | No | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Italian | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures | This program is designed to help students attain a high linguistic proficiency in at least one romance language and broad insight into the literature and culture of other nations. Graduates with RLL majors are currently employed in many different fields including law, interpreting, and international business. For students interested in graduate studies, the major offers solid preparation and guidance. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Lyons Hall 304, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3820 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures | The focus of the linguistics program does not lie alone in the acquisition of language skills, but rather in learning to analyze linguistic phenomena with a view toward making significant generalizations about the nature of language. A program of study tailored to the individual student's interests and goals is designed in consultation with the faculty. Typical areas of emphasis include philology (the historical and comparative study of ancient languages), psycholinguistics, and language acquisition. It prepares students for a wide array of careers including education, law, publishing, speech pathology, government service, and computer science. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include SL 311 General Linguistics (3 credits); SL 344 Syntax and Semantics (3 credits); SL 367 Language and Language Types (3 credits). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures, Boston College, Lyons Hall 210140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3910 | The Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures department was founded in 1969 and it is one of the oldest in New England which offers a number of undergraduate majors and minors and many diverse courses on East Asian, Semitic and Slavic languages, literatures and cultures, and in the field of linguistics, as well as MA degrees in Russian and Slavic studies and in Linguistics. The department is a unique one both at Boston College and in the larger academic community and it represents languages and cultures from many parts of the world. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Music Department | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MU 070 Fundamentals of Music Theory; MU 110 Harmony; MU 211 Chromatic Harmony; MU 312 Counterpoint; MU 214 Form and Analysis; MU 215 Jazz Harmony; MU 315 Composition Seminar; MU 209 Twentieth Century Music; MU 201 Medieval-Renaissance Music; MU 203 Music of the Baroque; MU 205 Music of the Classic Era; MU 207 Music of the Romantic Era; MU 301 Introduction to World Music; MU 305 Native North American Song; MU 306 African Music; MU 320 Music and America; MU 321 Rhythm and Blues in American Music; MU 322 Jazz in America; MU 330 Introduction to Irish Folk Music. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Music Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Music Department, Lyons Hall 407, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8720 | The Music Department at Boston College was founded in 1989 by the late Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, J. Robert Barth, SJ. The program offers a Bachelor of Arts in Music and numbers around 40 music majors and 60 music minors. The department is also one of many organizations on campus that sponsors Concerts, both student concerts and visiting artists, such as the Hawthorne String Quartet, artists-in-residence at Boston College. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Philosophy Department | This program provides excellent training in critical thinking and logical analysis. Philosophy is regularly recommended as an undergraduate major for students preparing for many of the professions. Philosophy majors consistently rank in the top percentiles of those taking the GRE and LSAT. As a mode of inquiry, philosophy provides students with the analytical and verbal skills necessary for success in any profession. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PL070 Philosophy of the Person 1; PL071 Philosophy of the Person 2; PL088 PULSE Person and Social Responsibility 1; PL089 PULSE Person and Social Responsibility 2; PL090 Perspectives I: Western Culture 1; PL091 Perspective I: Western Culture 2; UN104-105 Perspectives II: Modernism and the Arts 1; UN 106-107 Perspectives II: Modernism and the Arts 2; UN109-110 Perspectives III: New Social Sciences 1; UN119-120 Perspectives IV: New Scientific Vision 1; UN121-122 Perspectives IV: New Scientific Vision 2. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Philosophy Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Philosophy Department, 21 Campanella Way, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3847 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program provides a foundation for careers in politics, public administration, international service, law, business, and journalism, as well as a foundation for graduate work and teaching in the social sciences. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PO 020 Internships; PO 041 Fundamental Concepts of Politics I; PO 042 Fundamental Concepts of Politics II; PO 202 Environmental Policy; PO 225 Capstone: Lives of Faith and Solidarity; PO 281-282 Individual Research in Political Science I and II; PO 283-284 Thesis I and II; PO 291-292 Honors Thesis in Political Science I and II; PO 295 Honors Seminar: Immigration: Processes, Politics, and Policies; PO 296 Honors Seminar: Democracy in America; PO 301 Policy and Politics in the U.S.; PO 306 Parties and Elections in America; PO 309 The U.S. Congress; PO 317 The American Presidency; PO 322 Courts and Public Policy; PO 327 U.S. Constitutional Development; PO 328 Discussion Group: U.S. Constitutional Development; PO 334 Political Behavior and Participation; PO 335 Conflict and Polarization in American Politics; PO 341 American Political Thought I; PO 357 Seminar: The Problem of Evil; PO 360 Seminar: Rights in Conflict; PO 363 Muslims in U.S. Society and Politics; PO 399 Advanced Independent Research; PO 402 Comparative Revolutions; PO 403 Rise and Rule of Islamic States; PO 414 Politics and Society in Central Eurasia; PO 415 Models of Politics; PO 418 U.S.-European Foreign Policy Cooperation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 201 McGuinn Hall, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4160 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Psychology - Clinical Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is particularly suited to students who wish to understand human behavior and mental functioning at the behavioral level. Students will take Psychology courses relevant to social, developmental, and cognitive psychology and will learn how animal models can be used to inform human behavior. Together these courses will provide students with an appreciation for the theories that have been put forth to explain human behavior and for the importance of considering clinical, cultural, social, and developmental factors when trying to understand why humans think, feel, and act as they do. The undergraduate clinical concentration is designed for psychology B.A. majors with a particular interest in careers in clinical or counseling psychology or clinical social work. Although the concentration does not lead to a license for such careers, it does lay a solid foundation in coursework, research, and field experiences that prepare students for applying to a graduate program in these fields. This concentration is not open to psychology B.S. majors. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PS 234 Abnormal Psychology; PS 241 Social Psychology; PS 242 Personality Theories; PS 260 Developmental Psychology; PS 371 Cognitive Neuroscience: Exploring Mind and Brain; PS 372 Affective Neuroscience; PS 375 Psychology and Neuroscience of Human Memory; PS 473 Event-Related Potentials (laboratory course); PS 570 Advanced Topics in Cognitive Neuroscience; PS 571 Controversies in Cognitive Neuroscience; PS 574 Neuroscience of Sensation and Perception; PS 575 Advanced Affective Neuroscience; PS 579 Methods in Human Brain Mapping; PS 490 Senior Thesis I (laboratory course); PS 495 Senior Honors Thesis I (laboratory course); PS 497 Scholars Project Research (laboratory course); PS 381 Neurobiology of Social Behavior; PS 382 Neurobiology of Stress; PS 383 Neurobiological Basis of Learning and Memory; PS 384 Neurobiology of Sensory and Motor Systems; PS 385 Neurobiology of Motivation and Emotion; PS 386 Psychopharmacology; PS 387 Developmental Neuroscience and Behavior; PS 388 Neurobiology of Eating and Eating Disorders; PS 584 Epigenetic and Mental Disorders; PS 585 Brain Systems: Motivation and Emotion; PS 589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS 490 Senior Thesis I (laboratory course); PS 495 Senior Honors Thesis I (laboratory course); PS 497 Scholars Project Research (laboratory course); BI 304 Molecular Cell Biology; BI 305 Genetics; BI 426 Vertebrate Anatomy; BI 435 Biological Chemistry; BI 437 Developmental Neuroscience and Behavior; BI 442 Principles of Ecology; BI 445 Animal Behavior; BI 458 Evolution; BI 485 Research in Neuroscience Lab; BI 510 General Endocrinology; BI 551 Cell Biology of the Nervous System; BI 554 Physiology; BI 556 Developmental Biology; BI 557 Petrochemical Genetics. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston College 300 McGuinn, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4100 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Psychology - Neuroscience Concentraiton | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is particularly suited to students who wish to understand human behavior and mental functioning at the behavioral level. Students will take Psychology courses relevant to social, developmental, and cognitive psychology and will learn how animal models can be used to inform human behavior. Together these courses will provide students with an appreciation for the theories that have been put forth to explain human behavior and for the importance of considering clinical, cultural, social, and developmental factors when trying to understand why humans think, feel, and act as they do. The neuroscience concentration within the psychology major allows students to engage in coursework and research that will provide them with a strong understanding of the biological bases of behavior and mental function. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PS110 Introductory Psychology as a Natural Science; PS111 Introductory Psychology as a Social Science; PS120 Introduction to Behavioral Statistics and Research I; PS121 Introduction to Behavioral Statistics and Research II; PS285 Behavioral Neuroscience; PS272 Cognitive Psychology: Mental Processes and their Neural Substrates; PS234 Abnormal Psychology; PS241 Social Psychology; PS242 Personality Theories; PS260 Developmental Psychology; PS371 Cognitive Neuroscience: Exploring Mind and Brain; PS372 Affective Neuroscience; PS375 Psychology and Neuroscience of Human Memory; PS473 Event-Related Potentials; PS570 Advanced Topics in Cognitive Neuroscience; PS571 Controversies in Cognitive Neuroscience; PS574 Neuroscience of Sensation and Perception; PS575 Advanced Affective Neuroscience; PS576 Methods in Human Brain Mapping; PS579 Special Topics: Cognitive, Affective, and Behavioral Neuroscience; PS490 Senior Thesis I; PS495 Senior Honors Thesis I; PS497 Scholars Project Research; PS381 Neurobiology of Social Behavior; PS382 Neurobiology of Stress; PS383 Neurobiological Basis of Learning and Memory; PS384 Neurobiology of Sensory and Motor Systems; PS385 Neurobiology of Motivation and Emotion; PS386 Psychopharmacology; PS387 Developmental Neuroscience and Behavior; PS388 Neurobiology of Eating and Eating Disorders; PS584 Epigenetics and Mental Disorders; PS585 Brain Systems: Motivation and Emotion; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS584 Epigenetics and Mental Disorders; PS585 Brain Systems: Motivation and Emotion; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; CH109 General Chemistry I with lab (CH111); CH110 General Chemistry II with lab (CH112). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston College 300 McGuinn, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4100 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Russian | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures | This program concentrates on acquiring advanced proficiency in the language and the ability to comprehend and analyze important aspects of Russian literature and culture. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures, Boston College, Lyons Hall 210140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3910 | The Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures department was founded in 1969 and it is one of the oldest in New England which offers a number of undergraduate majors and minors and many diverse courses on East Asian, Semitic and Slavic languages, literatures and cultures, and in the field of linguistics, as well as MA degrees in Russian and Slavic studies and in Linguistics. The department is a unique one both at Boston College and in the larger academic community and it represents languages and cultures from many parts of the world. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program prepares students for teaching in senior high schools, grades 8-12. The major in Secondary Education will benefit those students interested in high school teaching, who want to achieve an in-depth major in a discipline, and who want to apply elective courses to enhance the major and professional course work. Students may prepare to teach in the following disciplines biology; chemistry; geology (earth science); physics; English; history; mathematics; French; Spanish; and Latin and classical humanities. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PY030 Child Growth and Development Fall only; PY031 Family, School and Society Spring only; PY041 Adolescent Psychology; ED044 Working with Special Needs Students; ED060 Classroom Assessment (take with ED211, ED151, ED131); ED211 Secondary Curriculum and Instruction (take with ED060, ED151, ED131); ED300-304 Secondary Methods Courses Fall only (take with ED151, ED131); ED323 Secondary Reading Instruction Spring only (take with ED151, ED131); ED151,152,153 3 Pre-practica (Inquiry Seminar is co-requisite, one credit each); ED131,132,133 Undergraduate Inquiry Seminar I, II, III (one credit each); ED154 and ED134 International Pre-practicum ( optional); ED231 Senior Inquiry Seminar (SIS) (co-requisite to ED250); ED250 Secondary Full Practicum (co-requisite to ED231). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Slavic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures | This program provides broadly based training in scholarship about Russia and the nations of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures, Boston College, Lyons Hall 210140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3910 | The Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures department was founded in 1969 and it is one of the oldest in New England which offers a number of undergraduate majors and minors and many diverse courses on East Asian, Semitic and Slavic languages, literatures and cultures, and in the field of linguistics, as well as MA degrees in Russian and Slavic studies and in Linguistics. The department is a unique one both at Boston College and in the larger academic community and it represents languages and cultures from many parts of the world. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | This program is designed to satisfy the intellectual and career interests of students who are concerned about what is happening in their society and in their daily personal interactions. It prepares students for occupations or for graduate study in sociology, social work, urban affairs, governmental administration, criminal justice, law, education, etc. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include SC 001 Introductory Sociology; SC 003 Introductory Anthropology; SC 005 Planet in Peril: Environmental Issues and Society; SC 019 The Roots of Racial Wealth Gap in Public Policy; SC 024 Gender and Society; SC 025 People and Nature: History and Future of Human; SC 026 Consumer Society Discussion Group; SC 028 Love, Intimacy, and Human Sexuality; SC 030 Deviance and Social Control; SC 037 Introduction to American Indian Societies; SC 038 Race, Class, and Gender; SC 039 African World Perspectives; SC 043 Introduction to African-American Society; SC 046 Technology and Society; SC 058 Sociology of the Family; SC 072 Inequality in America; SC 076 Sociology of Popular Culture; SC 077 Sociology of HIV/AIDS: Global and U.S. Experiences of Epidemic; SC 078 Sociology of Health and Illness; SC 092 Peace or War; SC 094 Social Conflict; SC 096 Aging and Society; SC 099 Sociology of Migration; SC 150 States and Minorities in the Middle East; SC 200 Statistics; SC 210 Research Methods; SC 215 Social Theory; SC 225 Introduction to Feminisms; SC 250 Perspectives on War, Aggression, and Conflict Resolution; SC 280 Social and National Identity in the Balkans; SC 299 Reading and Research; SC 303 Social Construction of Whiteness; SC 304 Race, Ethnicity, and Popular Culture. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department, McGuinn Hall 426, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4130 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Sociology and Master of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The choice of this program will provide the sociology major with an undergraduate B.A. degree in sociology and with the professional degree of master of social work. The B.A. degree will be awarded with the student’s undergraduate class. The master’s degree will be awarded one year later. The choice of this program should be made by sociology majors in their sophomore year so that the required course sequence and degree requirements can be fulfilled. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department, McGuinn Hall 426, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4130 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department | This program is designed both for the student artist and the student interested in art. Courses are offered in painting, drawing, ceramics, photography, filmmaking, and digital technology. These courses are conceived as an integral part of the University curriculum, and the studio major provides a solid basis for continuing work in graduate school and art-related fields such as design, art criticism, teaching, conservation, art therapy, publishing, exhibition design, and advertising. The studio art major provides students with an opportunity to develop the techniques, visual sensibility, and historical understanding necessary for working with various materials. An understanding and exploration of the meanings and ideas generated by the things they make, and an awareness of the satisfaction inherent in the process of "the making" is essential parts of the program. An integral part of the studio art major's undergraduate education is the senior project. Focused in their area of concentration, Senior Projects are exhibited on campus at the end of the academic year. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include FS101 Drawing I: Foundations; FS102 Painting I: Foundations; FS103 Issues and Approaches to Studio Art; FS104 Seeing Is Believing; FS141 Ceramics I; FS142 Ceramics II; FS146 Sculpture Projects; FS150 Painting Plus: Collage; FS161 Photography I; FS204 Drawing: Introduction to the Figure; FS211 Hot Off the Shelf; FS215 Collage and Mixed Media; FS223 The Power of Objects-Intermediate Painting; FS224 Bare Naked Approaches to Painting the Figure-Painting III; FS225 Watercolor I; FS230 Introduction to Video Art; FS261 Photography II; FS276 Art and Digital Technology; FS280 Digital Diaries: Creating a personal body of work in the digital age; FS299 Art and Alternative Media; FS304 The Figure in Context; FS321 Painting IV: Layered Image; FS325 Studio/Critical Issues; FS330 Pandora's Box; FS352 Stage Design I; FS361 Photography III; FS385 Independent Work I; FS386 Independent Work II; FS473 Senior Project II; FS485 Independent Work III; FS486 Independent Work IV; FS498 Senior Project I; FS598 Teaching Assistantship. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Fine Arts Department, Devlin Hall 434, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4295 | The Boston College Fine Arts Department is located in Devlin Hall. The building houses Art studios as well as faculty offices, a slide library of about 100,000 slides, and classrooms of various sizes equipped for audiovisual projection for art history classes. There are studios for painting and drawing, as well as facilities for teaching photography and filmmaking in Devlin Hall. Additional studios for ceramics and senior studios are available in two nearby carriage houses. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A. in Theology | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology | This program is designed to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary for reasoned reflection on their own values, faith, and tradition, as well as on the religious forces that shape the society and world. A broad liberal arts discipline, Theology encourages and guides inquiries into life's most meaningful issues. The major in theology has proven to be excellent preparation for careers and professions requiring careful reasoning, close reading, clarity in written expression, the ability to make ethical decisions, and a broad understanding of cultures. It provides a solid background for graduate study in the humanities and for such professional schools as medicine, business and law. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include TH 001-002 Biblical Heritage I and II; TH 016-017 Introduction to Christian Theology I and II; TH 023-024 Introduction to Catholicism I and II; TH 161-162 The Religious Quest I and II; PL/TH 090-091 Perspectives on Western Culture; PL/TH 088-089 Person and Social Responsibility. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3880 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A./M.A in Psychology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is limited to students who are majoring in psychology at Boston College. The program is designed to allow selected students to earn both a B.A. and an M.A. in psychology in five years. The purpose of the program is to allow students a greater opportunity for concentrated study and research training. Such training is excellent preparation for application to a Ph.D. program in any area of psychology. Undergraduate psychology majors may apply to continue their studies beyond the B.A. and to earn an M.A. with the equivalent of another, consecutive year of full-time study. It is limited to Boston College undergraduates, and the fifth year must follow immediately after the fourth. The psychology departments five areas of concentration are cognitive and cognitive neuroscience; behavioral neuroscience; social-personality; developmental; quantitative. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston College 300 McGuinn, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4100 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A./M.A. in Philosophy | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In this program, students will follow the curriculum for philosophy majors, except that two courses taken during the senior year must be eligible for graduate credit. These two courses will count toward the M.A. as well as the B.A. The remainder of the M.A. may thus be completed by taking eight additional graduate courses, as well as the M.A. comprehensive examination and meeting the language requirement for master's students. It is advisable to consult with the director of the graduate program during junior year. In addition to the two graduate level courses that count toward both the B.A. and the M.A., it is strongly recommended that the student take two graduate level courses in the senior year that are beyond the 38 courses required for the B.A. and thus count only for the M.A. degree. This allows the student to take a normal graduate course load the fifth year, of three courses a semester, in preparation for the M.A. comprehensive examination. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Philosophy Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Philosophy Department, 21 Campanella Way, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3847 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | B.A./M.A. in Sociology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program prepares students for careers in the area of social research, applied sociological analysis, and basic college-level teaching, while also providing the foundation for advanced graduate-level study toward the Ph.D. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include SC 001 Introductory Sociology; SC 003 Introductory Anthropology; SC 005 Planet in Peril: Environmental Issues and Society; SC 019 The Roots of Racial Wealth Gap in Public Policy; SC 024 Gender and Society; SC 025 People and Nature: History and Future of Human; SC 026 Consumer Society Discussion Group; SC 028 Love, Intimacy, and Human Sexuality; SC 030 Deviance and Social Control; SC 037 Introduction to American Indian Societies; SC 038 Race, Class, and Gender; SC 039 African World Perspectives; SC 043 Introduction to African-American Society; SC 046 Technology and Society; SC 058 Sociology of the Family; SC 072 Inequality in America; SC 076 Sociology of Popular Culture; SC 077 Sociology of HIV/AIDS: Global and U.S. Experiences of Epidemic; SC 078 Sociology of Health and Illness; SC 092 Peace or War; SC 094 Social Conflict; SC 096 Aging and Society; SC 099 Sociology of Migration; SC 150 States and Minorities in the Middle East; SC 200 Statistics; SC 210 Research Methods; SC 215 Social Theory; SC 225 Introduction to Feminisms; SC 250 Perspectives on War, Aggression, and Conflict Resolution; SC 280 Social and National Identity in the Balkans; SC 299 Reading and Research; SC 303 Social Construction of Whiteness; SC 304 Race, Ethnicity, and Popular Culture. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department, McGuinn Hall 426, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4130 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Accounting - Corporate Reporting and Analysis Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting | This program aims to give student a significant insight into all financial information - how it is generated, how it is processed, and what it means. Any business person must have an understanding of the "numbers" if he or she is to be successful. Therefore, they recommend that every student who has a strong interest in the fields of accounting, financial management, or financial information systems consider accounting as a major. The course of study will provide a strong background for the later (or simultaneous) study of finance, economics, computer science, operations management, and related disciplines. A major in accounting is also worthy of consideration by those students who plan to attend law school or other graduate programs. Students who majored in accounting have found that their preparation was helpful not only for their graduate programs, but also for their subsequent professional careers. To enhance the career opportunities of Carroll school students and better meet the needs of employers, the accounting department established the “corporate reporting and analysis” concentration. In focus groups held with alumni and recruiters they continually heard of the value of professionals who have a deep understanding of corporate reporting and financial statement analysis. There was also a feeling that strong quantitative skills were needed. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MA301 Financial Accounting Standards and Theory I; MA302 Financial Accounting Standard and Theory II; MA351 Financial Statement Analysis; MA602 Theory and Contemporary Issues in Accounting; MD 384 Applied Statistics; MD 606 Forecasting Techniques; EC 228 Econometric Methods; EC 229 Economics and Business Forecasting. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accounting department educates students to manage, thrive and lead in the accounting industry today. Whether a student is preparing for the 150-hour requirement for the certified public accountant (CPA) examination, is a Liberal Arts undergraduate enrolled in Accounting 101, or is an MBA student learning about the cornerstones of a reliable reporting infrastructure, this department prepare students at every level to excel by focusing on the fundamentals of ethical decision-making in the accounting profession. Accessibility to expert faculty teaching in addition to collaborative environment equals success on the balance sheet. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Accounting - Information Systems and Accounting Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting | This program aims to give student a significant insight into all financial information - how it is generated, how it is processed, and what it means. Any business person must have an understanding of the "numbers" if he or she is to be successful. Therefore, they recommend that every student who has a strong interest in the fields of accounting, financial management, or financial information systems consider accounting as a major. The course of study will provide a strong background for the later (or simultaneous) study of finance, economics, computer science, operations management, and related disciplines. A major in accounting is also worthy of consideration by those students who plan to attend law school or other graduate programs. Students who majored in accounting have found that their preparation was helpful not only for their graduate programs, but also for their subsequent professional careers. Information systems (IS) have clearly had and will continue to have a profound effect on business entities. Employers continually emphasize the value of professionals who both “understand business” and IS. Information systems people tend to have strong technical knowledge, while accountants have knowledge of the accounting system and are increasingly obtaining a broad understanding of business processes and controls. The combination of the two areas is powerful. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MA 301 Financial Accounting Standards and Theory I; MA/MI 320 Accounting Information Systems; MI 157 Introduction to Programming for Management (or CS 101); MI 257 Database Systems and Applications; MI 258 Systems Analysis and Design; MA 302 - Financial Accounting Standards and Theory II; MA 307 - Managerial Cost and Strategic Analysis; MA 309 - Audit and Other Assurance Services; MA 351 - Financial Statement Analysis. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accounting department educates students to manage, thrive and lead in the accounting industry today. Whether a student is preparing for the 150-hour requirement for the certified public accountant (CPA) examination, is a Liberal Arts undergraduate enrolled in Accounting 101, or is an MBA student learning about the cornerstones of a reliable reporting infrastructure, this department prepare students at every level to excel by focusing on the fundamentals of ethical decision-making in the accounting profession. Accessibility to expert faculty teaching in addition to collaborative environment equals success on the balance sheet. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Biochemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department | This interdisciplinary major in biochemistry, administered jointly by the chemistry and biology departments, provides the student with a broad background in Biochemistry and related courses in chemistry and biology. This major is intended for those interested in the more chemical and molecular aspects of the life sciences. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CH 109-110 (or CH 117 - 118); CH 111-112 (or CH 119-120); BI 200 Molecules and Cells; BI 202 Organisms and Populations; BI 204 Investigations in Molecular Cell Biology; CH 231-232 (or CH 241-242) Lecture 6 credits; CH 233-234 (or CH 243-244) Laboratory 2 credits; BI 304 Cell Biology; BI 305 Genetics; BI 315 Functional Genomics; BI 414 Microbiology; BI 420 Introduction to Bioinformatics; CH 351 Lecture; CH 353 Laboratory; CH 473 Lecture; CH 561-562 Biochemistry I and II or; BI 435 Biological Chemistry and BI 440 Molecular Biology; BI 480 or BI 484; BI 409 Virology; BI 416 Nuclear Cell Biology; BI 429 Medical Biochemistry and Metabolism; BI 432 Developmental Biology; BI 506 Recombinant DNA Technology; BI 540 Immunology; BI 561 Molecular Evolution; CH 564 Physical Methods in Biochemistry; CH 565 Chemical Biology: Nucleic Acids; CH 566 Bioinorganic Chemistry; CH 567 Chemical Biology: Structure and Function; CH 569 Chemical Biology: Enzyme Mechanisms; CH 570 Introduction to Biological Membranes; CH 582 Advanced Topics in Biochemistry. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department, Merkert Chemistry Center, Boston College2609 Beacon Street, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3605 | The Chemistry Department is located in the Merkert Chemistry Center, a 109,000 square foot structure designed to empower the dynamic, cutting-edge research for which the department is internationally recognized. The Merkert Chemistry Center contains faculty research laboratories in organic chemistry, chemical biology, and physical chemistry; specialized research facilities and shared instrumentation; and classrooms and teaching laboratories. Chemistry faculty members have collaborated on the unique design of their own research laboratories, which are built to accommodate state-of-the-art instrumentation and adapt to new research directions. The Merkert Chemistry Center was built in 1991 through the generosity of Mr. Eugene F. Merkert, a successful Boston businessman. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Chemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department | In this program, students are strongly urged to engage in a research project under the direction of a faculty member, particularly if the student is planning to attend graduate school. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CH 109 General Chemistry I or; CH 117 Principles of Modern Chemistry I; CH 111 General Chemistry Laboratory I or; CH 119 Modern Chemistry Laboratory I; PH 209 Intro to Physics I; PH 203 Physics Laboratory I; MT 102 Calculus I; CH 110 General Chemistry II or; CH 118 Principles of Modern Chemistry II; CH 112 General Chemistry Laboratory II or; CH 120 Modern Chemistry Laboratory II; PH 210 Intro. to Physics II; PH 204 Physics Laboratory II; MT 103 Calculus II; CH 231 Organic Chemistry I or; CH 241 Honors Organic Chemistry I; CH 233 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I; CH 351 Analytical Chemistry; CH 353 Analytical Chemistry Laboratory; MT 202 Calculus III; CH 232 Organic Chemistry II or; CH 242 Honors Organic Chemistry II; CH 234 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II; CH 222 Intro. Inorganic Chemistry; CH 224 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory; CH 575 Physical Chemistry I; CH 576 Physical Chemistry II; CH 557 Advanced Methods in Chemistry I; CH 554 Advanced Methods in Chemistry Laboratory I; CH 461 Biochemistry (chemistry majors). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department, Merkert Chemistry Center, Boston College2609 Beacon Street, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3605 | The Chemistry Department is located in the Merkert Chemistry Center, a 109,000 square foot structure designed to empower the dynamic, cutting-edge research for which the department is internationally recognized. The Merkert Chemistry Center contains faculty research laboratories in organic chemistry, chemical biology, and physical chemistry; specialized research facilities and shared instrumentation; and classrooms and teaching laboratories. Chemistry faculty members have collaborated on the unique design of their own research laboratories, which are built to accommodate state-of-the-art instrumentation and adapt to new research directions. The Merkert Chemistry Center was built in 1991 through the generosity of Mr. Eugene F. Merkert, a successful Boston businessman. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management | This program provides a general background that is useful to those planning careers in law, government service, or business, as well as those planning careers as professional economists. Professional economists work as college teachers, as researchers for government agencies, businesses and consulting firms, and as administrators and managers in a wide range of fields. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | The Chemistry Department is located in the Merkert Chemistry Center, a 109,000 square foot structure designed to empower the dynamic, cutting-edge research for which the department is internationally recognized. The Merkert Chemistry Center contains faculty research laboratories in organic chemistry, chemical biology, and physical chemistry; specialized research facilities and shared instrumentation; and classrooms and teaching laboratories. Chemistry faculty members have collaborated on the unique design of their own research laboratories, which are built to accommodate state-of-the-art instrumentation and adapt to new research directions. The Merkert Chemistry Center was built in 1991 through the generosity of Mr. Eugene F. Merkert, a successful Boston businessman. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Environmental Geoscience | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | This program serves as an excellent major for students who wish to concentrate in the sciences but who may not be looking toward professional careers as scientists, as well as for students planning graduate work in environmental law, environmental policy, or environmental studies. Students majoring in environmental geoscience should work out their programs closely with a departmental advisor to insure both breadth and depth in this subject area. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include Environmental Systems: The Human Footprint (GE 201); Environmental Systems: Ecosystems (GE 202); Environmental Systems: Water Resources (GE 203); Environmental Systems: The Critical Zone (GE 204); Environmental Systems: Climate Change (GE 205); Environmental Systems: Oceans (GE 206); Environmental Systems: Earthquakes and Hazards (GE 207); Environmental Geosciences I (GE 167); Exploring the Earth I (GE 132) with laboratory (GE 133); Earth Materials (GE 220) with laboratory (GE 221); Environmental Geology (GE 250) with laboratory; (GE 251) Alternative: GE 203 and GE 204; GE 180 plus laboratory (GE 136); Geology of National Parks (GE 110); Exploring the Earth II (GE 134) with laboratory (GE 135); Oceanography (GE 157) with laboratory (GE 158); Environmental Geosciences II (GE 168); Rivers and the Environment (GE 170); Weather, Climate, and Environment (GE 172) with laboratory (GE 173); Climate Change and Society (GE 174) with laboratory (GE 175); Geoscience and Public Policy (GE 187); Introduction to Geochemistry (GE 230) with laboratory (GE 231); Stratigraphy and Sedimentation (GE 264) with laboratory (GE 265); Structural Geology (GE 285) with laboratory (GE 286); Geological Field Mapping and Methods (GE 288); Environmental Hydrology (GE 297); Topics in Geobiology (GE 335); Paleoclimatology (GE 360) with laboratory (GE 361); Petrology I (GE 372) with laboratory (GE 373); Petrology II (GE 374) with laboratory (GE 375); Environmental Oceanography (GE 380); Introduction to Geophysics (GE 391); Statistical Analysis of Scientific Data (GE 398); Watershed Geomorphology (GE 400) with laboratory (GE 401); Global Biochemical Cycles (GE 440); Environmental Contaminants (GE 457); Geographical Information Systems (GIS) (GE 480) with laboratory (GE 481); Isotope Applications in Earth Science (GE 512) with laboratory (GE 513); Estuarine Studies (GE 518); Coastal Processes (GE 535); Plate Tectonics/Mountain Belts (GE 543); Geophysical Data Processing (GE 572). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Boston CollegeDevlin Hall 213, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3640 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance | The finance curriculum is designed to help students function competently and professionally in the field of financial management. The courses cover the major areas of finance-corporate finance, investment management, and capital markets and financial institutions. Courses in corporate finance, commercial bank management, investments, portfolio management, hedge funds, tax effects/managerial decisions, venture capital, and small business finance teach the decision- making process from the perspective of several economic entities, while courses in commercial bank management, financial institutions, financial instruments, and money and capital markets describe the financial environment in which financial managers operate. The concentration in finance requires a mixture of these two types of courses. In all courses, however, students are expected to develop and apply the analytical skills necessary to identify problems, propose and evaluate solutions, and ultimately, make management decisions. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MA 021 Financial Accounting (Prerequisite for Basic Finance); MF 021 Basic Finance (Prerequisite: MA 021); MF 151 Investments (Prerequisite: MF 021); MF 127 Corporate Finance (Prerequisite: MF 021); MF 225 Financial Policy (Prerequisite: MF 127, MF 151); at least one elective from courses listed below: MF 207 Real Estate Finance (Prerequisite: MA 021); MF 235 Investment Banking (Prerequisite: MF 127); MF 250 Fixed Income Analysis (Prerequisite: MF 151); MF 299 Individual Directed Study. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in General Management | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management | In this program, students choose to concentrate in this area for many reasons, but it is especially attractive to those students who are preparing for the management of a family business or for those who want a broad management background as preparation for law school. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MA 301 Financial Accounting Standards and Theory I; MA 302 Financial Accounting Standards and Theory II; MA 307 Managerial Cost and Strategic Analysis; MA 320 Accounting Information Systems; MA 351 Financial Statement Analysis; MI 157 Introduction to Programming for Management; MI 257 Database Systems and Applications; MI 258 Systems Analysis and Design; MK 253 Marketing Research or MK 256 Applied Marketing Management; MK 148 Services Marketing; MK 152 Consumer Behavior; MK 153 Retail and Wholesale Distribution; MK 154 Communication and Promotion; MK 157 Professional Selling and Sales Management; MK 158 Product Planning and Strategy; MK 161 Customer Relationship Management; MK 168 International Marketing; MK 170 Entrepreneurship; MK 172 Marketing Ethics; MK 253 Marketing Research; MK 256 Applied Marketing Management; MB 111 Ethical Leadership and Changing Methods; MB 119 Interpersonal Communication in Organization; MB 120 Employment Policy; MB 123 Negotiation; MB 127 Leadership; MB 135 Career and Human Resources Planning; MB 313 Organizational Research. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Geological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | This major combines elements of the traditional geology and geophysics programs and is considered excellent preparation for those working toward graduate school in the geosciences or employment in industry following graduation with a B.S. degree. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include Exploring the Earth (GE 132) with laboratory GE 133, 4 credits; Earth Materials (GE 220) with laboratory GE 221, 4 credits; Geological Field Methods and Mapping (GE 288), 4 credits (or an approved field camp); Stratigraphy and Sedimentation (GE 264) with laboratory GE 265, 4 credits; Introduction to Structural Geology (GE 285) with laboratory GE 286, 4 credits; Introduction to Geophysics (GE 391), 3 credits; Optical Mineralogy (GE 370) with laboratory GE 371, 2 credits; Igneous Petrology (GE 372) with laboratory GE 373, 2 credits; Metamorphic Petrology (GE 374) with laboratory GE 375, 2 credits; Sedimentary Petrology (GE 376) with laboratory GE 377, 2 credits. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Boston CollegeDevlin Hall 213, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3640 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | In this program, students trained in the earth sciences can look forward to exciting and rewarding careers, as society will require ever larger amounts of energy and resources in the twenty-first century, and will face increasing environmental problems and concerns. The department provides students with the skills and varied background needed to address these problems. Earth scientists are naturally interdisciplinary and use science to solve real-world problems. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include GE 132 Exploring the Earth I; GE 134 Exploring the Earth II; Alternative: At least 3 credits from GE courses numbered above 200; GE 220 Earth Materials; GE 264 Stratigraphy and Sedimentation; GE 372 Petrology I; Alternative: GE 370-373; GE 374 Petrology II; Alternative: GE 374-377; GE 285 Introduction to Structural Geology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Boston CollegeDevlin Hall 213, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3640 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Geology and Geophysics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | This major combines elements of both the geology and the geophysics programs and is considered excellent preparation for those working toward graduate school or employment in industry following graduation with a B.S. degree. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include GE 132 Exploring the Earth I; GE 134 Exploring the Earth II; GE 220 Earth Materials; GE 264 Stratigraphy and Sedimentation; GE 285 Introduction to Structural Geology; GE 418 Hydrogeology; GE 424 Environmental Geophysics; GE 372 Petrology I; GE 374 Petrology II; GE 391 Introductions to Geophysics; GE 398 Statistical Analysis of Scientific Data; GE 400 Watershed Geomorphology; GE 455 Exploration Seismology; GE 480 Applications of GIS; GE 485 Advanced Structural Geology; GE 518 Estuarine Studies; GE 530 Marine Geology; GE 535 Coastal Processes; GE 543 Plate Tectonics/Mountain Belts; GE 572 Geophysical Data Processing; GE 660 Introduction to Seismology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Boston CollegeDevlin Hall 213, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3640 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Geophysics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | In this program, students trained in the earth sciences can look forward to exciting and rewarding careers, as society will require ever larger amounts of energy and resources in the twenty-first century, and will face increasing environmental problems and concerns. The department provides students with the skills and varied background needed to address these problems. Earth scientists are naturally interdisciplinary and use science to solve real-world problems. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include GE 132 Exploring the Earth I; GE 134 Exploring the Earth II; Alternative: At least 3 credits from GE courses numbered above 200; GE 220 Earth Materials; GE 285 Introduction to Structural Geology; GE 372 Petrology I; Alternative: GE 370-373; GE 374 Petrology II; Alternative: GE 374-377; GE 391 Introduction to Geophysics; GE 398 Statistical Analysis of Scientific Data; GE 400 Watershed Geomorphology; GE 418 Hydrogeology; GE 424 Environmental Geophysics; GE 455 Exploration Seismology; GE 485 Advanced Structural Geology; GE 530 Marine Geology; GE 543 Plate Tectonics/Mountain Belts; GE 535 Coastal Processes; GE 572 Geophysical Data Processing; GE 660 Introduction to Seismology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Boston CollegeDevlin Hall 213, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3640 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Information Systems - Concentration in Information Systems and Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management, Information Systems Department | This program focuses on both technology and its effective use in organizations. In this program, students will learn how to plan, develop, and deploy technology-based business solutions, as well as to understand the strategic role of IS in organizations and the influential role of technology in society. The information systems concentration is designed for students with an aptitude for logical, analytical thinking and prepares them for positions in a variety of fast-growing professions. The information systems concentration is a strong choice as a primary concentration for CSOM students. Given the increasing influence of IS in all functional areas, it also serves as an excellent second concentration for students whose primary concentration is in another field such as accounting, finance, marketing, or operations. The information systems concentration emphasizes both team and individual work, allowing students to gain the skills and experience to strategize, design, program, and implement computerized information systems. The curriculum emphasizes software development technologies, data management, data communications, electronic commerce, knowledge management as well as the fundamentals of computer hardware and software systems, high-level software design and programming, project management, emerging technology studies, and the strategic, operational, and responsible use of information systems. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MA 301 Financial Accounting Standards and Theory I; MI 157 Introduction to Programming for Management; MI 257 Database Systems and Applications; MI 258 Systems Analysis and Design; MA/MI 320 Accounting Information Systems; MA 302 Financial Accounting Standards and Theory II; MA 307 Managerial Cost and Strategic Analysis; MA 309 Audit and Other Assurance Services; MA 351 Financial Statement Analysis. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Information Systems Department | Carroll School of Management, Information Systems Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | No | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management, Marketing Department | In this program, students are educated not only in the primary marketing policy areas, such as product/market selection, product line management, sales force operations, communications management, pricing and profit planning, management of channels of distribution, and marketing research, but also in the area of the students’ career interest. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MK 253 Marketing Research; MK 256 Applied Marketing Management; MK 148 Service Marketing; MK 152 Consumer Behavior; MK 153 Retail and Wholesale Distribution; MK 154 Communication and Promotion; MK 157 Professional Selling and Sales Management; MK 158 Product Planning and Strategy; MK 161 Customer Relationship Management; MK 168 International Marketing; MK 170 Entrepreneurship; MK 172 Marketing Ethics; MK 235 New Media Industry (cross listed with MI 235); MK 252 E-Commerce (cross listed with MD 253, MI 253); MK 610 Sports Marketing; MK 620 Marketing Information Analytics; MK 630 Tourism and Hospitality Management. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Marketing Department | Carroll School of Management, Marketing Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | No | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Operations Management | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management, Operations and Strategic Management Department | This program is designed to provide students with knowledge of the current issues in the fields of operations management. Intense competition in the fast-paced global markets has made competencies in this field the focus of attention in both manufacturing and service organizations. The concentration satisfies the need for students with in-depth knowledge of issues in both types of organizations. This widely-applicable concentration combines teaching of analytical methods, operations management issues, and strategic management. The curriculum recognizes the importance of environmental, ethical, and social issues. The pedagogy entails lecture and discussion, field studies, case studies, and analytical modeling. The concentration purposefully builds upon the Carroll School of Management core, particularly complementing the courses in statistics, economics, management science, and strategy and policy to produce an exceptionally fine package strongly grounded in analysis while being managerial in focus. The courses emphasize analysis and policy formulation and are explicitly designed to deliver the skills and knowledge required by successful managers in today’s competitive environment. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MD 375 Operations Strategy and Consulting (fall); MD 254 Service Operations Management (spring); MD 255 Managing Projects (spring); MD 384 Applied Statistics (spring); MD 604 Management Science (fall); MD 606 Forecasting Techniques (fall); MI 205 TechTrek (spring); MI/CS 258 Systems Analysis and Design (fall); MI 253 Electronic Commerce (fall); MD 254 Service Operations Management (spring); MD 255 Managing Projects (spring)-if not taken above; MD 384 Applied Statistics (spring)-if not taken above; MD 604 Management Science (fall)-if not taken above; MD 606 Forecasting Techniques (fall)-if not taken above. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Operations and Strategic Management Department | Carroll School of Management, Operations and Strategic Management Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | No | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Organization Studies - Concentration in Human Resources Management | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | This program gives students the opportunity to learn about various employee management functions. The development of programs to reduce turnover, forecast human resource needs, and create coherent career tracks is critical to the success of companies competing in the international arena. Just as it would be unthinkable for a modern manager to be computer illiterate, managers without a solid background in human resources management will not be as effective as those with a strong knowledge of human resources management. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MB 021 Organizational Behavior or MB 031 Organizational Behavior - Honors; MB 110 Human Resources Management; MB 313 Research Methods for Management (normally taken in the fall, senior year); MB111 Ethical Leadership Skills; MB119 Communication and Personal Branding; MB123 Negotiation; MB127 Leadership; MB130 Leading Change in Organizations; MB133 Leading High Performance Teams; MB135 Career and Human Resources Planning; MB137 Managing Diversity; MB139 Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship: A Special Topics Course; MB140 Special Topics: International Management; MB145 Environmental Management; MB299 Independent Study (by permission of instructor); MB399 Advanced Topics in Organizational Behavior and Human Resources Management (offered periodically). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Organization Studies is a broad discipline that studies how organizations are structured and how individuals fit into that structure. Faculty is committed to providing an open, challenging and supportive environment for students to learn about the human component of organizations. As organizations become increasingly knowledge-based, human resources have emerged as a critical strategic factor determining competitive advantage. In response to this trend and to prepare students for a career in human resource management, this department offers a concentration in Human Resources Management at the undergraduate level. Because the students need to learn how to better lead and manage people and organizations, this department also offer a concentration in Management and Leadership to support undergraduate students in all management disciplines in becoming more effective managers and leaders. At the graduate level, this department recognizes that change leadership is a core competence for managers today. To help the MBAs develop the ability to respond to rapidly changing technological demands, market reconfigurations, and other organizational issues, this department offer a concentration in Change Leadership. In addition, this department offers a Ph.D. in Organization Studies that prepares students for a career in academic research on organizations. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Organization Studies - Concentration in Management and Leadership | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | This program will help students to develop and enhance their ability to lead and manage people and organizations. These skills are highly desired by virtually all potential employers, making the management and leadership concentration beneficial to all Carroll School undergraduates. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MB 021 Organizational Behavior or MB 031 Organizational Behavior - Honors; MB 127 Leadership; MB111 Ethical Leadership Skills; MB119 Communication and Personal Branding; MB123 Negotiation; MB127 Leadership; MB130 Leading Change in Organizations; MB133 Leading High Performance Teams; MB135 Career and Human Resources Planning; MB137 Managing Diversity; MB139 Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship: A Special Topics Course; MB140 Special Topics: International Management; MB145 Environmental Management; MB299 Independent Study (by permission of instructor); MB399 Advanced Topics in Organizational Behavior and Human Resources Management (offered periodically); MD548 Leadership and Mindfulness. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Organization Studies is a broad discipline that studies how organizations are structured and how individuals fit into that structure. Faculty is committed to providing an open, challenging and supportive environment for students to learn about the human component of organizations. As organizations become increasingly knowledge-based, human resources have emerged as a critical strategic factor determining competitive advantage. In response to this trend and to prepare students for a career in human resource management, this department offers a concentration in Human Resources Management at the undergraduate level. Because the students need to learn how to better lead and manage people and organizations, this department also offer a concentration in Management and Leadership to support undergraduate students in all management disciplines in becoming more effective managers and leaders. At the graduate level, this department recognizes that change leadership is a core competence for managers today. To help the MBAs develop the ability to respond to rapidly changing technological demands, market reconfigurations, and other organizational issues, this department offer a concentration in Change Leadership. In addition, this department offers a Ph.D. in Organization Studies that prepares students for a career in academic research on organizations. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program is designed to prepare students not only for advanced graduate studies in physics, but also for employment upon graduation in physics and other disciplines related to science and technology. Basic courses give the student a solid foundation in the concepts of modern physics, and assist the students in developing their analytical reasoning and problem-solving skills. Laboratory courses complement this experience with an opportunity to develop experimental skills and a working knowledge of advanced technology. Students are strongly encouraged to further develop all these skills by participating in advanced experimental, analytical, or computational research under the supervision of faculty mentors. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PH 209 Introductory Physics I (Fall: 4 credits); PH 210 Introductory Physics II (Spring: 4 credits); PH 203 Introductory Physics Lab I (Fall: 1 credit); PH 204 Introductory Physics Lab II (Spring: 1 credit); PH 301 Vibrations and Waves (Fall: 4 credits); PH 303 Modern Physics (Spring: 4 credits); PH 401 Mechanics (Fall: 3 credits); PH 402 Electricity and Magnetism (Spring: 3 credits); PH 407 Quantum Mechanics I (Fall: 3 credits); PH 408 Quantum Mechanics II (Spring: 3 credits); PH 409 Contemporary Electronics Laboratory (Fall: 2 credits); PH 420 Thermodynamics and Statistical Physics (Fall: 4 credits); PH 430 Numerical Methods and Scientific Computing; PH 532 Senior Thesis (Spring: 3 credits); PH 535 Experiments in Physics (Spring: 3 credits); PH 412 Particle Physics (3 credits); PH 425 Introduction to Condensed Matter Physics (3 credits); PH 441 Optics (3 credits); PH 540 Cosmology and Astrophysics (3 credits); PH 545/MT 440 Introduction to Chaos/Dynamical Systems (3 credits). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, 335 Higgins Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3575 | Organization Studies is a broad discipline that studies how organizations are structured and how individuals fit into that structure. Faculty is committed to providing an open, challenging and supportive environment for students to learn about the human component of organizations. As organizations become increasingly knowledge-based, human resources have emerged as a critical strategic factor determining competitive advantage. In response to this trend and to prepare students for a career in human resource management, this department offers a concentration in Human Resources Management at the undergraduate level. Because the students need to learn how to better lead and manage people and organizations, this department also offer a concentration in Management and Leadership to support undergraduate students in all management disciplines in becoming more effective managers and leaders. At the graduate level, this department recognizes that change leadership is a core competence for managers today. To help the MBAs develop the ability to respond to rapidly changing technological demands, market reconfigurations, and other organizational issues, this department offer a concentration in Change Leadership. In addition, this department offers a Ph.D. in Organization Studies that prepares students for a career in academic research on organizations. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Psychology - Clinical Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is particularly suited to students who wish to understand human behavior and mental functioning at the behavioral level. Students will take psychology courses relevant to social, developmental, and cognitive psychology and will learn how animal models can be used to inform human behavior. Together these courses will provide students with an appreciation for the theories that have been put forth to explain human behavior and for the importance of considering clinical, cultural, social, and developmental factors when trying to understand why humans think, feel, and act as they do. The undergraduate clinical concentration is designed for psychology B.A. majors with a particular interest in careers in clinical or counseling psychology or clinical social work. Although the concentration does not lead to a license for such careers, it does lay a solid foundation in coursework, research, and field experiences that prepare students for applying to a graduate program in these fields. This concentration is not open to psychology B.S. majors. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PS 234 Abnormal Psychology; PS 241 Social Psychology; PS 242 Personality Theories; PS 260 Developmental Psychology; PS 371 Cognitive Neuroscience: Exploring Mind and Brain; PS 372 Affective Neuroscience; PS 375 Psychology and Neuroscience of Human Memory; PS 473 Event-Related Potentials (laboratory course); PS 570 Advanced Topics in Cognitive Neuroscience; PS 571 Controversies in Cognitive Neuroscience; PS 574 Neuroscience of Sensation and Perception; PS 575 Advanced Affective Neuroscience; PS 579 Methods in Human Brain Mapping; PS 490 Senior Thesis I (laboratory course); PS 495 Senior Honors Thesis I (laboratory course); PS 497 Scholars Project Research (laboratory course); PS 381 Neurobiology of Social Behavior; PS 382 Neurobiology of Stress; PS 383 Neurobiological Basis of Learning and Memory; PS 384 Neurobiology of Sensory and Motor Systems; PS 385 Neurobiology of Motivation and Emotion; PS 386 Psychopharmacology; PS 387 Developmental Neuroscience and Behavior; PS 388 Neurobiology of Eating and Eating Disorders; PS 584 Epigenetic and Mental Disorders; PS 585 Brain Systems: Motivation and Emotion; PS 589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS 490 Senior Thesis I (laboratory course); PS 495 Senior Honors Thesis I (laboratory course); PS 497 Scholars Project Research (laboratory course); BI 304 Molecular Cell Biology; BI 305 Genetics; BI 426 Vertebrate Anatomy; BI 435 Biological Chemistry; BI 437 Developmental Neuroscience and Behavior; BI 442 Principles of Ecology; BI 445 Animal Behavior; BI 458 Evolution; BI 485 Research in Neuroscience Lab; BI 510 General Endocrinology; BI 551 Cell Biology of the Nervous System; BI 554 Physiology; BI 556 Developmental Biology; BI 557 Petrochemical Genetics. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston College 300 McGuinn, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4100 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S. in Psychology - Neuroscience Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is particularly suited to students who wish to understand human behavior and mental functioning at the behavioral level. Students will take Psychology courses relevant to social, developmental, and cognitive psychology and will learn how animal models can be used to inform human behavior. Together these courses will provide students with an appreciation for the theories that have been put forth to explain human behavior and for the importance of considering clinical, cultural, social, and developmental factors when trying to understand why humans think, feel, and act as they do. The neuroscience concentration within the psychology major allows students to engage in coursework and research that will provide them with a strong understanding of the biological bases of behavior and mental function. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include PS110 Introductory Psychology as a Natural Science; PS111 Introductory Psychology as a Social Science; PS120 Introduction to Behavioral Statistics and Research I; PS121 Introduction to Behavioral Statistics and Research II; PS285 Behavioral Neuroscience; PS272 Cognitive Psychology: Mental Processes and their Neural Substrates; PS234 Abnormal Psychology; PS241 Social Psychology; PS242 Personality Theories; PS260 Developmental Psychology; PS371 Cognitive Neuroscience: Exploring Mind and Brain; PS372 Affective Neuroscience; PS375 Psychology and Neuroscience of Human Memory; PS473 Event-Related Potentials; PS570 Advanced Topics in Cognitive Neuroscience; PS571 Controversies in Cognitive Neuroscience; PS574 Neuroscience of Sensation and Perception; PS575 Advanced Affective Neuroscience; PS576 Methods in Human Brain Mapping; PS579 Special Topics: Cognitive, Affective, and Behavioral Neuroscience; PS490 Senior Thesis I; PS495 Senior Honors Thesis I; PS497 Scholars Project Research; PS381 Neurobiology of Social Behavior; PS382 Neurobiology of Stress; PS383 Neurobiological Basis of Learning and Memory; PS384 Neurobiology of Sensory and Motor Systems; PS385 Neurobiology of Motivation and Emotion; PS386 Psychopharmacology; PS387 Developmental Neuroscience and Behavior; PS388 Neurobiology of Eating and Eating Disorders; PS584 Epigenetics and Mental Disorders; PS585 Brain Systems: Motivation and Emotion; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS584 Epigenetics and Mental Disorders; PS585 Brain Systems: Motivation and Emotion; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; CH109 General Chemistry I with lab (CH111); CH110 General Chemistry II with lab (CH112). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston College 300 McGuinn, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4100 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | B.S./M.S. in Nursing | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | This program enables students to graduate with bachelors and master’s degrees in five years (full time) or six years (part time). Students take graduate courses their senior year and during the summer after graduation. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F Connell School of Nursing (Undergraduate) | William F Connell School of Nursing (Undergraduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4925 | The School of Nursing was opened on January 27, 1947. The school was dedicated in honor of the late Boston-area businessman and philanthropist William F. Connell on September 12, 2003. The school, now named the William F. Connell School of Nursing, was the recipient of a $10 million gift made by Connell shortly before his death from cancer in 2001. Connell was a 1959 graduate of Boston College and served on the University's board of trustees for 24 years. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | BA/MA Program in History | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program gives students a greater opportunity for concentrated study and research training without requiring a commitment to the Ph.D. Students in the BA/MA program must meet all the specific course requirements for the undergraduate major as well as the formal requirements for the MA, including the completion of a research seminar, demonstrated proficiency in a foreign language, and an oral comprehensive exam in major and minor fields. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include HS 001-002 Europe in the World I and II; HS 005-006 Asia in the World I and I; HS 011-012 Atlantic World I and II; HS 019-020 Democracy, Rights, and Empire I and II; HS 023-024 Eurasia in the World I and II; HS 031-032 Europe and the Modern World I and II; HS 035-036 Europe and the Modern World I and II; HS 041-042 Europe in the World I and II; HS 051-052 Europe in the World I and II; HS 081-082 Modern History I and II; HS 093-094 Modern History I and II; HS 104 American Presidency; HS 106 Teaching History Content Lab; HS 107 Internship; HS 111 America’s War in Vietnam; HS 120 Introduction to African Diaspora Studies; HS 121 People and Nature: History and Future of Human Impact/Planet; HS 131 American Icons - Nineteenth-Century Images of National Identity; HS 148 Introduction to Feminisms; HS 163 Roman Law and Family; HS 166 Arts of Islamic Spain; HS 171 Islamic Civilization; HS 172 Post-Slavery History of the Caribbean; HS 247 Irish Material Culture. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department, Boston College, 21 Campanella Way140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 2267 | The Department of History is one of the largest departments in the College of Arts and Sciences, with 35 full-time faculty members and over 600 history majors. The offices for faculty and staff in this department are located in 21 Campanella Way, on the 4th floor. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor in Sacred Theology (S.T.B.) | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | School of Theology and Ministry | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Biology | Full Time | 44 Credit-hour(s) | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department | This program also provides a solid foundation in biology, but allows more room in a student’s schedule for additional elective courses by removing the specific requirements for organic chemistry and calculus-based physics that characterize the B.S. program. The B.A. program is well-suited to biology majors interested in integrating their study of biology with other areas, including law, ethics, history, sociology, computer science, and management. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include BI 200 Molecules and Cells; BI 202 Organisms and Populations; BI 204 Investigations in Molecular Cell Biology; BI 303 Organism Biology; BI 304 Cell Biology; BI 305 Genetics; BI 315 Functional Genomics; BI 316 Physiology; BI 401 Environmental Biology; BI 407 Ecology of Plants with Lab; BI 414 Microbiology; BI 416 Nuclear Cell Biology; BI 420 Introduction to Bioinformatics; BI 422 Plant Biology; BI 426 Human Anatomy with Lab; BI 432 Developmental Biology; BI 433 Human Physiology with Lab; BI 435 Biological Chemistry; BI 436 Environmental Genomics: Lab Projects; BI 437 Developmental Neuroscience and Behavior; BI 440 Molecular Biology; BI 442 Principles of Ecology; BI 451 Cancer Biology; BI 455 Cell Physiology and Exercise; BI 456 Insect Ecology; BI 458 Evolution; BI 481 Introduction to Neuroscience; BI 482 Research in Cell Biology Lab; BI 483 Research in Molecular Biology Lab; BI 484 Research in Biochemistry Lab; BI 485 Research in Neuroscience Lab; BI 486 Methods in Ecology: Coastal Wetland Communities; BI 503 Current Topics in Cancer Research; BI 509 Vertebrate Cell Biology; BI 513 Environmental Disruptors of Development; BI 517 Human Parasitology; BI 524 Computational Foundations of Bioinformatics; BI 527 Neurobiology of Disease; BI 540 Immunology; BI 551 Cell Biology of the Nervous System; CH 561 Biochemistry I; CH 562 Biochemistry II; GE 330 Paleobiology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3540 | Students pursue a program of studies that includes an extensive multi-disciplinary core experience, intensive work in a major field, and the opportunity to strengthen and round out a liberal arts education with a wide variety of electives. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Arts in Advancing Studies - Humanities | Full Time | Variable | US $1,502 per semester | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | This program prepares students to address and master the challenges of a rapidly changing and increasingly complex world. A flexible, broad-based curriculum permits registrants to choose courses and tracks of study reflecting their individual interests and varied career objectives. The curriculum offers intensive work and a degree of disciplined mastery in a major area. It also provides breadth and venturesome possibilities in communications, corporate systems, criminal and social justice, information technology, the humanities and the social sciences. Humanities develop communication strengths, explore diverse cultures, and introduce the kinds of thinking that relate learning to the moral significance and practical direction of life. The nine course requirement comprises Introductory College Writing, Literary Works and an English elective; two foreign literatures in English translation or two intermediate foreign language courses; Problems in Philosophy and a philosophy elective; two Theology electives. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Organization Studies is a broad discipline that studies how organizations are structured and how individuals fit into that structure. Faculty is committed to providing an open, challenging and supportive environment for students to learn about the human component of organizations. As organizations become increasingly knowledge-based, human resources have emerged as a critical strategic factor determining competitive advantage. In response to this trend and to prepare students for a career in human resource management, this department offers a concentration in Human Resources Management at the undergraduate level. Because the students need to learn how to better lead and manage people and organizations, this department also offer a concentration in Management and Leadership to support undergraduate students in all management disciplines in becoming more effective managers and leaders. At the graduate level, this department recognizes that change leadership is a core competence for managers today. To help the MBAs develop the ability to respond to rapidly changing technological demands, market reconfigurations, and other organizational issues, this department offer a concentration in Change Leadership. In addition, this department offers a Ph.D. in Organization Studies that prepares students for a career in academic research on organizations. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Arts in Advancing Studies - Mathematics and Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $1,502 per semester | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | This program enhances the content knowledge and its impact on individuals, communities, societies and the global environment. A computer course and two courses in either mathematics or science comprise the three course requirement. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Organization Studies is a broad discipline that studies how organizations are structured and how individuals fit into that structure. Faculty is committed to providing an open, challenging and supportive environment for students to learn about the human component of organizations. As organizations become increasingly knowledge-based, human resources have emerged as a critical strategic factor determining competitive advantage. In response to this trend and to prepare students for a career in human resource management, this department offers a concentration in Human Resources Management at the undergraduate level. Because the students need to learn how to better lead and manage people and organizations, this department also offer a concentration in Management and Leadership to support undergraduate students in all management disciplines in becoming more effective managers and leaders. At the graduate level, this department recognizes that change leadership is a core competence for managers today. To help the MBAs develop the ability to respond to rapidly changing technological demands, market reconfigurations, and other organizational issues, this department offer a concentration in Change Leadership. In addition, this department offers a Ph.D. in Organization Studies that prepares students for a career in academic research on organizations. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Arts in Advancing Studies - Social Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $1,502 per semester | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | This program provides a better understanding of how people develop, think and interact; how they adapt and change the environment. Required are two history courses and three additional courses selected from the following areas: economics, history, political science, psychology or sociology. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Organization Studies is a broad discipline that studies how organizations are structured and how individuals fit into that structure. Faculty is committed to providing an open, challenging and supportive environment for students to learn about the human component of organizations. As organizations become increasingly knowledge-based, human resources have emerged as a critical strategic factor determining competitive advantage. In response to this trend and to prepare students for a career in human resource management, this department offers a concentration in Human Resources Management at the undergraduate level. Because the students need to learn how to better lead and manage people and organizations, this department also offer a concentration in Management and Leadership to support undergraduate students in all management disciplines in becoming more effective managers and leaders. At the graduate level, this department recognizes that change leadership is a core competence for managers today. To help the MBAs develop the ability to respond to rapidly changing technological demands, market reconfigurations, and other organizational issues, this department offer a concentration in Change Leadership. In addition, this department offers a Ph.D. in Organization Studies that prepares students for a career in academic research on organizations. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | This program is designed to provide a solid foundation in the fundamentals of computer science. At the same time, it provides practical, hands-on experience with computing systems, as the current technology job market dictates. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CS 101 Computer Science I; CS 102 Computer Science II; CS 243 Logic and Computation; CS 244 Randomness and Computation; CS 271 Computer Systems; CS 272 Computer Organization/CS 273 Computer Organization Lab (this combination counts as one course); CS 383 Algorithms. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3975 | The department has separate lab facilities which contain 25 Apple iMac Intel computers, a central server and a high-end HP laser printer. Each lab computer is capable of operating Apple OS X or Windows XP via virtualization software. The Computer Architecture lab has 10 Dell PCs each configured with Xilinx ISE, and XESS boards with Xilinx FPGAs. The Eye Tracking lab is used to study the human visual system through eye-tracking experiments. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science - Concentration in Bioinformatics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | This program is designed to provide a solid foundation in the fundamentals of computer science. At the same time, it provides practical, hands-on experience with computing systems, as the current technology job market dictates. Bioinformatics is an interdisciplinary field of study combining aspects of biology, mathematics, and computer science. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CS 101 Computer Science I; CS 102 Computer Science II; CS 243 Logic and Computation; CS 244 Randomness and Computation; CS 271 Computer Systems; CS 272 Computer Organization/CS 273 Computer Organization Lab (this combination counts as one course); CS 383 Algorithms; BI 304 Molecular Biology (lab not required); BI 305 Molecular Biology (lab not required); BI 420 Introduction to Bioinformatics (Fall); BI 424 Computational Foundations of Bioinformatics (Spring); BI 585 Genomics Laboratory (Spring); CS 227 Introduction to Scientific Computation (Fall). Computer Science students may substitute CS 101; CS 327 Algorithm Analysis and Design for Computational Scientists. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3975 | The department has separate lab facilities which contain 25 Apple iMac Intel computers, a central server and a high-end HP laser printer. Each lab computer is capable of operating Apple OS X or Windows XP via virtualization software. The Computer Architecture lab has 10 Dell PCs each configured with Xilinx ISE, and XESS boards with Xilinx FPGAs. The Eye Tracking lab is used to study the human visual system through eye-tracking experiments. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department | This program is designed to provide a solid foundation in the main areas of mathematics and mathematical applications. Course work is offered in preparation for graduate school in pure or applied mathematics, careers in the actuarial profession, applied areas of government and industry, and education. Mathematics majors also make excellent candidates for law school and other professional schools. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MT102 Calculus I (Math and Science Majors); MT103 Calculus II (Math and Science Majors); MT202 Multivariable Calculus; MT210 Linear Algebra; MT216 Introduction to Abstract Mathematics; MT310 Introduction to Abstract Algebra; MT320 Introduction to Analysis. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department, 301 Carney Hall, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3750 | The Mathematics Department is located in Carney Hall, near the southwest corner of the main campus. It borders on Beacon Street, one building east from the intersection of Beacon Street with College Road and Hammond Street. It is easily accessible from the Beacon Street parking facility. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Arts in Theater - Theatre Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Theatre Department | In this program, students will receive a solid foundation of skills and knowledge that prepare students to begin advanced theatre studies or embark upon a career in professional theatre or one of its sister arts. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CT 062 Dramatic Structure and Theatrical Process; CT 101 Acting I; CT 140 Elements of Theatre Production I; CT 141 Elements of Theatre Production II; CT 275 History of Theatre I; CT 276 History of Theatre II. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Theatre Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Theatre Department, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4012 | In 1865, two years after Boston College opened, theater department began at BC. It continued for many years as a student activity under the aegis of the Dramatics Society. In the early 1970s, the College of Arts and Sciences established a theater major as part of the Department of Speech, Communications and Theatre. The Robsham Theater Arts Center opened in 1981 as the center of theater production on campus. In 1993, the Theatre Department was established as an independent department. Since then, both the academic and production programs have grown steadily in terms of faculty staff, theater majors, course offerings, and the quality and quantity of productions. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in Biology | Full Time | 59 or 60 credits | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department | This program is well-suited for biology majors who are interested in pursuing those aspects of the field that require strong background knowledge in physics, chemistry, and mathematics and for students who want to fulfill premedical/pre-dental requirements. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include BI 200 Molecules and Cells; BI 202 Organisms and Populations; BI 204 Investigations in Molecular Cell Biology; BI 303 Organism Biology; BI 304 Cell Biology; BI 305 Genetics; BI 315 Functional Genomics; BI 316 Physiology; BI 401 Environmental Biology; BI 407 Ecology of Plants with Lab; BI 414 Microbiology; BI 416 Nuclear Cell Biology; BI 420 Introduction to Bioinformatics; BI 422 Plant Biology; BI 426 Human Anatomy with Lab; BI 432 Developmental Biology; BI 433 Human Physiology with Lab; BI 435 Biological Chemistry; BI 436 Environmental Genomics: Lab Projects; BI 437 Developmental Neuroscience and Behavior; BI 440 Molecular Biology; BI 442 Principles of Ecology; BI 451 Cancer Biology; BI 455 Cell Physiology and Exercise; BI 456 Insect Ecology; BI 458 Evolution; BI 481 Introduction to Neuroscience; BI 482 Research in Cell Biology Lab; BI 483 Research in Molecular Biology Lab; BI 484 Research in Biochemistry Lab; BI 485 Research in Neuroscience Lab; BI 486 Methods in Ecology: Coastal Wetland Communities; BI 503 Current Topics in Cancer Research; BI 509 Vertebrate Cell Biology; BI 513 Environmental Disruptors of Development; BI 517 Human Parasitology; BI 524 Computational Foundations of Bioinformatics; BI 527 Neurobiology of Disease; BI 540 Immunology; BI 551 Cell Biology of the Nervous System; CH 561 Biochemistry I; CH 562 Biochemistry II; GE 330 Paleobiology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3540 | Students pursue a program of studies that includes an extensive multi-disciplinary core experience, intensive work in a major field, and the opportunity to strengthen and round out a liberal arts education with a wide variety of electives. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Science / Master of Science in Biology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program allows Boston College students involved in undergraduate research to apply to the biology department graduate program during their junior year, for entry into the five year BS/MS before the beginning of their senior year. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include BI 502 Literature of Neurochemistry; BI 503 Current Topics in Cancer Research; BI 506 Recombinant DNA Technology; BI 517 Human Parasitological; BI 551 Cell Biology of the Nervous System; BI 554 Physiology; BI 556 Developmental Biology; BI 561 Molecular Evolution. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | This program is designed to provide an extensive background in computer science and is well-suited for students considering graduate study or students planning to pursue careers in science or engineering. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CS 101 Computer Science I; CS 102 Computer Science II; CS 243 Logic and Computation; CS 244 Randomness and Computation; CS 271 Computer Systems; CS 272 Computer Organization/CS 273 Computer Organization Lab (this combination counts as one course); CS 372 Computer Architecture/CS 373 Computer Architecture Lab (this combination counts as one course); CS 383 Algorithms. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3975 | The department has separate lab facilities which contain 25 Apple iMac Intel computers, a central server and a high-end HP laser printer. Each lab computer is capable of operating Apple OS X or Windows XP via virtualization software. The Computer Architecture lab has 10 Dell PCs each configured with Xilinx ISE, and XESS boards with Xilinx FPGAs. The Eye Tracking lab is used to study the human visual system through eye-tracking experiments. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science - Concentration in Bioinformatics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | This program is designed to provide an extensive background in computer science and is well-suited for students considering graduate study or students planning to pursue careers in science or engineering. Bioinformatics is an interdisciplinary field of study combining aspects of biology, mathematics, and computer science. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include CS 101 Computer Science I; CS 102 Computer Science II; CS 243 Logic and Computation; CS 244 Randomness and Computation; CS 271 Computer Systems; CS 272 Computer Organization/CS 273 Computer Organization Lab (this combination counts as one course); CS 372 Computer Architecture/CS 373 Computer Architecture Lab (this combination counts as one course); CS 383 Algorithms; BI 304 Molecular Biology (lab not required); BI 305 Molecular Biology (lab not required); BI 420 Introduction to Bioinformatics (Fall); BI 424 Computational Foundations of Bioinformatics (Spring); BI 585 Genomics Laboratory (Spring); CS 227 Introduction to Scientific Computation (Fall). Computer Science students may substitute CS 101; CS 327 Algorithm Analysis and Design for Computational Scientists. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3975 | The department has separate lab facilities which contain 25 Apple iMac Intel computers, a central server and a high-end HP laser printer. Each lab computer is capable of operating Apple OS X or Windows XP via virtualization software. The Computer Architecture lab has 10 Dell PCs each configured with Xilinx ISE, and XESS boards with Xilinx FPGAs. The Eye Tracking lab is used to study the human visual system through eye-tracking experiments. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department | This program is designed to provide a solid foundation in the main areas of mathematics and mathematical applications. Course work is offered in preparation for graduate school in pure or applied mathematics, careers in the actuarial profession, applied areas of government and industry, and education. Mathematics majors also make excellent candidates for law school and other professional schools. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include MT102 Calculus I (Math and Science Majors); MT103 Calculus II (Math and Science Majors); MT202 Multivariable Calculus; MT210 Linear Algebra; MT216 Introduction to Abstract Mathematics; MT310 Introduction to Abstract Algebra; MT320 Introduction to Analysis. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department, 301 Carney Hall, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3750 | The Mathematics Department is located in Carney Hall, near the southwest corner of the main campus. It borders on Beacon Street, one building east from the intersection of Beacon Street with College Road and Hammond Street. It is easily accessible from the Beacon Street parking facility. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Bachelor of Science in Nursing | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $40,880 a year | William F Connell School of Nursing (Undergraduate) | This program is designed to develop a student's diagnostic, therapeutic and ethical reasoning in nursing practice. The graduate is prepared as a generalist able to care for individuals and groups at each developmental level and in varied health care settings. Options are available for baccalaureate students to begin master's-level courses during their undergraduate nursing program. Undergraduate nursing students may enroll for one semester during their junior year in any number of study-abroad programs sponsored by Boston College or by other U.S. colleges and universities. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | The modules include NU 010 Freshman Professional Development Seminar; NU 060 Professional Nursing I; NU 080 Pathophysiology; NU 120/121 Assessment of Health Across the Lifespan (Theory/Clinical); NU 230/231 Adult Health I Nursing Theory/Clinical; NU 242/243 Adult Health II Nursing Theory/Clinical; NU 244/245 Childbearing Nursing Theory/Clinical; NU 250/251 Child Health Nursing Theory/Clinical; NU 252/253 Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing Theory/Clinical; NU 260/261 Community Nursing Theory/Clinical; NU 263 Nursing Synthesis (Clinical); NU 264 Professional Nursing II. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F Connell School of Nursing (Undergraduate) | William F Connell School of Nursing (Undergraduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4925 | The School of Nursing was opened on January 27, 1947. The school was dedicated in honor of the late Boston-area businessman and philanthropist William F. Connell on September 12, 2003. The school, now named the William F. Connell School of Nursing, was the recipient of a $10 million gift made by Connell shortly before his death from cancer in 2001. Connell was a 1959 graduate of Boston College and served on the University's board of trustees for 24 years. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Combined B.A./M.A. in Mathematics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department, 301 Carney Hall, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3750 | The Mathematics Department is located in Carney Hall, near the southwest corner of the main campus. It borders on Beacon Street, one building east from the intersection of Beacon Street with College Road and Hammond Street. It is easily accessible from the Beacon Street parking facility. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |||
| 164924 | Boston College | Combined MSW / PhD in Social Work | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Social Work | The school provides an option whereby those doctoral students without a master of social work degree can engage in a program of study that leads to both the M.S.W. and the Ph.D. degrees. The combined M.S.W./Ph.D. program provides an integrated educational program for exceptionally talented students to embark on their doctoral course work before fully completing all of the requirements for the M.S.W. program. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Applied Developmental and Educational Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program prepares students to serve diverse populations in a variety of professional roles as teachers and researchers in colleges and universities and as researchers and leaders in applied settings, including schools, government agencies, and health and human services organizations. The focus the program is development and learning in socio cultural context. Areas of program expertise within the study of child development and child functioning include cognitive development and social development from the preschool years through adolescence. Development is examined, in both research and curriculum, across multiple, interactive contexts or levels. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PY 920 Proseminar on Current Issues in Applied Developmental and Educational Psychology; PY 615 Social and Emotional Processes of Development; PY 917 Cognitive and Affective Bases of Behavior; PY 916 Theory and Application of Developmental and Educational Psychology (offered every other year); PY 813 Socioc Cultural Contexts of Development (offered every other year); PY 469 Intermediate Statistics; PY 667 General Linear Models; PY 841 Quantitative Research Design in Counseling and Developmental Psychology; PY 851 Design of Qualitative Research; PY 912 Participatory Action Research; PY/ED 664 Design of Experiments; SC 710 Survey of Research Methods; PY/ED 669 Psychometrics; PY/ED 861 Construction of Attitude and Opinion Questionnaires. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Educational Research, Measurement, and Evaluation | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School Of Education, Department of Educational Research, Measurement, and Evaluation | This curriculum emphasizes research methodology and data analysis and includes advanced coursework in research design, statistical methods, and testing and assessment as well as seminars in statistical and measurement topics. ERME students have the opportunity to tailor coursework to their particular interests and background. The doctoral degree requires a minimum of 54 credits beyond the M.Ed. and satisfactory completion of comprehensive exams and a dissertation. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include ED/PY 460 Interpretation and Evaluation of Research; ED/PY 462 Assessment and Test Construction; ED 466 Program Evaluation I; ED 467 Program Evaluation II; ED/PY 468 Introductory Statistics; ED/PY 469 Intermediate Statistics; ED/PY 560 Seminar on Issues in Testing and Assessment; ED/pY 561 Evaluation and Public Policy; ED/PY 565 Large-Scale Assessment: Procedures and Practice; ED/PY 664 Design of Experiments; ED/PY 667 General Linear Models; ED/PY 668 Multivariate Statistical Analysis; ED/PY 669 Psychometric Theory; ED 724 Practicum in Educational Technology: Technology-Enhanced Assessment; ED/PY 851 Qualitative Research Methods; ED/PY 861 Multilevel Regression Modeling; ED/PY 862 Survey Methods in Educational and Social Research; ED 941 Dissertation Seminar in Educational Research, Measurement and Evaluation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School Of Education, Department of Educational Research, Measurement, and Evaluation | Lynch School Of Education, Department of Educational Research, Measurement, and Evaluation, Campion Hall Room 336, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 2072 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Higher Education Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program is designed to prepare experienced practitioners for senior administrative and policy-making posts, and careers in teaching/research in the field of higher education. The program has several specific programmatic foci that permit students to specialize in an area of interest. Among these are administration and policy analysis in higher education; student development and student affairs; international and comparative higher education; historical and philosophical foundations of higher education; finance and economics of higher education; organizational culture and change; and the academic profession. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 1760 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include MT410 Differential Equations; MT412 Partial Differential Equations; MT414 Numerical Analysis; MT426 Probability; MT427 Mathematical Statistics; MT430 Introduction to Number Theory; MT435 Mathematical Programming I; MT440 Dynamical Systems; MT445 Applied Combinatory; MT451 Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Geometry; MT455 Mathematical Problem Solving; MT480.01 Topics in Mathematics; MT480.02 Topics in Mathematics; MT806 Algebra I; MT845 Topics in Algebra and Number Theory; MT855 Topics in Geometry and Topology; MT890 Graduate Teaching Seminar I; MT891 Graduate Teaching Seminar II; MT892 Graduate Research Seminar; MT899 Readings and Research; MT903 Seminar. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Upon entering the doctoral program, each student shall select a field of specialization and establish a working relationship with a member of the faculty. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PH700 Physics Colloquium; PH707 Physics Graduate Seminar I; PH708 Physics Graduate Seminar II; PH711 Classical Mechanics; PH721 Statistical Physics I; PH722 Statistical Physics II; PH732 Electromagnetic Theory I; PH735 Techniques of Experimental Physics I; PH741 Quantum Mechanics I; PH742 Quantum Mechanics II; PH761 Solid State Physics I; PH762 Solid State Physics II; PH799 Readings and Research in Physics; PH801 Physics Thesis Research; PH835 Mathematical Physics I; ;PH888 Interim Study PH910 Seminar: Topics in Physics; PH950 Group Theory; PH998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PH999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Theology and Education | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program is offered in conjunction with Boston college theology department in the graduate school of arts and sciences and the lynch school of education. The degree is awarded by the graduate school of arts and sciences (GSAS). The program is intended to educate scholars in the interdisciplinary field of religious education. Participants take courses in theology, education, and religious education; faculty members from each of these areas serve on both the comprehensive examination committee and on the dissertation committee. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Doctor of Philosophy in History | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is offered with concentrations in African and Middle Eastern, Asian, Early Modern European, Latin American, Medieval, Modern European, Russian and Eastern European, and United States history. The department also offers coursework in three comparative areas: Atlantic World, Empires and Legacies, and Religious History. During the first semester of full-time study, doctoral students choose a faculty advisor, who oversees the student's progress in preparing for comprehensive exams and in developing a dissertation topic. The Ph.D. is a research degree and requires special commitment and skills. While the degree is not granted for routine adherence to certain regulations, or for the successful completion of a specified number of courses, there are certain basic requirements. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include HS131 American Icons--Nineteenth-Century Images of National Identity; HS280 History of Black Nationalism; HS302 From Sun Yat-Sen to the Beijing Olympics; HS303 Late Imperial China; HS310 Public Culture in Postwar Japan; HS311 African Slave Trade; HS320 Modern Brazil; HS324 Populism and Military Rule in Latin America; HS325 Revolutionary Cuba: History and Politics; HS326 History of Modern Iran; HS329 The Caribbean During the Cold War, 1962-1989; HS331 Perspectives in Latin American History; HS358 The Death Penalty: United Sates and European Union; HS368 Early Modern British Expansion; HS371 Century of Famine: 19th C. Social Crisis; HS373 Slave Societies in the Caribbean and Latin America; HS376 Latin American Women/Themselves; HS385 Introduction to Modern South Asia; HS401 The Reformation; HS403 The Vikings; HS409 500 Years of Michelangelo's Chapel in History and Imagination; HS410 Disunited Kingdom; HS421 Irish Women Emigrants: The Irish and American Contexts; HS431 Ireland: Union to Rebellion; HS436 Twentieth-Century Ireland; HS452 War and Genocide; HS454 Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Russia; HS458 St. Petersburg/Leningrad: From Peter the Great to Putin; HS460 Hitler, Churches, and the Holocaust; HS470 The Ends of Human History: 20th Century European Intellectual History; HS488 The French Revolution; HS506 History of the American West; HS511 Race, Class, and Ethnicity and the Struggle for Human Rights in America, 1941 to Present; HS514 The American Civil War and Reconstruction; HS517 U.S. Constitutional History I; HS526 Law and American Society; HS539 History of American Women I; HS540 History of American Women II; HS542 Gender and Migration; HS548 Age of Decision: Challenges to Industrial America,1877-1929; HS551 U. S. 1929 - 1960; HS552 U. S. Since 1960; HS553 The Old South; HS565 American Immigration I (to 1865); HS566 American Immigration II (from 1865); HS571 U.S. Foreign Relations I; HS572 U.S. Foreign Relations II; HS575 Terror and the American Century; HS665 Seminar in College Teaching: Women's Studies; HS799 Readings and Research: Independent Study; HS802 Colloquium: Introduction to Doctoral Studies; HS805 Graduate Colloquium: Nation, Religion, and the Meaning of Modern; HS822 History and Memory in Theory and Politics; HS838 Colloquium: International History: Markets, States and the "Transnational"; HS842 Graduate Colloquium: Ireland Before 1850; HS860 Grad Colloquium: Race, Gender, Sexuality and the State in Modern U.S. History; HS865 Colloquium: Religion in America; HS871 Colloquium: U.S. History to 1877; HS888 Interim Study; HS897 Core Colloquium: Modern European History; HS921 Seminar: Medieval History; HS971 Seminar: Nineteenth Century America; HS978 Seminar: Twentieth Century America; HS992 Seminar: Dissertation Seminar; HS997 Dissertation Workshop; HS998 Doctoral Comprehensives; HS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department, Boston College, 21 Campanella Way140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 2267 | The Department of History is one of the largest departments in the College of Arts and Sciences, with 35 full-time faculty members and over 600 history majors. The offices for faculty and staff in this department are located in 21 Campanella Way, on the 4th floor. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PO705 Civil Liberties; PO706 The American Founding; PO710 Research Methods in Political Science; PO726 Democracy in America; PO729 American Political Development II; PO799 Readings and Research; PO801 Master’s Thesis Seminar; PO806 Political Cultures of the Middle East; PO809 Modern State; PO813 Islam in Europe; PO863 Institutions in International Politics; PO865 Realism in International Politics; PO888 Interim Study; PO901 Xenophon's Cyrus and Anabasis; PO903 On Plato's Political Philosophy; PO909 Rousseau and Novels; PO947 Hobbes; PO996 Dissertation Seminar I; PO997 Dissertation Seminar II; PO998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PO999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ed.D. in Professional School Administrators Program | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program was developed by the University more than three decades ago as to provide an opportunity for full-time working elementary, secondary, and central office school administrators to pursue doctoral study. The doctoral program in educational leadership at Boston College integrates theory and practice. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 1760 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department | Students apply for the biology honors program during the spring semester of their junior year. To be eligible for the honors program, students must have a minimum science GPA of 3.5 and be working on an independent research project under the mentorship of a biology faculty member. Applications for the program include a description of the research project and a letter of support from the student’s faculty mentor. During senior year, students in the honors program are expected to continue their research project, to write a thesis describing their research and to participate in a one-credit honors seminar. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Biology Department, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3540 | Students pursue a program of studies that includes an extensive multi-disciplinary core experience, intensive work in a major field, and the opportunity to strengthen and round out a liberal arts education with a wide variety of electives. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Chemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department | This program aims to train talented undergraduate students in chemistry through intellectually engaging and highly interactive classes and original laboratory research. The heart of the program consists of four one-semester courses and three specially designed laboratory sections. These courses are designed to teach all the important fundamentals of chemistry in the context of their significance to modern medicine and novel technologies. Classes are highly interactive and utilize the state-of-the-art in audiovisual aids. Laboratory sessions include the use of state-of-the-art instruments (NMR) and are designed to teach critical concepts in observation, data collection and the art of teamwork in science. Smaller class size provides nearly complete and open access to the faculty and teaching assistants (top graduate students). The honors program is based on the philosophy of "teaching through research." Concepts in the classroom are taught based on modern research results. The fourth honors laboratory often involves a three-month stay in a research group. By the end of their sophomore year, most of the Honors students have selected and officially joined a research group. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry Department, Merkert Chemistry Center, Boston College2609 Beacon Street, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3605 | The Chemistry Department is located in the Merkert Chemistry Center, a 109,000 square foot structure designed to empower the dynamic, cutting-edge research for which the department is internationally recognized. The Merkert Chemistry Center contains faculty research laboratories in organic chemistry, chemical biology, and physical chemistry; specialized research facilities and shared instrumentation; and classrooms and teaching laboratories. Chemistry faculty members have collaborated on the unique design of their own research laboratories, which are built to accommodate state-of-the-art instrumentation and adapt to new research directions. The Merkert Chemistry Center was built in 1991 through the generosity of Mr. Eugene F. Merkert, a successful Boston businessman. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | Students with a qualifying grade point average of 3.75 or higher are eligible for the program. To complete the honors program, students will need to take two specified “honors” writing intensive seminars, perform well in those courses (receive grades of A or A-), and successfully complete an honors thesis under the direction of the instructor of one of those courses. Honors students will receive a total of nine credit hours for their participation in, and completion of, the program. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Department, 21 Campanella Way, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4280 | The Communication Department is located on the fifth (5th) floor of 21 Campanella Way, a building located on the main campus in Chestnut Hill. The department is concerned with the study, criticism, research, teaching and application of the artistic, humanistic, and scientific principles of communication. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | Students with at least a 3.3 GPA in CS courses are eligible to join the departmental honors program. In order to graduate with the departmental honors designation, eligible students must maintain at least a 3.3 GPA in CS courses and complete a senior thesis. Thesis requirements are to have a thesis proposal approved by a faculty advisor and by the honors committee by the end of their junior year. They must complete two sections of CS 397 honors thesis during their senior year with grades of B plus or higher. They must submit a written honors thesis by the last day of class in the second semester of their senior year, and they must make an oral presentation of their thesis at the end of their senior year. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Computer Science Department, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3975 | The department has separate lab facilities which contain 25 Apple iMac Intel computers, a central server and a high-end HP laser printer. Each lab computer is capable of operating Apple OS X or Windows XP via virtualization software. The Computer Architecture lab has 10 Dell PCs each configured with Xilinx ISE, and XESS boards with Xilinx FPGAs. The Eye Tracking lab is used to study the human visual system through eye-tracking experiments. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program provides solid preparation for students planning to attend graduate school in economics as well as for those planning advanced study in other fields. For those students planning to enter the workforce directly after graduation, the program will develop the research, analytical and writing skills that employer’s desire. The program offers highly motivated students the opportunity for an individualized and challenging curriculum. Upon successful completion of the program, students are awarded their Boston College degrees with the designation "Honors in Economics." | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3670 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in English | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, English Department | This program is designed principally for undergraduates who, while pursuing the conventional English major, would like to undertake an extended writing project during their senior year. Students who plan to pursue graduate work in English should seriously consider participating in this program. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, English Department | College of Arts and Sciences, English Department, Boston College, Carney Hall140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3716 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in German Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, German Studies Department | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, German Studies Department | College of Arts and Sciences, German Studies Department, Lyons Hall 201, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3740 | The German Department is a small, student-focused department in the College of Arts and Sciences that provides courses in German language, culture, business and history from the Middle Ages to the present. In addition, the department offers opportunities for contact with German-speaking Europe and for study abroad in Austria and Germany, as well as the possibility of teaching in Germany following graduation. The department is known for its student’s first attitude, as the faculty members provide personal attention to student needs, and foster a positive learning experience within the classroom. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in History | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department | College of Arts and Sciences, History Department, Boston College, 21 Campanella Way140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 2267 | The Department of History is one of the largest departments in the College of Arts and Sciences, with 35 full-time faculty members and over 600 history majors. The offices for faculty and staff in this department are located in 21 Campanella Way, on the 4th floor. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Nursing | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | William F Connell School of Nursing (Undergraduate) | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F Connell School of Nursing (Undergraduate) | William F Connell School of Nursing (Undergraduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4925 | The School of Nursing was opened on January 27, 1947. The school was dedicated in honor of the late Boston-area businessman and philanthropist William F. Connell on September 12, 2003. The school, now named the William F. Connell School of Nursing, was the recipient of a $10 million gift made by Connell shortly before his death from cancer in 2001. Connell was a 1959 graduate of Boston College and served on the University's board of trustees for 24 years. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, 335 Higgins Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3575 | The School of Nursing was opened on January 27, 1947. The school was dedicated in honor of the late Boston-area businessman and philanthropist William F. Connell on September 12, 2003. The school, now named the William F. Connell School of Nursing, was the recipient of a $10 million gift made by Connell shortly before his death from cancer in 2001. Connell was a 1959 graduate of Boston College and served on the University's board of trustees for 24 years. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program seeks to provide additional opportunities for intellectual exchange and friendship, among students as well as with the faculty. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 201 McGuinn Hall, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4160 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The program offers students an excellent opportunity to get involved in research. The program is for students with strong academic records who wish to devote a substantial amount of time in their senior year to a senior honors thesis. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston College 300 McGuinn, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4100 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department, McGuinn Hall 426, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4130 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors Program in Theology | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology | The purpose of the program is to acknowledge special achievement in the academically most talented majors, to encourage greater dedication to theological scholarship, and to provide concrete means by which it can be fostered. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3880 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors in Earth and Environmental Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | Students are encouraged to conduct research with professors in the department. A senior thesis is normally a two-semester project, often also involving work during the summer after their junior year (or before). To do a thesis, students register for senior thesis (GE 595) each semester of the senior year. To achieve department honors, majors in the department need to meet the GPA criteria (3.3 in major, 3.2 overall) and provide a thesis proposal to the undergraduate studies committee by the drop-add date in the fall semester. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Boston CollegeDevlin Hall 213, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3640 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department, 301 Carney Hall, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3750 | The Mathematics Department is located in Carney Hall, near the southwest corner of the main campus. It borders on Beacon Street, one building east from the intersection of Beacon Street with College Road and Hammond Street. It is easily accessible from the Beacon Street parking facility. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Honors in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Music Department | Student must maintain a grade point average of 3.5 in the major, and 3.3 in university, pass the ear-training and listening repertoire requirements with a high score, and produce a final project, recital, or paper deemed worthy of honors. The project must be completed for a grade of A- or better to receive honors. | Bachelor degree | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Music Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Music Department, Lyons Hall 407, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8720 | The Music Department at Boston College was founded in 1989 by the late Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, J. Robert Barth, SJ. The program offers a Bachelor of Arts in Music and numbers around 40 music majors and 60 music minors. The department is also one of many organizations on campus that sponsors Concerts, both student concerts and visiting artists, such as the Hawthorne String Quartet, artists-in-residence at Boston College. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | Interdisciplinary Major in American Heritages | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program is recommended for students who are interested in the American heritage from literary and historical perspectives. Two tracks are available for students pursuing this major, a cultural track with emphasis in the literary perspective, and a social science track for students interested in historical and sociological perspectives. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Major | Boston College | The modules include HS111 America’s War in Vietnam; HS181 U.S. History I; HS182 U.S. History II; HS517 U.S. Constitutional History; EN141 American Literary History I; EN142 American Literary History II; EN143 American Literary History III; EN246 Intro to Asian American Literature; EN482/BK410 African American Writers; FA207 Ruins of Ancient America: Temples and Tombs; FA263 American Icons: 19th Century Images of National Identity; FA267 Saltbox to Skyscraper: American Architecture; FA340 German and American Expressionist Painting; BK104 Afro-American History I; BK266 Rhythm and Blues in America; EN277 Intro to American Studies; BK285 Jazz in America; HS104 The American Presidency. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Interdisciplinary Major in General Science | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program is designed for students seeking a broad and general background in science to help them teach in an early childhood, elementary, or special education setting. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Major | Boston College | The modules include BI200-202 Introductory Biology I and II; CH105 Chemistry and Society I or CH109 General Chemistry I; PH115 Structure of the Universe; GE132 Exploring the Earth I; GE133 lab; GE167 Environmental Geo-sciences I; GE180 The Living Earth I and II; GE172 Weather, Climate and the Environment; BI442 Principles of Ecology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Interdisciplinary Major in Human Development | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program provides students with a background in the fields of counseling, developmental, and educational psychology. This major is particularly appropriate for students seeking a deeper understanding of the relationships between psychology and education and between schools and other social services, community agencies, and public and private organizations, including business. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Major | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Interdisciplinary Major in Mathematics/Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program is recommended for students who have had four years of high school mathematics and wish to specialize in the area of mathematics and computer science, but who are not interested in the traditional mathematics major because of their intended career objective as elementary, early childhood, or special needs educators. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Major | Boston College | The modules include MT190 Fundamentals of Math I; MT191 Fundamentals of Math II; ED128 Computer Applications for Educators; MT290 Number Theory for Teachers or MT453 Euclid’s Elements; MT291 Geometry for Teachers; MT353 Statistics; CS101 Computer Science I; MT100 Calculus I; ED674 Teaching Math Problem Solving 4-12. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Interdisciplinary Major in Perspectives on Spanish America | Full Time | Variable | US $40,880 a year | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program is recommended for students who may have had at least two years of high school Spanish and wish to develop Spanish language skills, coupled with a background in the historical, sociological, and literary traditions of Hispanic cultures. | Students should have obtained a minimum TOEFL score of 600 on paper-based test; 250 on the computer based test, or 100 on the internet-based test. Therefore, in most cases, a strong TOEFL score will enhance the strength of an international student's application. This requirement will only be waived if a student has earned an SAT Verbal score of 600 or better. | Major | Boston College | The modules include RL215-216 Spanish Conversation, Composition and Reading I and II (CCR) (F/S); RL391-392 Naturalmente I and II; RL335 Hispanic American Experience (Fronteras); RL597 Foreign Language Teaching Methodology; RL637 Spanish-American Short Story; RL678 Early Spanish American Women Writers; RL615 Contemporary Spanish American Writers; RL648 Cultural Migrations; HS174 Modern Latin America; BK325 Revolutionary Cuba: History and Politics; HS161 Biography of Power in Latin America; HS320 Modern Brazil; HS330 Religion in Latin American History; HS329 Caribbean During Cold War. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./M.A. in Higher Education | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | Contact provider | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program is designed for students who are interested in serving the combined legal and educational needs for students, families and communities in the nation. The program reflects the university's mission to promote social justice and to prepare men and women for service to others. Both the J.D. and M.Ed can be obtained in three years through this program, and designed to serve the needs of persons who wish to combine knowledge about education and applied psychology with legal knowledge and skills to better serve their clients and constituencies. Applicants to this program must apply separately for admission to each school. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PY348 Culture; Community and Change; PY397 Social Issues and Social Policy; PY418 Applied Child Development; PY440 Principles and Techniques of Counseling; PY441 Issues in Counseling Men; PY443 Psychoanalytic Case Conceptualization; PY444 Theories of Counseling and Personality I; PY445 Child Psychopathology; PY446 Theories of Counseling and Personality II; PY447 Applied Adolescent Development; ED300 Secondary and Middle School Science Methods; ED301 Secondary and Middle School History Methods; ED302 Secondary and Middle School English Methods; ED303 Secondary and Middle School Foreign Language Methods; ED304 Secondary and Middle School Mathematics Methods; ED307 Teachers and Educational Reform; ED316 Teaching Process and Content in Early Education; ED323 Reading and Special Needs Instruction for Secondary and Middle School Students; ED346 Teaching Bilingual Students; ED347 Honors Thesis II; ED349 Sociology of Education; ED363 Survey of Children's Literature; ED373 Classroom Management; ED374 Management of the Behavior of Students with Special Needs; ED381 Disabilities on Film. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./M.A. in Higher Education | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | Contact provider | Law School | This program is designed for students who are interested in serving the combined legal and educational needs for students, families and communities in the nation. The program reflects the university's mission to promote social justice and to prepare men and women for service to others. Both the J.D. and M.Ed can be obtained in three years through this program, and designed to serve the needs of persons who wish to combine knowledge about education and applied psychology with legal knowledge and skills to better serve their clients and constituencies. Applicants to this program must apply separately for admission to each school. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PY348 Culture; Community and Change; PY397 Social Issues and Social Policy; PY418 Applied Child Development; PY440 Principles and Techniques of Counseling; PY441 Issues in Counseling Men; PY443 Psychoanalytic Case Conceptualization; PY444 Theories of Counseling and Personality I; PY445 Child Psychopathology; PY446 Theories of Counseling and Personality II; PY447 Applied Adolescent Development; ED300 Secondary and Middle School Science Methods; ED301 Secondary and Middle School History Methods; ED302 Secondary and Middle School English Methods; ED303 Secondary and Middle School Foreign Language Methods; ED304 Secondary and Middle School Mathematics Methods; ED307 Teachers and Educational Reform; ED316 Teaching Process and Content in Early Education; ED323 Reading and Special Needs Instruction for Secondary and Middle School Students; ED346 Teaching Bilingual Students; ED347 Honors Thesis II; ED349 Sociology of Education; ED363 Survey of Children's Literature; ED373 Classroom Management; ED374 Management of the Behavior of Students with Special Needs; ED381 Disabilities on Film. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./M.A. in Philosophy | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | Contact provider | Law School | This program designed for students who have an interest in legal theory and jurisprudence, and who may eventually wish to go into law teaching in those fields. Students may complete their law degree and masters in philosophy in four years of joint study, or law and Ph.D. in six. Students must apply to both the law school and masters or Ph.D. program in the philosophy department of Boston College. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./M.A. in Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Law School | This program is for students interested in exploring the connections between law and urban and environmental policy and planning. Students receive two degrees-a Master of Arts and a Juris Doctor (M.A./J.D.). The dual degree program recognizes that the fields of law and planning are inexorably linked. Planning (including policy analysis) is a process of guiding future development patterns; the law frames the mechanisms and limits of governments’ control over this process. Planning and law immerse students in broad debates and critical thinking about the environment, human settlements, social and environmental justice, corporate responsibility, and land use, each guided by constitutional, equitable and pragmatic principles. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./M.B.A. - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | Contact provider | Law School | This program is offered jointly by Boston college law school and the Carroll school of management at Boston college offer a combined J.D./M.B.A. program for the lawyer who also wishes to be trained as a business professional. Credit for one semester in the M.B.A. program is given toward the J.D. degree, and credit for one semester in the law school is given toward the M.B.A. degree. Both degrees can be obtained within four academic years rather than the five required for completing the two degrees separately. Interested students may obtain information from the law school's admissions office. Students will need to apply to and be admitted by each school independently. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./M.B.A. - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | This program is offered jointly by Boston college law school and the Carroll school of management at Boston college offer a combined J.D./M.B.A. program for the lawyer who also wishes to be trained as a business professional. Credit for one semester in the M.B.A. program is given toward the J.D. degree, and credit for one semester in the law school is given toward the M.B.A. degree. Both degrees can be obtained within four academic years rather than the five required for completing the two degrees separately. Interested students may obtain information from the law school's admissions office. Students will need to apply to and be admitted by each school independently. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./M.Ed. in Educational Administration | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | Contact provider | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program is designed for students who are interested in serving the combined legal and educational needs for students, families and communities in the nation. The program reflects the university's mission to promote social justice and to prepare men and women for service to others. Both the J.D. and M.Ed can be obtained in three years through this program, and designed to serve the needs of persons who wish to combine knowledge about education and applied psychology with legal knowledge and skills to better serve their clients and constituencies. Applicants to this program must apply separately for admission to each school. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 1760 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./M.Ed. in Educational Administration | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | Contact provider | Law School | This program is designed for students who are interested in serving the combined legal and educational needs for students, families and communities in the nation. The program reflects the university's mission to promote social justice and to prepare men and women for service to others. Both the J.D. and M.Ed can be obtained in three years through this program, and designed to serve the needs of persons who wish to combine knowledge about education and applied psychology with legal knowledge and skills to better serve their clients and constituencies. Applicants to this program must apply separately for admission to each school. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | J.D./Ph.D. in Philosophy | Full Time | 6 Year(s) | Contact provider | Law School | This program designed for students who have an interest in legal theory and jurisprudence, and who may eventually wish to go into law teaching in those fields. Students may complete their law degree and masters in philosophy in four years of joint study, or law and Ph.D. in six. Students must apply to both the law school and masters or Ph.D. program in the philosophy department of Boston College. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Juris Doctor and Master of Social Work (J.D./M.S.W.) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Law School | This program is jointly offered by Boston college law school and the Boston college school of social work offers a program leading to both Juris Doctor and Master of Social Work degrees in four rather than the usual five years. The joint J.D./M.S.W. is designed for students interested in serving the legal and social welfare needs of individuals, families, groups and communities. Students are required to be independently admitted to both schools. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Classics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include CL063 Intensive Reading in Latin; CL070 Intermediate Modern Greek I; CL186 Greek Civilization; CL206 Roman History; CL223 The Art Museum: History, Philosophy and Practice; CL226 The Age of Augustus; CL236 Roman Law and Family; CL244 Women in the Greek Cultural Spectrum; CL331 Sophocles and Aristophanes; CL333 Apuleius; CL345 Sophocles: Oedipus Tyrannos; CL348 Latin Epigram: Catullus and Martial; CL356 Tacitus; CL373 Euripides, Hecuba; CL375 Advanced Latin Poetry: Virgil's Aeneid 2 and 6; CL790 Readings and Research I; CL791 Readings and Research II; CL888 Interim Study. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Greek | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include CL063 Intensive Reading in Latin; CL070 Intermediate Modern Greek I; CL186 Greek Civilization; CL206 Roman History; CL223 The Art Museum: History, Philosophy and Practice; CL226 The Age of Augustus; CL236 Roman Law and Family; CL244 Women in the Greek Cultural Spectrum; CL331 Sophocles and Aristophanes; CL333 Apuleius; CL345 Sophocles: Oedipus Tyrannous; CL348 Latin Epigram: Catullus and Martial; CL356 Tacitus; CL373 Euripides, Hecuba; CL375 Advanced Latin Poetry: Virgil's Aeneid 2 and 6; CL790 Readings and Research I; CL791 Readings and Research II; CL888 Interim Study. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include CL063 Intensive Reading in Latin; CL070 Intermediate Modern Greek I; CL186 Greek Civilization; CL206 Roman History; CL223 The Art Museum: History, Philosophy and Practice; CL226 The Age of Augustus; CL236 Roman Law and Family; CL244 Women in the Greek Cultural Spectrum; CL331 Sophocles and Aristophanes; CL333 Apuleius; CL345 Sophocles: Oedipus Tyrannous; CL348 Latin Epigram: Catullus and Martial; CL356 Tacitus; CL373 Euripides, Hecuba; CL375 Advanced Latin Poetry: Virgil's Aeneid 2 and 6; CL790 Readings and Research I; CL791 Readings and Research II; CL888 Interim Study. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Mental Health Counseling | Full Time | 60 Credit-hour(s) | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | In this program, the first year of both sequences is devoted primarily to course work. School counseling students, however, do spend one day a week at a school in the second semester of the first year to meet pre-practicum requirements. Persons selecting the mental health counselor sequence are expected to take one required course during the summer session. They may also take additional elective courses during the summer session if they wish to reduce their course load during the second year in the program. The second year of the program includes a full-year, half-time internship placement and the completion of remaining academic requirements for mental health counselor students and a full-year, full-time practicum placement and the completion of remaining academic requirements for school counselor students. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PY 444 Theories of Personality and Counseling I 3; PY 446 Theories of Personality and Counseling II 3; PY 448 Career Development 3; PY 465 Psychological Testing 3; PY 518 Issues in Life-Span Development 3; PY 528 Multicultural Issues 3; PY 549 Psychopathology 3; PY 605 Ethical and Legal Issues 3; PY 640 Group Counseling 3; PY 440 Principles and Techniques of Counseling 3; PY 748 Practicum in Counseling 3; PY 646 Internship in Counseling I 3; PY 746 Internship in Counseling II 3; PY 460.12 Interpretation and Evaluation of Research Topics in Mental Health Counseling (Statistics requirement) 3. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PL500 Philosophy of Law; PL510 Contemporary Philosophy of Religion; PL512 Philosophy of Existence; PL513 Anthropology of Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II; PL516 Epistemology; PL518 Philosophy of Imagination; PL521 Women, Nature, and Ecology; PL524 Ethics: An Introduction; PL528 Skepticism, Stoicism, and Neo-Platonism; PL532 Philosophy of Religion in Human Subjectivity; PL540 Philosophy of Liberation; PL541 Philosophy of Health Science: East and West; PL553 Capstone: Poets, Philosophers and Mapmakers; PL576 Two Existentialisms: Sartre and Marcel; PL577 Symbolic Logic: Theory and Practices; PL578 Kant's Critique of Pure Reason; PL593 Philosophy of Science; PL599 Kant's Moral Philosophy; PL604 Social Construction; PL611 Global Justice and Human Rights; PL612 Heidegger's Conception of Art; PL615 Feeling, Intentionality, Emotion; PL625 The Problem of Self-Knowledge; PL626 Hermeneutics of God; PL628 Schelling; PL670 Technology and Culture; PL701 Augustine; PL704 Plato's Republic; PL706 Advanced Topics in Medieval Philosophy; PL711 Merleau-Ponty: Flesh and Language; PL713 Virtue and Action; PL715 Science in Ancient and Medieval Thought; PL720 Platonic Theories of Knowledge; PL722 German Idealism; PL729 Philosophy and Psychoanalysis; PL731 Michel Foucault; PL732 Husserl's Ideas: Book I; PL746 Rawls' Political Philosophy; PL762 Soren Kierkegaard; PL780 Readings in Theory; PL788 Aristotle's Metaphysics; PL794 Philosophy and the Church Fathers; PL799 Readings and Research; PL807 Kant's "Critique of Judgment"; PL822 Justice: Right vs. Good; PL888 Interim Study; PL990 Teaching Seminar; PL991 Writing Seminar; PL998 Doctoral Comprehensives; PL999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Psychology - Behavioral Neuroscience | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In this program, students use a systems level analysis to explore the neural circuits underlying motivational and emotional processes that regulate essential behaviors in animals. They are also interested in the effects of genetic and experiential factors on the development and function of these circuits. The basic motivational and emotional processes of interest include those underlying: positive social behaviors such as affiliation and parental care; food intake and hunger; attention and arousal; reward or reinforcement processes and their relationship to synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory; defensive, anxiety-, and stress-related behaviors; aggression. These basic processes and associated behaviors are likely sub served by evolutionarily conserved core neural circuits, which allow the findings from animal research to be relevant to the homologous processes in humans. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Psychology - Cognitive and Cognitive Neuroscience | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program aims to understand the nature of visual memory (i.e. memory for visual items or events). Drawing on the foundation of research in visual perception, he employs cognitive modeling (based on behavioral measures), event-related potentials (ERPs), and functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI). The research indicates that memory retrieval is a continuous process that is constructive in nature, where features or components from disparate cortical regions bind together to form a unified memory. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Psychology - Developmental Psychology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In this program, students are studying social, emotional, and cognitive development across the life span. Areas of study include attachment relationships; sibling and peer relationships; children's understanding of emotions; cultural aspects of young children's development; ethnic identity development; the role policies and programs play in the lives of children, adolescents, older adults, and families; the development of artistic abilities in normal and gifted populations; the acquisition of a theory of mind; the relationship between theory of mind and communication skills; adolescent sexual behavior; mental health in later life. Children from both western and non-western communities are studied. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Psychology - Quantitative Psychology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program focuses on the quantitative and methodological issues in conducting psychological research. The quantitative issues are loosely categorized into application of statistical methods to psychological study, psychometrics, and mathematical modeling of psychological processes. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Psychology - Social-Personality Psychology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This concentration explores human psychological processes and behavior at different levels of analysis, ranging from the intra- and interpersonal to the group, intergroup, and societal levels. Areas of investigation include the study of emotion; how nonverbal behavior and discourse reflect and influence human social relations; the study of social-cognitive mechanisms in emotion regulation; the study of individual differences in effect, motivation, and performance; social-cognitive processes at the individual level and as shared “cultural models;” ways in which such social categories as gender, class, and ethnicity frame and constrain social behavior; cultural construction of the self and social identities. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in School Counseling | Full Time | 42 Credit-hour(s) | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program is designed to meet the professional standards recommended by the Interstate Certification Compact (ICC), Massachusetts department of education. This sequence is designed to meet the educational requirements for licensure as a school counselor in the state of Massachusetts. Licensure is granted by the state department of education and requirements are subject to change by the state. Students seeking licensure in Massachusetts must pass the Massachusetts tests for educator licensure. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PY 440 Principles and Techniques of Counseling; (One of the following)PY 418 Applied Child Development- PY 447 Applied Adolescent Development; PY 445 Clinical Child Psychology 3 PY 633 Impact of Psychosocial Aspects on Learning; PY 528 Multicultural Issues; PY 448 Career Counseling and Development; (One of the following) PY 468 Introductory Statistics; PY 469 Intermediate Statistics; PY 460 Interpretation and Evaluation of Research; PY 540 Issues in School Counseling; PY 743 Counseling Families; PY 465 Psychological Testing; PY 648 Pre-Practicum Diversity and School Culture; PY 640 Group Counseling; (One of the following) PY 643 Practicum in School Counseling (PreK-8); PY 644 Practicum in School Counseling (5-12); (One of the following) PY 649 Practicum II (PreK-8); PY 650 Practicum II (5-12); PY 888 Masters Comprehensive Exam. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program prepares students for careers in the area of social research, applied sociological analysis, and basic college-level teaching, while also providing the foundation for advanced graduate-level study toward the Ph.D. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department, McGuinn Hall 426, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4130 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A.T. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include BI503 Current Topics in Cancer Research; BI509 Vertebrate Cell Biology; BI513 Environmental Disruptors of Development; BI517 Human Parasitology; BI524 Computational Foundations of Bioinformatics; BI527 Neurobiology of Disease; BI532 Nanoscale Integrated Science; BI540 Immunology; BI551 Cell Biology of the Nervous System; BI611 Advanced Genetics; BI614 Graduate Molecular Biology; BI615 Advanced Cell Biology; BI616 Graduate Bioinformatics; BI803 Malaria Biology and Control; BI888 Interim Study; BI998 Doctoral Comprehensive; BI999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.A.T. in Latin and Classical Humanities | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include CL063 Intensive Reading in Latin; CL070 Intermediate Modern Greek I; CL186 Greek Civilization; CL206 Roman History; CL223 The Art Museum: History, Philosophy and Practice; CL226 The Age of Augustus; CL236 Roman Law and Family; CL244 Women in the Greek Cultural Spectrum; CL331 Sophocles and Aristophanes; CL333 Apuleius; CL345 Sophocles: Oedipus Tyrannous; CL348 Latin Epigram: Catullus and Martial; CL356 Tacitus; CL373 Euripides, Hecuba; CL375 Advanced Latin Poetry: Virgil's Aeneid 2 and 6; CL790 Readings and Research I; CL791 Readings and Research II; CL888 Interim Study. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.B.A - Master of Arts in Business Administration / Master of Arts in Linguistics (M.B.A/M.A.) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | M.B.A. - Master of Business Administration / M.A. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This is a joint effort of BC's carroll graduate school of management and the sociology department. The programs involve an interdisciplinary curriculum that provides social researchers with a systematic understanding of the business and workplace environment, and trains managers in social research techniques appropriate to their needs. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.B.A. - Master of Business Administration / M.A. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | This is a joint effort of BC's carroll graduate school of management and the sociology department. The programs involve an interdisciplinary curriculum that provides social researchers with a systematic understanding of the business and workplace environment, and trains managers in social research techniques appropriate to their needs. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.B.A. - Master of Business Administration / Master of Arts in Mathematics (Dual Degree) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | This program is offered in conjunction with the Carroll graduate school of management. Students must be accepted into the M.B.A. program by the Carroll graduate school of management, and approved by the department of mathematics. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.B.A. - Master of Business Administration / Master of Arts in Mathematics (Dual Degree) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is offered in conjunction with the Carroll graduate school of management. Students must be accepted into the M.B.A. program by the Carroll graduate school of management, and approved by the department of mathematics. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Mathematics Department, 301 Carney Hall, Boston College, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3750 | The Mathematics Department is located in Carney Hall, near the southwest corner of the main campus. It borders on Beacon Street, one building east from the intersection of Beacon Street with College Road and Hammond Street. It is easily accessible from the Beacon Street parking facility. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.B.A. - Master of Business Administration / Master of Arts in Russian (M.B.A./M.A.) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | The Mathematics Department is located in Carney Hall, near the southwest corner of the main campus. It borders on Beacon Street, one building east from the intersection of Beacon Street with College Road and Hammond Street. It is easily accessible from the Beacon Street parking facility. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | M.B.A. - Master of Business Administration / Master of Arts in Slavic Studies (M.B.A./M.A.) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | The Mathematics Department is located in Carney Hall, near the southwest corner of the main campus. It borders on Beacon Street, one building east from the intersection of Beacon Street with College Road and Hammond Street. It is easily accessible from the Beacon Street parking facility. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | M.Ed. in Teacher of Students with Moderate Special Needs - Grades Pre-K-9 and Grades 5-12 | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program prepares teachers to work with students with mild to moderate disabilities such as: specific learning disabilities, emotional and behavioral disorders, and mild developmental disabilities. The goal of the program is to prepare teachers to work in a variety of roles including: lead teacher, special education teachers, learning specialist, and to collaborate with regular educators, other services providers and parents. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.Ed. in Teacher of Students with Severe Special Needs | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program prepares teachers to work with students who have moderate to severe intellectual disability, autism, and additional disabilities (such as visual impairment, deafness, cerebral palsy, and medical conditions). The program leads to eligibility for the Massachusetts teaching license in severe disabilities. An additional specialization in deaf blindness is available. No prior teaching license is required for admission. The program of study is available leading to initial licensure and for these already licensed. The severe program is founded on close linkages between current research and best practices in teaching. All program students complete an inquiry study that prepares them for the teacher-researcher role. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.S. in Earth and Environmental Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include GE250 Environmental Geology; GE335 Topics in Geobiology; GE380 Environmental Oceanography; GE398 Statistical Analysis of Scientific Data; GE418 Hydrogeology; GE455 Exploration Seismology; GE456 Exploration Seismology Laboratory; GE480 Applications of GIS (Geographical Information Systems); GE481 Applications of GIS Lab; GE484 Aqueous Geochemistry; GE484.01 Aqueous Environmental Geochemistry; GE490 Remote Sensing and Image Interpretation; GE530 Marine Geology; GE580 Environmental Seminar; GE660 Introduction to Seismology; GE693 Earth Systems Seminar; GE798 Graduate Reading and Research in Geophysics; GE799 Graduate Reading and Research in Geology; GE801 Thesis Seminar. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Boston CollegeDevlin Hall 213, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3640 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | M.S.T. - Geology/Geophysics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is administered through the lynch school of education in cooperation with the department of earth and environmental sciences. It requires admission to both the lynch school of education and the department of earth and environmental sciences. This program, which is designed for prospective teachers, acknowledges variations in prior background and skills. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include GE250 Environmental Geology; GE335 Topics in Geobiology; GE380 Environmental Oceanography; GE398 Statistical Analysis of Scientific Data; GE418 Hydrogeology; GE455 Exploration Seismology; GE456 Exploration Seismology Laboratory; GE480 Applications of GIS (Geographical Information Systems); GE481 Applications of GIS Lab; GE484 Aqueous Geochemistry; GE484.01 Aqueous Environmental Geochemistry; GE490 Remote Sensing and Image Interpretation; GE530 Marine Geology; GE580 Environmental Seminar; GE660 Introduction to Seismology; GE693 Earth Systems Seminar; GE798 Graduate Reading and Research in Geophysics; GE799 Graduate Reading and Research in Geology; GE801 Thesis Seminar. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Boston CollegeDevlin Hall 213, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3640 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration / M.A. in French or Hispanic Studies and International Management | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration / M.S. in Earth and Environmental Sciences (Dual Degree) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | This program offers interested students the opportunity to participate in the combined M.S.-M.B.A. degree program. Completion of this program leads to the awarding of both degrees. This program is excellent preparation for careers in industrial or financial geosciences management, including areas such as the environmental and petroleum industries, natural hazard assessment, and natural resource evaluation and investment. The combined M.S.-M.B.A. program normally takes three years for students with a good science background as an undergraduate - about one year less than pursuing these two degrees independently. Students in this program commonly take their first year entirely within the department of earth and environmental sciences. During the first summer, the student is expected to begin work on a research M.S. thesis that may be combined with an off-campus internship. The second year of the program is taken at the Carroll graduate school of management and the third year is split between both programs. Corporate internships are encouraged. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration / M.S. in Earth and Environmental Sciences (Dual Degree) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program offers interested students the opportunity to participate in the combined M.S.-M.B.A. degree program. Completion of this program leads to the awarding of both degrees. This program is excellent preparation for careers in industrial or financial geosciences management, including areas such as the environmental and petroleum industries, natural hazard assessment, and natural resource evaluation and investment. The combined M.S.-M.B.A. program normally takes three years for students with a good science background as an undergraduate - about one year less than pursuing these two degrees independently. Students in this program commonly take their first year entirely within the department of earth and environmental sciences. During the first summer, the student is expected to begin work on a research M.S. thesis that may be combined with an off-campus internship. The second year of the program is taken at the Carroll graduate school of management and the third year is split between both programs. Corporate internships are encouraged. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration / Ph.D. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This is a joint effort of BC's Carroll graduate school of management and the sociology department. The programs involve an interdisciplinary curriculum that provides social researchers with a systematic understanding of the business and workplace environment, and trains managers in social research techniques appropriate to their needs. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department, McGuinn Hall 426, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4130 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration and Master of Science in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting | This program is for individuals interested in careers in public accounting, financial analysis, or financial management in a corporate or not-for-profit environment. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accounting department educates students to manage, thrive and lead in the accounting industry today. Whether a student is preparing for the 150-hour requirement for the certified public accountant (CPA) examination, is a Liberal Arts undergraduate enrolled in Accounting 101, or is an MBA student learning about the cornerstones of a reliable reporting infrastructure, this department prepare students at every level to excel by focusing on the fundamentals of ethical decision-making in the accounting profession. Accessibility to expert faculty teaching in addition to collaborative environment equals success on the balance sheet. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration and Master of Science in Finance | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance | This program is highly analytical, and an applicant's quantitative skills are weighed heavily in the admission decision. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Asset Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | In this program, students become familiar with the broad range of issues common to all finance professionals and also allow sufficient leeway in course choice to become conversant in different asset management career tracks. Students who participate in this track will be perceived as having enhanced market-specific knowledge and a faster learning curve by prospective employers. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MF801 Investments; MF807 Corporate Finance; MF860 Derivatives and Risk Management and at least 3 of the following: MF869 Fundamental Analysis or MA824 Financial Statement Analysis; MF803 Portfolio Theory or MF813 Security Analysis/Portfolio Management or MF811 Investment Management; MF605 Role of Investment Management Firms in Financial Markets; MF617 Hedge Funds; MF835 Real Estate Investment Analysis; MF852 Financial Econometrics; MF880 Fixed Income Analysis. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Competitive Service Delivery | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | In this program, students will be readily conversant with the complex nature of the service value chain, from supplier to customer. Graduates will enter the workplace with the skills and tools necessary to enhance and leverage the key performance drivers in the service value chain. They will be able to understand, manage, and influence the roles of key stakeholders and maximize financial performance through all aspects of service delivery. Finally, they will apply skill-building tools for implementation, measurement and metrics throughout the service value chain. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MD832 Supply Chain Management; MD854 Management of Service Operations; MK811 Customer Relationship Management; MK813 Services Marketing and at least 2 of the following: MD809 Strategic Management of Financial Service Institutions; MD831 Managing Projects; MF820 Management of Financial Institutions; MI834 Wireless and Mobile Business; MI851 IT for Financial Services; MI853 E-commerce; MK805 Marketing Strategy; MK807 International Marketing Management; MK810 Business-to-Business Marketing; MK815 Strategic Brand Management. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Corporate Finance | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | This specialization teaches a core set of skills in financial modeling, debt and equity issues, valuation, mergers and acquisitions, financial planning, risk management, financial reporting and analysis, and taxation necessary in corporate finance positions. Students will develop the skills and knowledge base to undertake positions in investment banks, commercial banks, financial consulting, general management consulting, venture capital and private equity firms, and corporate finance within large and mid-sized firms. This track requires students to become familiar with the broad range of issues common to all finance professionals, but then focuses their studies in specialized courses designed to accelerate a targeted career in corporate finance. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MF801 Investments; MF807 Corporate Finance; MF808 Financial Policy and at least 3 of the following: MA824 Financial Statement Analysis; MF602 Venture Capital; MF616 Investment Banking; MF631 International Finance; MF645 Project Financing; MF821 Corporate Valuation and Restructuring; MF881 Corporate Finance Theory. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Entrepreneurial Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | This specialization will provide students with a broadened entrepreneurial education. Through coursework across multiple core courses and electives, they will be exposed to a wide spectrum of entrepreneurial knowledge, such as business planning, analysis, financing and negotiations. Additionally, students will be able to focus their attention further in areas of study within the specialization and through course selection; they can hone their skills in select areas of entrepreneurship such as new product development, international entrepreneurship, or project/corporate entrepreneurial finance. Graduates are armed with a combination of academic skills and practical knowledge, ultimately allowing them to found and run their own business. Students typically pursue three career paths with this specialization entrepreneurship, intrapreneurship, or product development. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MD844 International Entrepreneurship; MF602 Venture Capital and MF801 Investments or MF807 Corporate Finance and at least 3 of the following: MA852 Financial and Accounting Issues for High-Tech Ventures; MB802 Management of Organizational Change; MB812 Negotiating; MD808 Entrepreneurship and New Ventures; MD831 Managing Projects; MD835 New Product Development; MD836 New Enterprise Development; MF645 Project Financing; MK803 Product Planning and Strategy; MM804 Entrepreneurial Finance. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Financial Reporting and Controls | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | In this program, students who are interested in pursuing careers in a corporate setting as senior-level managers in the broad area of financial management will want to pursue this specialization. Students will combine financial accounting, control and finance through a comprehensive set of course offerings. The graduates will be well positioned for job opportunities leading to chief financial officer, treasury, internal control, and budgeting director positions. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MA812 Accounting Tools for Managers; MF807 Corporate Finance; MA801 Contemporary Topics in Corporate Reporting or MA824 Financial Statement Analysis; and at least 3 of the following: MA801 Contemporary Topics in Corporate Reporting or MA824 Financial Statement Analysis; MA813 Financial Accounting Practice I; MA814 Financial Accounting Practice II; MA815 Financial Auditing; MA817 Internal Cost Management and Control; MA818 Accounting Information Systems; MA826 Taxes and Management Decisions; MA852 Finance and Accounting in Hi-Tech; MA856 Corporate Governance and Risk Management; MF881 Corporate Finance Theory OR MF808 Financial Policy. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Global Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | This specialization will provide students with an internationalized education arming them with global knowledge and preparing them for careers in international firms. They will be able to concentrate their studies in specific areas of international business, such as governance/compliance/reporting issues, law, entrepreneurship and marketing. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MM811 International Consulting Asia; MM813 International Consulting Europe; MM816 International Consulting Latin America; MM820 International Management Experience Asia; MM821 International Management Experience Europe; MD844 International Entrepreneurship; MD856 Agenda for Managers in the 21st Century; MF618 Global Financial Markets; MF631 International Finance; MJ600 Bermuda Law; MJ631 African Business; MJ811 International Business Law; MK807 International Marketing. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Leadership and Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | This specialization is appropriate for people who want to build on their technical/functional skills and assume greater responsibility for leadership and management in their organizations, start new entrepreneurial organizations, or work as consultants to other organizations. Courses are also a powerful complement to traditional functional area expertise in corporate finance, brand and product management, financial services, and entrepreneurship or global management. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MB803 Principled Leadership or MB815 Women and Leadership; and at least 5 of the following (excluding the one taken to meet the Leadership course requirement): MB648 Management of Technology; MB802 Management of Organization Change; MB803 Principled Leadership; MB804 Nonprofit Management; MB811 Corporate Governance; MB812 Negotiating; MB815 Women and Leadership; MB828 Strategic Human Resources; MB830 Career Management and Work-Life Planning; MB845 Managing Corporate Responsibility; MD803 Management Decision Making; MD837 Strategic Deal Making; MD854 Management of Service Operations; MM810 Communication Skills for Managers; MM817 Boards and CEO's: Governing America's Businesses. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Marketing Informatics | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | In this program, students will enter the workplace with a unique mix of hard and soft skills that will readily appeal to employers and will be conversant with the often-complex technical jargon of IT and will possess hands-on skills in areas such as data-mining and statistical model analysis. They also have an appreciation for the strategic aspects of IT use within corporations, enabling them to understand how new technologies might reshape the traditional relationship between firms and their customers. They will be exposed to traditional and advanced marketing courses such as marketing research, consumer behavior and marketing information analytics. With complementary exposure to IT, they will be in a stronger position to move beyond focused marketing issues to more strategic concerns facing the firm. Creative and analytical positions such as Internet marketing analyst, database marketer, market analytics specialist, ecommerce strategist, media planner, and CRM specialist are becoming increasingly prevalent. These positions show the importance of a skill set that can leverage IT to drive marketing strategies. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MI824 Data mining; MK801 Marketing Research; MI/MK853 E-Commerce; MI805 Tech Trek West; MI815 Management of Technology and Innovation; MI840 IT Strategy and Execution; MK804 Consumer Behavior; MK805 Marketing Strategy; MK811 Customer Relationship Management; MK814 Pricing/Policy and Strategy; MK816 Marketing Information Analytics; MK822 Advanced Marketing Tools and Applications. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Product and Brand Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | This specialization is the heart of the marketing discipline and is designed to build skills via in-class learning that will prepare students for a summer internship and then a full-time position in the broader world of brand management. Brand managers have P and L responsibility to maintain and grow specific products, product lines, and/or brands. They typically manage a circle of key relationships and functions that surround the brand: advertising agencies, promotion agencies, public relations, package design, product launch, production planning, channel strategy, licensing, and product design. A capable brand manager has exceptional strategic, quantitative, interpersonal, and presentation skills and must be comfortable and confident with decision-making and be able to readily bring people to agreement and consensus. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include MK801 Marketing Research; MK803 Product Planning and Strategy; MK814 Pricing/Policy and Strategy; MK815 Strategic Brand Management and at least 2 of the following: MK804 Consumer Behavior; MK805 Marketing Strategy; MK807 International Marketing Management; MK808 Marketing Communication and Promotion; MK810 Business-to-Business Marketing; MK811 Customer Relationship Management; MK813 Services Marketing; MK853 E-commerce. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Tailored Specialization | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $40,640 a year | Carroll School of Management | This program offers a wide range of high quality MBA courses which encompass the full array of management functions, the spectrum of management decision making from the tactical to the strategic, and address the broad range of issues facing managers today and in the future. Students of the Carroll School have the opportunity to create a specialty designed for their specific career needs and interests by crafting an approved tailored specialty. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration/Master of Arts in French Studies (MBA/MA) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration/Master of Arts in Hispanic Studies (MBA/MA) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | ||
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration/Master of Arts in Italian Studies (MBA/MA) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |||
| 164924 | Boston College | MBA - Master of Business Administration/Master of Science in Biology (MBA/MS) | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Carroll School of Management | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management | Carroll School of Management, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |||
| 164924 | Boston College | MS / MA in Pastoral Ministry | Full Time | Variable | US $1,050 per credit / unit | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | This program prepares students for advanced nursing practice while providing ministry skills useful in a variety of pastoral settings such as religious congregations and health care institutions. The joint degree option enables students to earn the two master's degrees simultaneously in three years, or in two academic years with summer study. The plan of study can be extended if the student prefers part-time study. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree, diploma, or associate's degree from a nationally accredited nursing program. They should have secured an undergraduate grade point average of B or better. They should have completed a course in statistics and should also have a current RN license to practice nursing. Students who speak a native language other than English must provide evidence of English proficiency. They should have secured a score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 on the CBT test (computer-based test), or 100 on the new IBT test (Internet-Based Test) or higher on the Test of English, as a foreign language (TOEFL). Student copies or photocopies of TOEFL scores are not accepted. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include NU301 Culture and Health Care; NU315 Victim logy; NU317 Forensic Mental Health; NU318 Forensic Science I; NU319 Forensic Science Lab; NU402 Nursing Science I; NU403 Clinical Practice in Nursing I; NU406 Nursing Science II; NU407 Clinical Practice in Nursing II; NU408 Path physiology; NU411 Nursing Synthesis Practicum; NU415 Conceptual Basis for Advanced Nursing Practice; NU416 Ethical Reasoning and Issues in Advanced Nursing Practice; NU417 Advanced Practice Nursing within Complex Health Care Systems; NU420 Pharmacotherapeutics and Advanced Nursing Practice; NU426 Advanced Psychopharmacology; NU430 Advanced Health Assessment Across the Life Span; NU443 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing I; NU445 Individual Psychotherapies/Advanced Practice and Psychiatric Nursing Practice; NU450 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU450.01 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU453 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing I; NU457 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children I; NU462 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing I; NU463 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing I; NU465 Advance Practice in Gerontological Nursing I; NU472 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU473 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU490 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia I--Respiratory; NU491 Chemistry and Physics for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU502 Case Studies in Forensics; NU502.01 Case Studies in Forensics; NU520 Nursing Research Theory; NU524 Master's Research Practicum; NU525 Integrative Review of Nursing Research; NU543 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU545 Couple, Family, and Group Psychotherapy in Advanced Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU553 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing II; NU557 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children II; NU557.01 Adv Prac/Pediatric Ambulatory Care II; NU562 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing II; NU563 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing II; NU565 Advanced Gerontologic Nursing Practice II; NU572 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU573 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU590 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia III; NU591 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia I; NU592 Advanced Principles for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU593 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia II; NU641 Palliative Care II: Pain and Suffering in Seriously Ill; NU642 Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU643 Palliative Care III: Palliative Care and Adv Prac Nurs; NU644 Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU645 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Pain, Symand Suffering; NU646 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU646.01 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU647 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU647.01 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU672 Path physiologic Processes; NU680 Forensics: Fundamentals of Forensics/Nurse and Health; NU681 Forensics Care : Psychosocial and Legal Aspects; NU682 Forensic Nursing Care I:Practicum; NU683 Forensics Care (Theory) Vulnerable Populations; NU684 Crim Law and Sci Proc: Evidence Collection; NU685 Forensic Nursing Care II: Practicum; NU691 Nurse Anesthesia Residency I; NU693 Nurse Anesthesia Residency II; NU699 Independent Study in Nursing; NU701 Epistemology of Nursing; NU712 Nursing Science Processes and Outcomes NU714 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU714.01 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU751 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU751.01 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU752 Advanced Quantitative Methods for Health Care Research; NU810 Research Practicum I; NU811 Research Practicum II; NU812 Research Practicum III; NU813 Research Practicum IV; NU901 Dissertation Advisement; NU902 Dissertation Advisement; NU998 Doctoral Comprehensives; NU999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4928 | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MS / MBA Option | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | This option prepares students for advanced nursing practice while providing the management and financial skills required leading in the strategic planning and financial decision making of health care organizations. The joint degree option enables the students to earn the two master's degrees simultaneously in three or four academic years. The time required to earn both degrees is shortened by consolidation of some of the requirements in each degree program. Students spend their first year in the joint degree option taking courses in the school of nursing. The second year is dedicated to graduate management core courses, including the first two courses in the management practice sequence. The final year of course work is done in combination with both schools. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree, diploma, or associate's degree from a nationally accredited nursing program. They should have secured an undergraduate grade point average of B or better. They should have completed a course in statistics and should also have a current RN license to practice nursing. Students who speak a native language other than English must provide evidence of English proficiency. They should have secured a score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 on the CBT test (computer-based test), or 100 on the new IBT test (Internet-Based Test) or higher on the Test of English, as a foreign language (TOEFL). Student copies or photocopies of TOEFL scores are not accepted. | MBA | Boston College | The modules include NU301 Culture and Health Care; NU315 Victim logy; NU317 Forensic Mental Health; NU318 Forensic Science I; NU319 Forensic Science Lab; NU402 Nursing Science I; NU403 Clinical Practice in Nursing I; NU406 Nursing Science II; NU407 Clinical Practice in Nursing II; NU408 Path physiology; NU411 Nursing Synthesis Practicum; NU415 Conceptual Basis for Advanced Nursing Practice; NU416 Ethical Reasoning and Issues in Advanced Nursing Practice; NU417 Advanced Practice Nursing within Complex Health Care Systems; NU420 Pharmacotherapeutics and Advanced Nursing Practice; NU426 Advanced Psychopharmacology; NU430 Advanced Health Assessment Across the Life Span; NU443 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing I; NU445 Individual Psychotherapies/Advanced Practice and Psychiatric Nursing Practice; NU450 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU450.01 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU453 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing I; NU457 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children I; NU462 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing I; NU463 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing I; NU465 Advance Practice in Gerontological Nursing I; NU472 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU473 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU490 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia I--Respiratory; NU491 Chemistry and Physics for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU502 Case Studies in Forensics; NU502.01 Case Studies in Forensics; NU520 Nursing Research Theory; NU524 Master's Research Practicum; NU525 Integrative Review of Nursing Research; NU543 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU545 Couple, Family, and Group Psychotherapy in Advanced Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU553 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing II; NU557 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children II; NU557.01 Adv Prac/Pediatric Ambulatory Care II; NU562 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing II; NU563 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing II; NU565 Advanced Gerontologic Nursing Practice II; NU572 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU573 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU590 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia III; NU591 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia I; NU592 Advanced Principles for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU593 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia II; NU641 Palliative Care II: Pain and Suffering in Seriously Ill; NU642 Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU643 Palliative Care III: Palliative Care and Adv Prac Nurs; NU644 Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU645 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Pain, Symand Suffering; NU646 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU646.01 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU647 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU647.01 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU672 Path physiologic Processes; NU680 Forensics: Fundamentals of Forensics/Nurse and Health; NU681 Forensics Care : Psychosocial and Legal Aspects; NU682 Forensic Nursing Care I:Practicum; NU683 Forensics Care (Theory) Vulnerable Populations; NU684 Crim Law and Sci Proc: Evidence Collection; NU685 Forensic Nursing Care II: Practicum; NU691 Nurse Anesthesia Residency I; NU693 Nurse Anesthesia Residency II; NU699 Independent Study in Nursing; NU701 Epistemology of Nursing; NU712 Nursing Science Processes and Outcomes NU714 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU714.01 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU751 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU751.01 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU752 Advanced Quantitative Methods for Health Care Research; NU810 Research Practicum I; NU811 Research Practicum II; NU812 Research Practicum III; NU813 Research Practicum IV; NU901 Dissertation Advisement; NU902 Dissertation Advisement; NU998 Doctoral Comprehensives; NU999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4928 | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MS-PhD Program | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | Contact provider | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | This program is designed for individuals with a bachelor's degree in nursing who wish to obtain both preparations in advanced practice nursing as well as preparation at the doctoral level for clinical research. The program allows for 12 credits of the master's program (nursing research theory, MS research practicum, master's elective, and conceptual basis of advanced nursing practice) to be met through PhD program courses. It can be completed in four years of full-time study. The program is designed to enable students to meet requirements for the MS degree by the end of the second year of full-time study while also beginning doctoral-level coursework. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree, diploma, or associate's degree from a nationally accredited nursing program. They should have secured an undergraduate grade point average of B or better. They should have completed a course in statistics and should also have a current RN license to practice nursing. Students who speak a native language other than English must provide evidence of English proficiency. They should have secured a score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 on the CBT test (computer-based test), or 100 on the new IBT test (Internet-Based Test) or higher on the Test of English, as a foreign language (TOEFL). Student copies or photocopies of TOEFL scores are not accepted. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include NU301 Culture and Health Care; NU315 Victim logy; NU317 Forensic Mental Health; NU318 Forensic Science I; NU319 Forensic Science Lab; NU402 Nursing Science I; NU403 Clinical Practice in Nursing I; NU406 Nursing Science II; NU407 Clinical Practice in Nursing II; NU408 Path physiology; NU411 Nursing Synthesis Practicum; NU415 Conceptual Basis for Advanced Nursing Practice; NU416 Ethical Reasoning and Issues in Advanced Nursing Practice; NU417 Advanced Practice Nursing within Complex Health Care Systems; NU420 Pharmacotherapeutics and Advanced Nursing Practice; NU426 Advanced Psychopharmacology; NU430 Advanced Health Assessment Across the Life Span; NU443 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing I; NU445 Individual Psychotherapies/Advanced Practice and Psychiatric Nursing Practice; NU450 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU450.01 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU453 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing I; NU457 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children I; NU462 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing I; NU463 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing I; NU465 Advance Practice in Gerontological Nursing I; NU472 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU473 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU490 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia I--Respiratory; NU491 Chemistry and Physics for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU502 Case Studies in Forensics; NU502.01 Case Studies in Forensics; NU520 Nursing Research Theory; NU524 Master's Research Practicum; NU525 Integrative Review of Nursing Research; NU543 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU545 Couple, Family, and Group Psychotherapy in Advanced Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU553 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing II; NU557 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children II; NU557.01 Adv Prac/Pediatric Ambulatory Care II; NU562 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing II; NU563 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing II; NU565 Advanced Gerontologic Nursing Practice II; NU572 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU573 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU590 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia III; NU591 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia I; NU592 Advanced Principles for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU593 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia II; NU641 Palliative Care II: Pain and Suffering in Seriously Ill; NU642 Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU643 Palliative Care III: Palliative Care and Adv Prac Nurs; NU644 Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU645 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Pain, Symand Suffering; NU646 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU646.01 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU647 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU647.01 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU672 Path physiologic Processes; NU680 Forensics: Fundamentals of Forensics/Nurse and Health; NU681 Forensics Care : Psychosocial and Legal Aspects; NU682 Forensic Nursing Care I:Practicum; NU683 Forensics Care (Theory) Vulnerable Populations; NU684 Crim Law and Sci Proc: Evidence Collection; NU685 Forensic Nursing Care II: Practicum; NU691 Nurse Anesthesia Residency I; NU693 Nurse Anesthesia Residency II; NU699 Independent Study in Nursing; NU701 Epistemology of Nursing; NU712 Nursing Science Processes and Outcomes NU714 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU714.01 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU751 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU751.01 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU752 Advanced Quantitative Methods for Health Care Research; NU810 Research Practicum I; NU811 Research Practicum II; NU812 Research Practicum III; NU813 Research Practicum IV; NU901 Dissertation Advisement; NU902 Dissertation Advisement; NU998 Doctoral Comprehensives; NU999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4928 | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MSW / JD | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Social Work | This program is designed for students who are interested in serving the combined legal and social needs of individuals, families, groups, and communities. The program reflects the University's mission to educate individuals who are committed to working with the poor, the powerless, and the disadvantaged. It is intended for persons who wish to combine social work knowledge and intervention skills with legal knowledge and practice skills to better serve their clients or constituencies. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MSW / MA in Pastoral Ministry | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Social Work | This program aims to educate practitioners in social work and pastoral ministry who can effectively integrate their theological understanding with the theories and practice of social work. They provide the core curriculum of each discipline while enabling students to concentrate in the specific area of knowledge and practice that corresponds to their professional goals. Students are provided with applied learning experiences with professional supervision through two field internships. In the second year the student is under LICSW supervision. The opportunity for pastoral supervision is also provided. They are also prepared as practitioners who have a commitment to work with the church in bringing about a human condition that is free from violence, oppression and discrimination, and one that protects and promotes the development of all peoples. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MSW / MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Social Work | The program is designed to provide students with a unique combination of knowledge and skills in the behavioral and administrative sciences, with exceptional strength in management decision-making and leadership. In addition, specific objectives include a strong common base of social work knowledge, advanced competence in one of two social work methods of intervention, and identification with the social work profession. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | MSW in Children, Youth and Families | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $952 per credit / unit | Graduate School of Social Work | This program prepares students to develop and implement evidence-based intervention strategies that improve the health and integrity of families and their communities. Children, youth and families graduates work in settings such as schools, adoption and foster agencies, and child welfare organizations to address abuse, neglect, and a host of growing family issues confronting society. Additionally, specialized courses will prepare students for licensing exams for school-based social work. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include SW 805 Policy Issues in Family and Children's Services; SW 880 Social Work Practice in Child Welfare; SW 872 Advanced Clinical Interventions with Children, Youth and Families; SW 805 Policy Issues in Family and Children's Services; SW 880 Social Work Practice in Child Welfare; SW 885 Management of Organizations Serving Children, Youth and Families. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MSW in Global Practice | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $952 per credit / unit | Graduate School of Social Work | This program exposes students to the skills necessary to becoming effective international social workers. Students learn how to collaborate with local partners around issues of humanitarian aid, social development and capacity-building. Guiding principles are human rights, global justice, and diversity. Final year field placements will be managed in partnership with international organizations from around the globe. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include SW 826 Rights-Based Assessment and Capacity-Building in Global Social Work; SW 829 Sustainable Development and Responses in Global Social Work; SW 806 Global Policy Issues and Implications. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MSW in Health and Mental Health | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $952 per credit / unit | Graduate School of Social Work | This program aims to prepare students to enter the workplace with a tangible set of leadership skills tailored to their chosen practice and to health or mental health careers. Students will receive specialized knowledge and skills in assessment, interventions, policy, program planning, and financial management. Clinical students focus on treatment with individuals, couples, families, and small groups, developing skills relevant to particular problems and cultural contexts. Macro students specialize on resource development, budgeting, accounting, and use of technology in non-profit or public organizations. The health graduates typically work in hospitals and health clinics in the full range of care, while mental health graduates often choose in-patient psychiatric hospitals, outpatient mental health clinics, and substance abuse centers. Students also pursue careers in schools, in prisons, and working with the homeless. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include SW 865 Family Therapy; SW 897 Planning for Health and Mental Health Service; SW 817 Health and Mental Health Policy; SW 873 Psychosocial Dimensions of Health and Medical Care Practice; SW 897 Planning for Health and Mental Health Services; SW 817 Health and Mental Health Policy; SW 810 Financial Management for Human Services; SW 897 Planning for Health and Mental Health Services; SW 817 Health and Mental Health Policy. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | MSW in Older Adults and Families | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $952 per credit / unit | Graduate School of Social Work | This program prepares social work students for an integrated macro and clinical practice approach to working with older adults, their families, and the social policies and programs that affect their lives. Coursework for the concentration encompasses the entire range of health and mental health services from those provided to older adults as they “age in place” in their homes and communities through policy and advocacy functions of the local, state and national aging network. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include SW 823 Practice in Health and Mental Health Settings with Older Adults; SW 824 Practice in Home and Community Settings with Older Adults; SW 802 Policy for an Aging Society: Issues and Options. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Applied Developmental and Educational Psychology - Community Psychology and Social Justice Focus | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program is designed for students who seek to enhance their understanding of human development. The program provides training in applied development for educators, service providers, advocates, and researchers. It is designed for those who wish to understand and serve the needs of children, adults, and communities. The program embeds challenging academic work and a collegial intellectual environment within the broader culture of the Lynch school of education at Boston College, which seeks to promote social justice and enhance the human condition. This program focuses on those who wish to work in social service or social change programs in and with local, national, and international community contexts. Students with particular interests in human rights and international justice are encouraged to consider the certificate offered by the Boston college center for human rights and international justice which can be completed concurrently with this focus. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include py 418 Applied Child Development 3; py 447 Applied Adolescent Development 3; py 460 Interpretation and Evaluation of Educational Research; py 468 Introductory Statistics 3; py 615 Social and Affective Processes 3; py 617 Learning and Cognition 3; ed 888 Masters Comprehensive Exam; py 511 Alternative Strategies of Children Affected by Organized Violence: Community-based resources for mental health and human rights; py 543 Psychology of Trauma: Cross-cultural and Social Justice Perspectives; py 561 Evaluation and Public Policy; py 620 Educational and Social Issues and Social Policy; py 633 Impact of Psychosocial Issues on Learning; sw 822 The Impact of Traumatic Victimization on Child and Adolescent Development; py 348 Culture, Community, and Change; py 461 Human Rights Interdisciplinary Seminar; py/un 471 Psychological Responses to Humanitarian Crises: Human Rights, Gender Violence, and International Justice; py 543 Psychology of Trauma: Cross-cultural and Social Justice Perspectives; sw 728 Global Perspective on Gender Inequalities; py 740 Topics in the Psychology of Women; sw 807 Social Policy and Services in the Global Context; sw 829 Sustainable Development and Responses in Global Social Work; py 470 Advanced Practicum: Human Development; py 912 Participatory Action Research: Gender, Race, and Power. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Applied Developmental and Educational Psychology - Education Focus | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program is designed for students who seek to enhance their understanding of human development. The program provides training in applied development for educators, service providers, advocates, and researchers. It is designed for those who wish to understand and serve the needs of children, adults, and communities. The program embeds challenging academic work and a collegial intellectual environment within the broader culture of the Lynch school of education at Boston College, which seeks to promote social justice and enhance the human condition. This program focuses on those who plan to work with children or adolescents in an educational setting. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include py 418 Applied Child Development 3; py 447 Applied Adolescent Development 3; py 460 Interpretation and Evaluation of Educational Research; py 468 Introductory Statistics 3; py 615 Social and Affective Processes 3; py 617 Learning and Cognition 3; ed 888 Masters Comprehensive Exam; ed 435 Social Contexts of Education; py 561 Evaluation and Public Policy; py 620 Educational and Social Issues and Social Policy; py 633 Impact of Psychosocial Issues on Learning 3; py 465 Psychological Testing; ed 466 Models of Curriculum and Program Evaluation; ed 579 Educational Assessment of Learning Problems; ed 595 Assessment and Remediation of Reading Disabilities 3. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Applied Developmental and Educational Psychology - Individualized Focus | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program is designed for students who seek to enhance their understanding of human development. The program provides training in applied development for educators, service providers, advocates, and researchers. It is designed for those who wish to understand and serve the needs of children, adults, and communities. The program embeds challenging academic work and a collegial intellectual environment within the broader culture of the Lynch school of education at Boston College, which seeks to promote social justice and enhance the human condition. This program focuses on those who want to design a specialized program in an area not covered by the other four focus areas. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include py 418 Applied Child Development 3; py 447 Applied Adolescent Development 3; py 460 Interpretation and Evaluation of Educational Research; py 468 Introductory Statistics 3; py 615 Social and Affective Processes 3; py 617 Learning and Cognition 3; ed 888 Masters Comprehensive Exam. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Applied Developmental and Educational Psychology - Prevention and Promotion Focus | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program is designed for students who seek to enhance their understanding of human development. The program provides training in applied development for educators, service providers, advocates, and researchers. It is designed for those who wish to understand and serve the needs of children, adults, and communities. The program embeds challenging academic work and a collegial intellectual environment within the broader culture of the Lynch school of education at Boston College, which seeks to promote social justice and enhance the human condition. This program focuses on those who wish to work at the individual or program level in human or social service programs, advocacy or policy institutions. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include py 418 Applied Child Development 3; py 447 Applied Adolescent Development 3; py 460 Interpretation and Evaluation of Educational Research; py 468 Introductory Statistics 3; py 615 Social and Affective Processes 3; py 617 Learning and Cognition 3; ed 888 Masters Comprehensive Exam; py 620 Educational and Social Issues and Social Policy; py 633 Impact of Psychosocial Issues on Learning; sw 807 Social Policy and Services in the Global Context; py 470 Advanced Practicum: Human Development; py 912 Participatory Action Research: Gender, Race, and Power. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Applied Developmental and Educational Psychology - Research Focus | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program is designed for students who seek to enhance their understanding of human development. The program provides training in applied development for educators, service providers, advocates, and researchers. It is designed for those who wish to understand and serve the needs of children, adults, and communities. The program embeds challenging academic work and a collegial intellectual environment within the broader culture of the Lynch school of education at Boston College, which seeks to promote social justice and enhance the human condition. This program focuses on those who want advanced preparation for doctoral study in developmental or educational psychology or to move directly into a research position. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include py 418 Applied Child Development 3; py 447 Applied Adolescent Development 3; py 460 Interpretation and Evaluation of Educational Research; py 468 Introductory Statistics 3; py 615 Social and Affective Processes 3; py 617 Learning and Cognition 3; ed 888 Masters Comprehensive Exam; py 620 Educational and Social Issues and Social Policy; py 813 Sociocultural Contexts of Development; py 917 Cognitive and Affective Bases of Behavior; ed 466 Models of Curriculum and Program Evaluation; py 469 Intermediate Statistics; py 851 Qualitative Research Methods; py 912 Participatory Action Research: Gender, Race, and Power. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Higher Education Administration - Catholic University Leadership | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program prepares students for entry and middle-management positions in student affairs as well as in other professional areas in colleges, universities, community colleges, and policy making organizations. The M.A. program consists of 30 credit hours of required and elective course work and a field experience. The program can be completed in one academic year and one summer by students interested in full-time study. It is also possible to complete the program on a part-time basis. This concentration is designed to foster an understanding of higher education administration within Catholic colleges and universities as a vocation in service to the needs of a pluralistic society and for the common good; engender knowledge of institutional culture, identity, and mission in Catholic colleges and universities in the context of decision-making, policy development, research, institutional advancement, intellectual culture and student life; and, enable graduates to bring the resources of the Catholic intellectual tradition to contribute competently and ethically to the mission of Catholic higher education by serving in a broad range of institutional leadership roles and responsibilities. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 1760 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Higher Education Administration - General Higher Education Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program prepares students for entry and middle-management positions in student affairs as well as in other professional areas in colleges, universities, community colleges, and policy making organizations. The M.A. program consists of 30 credit hours of required and elective course work and a field experience. The program can be completed in one academic year and one summer by students interested in full-time study. It is also possible to complete the program on a part-time basis. This concentration prepares students to work as professionals in colleges and universities, policy organizations, and advocacy organizations. Students gain an understanding of the foundations of higher education with a focus on law, policy, and administration and are able to link theory and practice through field experience placements. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 1760 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Higher Education Administration - Student Affairs | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program prepares students for entry and middle-management positions in student affairs as well as in other professional areas in colleges, universities, community colleges, and policy making organizations. The M.A. program consists of 30 credit hours of required and elective course work and a field experience. The program can be completed in one academic year and one summer by students interested in full-time study. It is also possible to complete the program on a part-time basis. This concentration prepares students to work as professionals in functional areas of student affairs such as student activities, residence life, admissions, service learning, orientation, career services, and academic advising. Students gain an understanding of the foundations of higher education and student affairs and are able to link theory and practice through class projects and field experience placements. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 1760 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Church Management Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 850: Church Management: Integrative Colloquium Management; MB 709: Managing People and Organizations (CSOM) Management; CSOM Elective Management; MF 704: Financial Management (CSOM); TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Health Care Ministry Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Hispanic Ministry Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). The Hispanic ministry concentration provides students with an exploration of Hispanic theologies, spiritualities and religious communities, involving a supervised ministry requirement in a Hispanic/Latino/a or multicultural context. This concentration is especially designed for pastoral leaders (Hispanic, Anglo or otherwise) who wish to prepare themselves to minister in an increasingly multicultural Church. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Liturgy and Worship Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Music Ministry Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). This program will attract experienced musicians from throughout the world and will be completed over the course of six summers through summer institute. Through the support of Boston College and publishers world library publications, liturgy training publications, and Oregon catholic press, generous funding will be offered to all students accepted into the program. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Pastoral Care Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Religious Education Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Spiritual Formation Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Spirituality and Justice Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts (M.A.) in Pastoral Ministry - Youth and Young Adult Faith Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program prepares students to serve in a variety of ministries in the church and the world. Students can choose to pursue the M.A. in pastoral ministry with or without a concentration. Those who do not declare a concentration focus on developing a general understanding of the various parts of pastoral ministry. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of seven elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for ministry, religious education, electives, holistic formation, contextual education, and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include TM 644: Theological Foundations in Practical Perspective; TM 530: Contextual Education; TH 730: Holistic Formation for the Practice of Ministry; TH 731: Research Methods and Writing in Pastoral Theology. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts Degree in French, Hispanic, or Italian Literature and Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is designed to develop and strengthen teachers at the secondary school level and to prepare students to continue their studies in a Ph.D. program. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Lyons Hall 304, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3820 | Boston College offers over 20 programs, sponsored by various departments, providing students opportunities for real-life, community-based learning experience both at home and abroad. The programs foster a respect for the people, history, and cultures present in the countries or areas visited; a recognition of God's presence in the lives and cultures of the people this department encounter; and a willingness to be challenged personally by the stories, the experiences, and the relationships that are encountered while on the trip. They are designed to provide an educational experience for students, using what is often referred to as the "action/reflection model". These programs are cognizant of the university's larger Jesuit mission of forming "men and women for others", and attentive to the spiritual formation of students who travel to serve and learn in impoverished areas. They include time for community building, education, and reflection before, during, and after the trip in order to help participants process and appropriate their shared and individual experiences. They not only encourage the growth and formation of the student participants, but should also contribute something positive toward fostering greater justice in the world. Key to this is the relationship nurtured with the host organizations and the solidarity that develops over time between Boston College and the communities visited. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts Degree in Teaching French or Hispanic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is administered through the lynch school of education graduate programs, in cooperation with the department of romance languages and literatures. It requires admission to both lynch graduate school of education and the department of romance languages and literatures. The program provides certification and continued professional development for primary and secondary school teachers of French and Spanish. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts Pastoral Ministry / MBA - Master of Business Administration (M.A./M.B.A.) | Full Time | 6 Year(s) | Contact provider | School of Theology and Ministry | This program aims to educate students in the languages and cultures of best management practices, theology and pastoral ministry. It provides the core curriculum of each discipline while enabling students to concentrate in specific areas of knowledge and practice that correspond to their professional goals. This program also provides applied learning experiences in contexts related to the student’s professional interest, with competent and knowledgeable supervision from faculty and/or practitioners in management and pastoral ministry. It also prepares practitioners who have a commitment to work with the Church in bringing best management practices to the Church and related agencies, while bringing theological expertise and a social-ethical perspective to management in these contexts. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | MBA | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in English | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is intended for students who wish to extend and consolidate their knowledge of the field before moving on to work at the Ph.D. level, and for students oriented toward careers in secondary education, publishing, or related fields who desire a challenging, rigorous, and up-to-date academic program. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include EN121 The Linguistic Structure of English; EN175 Jewish Writers in Russia and America; EN392 Syntax and Semantics; EN527 General Linguistics; EN671 Magazine Edit and Publishing; EN704 Human Rights and the 20th Century Novel; EN707.01 William Carlos Williams and Wallace Stevens; EN714 Writing the Self in Early Modern England; EN716 Shakespeare and Donne; EN722 Irish Literary Revival; EN725 1916 and After; EN729 Woolf and Stevens; EN729.01 Woolf and Stevens; EN738 Agamben and His Universe; EN743.01 Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama; EN746 The City in American Literature and Culture; EN747 Sex, Gender, and the Body in Early Modern England; EN759 Pulp, Popular, Proletarian; EN761 Black Cultural Studies; EN762 Fourth Genre: Contemporary American Literary Nonfiction; EN765 What Is Performance; EN765.01 What Is Performance; EN766 Feminist Theory; EN769 Dickens; EN771.01 Victorian Novel; EN775 Seminar: Nabokov; EN780 Readings in Theory; EN782 Issues and Methods in American Studies; EN784.01 Studies in Early Modern Poetry; EN788 Irish Heroic Literature in Modern Adaptation; EN799 Nature, Culture, Wrtg: Derrida's of Grammatology/Cont; EN801 Thesis Seminar; EN820 Modern American Poetry and Poetics; EN825 Composition Theory and the Teaching of Writing; EN844 Medieval Mystics; EN849 Romantic Texts and Contexts; EN872 The Whitman Tradition; EN872.01 The Whitman Tradition; EN887 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN887.01 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN887.01 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN899 Readings and Research; EN932.01 PhD Seminar: Gender, Politics and Nationalism; EN934 Advanced Research Colloquium; EN934.01 PhD Advanced Research Colloquium; EN942 PhD Seminar: Theorizing Visual Culture; EN943 PhD Seminar: Irish Fiction and Culture,1960-Present; EN998 Doctoral Comprehensive; EN999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in English - Concentration in Irish Literature and Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In this program, students will be expected to complete within two years requirements in courses granting thirty hours of graduate credit, at least twelve of which must be in Anglo-Irish literature. In addition, unless proficiency is demonstrated in a written examination, all candidates will be required to complete twelve credits of course work in the Irish language as a step toward achieving reading ability in modern Irish. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include EN121 The Linguistic Structure of English; EN175 Jewish Writers in Russia and America; EN392 Syntax and Semantics; EN527 General Linguistics; EN671 Magazine Edit and Publishing; EN704 Human Rights and the 20th Century Novel; EN707.01 William Carlos Williams and Wallace Stevens; EN714 Writing the Self in Early Modern England; EN716 Shakespeare and Donne; EN722 Irish Literary Revival; EN725 1916 and After; EN729 Woolf and Stevens; EN729.01 Woolf and Stevens; EN738 Agamben and His Universe; EN743.01 Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama; EN746 The City in American Literature and Culture; EN747 Sex, Gender, and the Body in Early Modern England; EN759 Pulp, Popular, Proletarian; EN761 Black Cultural Studies; EN762 Fourth Genre: Contemporary American Literary Nonfiction; EN765 What Is Performance; EN765.01 What Is Performance; EN766 Feminist Theory; EN769 Dickens; EN771.01 Victorian Novel; EN775 Seminar: Nabokov; EN780 Readings in Theory; EN782 Issues and Methods in American Studies; EN784.01 Studies in Early Modern Poetry; EN788 Irish Heroic Literature in Modern Adaptation; EN799 Nature, Culture, Wrtg: Derrida's of Grammatology/Cont; EN801 Thesis Seminar; EN820 Modern American Poetry and Poetics; EN825 Composition Theory and the Teaching of Writing; EN844 Medieval Mystics; EN849 Romantic Texts and Contexts; EN872 The Whitman Tradition; EN872.01 The Whitman Tradition; EN887 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN887.01 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN887.01 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN899 Readings and Research; EN932.01 PhD Seminar: Gender, Politics and Nationalism; EN934 Advanced Research Colloquium; EN934.01 PhD Advanced Research Colloquium; EN942 PhD Seminar: Theorizing Visual Culture; EN943 PhD Seminar: Irish Fiction and Culture,1960-Present; EN998 Doctoral Comprehensive; EN999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is offered with concentrations in comparative world, early modern European, Latin American, medieval, modern European (encompassing British, Irish, continental European, and Russian), and United States history. The department also offers coursework in African, Middle Eastern, and Asian history. In addition, the department sponsors interdisciplinary work leading to a master's degree in medieval studies. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include HS131 American Icons--Nineteenth-Century Images of National Identity; HS280 History of Black Nationalism; HS302 From Sun Yat-Sen to the Beijing Olympics; HS303 Late Imperial China; HS310 Public Culture in Postwar Japan; HS311 African Slave Trade; HS320 Modern Brazil; HS324 Populism and Military Rule in Latin America; HS325 Revolutionary Cuba: History and Politics; HS326 History of Modern Iran; HS329 The Caribbean During the Cold War, 1962-1989; HS331 Perspectives in Latin American History; HS358 The Death Penalty: United Sates and European Union; HS368 Early Modern British Expansion; HS371 Century of Famine: 19th C. Social Crisis; HS373 Slave Societies in the Caribbean and Latin America; HS376 Latin American Women/Themselves; HS385 Introduction to Modern South Asia; HS401 The Reformation; HS403 The Vikings; HS409 500 Years of Michelangelo's Chapel in History and Imagination; HS410 Disunited Kingdom; HS421 Irish Women Emigrants: The Irish and American Contexts; HS431 Ireland: Union to Rebellion; HS436 Twentieth-Century Ireland; HS452 War and Genocide; HS454 Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Russia; HS458 St. Petersburg/Leningrad: From Peter the Great to Putin; HS460 Hitler, Churches, and the Holocaust; HS470 The Ends of Human History: 20th Century European Intellectual History; HS488 The French Revolution; HS506 History of the American West; HS511 Race, Class, and Ethnicity and the Struggle for Human Rights in America, 1941 to Present; HS514 The American Civil War and Reconstruction; HS517 U.S. Constitutional History I; HS526 Law and American Society; HS539 History of American Women I; HS540 History of American Women II; HS542 Gender and Migration; HS548 Age of Decision: Challenges to Industrial America,1877-1929; HS551 U. S. 1929 - 1960; HS552 U. S. Since 1960; HS553 The Old South; HS565 American Immigration I (to 1865); HS566 American Immigration II (from 1865); HS571 U.S. Foreign Relations I; HS572 U.S. Foreign Relations II; HS575 Terror and the American Century; HS665 Seminar in College Teaching: Women's Studies; HS799 Readings and Research: Independent Study; HS802 Colloquium: Introduction to Doctoral Studies; HS805 Graduate Colloquium: Nation, Religion, and the Meaning of Modern; HS822 History and Memory in Theory and Politics; HS838 Colloquium: International History: Markets, States and the "Transnational"; HS842 Graduate Colloquium: Ireland Before 1850; HS860 Grad Colloquium: Race, Gender, Sexuality and the State in Modern U.S. History; HS865 Colloquium: Religion in America; HS871 Colloquium: U.S. History to 1877; HS888 Interim Study; HS897 Core Colloquium: Modern European History; HS921 Seminar: Medieval History; HS971 Seminar: Nineteenth Century America; HS978 Seminar: Twentieth Century America; HS992 Seminar: Dissertation Seminar; HS997 Dissertation Workshop; HS998 Doctoral Comprehensives; HS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include SL097 Independent Language Study: Turkish; SL110 Spoken Arabic Language Workshop; SL280 Society and National Identity in the Balkans; SL311 General Linguistics; SL323 The Linguistic Structure of English; SL328 Classical Armenian; SL329 Early Slavic Linguistics and Texts; SL358 The Linguistic Structure of Japanese; SL361 Psycholinguistics; SL365 Readings in Chinese Literature and Philosophy; SL375 Jewish Writers in Russia and America (in translation); SL376 Studies in Words; SL390 Advanced Tutorial: Russian Language; SL430 Foreign Language Pedagogy; SL472 Comparative Development of the Romance Languages; SL575 Seminar: Nabokov; SL701 Jewish Literature in 20th Century North America; SL791 Russian Literature: Reading and Research; SL888 Interim Study. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include MT410 Differential Equations; MT412 Partial Differential Equations; MT414 Numerical Analysis; MT426 Probability; MT427 Mathematical Statistics; MT430 Introduction to Number Theory; MT435 Mathematical Programming I; MT440 Dynamical Systems; MT445 Applied Combinatory; MT451 Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Geometry; MT455 Mathematical Problem Solving; MT480.01 Topics in Mathematics; MT480.02 Topics in Mathematics; MT806 Algebra I; MT845 Topics in Algebra and Number Theory; MT855 Topics in Geometry and Topology; MT890 Graduate Teaching Seminar I; MT891 Graduate Teaching Seminar II; MT892 Graduate Research Seminar; MT899 Readings and Research; MT903 Seminar. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Pastoral Ministry - Master of Arts in Counseling Psychology (M.A./M.A.) | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program attracts students who wish to include an appreciation for the faith or spiritual dimensions of human life into their practice of mental health counseling. Dual degree students couple their study of counseling psychology with the study of pastoral care and spirituality and can seek licensing as professional mental health counselors. Such licensed counselors are well equipped to seek positions in mental health agencies, shelters, pastoral placements in parishes, campus ministry programs, prison work and youth and young adult programs. Graduates will bring the strength of solid counseling skills and exposure to spiritual direction work to their positions. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Pastoral Ministry / Master of Science in Nursing (M.A./M.S.) | Full Time | 6 Year(s) | Contact provider | School of Theology and Ministry | This program is designed for nurses with experience in clinical practice who wish to pursue graduate studies that combine theories and practice in nursing with studies in theology and exploration of the pastoral dimensions of caring. It equips students for certification as an Advanced Practice Nurse, while also providing them with the theoretical foundations for integrating pastoral ministry and nursing. Nurses educated in the dual M.A./M.S. program will be well prepared to offer advanced practice nursing across the life span. For nurses committed to addressing the spiritual dimensions of nursing care in any setting, the degree will enhance both their nursing practice and their participation in a community of Christian faith. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Pastoral Ministry / Master of Social Work (M.A./M.S.W.) | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | School of Theology and Ministry | This program was developed by the institute of religious education and pastoral ministry (IREPM), now part of the school of theology and ministry (STM), and the graduate school of social work (GSSW) for students who are interested in serving both the pastoral and social needs of individuals, families, groups, and communities. The program reflects the University’s mission to educate individuals who are committed to the pursuit of social justice. A specific goal is to develop the skills and credentials necessary to plan, administer and/or provide social services within a local church or church-related agency. Students admitted to the program may expect to receive both the Master of Arts in pastoral ministry (M.A.) and the master of social work (M.S.W.) degrees in approximately three years of full-time study (less if taking STM summer courses; more if approved for part-time study by the GSSW). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program concentrates on significant questions, practical and theoretical. The small size of the program - approximately five to six students are admitted to the doctoral program each year - allows for personal attention and close contacts with the faculty. Informal colloquia and more formal presentations supplement the regular order of scholarly exchange, and advanced students have an opportunity to teach under faculty supervision. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PO705 Civil Liberties; PO706 The American Founding; PO710 Research Methods in Political Science; PO726 Democracy in America; PO729 American Political Development II; PO799 Readings and Research; PO801 Master’s Thesis Seminar; PO806 Political Cultures of the Middle East; PO809 Modern State; PO813 Islam in Europe; PO863 Institutions in International Politics; PO865 Realism in International Politics; PO888 Interim Study; PO901 Xenophon's Cyrus and Anabasis; PO903 On Plato's Political Philosophy; PO909 Rousseau and Novels; PO947 Hobbes; PO996 Dissertation Seminar I; PO997 Dissertation Seminar II; PO998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PO999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Russian | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include SL097 Independent Language Study: Turkish; SL110 Spoken Arabic Language Workshop; SL280 Society and National Identity in the Balkans; SL311 General Linguistics; SL323 The Linguistic Structure of English; SL328 Classical Armenian; SL329 Early Slavic Linguistics and Texts; SL358 The Linguistic Structure of Japanese; SL361 Psycholinguistics; SL365 Readings in Chinese Literature and Philosophy; SL375 Jewish Writers in Russia and America (in translation); SL376 Studies in Words; SL390 Advanced Tutorial: Russian Language; SL430 Foreign Language Pedagogy; SL472 Comparative Development of the Romance Languages; SL575 Seminar: Nabokov; SL701 Jewish Literature in 20th Century North America; SL791 Russian Literature: Reading and Research; SL888 Interim Study. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Slavic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program involves a proportion of work in other departments of the University, and candidates in these areas are expected to meet all prerequisites for such courses and seminars. Students must also be prepared, in the course of studies, to deal with materials in various languages as required. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include SL097 Independent Language Study: Turkish; SL110 Spoken Arabic Language Workshop; SL280 Society and National Identity in the Balkans; SL311 General Linguistics; SL323 The Linguistic Structure of English; SL328 Classical Armenian; SL329 Early Slavic Linguistics and Texts; SL358 The Linguistic Structure of Japanese; SL361 Psycholinguistics; SL365 Readings in Chinese Literature and Philosophy; SL375 Jewish Writers in Russia and America (in translation); SL376 Studies in Words; SL390 Advanced Tutorial: Russian Language; SL430 Foreign Language Pedagogy; SL472 Comparative Development of the Romance Languages; SL575 Seminar: Nabokov; SL701 Jewish Literature in 20th Century North America; SL791 Russian Literature: Reading and Research; SL888 Interim Study. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) in English | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is designed for those students who wish to teach English at the secondary school level. Students who pursue a M.A.T. in English are closely advised by the Lynch school faculty to ensure a strong background in a variety of subject areas. Such a foundation is necessary to prepare future teachers for the range of material they may be called upon to teach in a secondary school program. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include EN121 The Linguistic Structure of English; EN175 Jewish Writers in Russia and America; EN392 Syntax and Semantics; EN527 General Linguistics; EN671 Magazine Edit and Publishing; EN704 Human Rights and the 20th Century Novel; EN707.01 William Carlos Williams and Wallace Stevens; EN714 Writing the Self in Early Modern England; EN716 Shakespeare and Donne; EN722 Irish Literary Revival; EN725 1916 and After; EN729 Woolf and Stevens; EN729.01 Woolf and Stevens; EN738 Agamben and His Universe; EN743.01 Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama; EN746 The City in American Literature and Culture; EN747 Sex, Gender, and the Body in Early Modern England; EN759 Pulp, Popular, Proletarian; EN761 Black Cultural Studies; EN762 Fourth Genre: Contemporary American Literary Nonfiction; EN765 What Is Performance; EN765.01 What Is Performance; EN766 Feminist Theory; EN769 Dickens; EN771.01 Victorian Novel; EN775 Seminar: Nabokov; EN780 Readings in Theory; EN782 Issues and Methods in American Studies; EN784.01 Studies in Early Modern Poetry; EN788 Irish Heroic Literature in Modern Adaptation; EN799 Nature, Culture, Wrtg: Derrida's of Grammatology/Cont; EN801 Thesis Seminar; EN820 Modern American Poetry and Poetics; EN825 Composition Theory and the Teaching of Writing; EN844 Medieval Mystics; EN849 Romantic Texts and Contexts; EN872 The Whitman Tradition; EN872.01 The Whitman Tradition; EN887 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN887.01 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN887.01 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN899 Readings and Research; EN932.01 PhD Seminar: Gender, Politics and Nationalism; EN934 Advanced Research Colloquium; EN934.01 PhD Advanced Research Colloquium; EN942 PhD Seminar: Theorizing Visual Culture; EN943 PhD Seminar: Irish Fiction and Culture,1960-Present; EN998 Doctoral Comprehensive; EN999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) in History | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is administered by the lynch school of education. It requires admission to both the graduate school of education and to the department of history. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include HS131 American Icons--Nineteenth-Century Images of National Identity; HS280 History of Black Nationalism; HS302 From Sun Yat-Sen to the Beijing Olympics; HS303 Late Imperial China; HS310 Public Culture in Postwar Japan; HS311 African Slave Trade; HS320 Modern Brazil; HS324 Populism and Military Rule in Latin America; HS325 Revolutionary Cuba: History and Politics; HS326 History of Modern Iran; HS329 The Caribbean During the Cold War, 1962-1989; HS331 Perspectives in Latin American History; HS358 The Death Penalty: United Sates and European Union; HS368 Early Modern British Expansion; HS371 Century of Famine: 19th C. Social Crisis; HS373 Slave Societies in the Caribbean and Latin America; HS376 Latin American Women/Themselves; HS385 Introduction to Modern South Asia; HS401 The Reformation; HS403 The Vikings; HS409 500 Years of Michelangelo's Chapel in History and Imagination; HS410 Disunited Kingdom; HS421 Irish Women Emigrants: The Irish and American Contexts; HS431 Ireland: Union to Rebellion; HS436 Twentieth-Century Ireland; HS452 War and Genocide; HS454 Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Russia; HS458 St. Petersburg/Leningrad: From Peter the Great to Putin; HS460 Hitler, Churches, and the Holocaust; HS470 The Ends of Human History: 20th Century European Intellectual History; HS488 The French Revolution; HS506 History of the American West; HS511 Race, Class, and Ethnicity and the Struggle for Human Rights in America, 1941 to Present; HS514 The American Civil War and Reconstruction; HS517 U.S. Constitutional History I; HS526 Law and American Society; HS539 History of American Women I; HS540 History of American Women II; HS542 Gender and Migration; HS548 Age of Decision: Challenges to Industrial America,1877-1929; HS551 U. S. 1929 - 1960; HS552 U. S. Since 1960; HS553 The Old South; HS565 American Immigration I (to 1865); HS566 American Immigration II (from 1865); HS571 U.S. Foreign Relations I; HS572 U.S. Foreign Relations II; HS575 Terror and the American Century; HS665 Seminar in College Teaching: Women's Studies; HS799 Readings and Research: Independent Study; HS802 Colloquium: Introduction to Doctoral Studies; HS805 Graduate Colloquium: Nation, Religion, and the Meaning of Modern; HS822 History and Memory in Theory and Politics; HS838 Colloquium: International History: Markets, States and the "Transnational"; HS842 Graduate Colloquium: Ireland Before 1850; HS860 Grad Colloquium: Race, Gender, Sexuality and the State in Modern U.S. History; HS865 Colloquium: Religion in America; HS871 Colloquium: U.S. History to 1877; HS888 Interim Study; HS897 Core Colloquium: Modern European History; HS921 Seminar: Medieval History; HS971 Seminar: Nineteenth Century America; HS978 Seminar: Twentieth Century America; HS992 Seminar: Dissertation Seminar; HS997 Dissertation Workshop; HS998 Doctoral Comprehensives; HS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) in Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program leads to licensure in secondary education which includes practicum experiences in addition to course work. For the initial pre-practicum, candidates typically spend one day a week in a school setting with a mentor teacher. For the full practicum, candidates spend 14 weeks involved in all aspects of classroom teaching working closely with a cooperating teacher and university supervisor. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Divinity (M.Div.) | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education (M.ED.) in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | The program stresses a humanistic approach to teaching that is both developmentally appropriate and intellectually challenging. It prepares the teacher to work with a diverse range of children by providing the teacher with knowledge about instructional practices, along with perspectives on children, schools, and society. The Program of Studies for the program includes foundation and professional courses, and practicum experiences. The program reflects current research and practices in teaching and learning. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education (M.Ed.) in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | 30 Credit-hour(s) | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program is for U.S. candidates who already possess an initial license and want to enhance learning further in their area of licensure; all candidates who want to explore new areas of interest such as policy, change, teacher leadership, teaching English Language Learners, universal design for learning, assessment, and special education; international students who wish to engage with foundational and leading edge thinking and thinkers on curriculum, pedagogy, and educational change; private school educators, Boston College students enrolled in the fifth year program, and educators from areas such as publishing, curriculum design, and museum education; and classroom teachers who wish to become teacher leaders in their schools and districts. This degree program does not lead to licensure, nor are students in this program eligible to apply for supervised practicum experiences. Programs of study are planned and personalized in consultation with a faculty advisor to support and develop candidate's professional goals. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education (M.Ed.) in Early Childhood Teaching | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program focuses on developmentally appropriate practices and critical thinking skills. This program is appropriate for students who wish to be prepared to teach normal and moderately disabled children in regular settings, pre-K-2. Students can enter the program without teaching licensure. Prerequisite for either program is a college degree with an Arts and Sciences major or the equivalent. Students who have majored in other areas, such as business or engineering, should consult the director of graduate admissions. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education (M.Ed.) in Educational Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program is intended for graduate level students who do not already hold a Master's Degree who wish to begin or advance a career in educational leadership in public or private elementary, middle, or secondary schools. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 1760 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education (M.Ed.) in Educational Research, Measurement, and Evaluation | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School Of Education, Department of Educational Research, Measurement, and Evaluation | This program combines the study of research design, statistical methods, and testing and assessment with a research focus on major contemporary education policy issues. The program is designed to prepare students for research and academic careers in education, social sciences and human services. The master’s program prepares graduate students with fundamental skills in testing, assessment, the evaluation of educational innovations, and in quantitative and qualitative social science research methods. A minimum of 30 semester hours and satisfactory performance on a comprehensive examination are required for the M.Ed. degree. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include ED/PY 460 Interpretation and Evaluation of Research; ED/PY 462 Assessment and Test Construction; ED 466 Program Evaluation I; ED 467 Program Evaluation II; ED/PY 468 Introductory Statistics; ED/PY 469 Intermediate Statistics; ED/PY 560 Seminar on Issues in Testing and Assessment Offered Biennially; ED/PY 561 Evaluation and Public Policy; ED/PY 565 Large-Scale Assessment: Procedures and Practice; ED/pY 664 Design of Experiments; ED/PY 667 General Linear Models; ED/PY 668 Multivariate Statistical Analysis; ED/PY 669 Psychometric Theory; ED 724 Practicum in Educational Technology: Technology-Enhanced Assessment; ED/PY 851 Qualitative Research Methods; ED/PY 861 Multilevel Regression Modeling; ED/PY 862 Survey Methods in Educational and Social Research Offered Biennially; ED 941 Dissertation Seminar in Educational Research, Measurement and Evaluation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School Of Education, Department of Educational Research, Measurement, and Evaluation | Lynch School Of Education, Department of Educational Research, Measurement, and Evaluation, Campion Hall Room 336, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 2072 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education (M.Ed.) in Reading and Literacy Education | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program is designed to enable candidates with at least one year of teaching to meet Massachusetts licensure standards for teacher of reading. The program conforms to the guidelines of the international reading association. The program of studies consists of foundation courses, courses in language and literacy, and practica experiences as a teacher of reading. A classroom teaching license is normally required for admission into the program, as well as a year of teaching under such license. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education (M.Ed.) in Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program leads to licensure in secondary education which includes practicum experiences in addition to course work. For the initial pre-practicum, candidates typically spend one day a week in a school setting with a mentor teacher. For the full practicum, candidates spend 14 weeks involved in all aspects of classroom teaching working closely with a cooperating teacher and university supervisor. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education in Religious Education (M.Ed.) | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | This program focuses on developing an understanding of the theory and practice of religious education for teaching in primary and secondary schools, parish faith formation programs and adult religious education. Students can choose to do the M.Ed. without a concentration, which gives them the flexibility to become an overall generalist in the field, or they can choose to pursue the M.Ed. with a concentration in school religion teaching, parish catechetical leadership (PCL), catholic school leadership or interreligious understanding. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of six elements: courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for religious education, contextual education, electives, holistic formation and synthesis project (comprehensives). While the M.Ed. program is housed in the school of theology and ministry, the lynch school of education (LSOE) grants the degree. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education | Lynch School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Higher Education, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 1760 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Education in Religious Education (M.Ed.) | Full Time | Variable | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program focuses on developing an understanding of the theory and practice of religious education for teaching in primary and secondary schools, parish faith formation programs and adult religious education. Students can choose to do the M.Ed. without a concentration, which gives them the flexibility to become an overall generalist in the field, or they can choose to pursue the M.Ed. with a concentration in school religion teaching, parish catechetical leadership (PCL), catholic school leadership or interreligious Understanding. A student’s program of studies is developed in consultation with an academic advisor with attention to the student’s background and aspirations. The curriculum is composed of six elements courses in theological and scriptural foundations, pastoral studies for religious education, contextual education, electives, holistic formation and synthesis project (comprehensives). | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Laws (LL.M.) Program | Full Time | Variable | US $20,385 per semester | Law School | This program is designed to immerse participants in the intricacies and flavor of the United States legal system, and help prepare them for the challenges of work in an increasingly global legal community. Students will design their own course of study from an enormous range of options - from business law to human rights to international law and beyond. As importantly, they will become an integral member of a carefully selected student body - the next generation of leaders in legal practice, government, NGOs, the judiciary, law teaching and private industry. Boston College’s LL.M. program is a centerpiece of their commitment to promoting the delivery of justice not just nationally, but internationally as well. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university prior to entering law school. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Law School | Law School, 885 Centre Street, NEWTON, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 617 552 8550 | The Boston College Law School was founded in 1929, and has grown into an internationally-known leader in legal education. This School is among the top few law schools in the country in the number of applications it receives, and has an overall applicant-to-acceptance ratio that is among the most selective in the nation. From its earliest days, the School had a reputation for toughness and high standards and it has won accreditation from the American Bar Association in 1932, just three years after its founding, joining the Harvard, Yale, and Boston University law schools as the only ones in New England to attain such a distinction. Academic standards were so high that in some years, as many as two-thirds of the first-year class would be excluded for poor scholarship. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Science (M.S.) in Physics - Non Thesis | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program emphasizes on a strong foundation in the basic principles of physics, preparing the student to undertake advanced research under the supervision of a faculty advisor. Graduate students are encouraged not only to collaborate closely with their research advisor, but also to draw upon the experience of the entire faculty and other graduate students. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PH700 Physics Colloquium; PH707 Physics Graduate Seminar I; PH708 Physics Graduate Seminar II; PH711 Classical Mechanics; PH721 Statistical Physics I; PH722 Statistical Physics II; PH732 Electromagnetic Theory I; PH735 Techniques of Experimental Physics I; PH741 Quantum Mechanics I; PH742 Quantum Mechanics II; PH761 Solid State Physics I; PH762 Solid State Physics II; PH799 Readings and Research in Physics; PH801 Physics Thesis Research; PH835 Mathematical Physics I; ;PH888 Interim Study PH910 Seminar: Topics in Physics; PH950 Group Theory; PH998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PH999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Science (M.S.) in Physics - Thesis | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program emphasizes on a strong foundation in the basic principles of physics, preparing the student to undertake advanced research under the supervision of a faculty advisor. Graduate students are encouraged not only to collaborate closely with their research advisor, but also to draw upon the experience of the entire faculty and other graduate students. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PH700 Physics Colloquium; PH707 Physics Graduate Seminar I; PH708 Physics Graduate Seminar II; PH711 Classical Mechanics; PH721 Statistical Physics I; PH722 Statistical Physics II; PH732 Electromagnetic Theory I; PH735 Techniques of Experimental Physics I; PH741 Quantum Mechanics I; PH742 Quantum Mechanics II; PH761 Solid State Physics I; PH762 Solid State Physics II; PH799 Readings and Research in Physics; PH801 Physics Thesis Research; PH835 Mathematical Physics I; ;PH888 Interim Study PH910 Seminar: Topics in Physics; PH950 Group Theory; PH998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PH999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Science in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $38,100 a year | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting | This program builds on student’s undergraduate education and equips them for the full range of opportunities in accounting and related fields. With its very flexible schedule, they will be able to quickly satisfy the 150-hour requirement for the certified public accountant (CPA) examination in effect in most states. Be part of an exciting educational experience that deepens their understanding of complex accounting issues and develops their critical reasoning capacity. The program's cross-disciplinary approach and focus on ethical business practices will significantly strengthen the technical, analytical and communication skills that employers require. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include MA 824 Financial Statement Analysis (3 credits); MA 826 Taxes and Management Decisions (3 credits); MA 825 Assurance and Consulting Services (3 credits); MA 827 Strategic Cost and Profitability Analysis (3 credits); MD 700 Economics/Micro-Economics (3 credits); MF 704 Financial Management (3 credits); MD 705 Statistics (3 credits); MJ 803 Law Topics for CPAs (3 credits); MA 819 Foundations for Accounting Professionals (3 credits); MA 813 Financial Accounting Practice I (3 credits); MA 814 Financial Accounting Practice II (3 credits); MA 815 Financial Auditing (3 credits); MA 816 Federal Taxation (3 credits); MA 817 Internal Cost Management and Control (3 credits); MA 818 Accounting Information Systems (3 credits); MA 824 Financial Statement Analysis (3 credits); MA 825 Assurance and Consulting Services (3 credits); MA 826 Taxes and Management Decisions (3 credits); MA 827 Strategic Cost and Profitability Analysis (3 credits). | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting | Carroll School of Management, Department of Accounting, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accounting department educates students to manage, thrive and lead in the accounting industry today. Whether a student is preparing for the 150-hour requirement for the certified public accountant (CPA) examination, is a Liberal Arts undergraduate enrolled in Accounting 101, or is an MBA student learning about the cornerstones of a reliable reporting infrastructure, this department prepare students at every level to excel by focusing on the fundamentals of ethical decision-making in the accounting profession. Accessibility to expert faculty teaching in addition to collaborative environment equals success on the balance sheet. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Science in Finance | Full Time | 30 Credit-hour(s) | US $38,100 a year | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance | This program is a world-class degree taught by a world-class faculty. The highly-ranked faculty commands the respect of practitioners and scholars alike for the quality and influence of their research. The leading-edge curriculum offers an unsurpassed experience in accelerated learning that fosters both intellectual growth and the development of new tools to meet the specific current and future needs of finance professionals. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include MF 801 Investments; MF 807 Corporate Finance; MF 820 Management of Financial Institutions; MF 852 Financial Econometrics; MF 860 Derivatives and Risk Management; MF 803 Portfolio Theory or MF 880 Fixed Income Analysis; MF 881 Corporate Finance Theory; MF 808 Financial Policy. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Science in Teaching (M.S.T.) in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is administered through the lynch school of education in cooperation with the department of mathematics. Application for the program is made to the lynch school of education, and students must be accepted by the lynch school of education and approved by the department of mathematics. This program is designed either for experienced teachers or for prospective teachers. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include MT410 Differential Equations; MT412 Partial Differential Equations; MT414 Numerical Analysis; MT426 Probability; MT427 Mathematical Statistics; MT430 Introduction to Number Theory; MT435 Mathematical Programming I; MT440 Dynamical Systems; MT445 Applied Combinatory; MT451 Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Geometry; MT455 Mathematical Problem Solving; MT480.01 Topics in Mathematics; MT480.02 Topics in Mathematics; MT806 Algebra I; MT845 Topics in Algebra and Number Theory; MT855 Topics in Geometry and Topology; MT890 Graduate Teaching Seminar I; MT891 Graduate Teaching Seminar II; MT892 Graduate Research Seminar; MT899 Readings and Research; MT903 Seminar. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Science in Teaching (M.S.T.) in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is administered through lynch graduate school of education in cooperation with the department of physics. It requires admission to both the lynch school of education and to the department of physics. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include PH700 Physics Colloquium; PH707 Physics Graduate Seminar I; PH708 Physics Graduate Seminar II; PH711 Classical Mechanics; PH721 Statistical Physics I; PH722 Statistical Physics II; PH732 Electromagnetic Theory I; PH735 Techniques of Experimental Physics I; PH741 Quantum Mechanics I; PH742 Quantum Mechanics II; PH761 Solid State Physics I; PH762 Solid State Physics II; PH799 Readings and Research in Physics; PH801 Physics Thesis Research; PH835 Mathematical Physics I; ;PH888 Interim Study PH910 Seminar: Topics in Physics; PH950 Group Theory; PH998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PH999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, 335 Higgins Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3575 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Science in Teaching (M.S.T.) in Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program leads to licensure in secondary education which includes practicum experiences in addition to course work. For the initial pre-practicum, candidates typically spend one day a week in a school setting with a mentor teacher. For the full practicum, candidates spend 14 weeks involved in all aspects of classroom teaching working closely with a cooperating teacher and university supervisor. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Science in Teaching in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is administered through the Lynch School of Education in cooperation with the department of chemistry and requires admission to graduate programs in both the lynch school of education and the department of chemistry. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Boston College | The modules include CH501 Nan scale Integrated Science; CH525 Small Molecule X-Ray Crystallography; CH531 Modern Methods in Organic Synthesis I; CH535 Physical Organic Chemistry; CH537 Mechanistic Organic Chemistry; CH539 Principles and Applications of NMR Spectroscopy; CH544 Modern Methods in Organic Synthesis II; CH560 Principles of Chemical Biology; CH561 Biochemistry I; CH562 Biochemistry II; CH566 Metallopharmaceuticals; ;CH581 Solid State Chemistry CH582 Advanced Topics/Biochemistry; CH676 Physical Chemistry: Principles and Applications; CH799 Reading and Research; ;CH800 Reading and Research; CH801 Thesis Seminar; CH802 Thesis Direction; CH805 Departmental Seminar I; CH806 Departmental Seminar II; CH821 Inorganic Chemistry Seminar I; CH822 Inorganic Chemistry Seminar II; CH831 Organic Chemistry Seminar I; CH832 Organic Chemistry Seminar II; CH861 Biochemistry Seminar I; CH862 Biochemistry Seminar II; CH871 Physical Chemistry Seminar I; CH872 Physical Chemistry Seminar II; CH888 Interim Study; CH997 Master's Comprehensive; CH998 Doctoral Cumulative Examinations; CH999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Theological Studies (M.T.S.) - Catholic Education Track | Full Time | Variable | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program provides students with the opportunity for the broad study of the various disciplines of theology, while also permitting them to concentrate in one area. Unlike the master of divinity program, the M.T.S. student has more elective credits that meet their vocational and professional needs. This degree is especially useful for those interested in personal reflection and theological development, those preparing for doctoral study, and for future teachers and for professionals seeking to integrate theology into their work life. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Theological Studies (M.T.S.) - Integrating Theology and the Professional Life Track | Full Time | Variable | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program provides students with the opportunity for the broad study of the various disciplines of theology, while also permitting them to concentrate in one area. Unlike the master of divinity program, the M.T.S. student has more elective credits that meet their vocational and professional needs. This degree is especially useful for those interested in personal reflection and theological development, those preparing for doctoral study, and for future teachers and for professionals seeking to integrate theology into their work life. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Theological Studies (M.T.S.) - Pre-Doctoral Track | Full Time | Variable | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program provides students with the opportunity for the broad study of the various disciplines of theology, while also permitting them to concentrate in one area. Unlike the master of divinity program, the M.T.S. student has more elective credits that meet their vocational and professional needs. This degree is especially useful for those interested in personal reflection and theological development, those preparing for doctoral study, and for future teachers and for professionals seeking to integrate theology into their work life. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Theological Studies (M.T.S.) - Theological Development Track | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program provides students with the opportunity for the broad study of the various disciplines of theology, while also permitting them to concentrate in one area. Unlike the master of divinity program, the M.T.S. student has more elective credits that meet their vocational and professional needs. This degree is especially useful for those interested in personal reflection and theological development, those preparing for doctoral study, and for future teachers and for professionals seeking to integrate theology into their work life. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Theology (Th.M.) - Ministerial Focus | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program is one of two advanced degrees Boston college school of theology and ministry (STM) offers to graduates of master of divinity programs, the other being the licentiate in sacred theology. However, unlike the S.T.L., which is a two-year ecclesiastical degree, the Th.M. is a one-year, civil degree. Although many Th.M. students are seeking formal ordination, Th.M. graduates come from various backgrounds and go on to use their experience in a diverse array of professions. Graduates take their Th.M. education and serve as teachers, administrators, medical doctors, advocates for refugees and human rights, and ecumenical ministers, as well as in numerous other capacities. Finally, lay students who have already completed a master of divinity and who are interested in pursuing doctoral work, but believe they need additional course work might also consider the master of theology. For those who want to focus their degree on ministerial and practical objectives, option B aims at cultivating advanced understanding and pastoral competence in a particular form of Church ministry. Many students choose to specialize in preaching, spiritual direction, or cross-cultural ministries. Unlike option A, students do not need to concentrate in a theological discipline, but instead can create a unique course of studies to meet their professional needs. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master of Theology (Th.M.) - Thesis or Biblical Language Focus | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $830 per credit / unit | School of Theology and Ministry | This program is one of two advanced degrees Boston college school of theology and ministry (STM) offers to graduates of master of divinity programs, the other being the licentiate in sacred theology. However, unlike the S.T.L., which is a two-year ecclesiastical degree, the Th.M. is a one-year, civil degree. Although many Th.M. students are seeking formal ordination, Th.M. graduates come from various backgrounds and go on to use their experience in a diverse array of professions. Graduates take their Th.M. education and serve as teachers, administrators, medical doctors, advocates for refugees and human rights, and ecumenical ministers, as well as in numerous other capacities. Finally, lay students who have already completed a master of divinity and who are interested in pursuing doctoral work, but believe they need additional course work might also consider the master of theology. This option is designed for those who want to focus on academic development and inquiry, option A requires concentrating in one of the theological disciplines and culminates in a thesis. Students can concentrate in biblical studies, church history, historical-systematic theology, moral theology, pastoral theology, or spirituality. Students can also apply credits earned studying a biblical language toward the Th.M. option A students usually do not take part in ministry practice. | Students must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Students for whom English is not their native language must demonstrate proficiency in the English language. This can be demonstrated by an acceptable score on the TOEFL exam (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or by receiving a degree from a college or university at which English is the language of instruction An acceptable TOEFL score is 213 or above on the computer-based exam, 550 on the paper-based exam or 79 on the new Internet exam. | Masters | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | School of Theology and Ministry | School of Theology and Ministry, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 6501 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master's Program in Traditional Route to Entry | Full Time | Variable | US $1,050 per credit / unit | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | In this program, core courses are offered twice a year; some are offered in the summer. Students can begin the program in September, January or May. Some classes are scheduled in the late afternoon or evening, with several courses available on a single day of the week to meet the tight scheduling needs of adult learners. The curriculum consists of both core and clinical specialty courses. Core courses cover subjects related to advanced practice nursing regardless of specialty area. Core courses make up 27 of the total credits. Clinical specialty courses provided in-depth knowledge and practice in meeting the health care needs of specific patient populations. These courses include: six credits of clinical specialty theory courses and twelve credits in clinical specialty practice courses. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree, diploma, or associate's degree from a nationally accredited nursing program. They should have secured an undergraduate grade point average of B or better. They should have completed a course in statistics and should also have a current RN license to practice nursing. Students who speak a native language other than English must provide evidence of English proficiency. They should have secured a score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 on the CBT test (computer-based test), or 100 on the new IBT test (Internet-Based Test) or higher on the Test of English, as a foreign language (TOEFL). Student copies or photocopies of TOEFL scores are not accepted. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include NU301 Culture and Health Care; NU315 Victim logy; NU317 Forensic Mental Health; NU318 Forensic Science I; NU319 Forensic Science Lab; NU402 Nursing Science I; NU403 Clinical Practice in Nursing I; NU406 Nursing Science II; NU407 Clinical Practice in Nursing II; NU408 Path physiology; NU411 Nursing Synthesis Practicum; NU415 Conceptual Basis for Advanced Nursing Practice; NU416 Ethical Reasoning and Issues in Advanced Nursing Practice; NU417 Advanced Practice Nursing within Complex Health Care Systems; NU420 Pharmacotherapeutics and Advanced Nursing Practice; NU426 Advanced Psychopharmacology; NU430 Advanced Health Assessment Across the Life Span; NU443 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing I; NU445 Individual Psychotherapies/Advanced Practice and Psychiatric Nursing Practice; NU450 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU450.01 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU453 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing I; NU457 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children I; NU462 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing I; NU463 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing I; NU465 Advance Practice in Gerontological Nursing I; NU472 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU473 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU490 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia I--Respiratory; NU491 Chemistry and Physics for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU502 Case Studies in Forensics; NU502.01 Case Studies in Forensics; NU520 Nursing Research Theory; NU524 Master's Research Practicum; NU525 Integrative Review of Nursing Research; NU543 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU545 Couple, Family, and Group Psychotherapy in Advanced Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU553 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing II; NU557 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children II; NU557.01 Adv Prac/Pediatric Ambulatory Care II; NU562 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing II; NU563 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing II; NU565 Advanced Gerontologic Nursing Practice II; NU572 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU573 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU590 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia III; NU591 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia I; NU592 Advanced Principles for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU593 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia II; NU641 Palliative Care II: Pain and Suffering in Seriously Ill; NU642 Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU643 Palliative Care III: Palliative Care and Adv Prac Nurs; NU644 Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU645 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Pain, Symand Suffering; NU646 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU646.01 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU647 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU647.01 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU672 Path physiologic Processes; NU680 Forensics: Fundamentals of Forensics/Nurse and Health; NU681 Forensics Care : Psychosocialand Legal Aspects; NU682 Forensic Nursing Care I:Practicum; NU683 Forensics Care (Theory) Vulnerable Populations; NU684 Crim Law and Sci Proc: Evidence Collection; NU685 Forensic Nursing Care II: Practicum; NU691 Nurse Anesthesia Residency I; NU693 Nurse Anesthesia Residency II; NU699 Independent Study in Nursing; NU701 Epistemology of Nursing; NU712 Nursing Science Processes and Outcomes NU714 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU714.01 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU751 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU751.01 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU752 Advanced Quantitative Methods for Health Care Research; NU810 Research Practicum I; NU811 Research Practicum II; NU812 Research Practicum III; NU813 Research Practicum IV; NU901 Dissertation Advisement; NU902 Dissertation Advisement; NU998 Doctoral Comprehensives; NU999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4928 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Master's in Entry Route to Entry | Full Time | 11 Month(s) | US $1,050 per credit / unit | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | The master's entry route to entry prepares those with a baccalaureate degree or higher in non-nursing fields for advanced practice nursing. During the first full-time 11 months of study, students complete all requirements to become registered nurses; students will not receive another bachelor's degree, but will progress to the master's degree. Specialization at the master's level prepares students to sit for certification examinations in any of the advanced practice specialties except CRNA (nurse anesthesia), which requires a bachelor's degree in nursing. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree, diploma, or associate's degree from a nationally accredited nursing program. They should have secured an undergraduate grade point average of B or better. They should have completed a course in statistics and should also have a current RN license to practice nursing. Students who speak a native language other than English must provide evidence of English proficiency. They should have secured a score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 on the CBT test (computer-based test), or 100 on the new IBT test (Internet-Based Test) or higher on the Test of English, as a foreign language (TOEFL). Student copies or photocopies of TOEFL scores are not accepted. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include NU301 Culture and Health Care; NU315 Victim logy; NU317 Forensic Mental Health; NU318 Forensic Science I; NU319 Forensic Science Lab; NU402 Nursing Science I; NU403 Clinical Practice in Nursing I; NU406 Nursing Science II; NU407 Clinical Practice in Nursing II; NU408 Path physiology; NU411 Nursing Synthesis Practicum; NU415 Conceptual Basis for Advanced Nursing Practice; NU416 Ethical Reasoning and Issues in Advanced Nursing Practice; NU417 Advanced Practice Nursing within Complex Health Care Systems; NU420 Pharmacotherapeutics and Advanced Nursing Practice; NU426 Advanced Psychopharmacology; NU430 Advanced Health Assessment Across the Life Span; NU443 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing I; NU445 Individual Psychotherapies/Advanced Practice and Psychiatric Nursing Practice; NU450 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU450.01 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU453 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing I; NU457 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children I; NU462 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing I; NU463 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing I; NU465 Advance Practice in Gerontological Nursing I; NU472 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU473 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU490 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia I--Respiratory; NU491 Chemistry and Physics for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU502 Case Studies in Forensics; NU502.01 Case Studies in Forensics; NU520 Nursing Research Theory; NU524 Master's Research Practicum; NU525 Integrative Review of Nursing Research; NU543 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU545 Couple, Family, and Group Psychotherapy in Advanced Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU553 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing II; NU557 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children II; NU557.01 Adv Prac/Pediatric Ambulatory Care II; NU562 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing II; NU563 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing II; NU565 Advanced Gerontologic Nursing Practice II; NU572 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU573 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU590 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia III; NU591 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia I; NU592 Advanced Principles for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU593 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia II; NU641 Palliative Care II: Pain and Suffering in Seriously Ill; NU642 Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU643 Palliative Care III: Palliative Care and Adv Prac Nurs; NU644 Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU645 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Pain, Symand Suffering; NU646 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU646.01 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU647 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU647.01 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU672 Path physiologic Processes; NU680 Forensics: Fundamentals of Forensics/Nurse and Health; NU681 Forensics Care : Psychosocial and Legal Aspects; NU682 Forensic Nursing Care I:Practicum; NU683 Forensics Care (Theory) Vulnerable Populations; NU684 Crim Law and Sci Proc: Evidence Collection; NU685 Forensic Nursing Care II: Practicum; NU691 Nurse Anesthesia Residency I; NU693 Nurse Anesthesia Residency II; NU699 Independent Study in Nursing; NU701 Epistemology of Nursing; NU712 Nursing Science Processes and Outcomes NU714 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU714.01 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU751 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU751.01 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU752 Advanced Quantitative Methods for Health Care Research; NU810 Research Practicum I; NU811 Research Practicum II; NU812 Research Practicum III; NU813 Research Practicum IV; NU901 Dissertation Advisement; NU902 Dissertation Advisement; NU998 Doctoral Comprehensives; NU999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4928 | The School of Theology and Ministry is located on the Brighton Campus recently acquired by Boston College from the Archdiocese of Boston. This facility provides classroom, office, worship, and social spaces. The school was formed on June 1, 2008, when the former Weston Jesuit School of Theology and the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry joined to offer a full array of ministerial and theological courses and degrees. The school is an international theological center that serves the Church’s mission in the world as part of a Catholic and Jesuit university. Through the fostering of Christian faith and the promotion of justice and reconciliation, the school prepares its students for ministries that are as diverse as the composition of the student body - Jesuits and other candidates approved for ordination studies, women and men for lay ecclesial ministries and for service rooted in faith. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include BI611 Advanced Genetics; BI612 Graduate Biochemistry; BI614 Graduate Molecular Biology; BI615 Advanced Cell Biology; BI616 Bioinformatics; BI681 Graduate Neurobiology; BI799 Readings and Research; BI801 Thesis Seminar; BI805 Departmental Seminar; BI806 Departmental Seminar; BI819 Advanced Topics in Biochemistry; BI834 Seminar in Translational Regulation; BI835 Seminar in Structural Neurochemistry; BI840 Responsible Conduct of Research and Professional Development; BI848 Seminar in Cellular Biology: Nuclear Import and Export . | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. Program in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program provides the student with a breadth of knowledge in the fields of organic and organ metallic chemistry; chemical biology and biochemistry; inorganic; and physical and analytical chemistry. After the first year, each student will pursue a program of studies, with the approval of their advisor that is consistent with individual educational goals. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include CH 560 Principles of Chemical Biology; CH 676 Physical Chemistry: Principles and Applications; CH 765 Chemical Biology: Literature Workshop; CH 772 Advanced Physical Chemistry/Electronics and Optics; CH 799-800 Reading and Research I and II; CH 801 Thesis Seminar; CH 802 Thesis Direction; CH 805-806 Departmental Seminar I and II; CH 821-822 Inorganic Chemistry Seminar I and II; CH 831-832 Organic Chemistry Seminar I and II; CH 861-862 Biochemistry Seminar I and II; CH 871-872 Physical Chemistry Seminar I and II; CH 888 Interim Study; CH 998 Doctoral Cumulative Examinations; CH 999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. Program in English | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In this program, candidates have the opportunity to select from a wide range of courses, and proceed through a streamlined series of exams culminating in a dissertation field exam and the writing of the dissertation. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include EN121 The Linguistic Structure of English; EN175 Jewish Writers in Russia and America; EN392 Syntax and Semantics; EN527 General Linguistics; EN671 Magazine Edit and Publishing; EN704 Human Rights and the 20th Century Novel; EN707.01 William Carlos Williams and Wallace Stevens; EN714 Writing the Self in Early Modern England; EN716 Shakespeare and Donne; EN722 Irish Literary Revival; EN725 1916 and After; EN729 Woolf and Stevens; EN729.01 Woolf and Stevens; EN738 Agamben and His Universe; EN743.01 Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama; EN746 The City in American Literature and Culture; EN747 Sex, Gender, and the Body in Early Modern England; EN759 Pulp, Popular, Proletarian; EN761 Black Cultural Studies; EN762 Fourth Genre: Contemporary American Literary Nonfiction; EN765 What Is Performance; EN765.01 What Is Performance; EN766 Feminist Theory; EN769 Dickens; EN771.01 Victorian Novel; EN775 Seminar: Nabokov; EN780 Readings in Theory; EN782 Issues and Methods in American Studies; EN784.01 Studies in Early Modern Poetry; EN788 Irish Heroic Literature in Modern Adaptation; EN799 Nature, Culture, Wrtg: Derrida's of Grammatology/Cont; EN801 Thesis Seminar; EN820 Modern American Poetry and Poetics; EN825 Composition Theory and the Teaching of Writing; EN844 Medieval Mystics; EN849 Romantic Texts and Contexts; EN872 The Whitman Tradition; EN872.01 The Whitman Tradition; EN887 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN887.01 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN887.01 Introduction to Advanced Research; EN899 Readings and Research; EN932.01 PhD Seminar: Gender, Politics and Nationalism; EN934 Advanced Research Colloquium; EN934.01 PhD Advanced Research Colloquium; EN942 PhD Seminar: Theorizing Visual Culture; EN943 PhD Seminar: Irish Fiction and Culture,1960-Present; EN998 Doctoral Comprehensive; EN999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Counseling Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | This program seeks to prepare the next generation of leaders in psychology, generally, and counseling psychology, specifically. The program emphasizes the scientist-practitioner training model emphasizing a developmental - contextual perspective with a commitment to social justice, multicultural education, and community-based practice. The doctoral program prepares students for positions as counseling psychologists, who use their scientific and clinical skills in an array of settings encompassing mental health organizations, educational institutions, academia, public policy agencies, and various other occupational and community contexts. Using developmental and social justice frameworks, the doctoral program in counseling psychology helps students to acquire the following knowledge and competencies acquire foundational knowledge of the field on psychology; comprehend and critically analyze current literature in the field; understand the major theoretical frameworks for counseling, personality, and career development; conduct independent research and scientific inquiry; have knowledge and competence in practice of a variety of assessment techniques; have respect for, knowledge, and competence in clinical work and research with diverse client populations; provide supervision, consultation, and outreach services to a broad array of client populations; commit to the ethical and legal standards of the profession including sensitivity to individual, gender, and cultural differences; and demonstrate competencies with a variety of individual and group counseling approaches to evidence based practice in supervised practicums and internships. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include py 528 Multicultural Issues, py 840 Seminar: Professional Issues in Counseling Psychology, py 842 Seminar: Counseling Theory, py 843 Seminar: Career Development, py 844 Seminar: Counseling Psychology in Context: Social Action, Consultation, and Collaboration, py 469 Intermediate Statistics, py 468 Introductory Statistics, py 667 General Linear Models. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology | Lynch School of Education, Department of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction | Full Time | Variable | US $1,084 per credit / unit | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | This program is designed to develop professionals who have the knowledge, intellectual disposition, professional skills, ethical sensibilities, and leadership potential to make a difference in the lives of all schoolchildren. Faculty research and development reflect the Lynch School mission of serving others and promoting social justice. In particular, curriculum and instruction faculty members are involved in a rich variety of research and professional development projects, which are often carried out in collaboration with school-based teachers and administrators. These projects link research, practice, and policy in teaching and teacher education by exploring how new and experienced teachers learn, how to meet the special needs of students with disabilities, and how to improve the school and life chances of students from urban, low income, or non-mainstream cultures. In this sense, the research and development activities of the curriculum and instruction faculty help to challenge the inequities of the social order and contribute to the establishment of a more just society. | In addition to the standardized test requirement, students who speak a language other than English as their native language must also provide evidence of proficiency. A minimum score of 550 on the paper-based test, 213 points on the computer-based test, or 79 on the internet-based test on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction | Lynch School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4200 | The Lynch School of Education, which began as Boston College's first coeducational school on the Chestnut Hill campus, has pursued its mission to enhance the human condition through education. The School is a complex academic enterprise that exerts an influence on education in Boston and its surrounding communities, and throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and the international community. As a research institution at the graduate level, it is ranked 16th (2005) among schools of education in the country, second in New England and the only school at a Catholic university to be ranked in the top 50 (U.S. News). The School has experienced more than 50 years of sustained growth in stature and impact on education and educational policy. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program trains economists for careers in teaching, research, and the private sector by providing strong backgrounds in economic theory, quantitative research methods, and applied fields. Requirements include course work, comprehensive examinations, a thesis, and a one-year residence requirement. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include EC720 Math for Economists; EC740 Microeconomic Theory I; EC741 Microeconomic Theory II; EC750 Macroeconomic Theory I; EC751 Macroeconomic Theory II; EC770 Statistics; EC771 Econometrics; EC798 Economics Practicum; EC799 Readings and Research; EC802 Advanced Microeconomic Theory; EC821 Time Series Econometrics; EC822 Cross Section and Panel Econometrics; EC827 Econometric Theory I; EC828 Econometric Theory II; EC853 Industrial Organization I; EC854 Industrial Organization II; EC861 Monetary Economics I; EC862 Monetary Economics II; EC865 Public Sector Economics I; EC871 Theory of International Trade; EC874 Topics in International Macroeconomics; EC875 Political Economy of Trade and Development; EC885 Analysis of Labor Markets; EC886 Current Topics in Labor Economics; EC888 Interim Study; EC900 Third Year Thesis Workshop; EC901 Fourth Year Thesis Workshop; EC998 Doctoral Comprehensives; EC999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Hispanic or French Literature and Culture - Plan I | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In this program, students examine the chronological development of French or Hispanic literature, culture and language, eventually concentrating on a period or genre of their choice. They also become familiar with current critical methodologies. In consultation with their advisors, candidates will assess and remedy any gaps in their intellectual preparation, to produce a broad and consistent knowledge base in their major literature. Advisors will assist students in balancing such broad preparation for dissertation work in a field in which individual candidates have demonstrated particular interest and ability. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Management with a Concentration in Finance | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance | This program provides graduates with the knowledge and analytical abilities they need to teach and to pursue research of the highest quality. These goals require an education that combines theory, applied research, and teaching experience. The program begins with systematic and rigorous training in quantitative methods and economic and financial theory. A research paper, due at the end of the student's first summer in the program, begins to develop the student's ability to do original research. This development culminates in the dissertation. Training in teaching is provided in the second through fourth years, when the student participates in teaching workshops and acquires experience in the classroom. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance | Carroll School of Management, Department of Finance, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Accessibility to preeminent finance faculty and cutting-edge academic research are key ingredients to providing undergraduate and graduate students with the tools and methods necessary to expand their understanding of finance. Rigorous training at all academic levels prepares students for the quantitative and analytical challenges in both the business and academic fields. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Management with a Concentration in Organization Studies | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | Contact provider | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | This program prepares students for careers in research and teaching in organizational behavior and related fields. The intellectual theme of the program emphasizes organizational transformation: fundamental changes in organizations that influence their character and effectiveness. The program combines courses in theory and applied research, along with practical experience in teaching and consulting. Students are expected to engage in research from the outset of the program. Students typically fulfill requirements by completing 18 courses, the majority in the first two years of the program. In the first year, students receive systematic and rigorous training in organizational theory, statistics, research methods, and organizational change. During the second year, students also receive training in teaching skills, as well as the opportunity to teach. Additional requirements include successful completion of a comprehensive exam at the end of the first year, a research paper by the end of the second year, and a dissertation proposal by the start of the third year. The final portion of the program is devoted to the preparation and defense of a dissertation. | Students must hold a college or university degree equivalent to a four-year American bachelor’s degree. All students are recommended to confirm their educational equivalency with a credential evaluation organization such as world education services. The minimum required score on the TOEFL is 100 on the internet-based test, 250 on the computer-based test, and 600 on the paper-based test. The minimum required score on the PTE is 68. TOEFL and PTE scores are valid for two years. Those candidates required to take the TOEFL or PTE must at least report their unofficial scores prior to submitting their application. Both overall and component test scores must be reported on the application form. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include MB 850 Micro-Organizational Theory; MB 852 Perspectives on Individual and Organizational Change; MB 854 General Linear Methods; MB 871 Quantitative Research Methods; MB 813 Multi-Variate Methods; MB 851 Macro-Organizational Theory; MB 870 Qualitative Research Methods; MB 880 Action Research Methods; MB 853 Organizational Change and Transformation; MB 872 Research Seminar I; MB 881 Teaching Practicum; MB 898 Independent Research I. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department | Carroll School of Management, Organization Studies Department, Boston College Fulton Hall 510, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 8420 | Organization Studies is a broad discipline that studies how organizations are structured and how individuals fit into that structure. Faculty is committed to providing an open, challenging and supportive environment for students to learn about the human component of organizations. As organizations become increasingly knowledge-based, human resources have emerged as a critical strategic factor determining competitive advantage. In response to this trend and to prepare students for a career in human resource management, this department offers a concentration in Human Resources Management at the undergraduate level. Because the students need to learn how to better lead and manage people and organizations, this department also offer a concentration in Management and Leadership to support undergraduate students in all management disciplines in becoming more effective managers and leaders. At the graduate level, this department recognizes that change leadership is a core competence for managers today. To help the MBAs develop the ability to respond to rapidly changing technological demands, market reconfigurations, and other organizational issues, this department offer a concentration in Change Leadership. In addition, this department offers a Ph.D. in Organization Studies that prepares students for a career in academic research on organizations. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Nursing | Full Time | Variable | US $1,050 per credit / unit | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | This program includes three core areas of study knowledge development in nursing; research methods; and substantive nursing content. Students apply core content to a selected research concentration. The curriculum includes courses in philosophy of science, epistemology of nursing, and strategies for developing nursing knowledge. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree, diploma, or associate's degree from a nationally accredited nursing program. They should have secured an undergraduate grade point average of B or better. They should have completed a course in statistics and should also have a current RN license to practice nursing. Students who speak a native language other than English must provide evidence of English proficiency. They should have secured a score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 on the CBT test (computer-based test), or 100 on the new IBT test (Internet-Based Test) or higher on the Test of English, as a foreign language (TOEFL). Student copies or photocopies of TOEFL scores are not accepted. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include NU301 Culture and Health Care; NU315 Victim logy; NU317 Forensic Mental Health; NU318 Forensic Science I; NU319 Forensic Science Lab; NU402 Nursing Science I; NU403 Clinical Practice in Nursing I; NU406 Nursing Science II; NU407 Clinical Practice in Nursing II; NU408 Path physiology; NU411 Nursing Synthesis Practicum; NU415 Conceptual Basis for Advanced Nursing Practice; NU416 Ethical Reasoning and Issues in Advanced Nursing Practice; NU417 Advanced Practice Nursing within Complex Health Care Systems; NU420 Pharmacotherapeutics and Advanced Nursing Practice; NU426 Advanced Psychopharmacology; NU430 Advanced Health Assessment Across the Life Span; NU443 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing I; NU445 Individual Psychotherapies/Advanced Practice and Psychiatric Nursing Practice; NU450 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU450.01 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU453 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing I; NU457 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children I; NU462 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing I; NU463 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing I; NU465 Advance Practice in Gerontological Nursing I; NU472 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU473 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU490 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia I--Respiratory; NU491 Chemistry and Physics for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU502 Case Studies in Forensics; NU502.01 Case Studies in Forensics; NU520 Nursing Research Theory; NU524 Master's Research Practicum; NU525 Integrative Review of Nursing Research; NU543 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU545 Couple, Family, and Group Psychotherapy in Advanced Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU553 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing II; NU557 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children II; NU557.01 Adv Prac/Pediatric Ambulatory Care II; NU562 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing II; NU563 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing II; NU565 Advanced Gerontologic Nursing Practice II; NU572 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU573 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU590 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia III; NU591 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia I; NU592 Advanced Principles for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU593 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia II; NU641 Palliative Care II: Pain and Suffering in Seriously Ill; NU642 Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU643 Palliative Care III: Palliative Care and Adv Prac Nurs; NU644 Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU645 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Pain, Symand Suffering; NU646 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU646.01 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU647 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU647.01 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU672 Path physiologic Processes; NU680 Forensics: Fundamentals of Forensics/Nurse and Health; NU681 Forensics Care : Psychosocial and Legal Aspects; NU682 Forensic Nursing Care I:Practicum; NU683 Forensics Care (Theory) Vulnerable Populations; NU684 Crim Law and Sci Proc: Evidence Collection; NU685 Forensic Nursing Care II: Practicum; NU691 Nurse Anesthesia Residency I; NU693 Nurse Anesthesia Residency II; NU699 Independent Study in Nursing; NU701 Epistemology of Nursing; NU712 Nursing Science Processes and Outcomes NU714 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU714.01 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU751 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU751.01 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU752 Advanced Quantitative Methods for Health Care Research; NU810 Research Practicum I; NU811 Research Practicum II; NU812 Research Practicum III; NU813 Research Practicum IV; NU901 Dissertation Advisement; NU902 Dissertation Advisement; NU998 Doctoral Comprehensives; NU999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4928 | Organization Studies is a broad discipline that studies how organizations are structured and how individuals fit into that structure. Faculty is committed to providing an open, challenging and supportive environment for students to learn about the human component of organizations. As organizations become increasingly knowledge-based, human resources have emerged as a critical strategic factor determining competitive advantage. In response to this trend and to prepare students for a career in human resource management, this department offers a concentration in Human Resources Management at the undergraduate level. Because the students need to learn how to better lead and manage people and organizations, this department also offer a concentration in Management and Leadership to support undergraduate students in all management disciplines in becoming more effective managers and leaders. At the graduate level, this department recognizes that change leadership is a core competence for managers today. To help the MBAs develop the ability to respond to rapidly changing technological demands, market reconfigurations, and other organizational issues, this department offer a concentration in Change Leadership. In addition, this department offers a Ph.D. in Organization Studies that prepares students for a career in academic research on organizations. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PL500 Philosophy of Law; PL510 Contemporary Philosophy of Religion; PL512 Philosophy of Existence; PL513 Anthropology of Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II; PL516 Epistemology; PL518 Philosophy of Imagination; PL521 Women, Nature, and Ecology; PL524 Ethics: An Introduction; PL528 Skepticism, Stoicism, and Neo-Platonism; PL532 Philosophy of Religion in Human Subjectivity; PL540 Philosophy of Liberation; PL541 Philosophy of Health Science: East and West; PL553 Capstone: Poets, Philosophers and Mapmakers; PL576 Two Existentialisms: Sartre and Marcel; PL577 Symbolic Logic: Theory and Practices; PL578 Kant's Critique of Pure Reason; PL593 Philosophy of Science; PL599 Kant's Moral Philosophy; PL604 Social Construction; PL611 Global Justice and Human Rights; PL612 Heidegger's Conception of Art; PL615 Feeling, Intentionality, Emotion; PL625 The Problem of Self-Knowledge; PL626 Hermeneutics of God; PL628 Schelling; PL670 Technology and Culture; PL701 Augustine; PL704 Plato's Republic; PL706 Advanced Topics in Medieval Philosophy; PL711 Merleau-Ponty: Flesh and Language; PL713 Virtue and Action; PL715 Science in Ancient and Medieval Thought; PL720 Platonic Theories of Knowledge; PL722 German Idealism; PL729 Philosophy and Psychoanalysis; PL731 Michel Foucault; PL732 Husserl's Ideas: Book I; PL746 Rawls' Political Philosophy; PL762 Soren Kierkegaard; PL780 Readings in Theory; PL788 Aristotle's Metaphysics; PL794 Philosophy and the Church Fathers; PL799 Readings and Research; PL807 Kant's "Critique of Judgment"; PL822 Justice: Right vs. Good; PL888 Interim Study; PL990 Teaching Seminar; PL991 Writing Seminar; PL998 Doctoral Comprehensives; PL999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Psychology - Behavioral Neuroscience | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In this program, students use a systems level analysis to explore the neural circuits underlying motivational and emotional processes that regulate essential behaviors in animals. They are also interested in the effects of genetic and experiential factors on the development and function of these circuits. The basic motivational and emotional processes of interest include those underlying: positive social behaviors such as affiliation and parental care; food intake and hunger; attention and arousal; reward or reinforcement processes and their relationship to synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory; defensive, anxiety-, and stress-related behaviors; aggression. These basic processes and associated behaviors are likely sub served by evolutionarily conserved core neural circuits, which allow the findings from animal research to be relevant to the homologous processes in humans. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Psychology - Cognitive and Cognitive Neuroscience | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program aims to understand the nature of visual memory (i.e. memory for visual items or events). Drawing on the foundation of research in visual perception, he employs cognitive modeling (based on behavioral measures), event-related potentials (ERPs), and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The research indicates that memory retrieval is a continuous process that is constructive in nature, where features or components from disparate cortical regions bind together to form a unified memory. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Psychology - Developmental Psychology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In this program, students are studying social, emotional, and cognitive development across the life span. Areas of study include attachment relationships; sibling and peer relationships; children's understanding of emotions; cultural aspects of young children's development; ethnic identity development; the role policies and programs play in the lives of children, adolescents, older adults, and families; the development of artistic abilities in normal and gifted populations; the acquisition of a theory of mind; the relationship between theory of mind and communication skills; adolescent sexual behavior; mental health in later life. Children from both western and non-western communities are studied. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Psychology - Quantitative Psychology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program focuses on the quantitative and methodological issues in conducting psychological research. The quantitative issues are loosely categorized into application of statistical methods to psychological study, psychometrics, and mathematical modeling of psychological processes. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Psychology - Social-Personality Psychology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This concentration explores human psychological processes and behavior at different levels of analysis, ranging from the intra- and interpersonal to the group, intergroup, and societal levels. Areas of investigation include the study of emotion; how nonverbal behavior and discourse reflect and influence human social relations; the study of social-cognitive mechanisms in emotion regulation; the study of individual differences in effect, motivation, and performance; social-cognitive processes at the individual level and as shared “cultural models;” ways in which such social categories as gender, class, and ethnicity frame and constrain social behavior; cultural construction of the self and social identities. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include PS377 Psycholinguistics; PS506 Structural Equation Modeling; PS532 Seminar on Choice and its Psychological Correlates; PS560 Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology; PS589 Neural Systems and Social Behavior; PS600 Introduction to Social Work; PS606 Experimental Design and Statistics; PS608 Multivariate Statistics; PS625 Graduate Independent Study; PS640 Research Workshop in Social Psychology I; PS641 Research Workshop in Social Psychology II; PS646 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self I; PS647 Research Workshop in Emotion, Gender, and the Self II; PS660 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology I; PS661 Research Workshop in Developmental Psychology II; PS672 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception I; PS673 Research Workshop in Cognition and Perception II; PS686 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience; PS687 Research Workshop in Behavioral Neuroscience II; PS691 Professional Development Workshop I; PS692 Professional Development Workshop II; PS998 Doctoral Comprehensive; PS999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Romance Literatures - Plan II | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This plan offers lateral specialization in one period or genre of two romance cultures. Students structure their program according to a lateral specialization, focusing on one period or genre in two different languages and literatures. Upon entering the program, students formulate a coherent program of studies in consultation with the advisor, selecting two romance literatures and a period or genre that merits investigation across linguistic, cultural and political frontiers. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is organized around the theme social economy and social justice: gender, race, and class in a global context, and prepares students for careers as university and college faculty and as researchers and decision makers in business, the public sector, and non-profit organizations. The primary criteria for admission are academic performance and promise of outstanding independent work. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department | College of Arts and Sciences, Sociology Department, McGuinn Hall 426, Boston College140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4130 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Theology - Biblical Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The program is designed and taught by the ecumenical faculty of the theology department. One of the intrinsic components of the program is a call for a wise appropriation of catholic and/or protestant theological and doctrinal traditions, as well as critical and constructive dialogue with other major religions, with other Christian theological positions, and with contemporary cultures. The program is rigorous in its expectation that students master catholic and/or protestant theological traditions and probe critically the foundations of various theological positions. Students are expected to master the tools and techniques of research and to organize and integrate their knowledge so as to make an original contribution to theological discussion. Because the program includes faculty members who are expert in the Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, and Jewish traditions, it also offers a context in which the issues raised by religious pluralism can be explored, responsibly and in detail, and in which a Christian comparative theology can be pursued seriously. Biblical studies focus on the canonical books of the Bible both within their historical and cultural world and in relation to their reception within the Christian and Jewish traditions. All students will acquire a thorough competency in both the old testament/Hebrew bible and the New Testament including competency in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek. They may learn other ancient languages and literature's as their research requires and must acquire a reading knowledge of German and either French or Spanish. The comprehensive exams will cover the whole Bible, with emphasis on either the old testament/Hebrew bible or the New Testament, and will include a specialized exam in an area of study pertinent to the student's dissertation. Students will also acquire and be tested on a limited competency (a minor or the equivalent) in an area of theology other than biblical studies. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue McGuinn Hall 531, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3268 | Boston college has totally 675 full-time faculty where 98% faculty with doctorates with 1:13 faculty-student ratio. The college has library facility with 8 libraries, 2.4 million volumes, More than 4.1 million units of microform, More than 210,000 government documents, 7200 linear feet of manuscripts and archival materials. In this college more than 7300 students participate in 37 intramural sports and 22 club sports. | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Theology - Comparative Theology | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The program is designed and taught by the ecumenical faculty of the theology department. One of the intrinsic components of the program is a call for a wise appropriation of catholic and/or protestant theological and doctrinal traditions, as well as critical and constructive dialogue with other major religions, with other Christian theological positions, and with contemporary cultures. The program is rigorous in its expectation that students master catholic and/or protestant theological traditions and probe critically the foundations of various theological positions. Students are expected to master the tools and techniques of research and to organize and integrate their knowledge so as to make an original contribution to theological discussion. Because the program includes faculty members who are expert in the Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, and Jewish traditions, it also offers a context in which the issues raised by religious pluralism can be explored, responsibly and in detail, and in which a Christian comparative theology can be pursued seriously. Comparative theology prepares students for careful theological reflection, usually from a Christian perspective, on non-Christian religions in their particularity, and on their significance for theology. Comparative theology entails the study of one or more religious traditions in addition to one's own, and critical reflection on one's own tradition in light of that other tradition or other traditions. Students are expected to acquire a significant understanding of a major non-Christian religion as well as a critical method used in the study of religions, for example, philosophy of religion, comparative religion, or history of religions. Like all other areas of theology, comparative theology's ultimate horizon is knowledge of God, the transcendent, or the nature of ultimate reality; it aims to be constructive theology. The practitioner, while rooted in one tradition (in this program, normally Christianity), becomes deeply affected by systematic, consistent attention to the details of one or more other religious and theological traditions, thereby informing continuing theological reflection upon his or her own tradition. It is this focused attention to the distinctive details of different traditions that distinguishes comparative theology from the theology of religions, but also opens the possibility of a newly and more deeply informed theology of religions. In turn, this study is brought into dialogue with some particular theme or topic of study in Christian theology (usually, as studied in one of the other areas of specialization: bible, history of Christian life and thought, systematic theology, theological ethics, or pastoral theology), and articulated in light of a theology of religions. Students in this area are thus prepared to take up a wide range of research projects, and also to teach one or more religious traditions in addition to chosen areas of Christian theology. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3880 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Theology - History of Christian Life and Thought | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The program is designed and taught by the ecumenical faculty of the theology department. One of the intrinsic components of the program is a call for a wise appropriation of catholic and/or protestant theological and doctrinal traditions, as well as critical and constructive dialogue with other major religions, with other Christian theological positions, and with contemporary cultures. The program is rigorous in its expectation that students master catholic and/or protestant theological traditions and probe critically the foundations of various theological positions. Students are expected to master the tools and techniques of research and to organize and integrate their knowledge so as to make an original contribution to theological discussion. Because the program includes faculty members who are expert in the Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, and Jewish traditions, it also offers a context in which the issues raised by religious pluralism can be explored, responsibly and in detail, and in which a Christian comparative theology can be pursued seriously. The history of Christian life and thought examines how different forms of Christian faith, theology and doctrine, behavior, ritual, and institutional setting came to manifest themselves over the course of Christian history. Students focus on how these various forms of Christian life and thought developed over time by looking not only to their direct social and religious contexts and their underlying philosophical and spiritual presuppositions, but also to the implications of such developments for the life of the Church, both immediate and long-term. While students in this area can study such diverse fields as history of exegesis, history of education, and institutional church history, as well as focus on individual authors, the current faculty in this area has a strong common interest in spirituality and in the history of theological developments. Their emphasis is on the study of the past in its "pastness," although secondarily the contemporary relevance of historical developments may be brought out as well. The faculty is interested in imparting to students a keen awareness of historical method by keeping them abreast of the contemporary historiographical debate. This area is for scholars whose teaching interests fall into a broad range of courses in the history of Christianity and whose research interests lie within at least one subfield of historical Christianity - such as the early Church, the medieval Church, the Reformation, counter-reformation, the Enlightenment, modernity, American Christianity, or Jewish history. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3880 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Theology - Systematic Theology | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The program is designed and taught by the ecumenical faculty of the theology department. One of the intrinsic components of the program is a call for a wise appropriation of catholic and/or protestant theological and doctrinal traditions, as well as critical and constructive dialogue with other major religions, with other Christian theological positions, and with contemporary cultures. The program is rigorous in its expectation that students master catholic and/or protestant theological traditions and probe critically the foundations of various theological positions. Students are expected to master the tools and techniques of research and to organize and integrate their knowledge so as to make an original contribution to theological discussion. Because the program includes faculty members who are expert in the Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, and Jewish traditions, it also offers a context in which the issues raised by religious pluralism can be explored, responsibly and in detail, and in which a Christian comparative theology can be pursued seriously. Systematic theology is the contemporary intellectual reflection on the Christian mysteries as an interrelated whole. The systematic faculty seeks to develop the student's ability to treat theological material systematically and constructively, that is, according to a method that attends to the coherence and interconnectedness of the elements of the Christian tradition. The necessary role of historical, dogmatic, and descriptive theological activity is hereby acknowledged. Their primary concern is the systematic and constructive elucidation of the Christian faith in a contemporary context, and they emphasize the relationships among theological themes and topics, including their growth and development in historical and systematic contexts. Essential to the practice of systematic theology is a methodical appreciation of the concerns that form the context for the great inquiries and debates of the tradition and modern times. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3880 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | Ph.D. in Theology - Theological Ethics | Full Time | Variable | US $29,044 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The program is designed and taught by the ecumenical faculty of the theology department. One of the intrinsic components of the program is a call for a wise appropriation of catholic and/or protestant theological and doctrinal traditions, as well as critical and constructive dialogue with other major religions, with other Christian theological positions, and with contemporary cultures. The program is rigorous in its expectation that students master catholic and/or protestant theological traditions and probe critically the foundations of various theological positions. Students are expected to master the tools and techniques of research and to organize and integrate their knowledge so as to make an original contribution to theological discussion. Because the program includes faculty members who are expert in the Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, and Jewish traditions, it also offers a context in which the issues raised by religious pluralism can be explored, responsibly and in detail, and in which a Christian comparative theology can be pursued seriously. Theological ethics prepares its graduates for teaching and research positions that call for specialization in theological ethics. It includes the ecumenical study of major Roman Catholic and protestant thinkers, and it attends to the Biblical foundations and theological contexts of ethics. In line with the conviction that faith and reason are complementary, the program explores the contributions of philosophical thought, both past and present. It includes a strong social ethics component, as well as offerings in other areas of applied ethics. The exploration of contemporary ethics is set in a critical, historical perspective and encourages attention to the global and multicultural character of the Christian community. | Students must have a bachelor's degree and undergraduate course work in calculus, physics, biochemistry, biology and chemistry, including organic chemistry. Applicants whose native language is not English must achieve a score of 600 or better (paper-based test) a 213 or better (computer-based test), or a 100 or better (internet-based test, with a speaking/listening score higher than 20) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Boston College | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theology, Boston College, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 3880 | Boston College is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic universities in the United States and was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863 and, with 3 teachers and 22 students, opened its doors on September 5, 1864. Through its first seven decades, it remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modern languages, and philosophy and religion. It is originally located on Harrison Avenue in Boston's South End, where it shared quarters with Boston College High School; the University outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. It moved to then-rural Chestnut Hill, on the site of the former Lawrence farm, where ground was broken on June 19, 1909 for the construction of Gasson Hall | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. | |
| 164924 | Boston College | PhD in Social Work | Full Time | Variable | US $952 per credit / unit | Graduate School of Social Work | This program provides to help students attain in-depth competence in a substantive area of social welfare. Students acquire expertise in applied social and behavioral science research methodologies that are especially appropriate for investigating critical policy and practice questions. This set of courses emphasizes analytic skills needed to understand, appraise and advance knowledge in social work. With these tools, the student selects a specific area of specialization and develops relevant social and behavioral science expertise to conduct significant research in that area. The learning process involves more than classroom instruction. Students are expected to work closely with faculty mentors in their roles as scholars and researchers. | Students must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college and a broad liberal arts background with at least 20 semester hours in the social, behavioral, and/or biological sciences. A strong undergraduate record is required to demonstrate the ability to complete graduate education. | Doctoral | Boston College | The modules include SW 951 Survey of Research Methods in Social and Behavioral Science; SW 952 Tools for Scholarship in Social and Behavioral Science; SW 953 Cross-Cultural Issues in Social and Behavioral Research; SW 954 Models for Social Work Intervention Research; SW 959 Doctoral Publishable Writing Project; SW 967 Statistical Analyses for Social and Behavioral Research; SW 968 Multivariate Analysis and Statistical Modeling; SW 980 History and Philosophy of Social Welfare in the U.S.; SW 983 International and Comparative Social Welfare; SW 992 Theories and Methods of Teaching in Professional Education; SW 994 Integrative Seminar for Doctoral Students. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | Graduate School of Social Work | Graduate School of Social Work, McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4020 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164924 | Boston College | RN to MS Option | Full Time | Variable | US $1,050 per credit / unit | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | This program enables registered nurses without a baccalaureate degree in nursing to obtain the MS degree, and prepares them for advanced practice nursing. The RN/MS students come from diverse backgrounds. They may possess a diploma with no other course work, an associate degree in nursing, an associate or bachelor's degree in another field, or various course credits acquired over time. All applicants, however, must demonstrate leadership potential, motivation, interest in a specific clinical specialty, and an excellent academic record. This option recognizes prior educational achievement and clinical experience. The school of nursing makes every attempt to maximize credits earned in prior educational programs and to recognize clinical expertise. Students may earn academic credit by transfer of courses and enrollment in courses at Boston College. Students already possessing a non-nursing BS or BA degree will have their general education requirements waived. | Students must hold a bachelor's degree, diploma, or associate's degree from a nationally accredited nursing program. They should have secured an undergraduate grade point average of B or better. They should have completed a course in statistics and should also have a current RN license to practice nursing. Students who speak a native language other than English must provide evidence of English proficiency. They should have secured a score of 600 on the paper-based test, 250 on the CBT test (computer-based test), or 100 on the new IBT test (Internet-Based Test) or higher on the Test of English, as a foreign language (TOEFL). Student copies or photocopies of TOEFL scores are not accepted. | Masters | Boston College | The modules include NU301 Culture and Health Care; NU315 Victim logy; NU317 Forensic Mental Health; NU318 Forensic Science I; NU319 Forensic Science Lab; NU402 Nursing Science I; NU403 Clinical Practice in Nursing I; NU406 Nursing Science II; NU407 Clinical Practice in Nursing II; NU408 Path physiology; NU411 Nursing Synthesis Practicum; NU415 Conceptual Basis for Advanced Nursing Practice; NU416 Ethical Reasoning and Issues in Advanced Nursing Practice; NU417 Advanced Practice Nursing within Complex Health Care Systems; NU420 Pharmacotherapeutics and Advanced Nursing Practice; NU426 Advanced Psychopharmacology; NU430 Advanced Health Assessment Across the Life Span; NU443 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing I; NU445 Individual Psychotherapies/Advanced Practice and Psychiatric Nursing Practice; NU450 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU450.01 Theoretical Found/Women's Health and Pediatric Nursing; NU453 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing I; NU457 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children I; NU462 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing I; NU463 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing I; NU465 Advance Practice in Gerontological Nursing I; NU472 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU473 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing I; NU490 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia I--Respiratory; NU491 Chemistry and Physics for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU502 Case Studies in Forensics; NU502.01 Case Studies in Forensics; NU520 Nursing Research Theory; NU524 Master's Research Practicum; NU525 Integrative Review of Nursing Research; NU543 Advanced Practice and Theory in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU545 Couple, Family, and Group Psychotherapy in Advanced Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing; NU553 Advanced Practice in Women's Health Nursing II; NU557 Advanced Practice in Ambulatory Care Nursing of Children II; NU557.01 Adv Prac/Pediatric Ambulatory Care II; NU562 Advanced Theory in Adult Health Nursing II; NU563 Advanced Practice in Adult Health Nursing II; NU565 Advanced Gerontologic Nursing Practice II; NU572 Advanced Theory in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU573 Advanced Practice in Community and Family Health Nursing II; NU590 Physiologic Variables for Nurse Anesthesia III; NU591 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia I; NU592 Advanced Principles for Nurse Anesthesia Practice; NU593 Clinical Practicum in Nurse Anesthesia II; NU641 Palliative Care II: Pain and Suffering in Seriously Ill; NU642 Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU643 Palliative Care III: Palliative Care and Adv Prac Nurs; NU644 Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU645 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Pain, Symand Suffering; NU646 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU646.01 Pediatric Palliative Care II: Practicum; NU647 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU647.01 Pediatric Palliative Care III: Practicum; NU672 Path physiologic Processes; NU680 Forensics: Fundamentals of Forensics/Nurse and Health; NU681 Forensics Care : Psychosocial and Legal Aspects; NU682 Forensic Nursing Care I:Practicum; NU683 Forensics Care (Theory) Vulnerable Populations; NU684 Crim Law and Sci Proc: Evidence Collection; NU685 Forensic Nursing Care II: Practicum; NU691 Nurse Anesthesia Residency I; NU693 Nurse Anesthesia Residency II; NU699 Independent Study in Nursing; NU701 Epistemology of Nursing; NU712 Nursing Science Processes and Outcomes NU714 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU714.01 Healthcare Policy: Moral and Sociopolitical Influences; NU751 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU751.01 Advanced Qualitative Research Methods; NU752 Advanced Quantitative Methods for Health Care Research; NU810 Research Practicum I; NU811 Research Practicum II; NU812 Research Practicum III; NU813 Research Practicum IV; NU901 Dissertation Advisement; NU902 Dissertation Advisement; NU998 Doctoral Comprehensives; NU999 Doctoral Continuation. | Boston College | Professor Gail Hoffman, Graduate Program Director | 12500 | 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467 | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate) | William F. Connell School of Nursing (Graduate), Boston College, Cushing Hall 140 Commonwealth Avenue, CHESTNUT HILL, Massachusetts, 02467, +1 617 552 4928 | Graduate School of Social Work saw its ranking climb from 24th to 14th in the US News and World Report’s 2009 America’s Best Graduate Schools report. “During the past few years this school have been competing for students, faculty, and staff with the top social work programs in the country,” said Dean Godenzi. “The new ranking follows this trend. I am grateful to my colleagues from the sister schools for their recognition of growth and I am indebted to Boston College for its strong commitment to the mission of social work education and research. Today’s result is a reflection of the amazing contributions and the hard work of GSSW students, faculty, and staff.” | Yes | Participants will be housed in air-conditioned dormitory suites at Boston College. The suites are composed of either two or four bedrooms sharing a common living area that has a refrigerator and a sink but no stove, plates or microwave. There is one bathroom for every two bedrooms and each bedroom has two beds. They can choose to either share a bedroom with another person or have their own bedroom. Rates for these rooms are $69 per person per night, for a single room in a suite; and $50 per person per night, for a double room in a suite. The suites are nicely appointed but provide only basic accommodations: sheets, two towels, a blanket, and a pillow. There are no bedside reading lamps and there is a Boston College dining hall, Corcoran Commons, across the street from the dormitory. |
| 164988 | Boston University | Accelerated LL.M. in Banking and Financial Law | Full Time | Variable | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This program is designed for students who have strong interest in both law and financial services, students may apply for the accelerated LL.M. in Banking and Financial Law. By taking qualifying courses during the second and third years of the J.D. program, students can graduate from the J.D. program with sufficient advanced standing to complete the LL.M. in Banking and Financial Law in just one additional semester. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | American Studies PhD | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of publication, teaching, and public history, and many have taken on positions as curators and directors of major cultural institutions and art agencies. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B. A. in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program must take fifteen courses in the following three categories. The assignment of a given course to one of these categories is determined by the bulletin listing in effect at the time of a student's enrollment in the course. Students must earn a minimum grade of C in all courses taken towards the CS concentration. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Boston University, 111 Cummington Street Room 138, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8919 | This department has a distinguished track record of academic excellence and major achievement in an increasingly vital field that is expanding at a rapid pace. Faculty research is published in the most prominent venues and recognized by significant citations and awards, both national and international. B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. students are recruited for internships and positions by such industry-leading firms as Motorola Labs, Google, and Microsoft and are recruited by some of the best computer science departments in the country as Ph.D. students, postdoctoral researchers, and tenure-track professors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Anthropology - Anthropology and Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program offers the student numerous ways to understand how religion works as a dynamic aspect of culture, and how individuals interact with their social environments to create systems of belief and ritual in their efforts to make sense of the world. Six courses in religion and six courses in anthropology are required with a grade of C or higher, as specified below. Those twelve courses must include Anthropology of Religion (taken either as CAS AN 384 or as CAS RN 387). Candidates for the B.A. with this joint concentration may not pursue a second concentration in religion or anthropology. They are, however, encouraged to take courses beyond the required twelve in either or both disciplines. Qualified seniors should consider Independent Work for Distinction, either AN 401/402 or RN 401/402. To ensure the most suitable program of study for the prospective student's areas of interest, courses should be selected in consultation with Professor Frank Korom, the program advisor < korom@bu.edu> For further information about the joint program, contact the program advisor or either department chair. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | AN 285 - Coping with Crisis in Contemporary Africa, AN 305- Comparative Family Systems in Asia, AN 307 - Turkey and Middle East Perspective, AN 312 - Peoples and Cultures of Africa, AN 312 - Peoples and Cultures of Africa, AN 318 - Southeast Asia: Tradition and Development, AN 319 -Anthropology of Muslim Cultures and Politics, AN 344 - Modern Japanese Society, AN 350 - Asians in America, AN 375 - Culture and Society of South Asia, AN 379 - China: Tradition and Transition, AN 379 - China: Tradition and Transition, AN 379 - China: Tradition and Transition, AN 379 - China: Tradition and Transition, AN 519 - Anthropology of Muslim Cultures and Politics, AN 520 - Nilotic Peoples: African Culture in Depth, AN 538 - Human Ecology of Modern Africa. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2195 | This department offers rigorous training in social and cultural theory and commitment to an anthropology capable of engaging the modern world. This departmentfocus on four interrelated topics: the culture, politics and economics of development; the anthropological study of history; the psycho cultural relationship between individual and society; and the comparative anthropology of the world religions, with special attention to Islam. The area strengths include the Middle East, Africa, and East Asia. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Anthropology - Biological Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program in biological anthropology starts with an introductory course (AN102) that exposes students to the entire field. Students can follow up with a variety of 300 level courses (two are required), ranging from primate adaptations, to human behavioral evolution, to human population variation, to human origins. The 500 level courses, which students would normally take in their junior or senior years, are largely lab oriented and give students hands-on experience with anatomy field methods in human biology, brain and language and human reproductive ecology. Students are required to take two of these courses as well. Additional requirements for the concentration include Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (AN101), an additional course in socio-cultural anthropology, a linguistics course, and two courses in archaeology. These courses are essential to providing a broader perspective on human cultural variation both past and present and the social processes that figure so prominently in the human experience. Two upper level biology courses are also required of concentrators. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: AN 102 - Human Behavioral Biology and Evolution, AN 210 - Medical Anthropology, AN 331 - Human Origins, AN 331 - Human Origins, AN 331 - Human Origins, AN 334 -Evolutionary Psychology, AN 335 - The Ape within: Chimpanzees and the Evolution of Human Behavior, AN 336 - Primate Evolutionary Ecology, AN 534 - Topics in Human Behavioral Evolution, AN 550 - Human Skeleton, AN 550 - Human Skeleton, AN 554 - Human Reproductive Ecology, AN 555 - Evolution of Brain and Language, AN 555 - Evolution of Brain and Language, AN 555 - Evolution of Brain and Language, AN 555 - Evolution of Brain and Language. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2195 | This department offers rigorous training in social and cultural theory and commitment to an anthropology capable of engaging the modern world. This departmentfocus on four interrelated topics: the culture, politics and economics of development; the anthropological study of history; the psycho cultural relationship between individual and society; and the comparative anthropology of the world religions, with special attention to Islam. The area strengths include the Middle East, Africa, and East Asia. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Astronomy and Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program helps students understand how physical concepts are applied in our universe. Whether students are interested in solar flares or the Big Bang, this joint-degree program arms them with the knowledge and skills to observe physics in our solar system and beyond. Students who choose this concentration will be prepared to enter graduate school to study astronomy or astrophysics. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Planetary Physics (AS 311), Stellar and Galactic Astrophysics (AS 312); Observational Astronomy (AS 441) OR Advanced Laboratory (PY 581); Calculus I and II (MA 123, 124) OR Enriched Calculus (MA 127); Multivariate Calculus (MA 225); Modern Physics (PY 354) OR Elementary Modern Physics (PY 313); Methods of Theoretical Physics (PY 355), Electromagnetic Fields and Waves I and II (PY 405, 406), Intermediate Mechanics (PY 408), Statistical Thermodynamics (PY 410), Quantum Physics (PY 451); and at least two courses from the following list: Extragalactic Astrophysics and Cosmology (AS 413), Solar and Space Physics (AS 414), and Quantum Physics (PY 452). Rcommended courses: Any from the above-required list if not taken as a principal course, as well as Electronics for Scientists PY 371; Remote Sensing of Environment (GE 302), Climate and the Environment (GE 310); Introduction to Computer Science (CS 111, 112). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program includes nine courses in the department and a number of related science courses. Following two prerequisite semesters of Introductory Biology (CAS BI 107 and BI 108 or 118), students select one course from each of the following areas: CAS BI 315 or 325 to fulfill the breadth requirement in physiology, endocrinology, and neurobiology (PER/Neuro); CAS BI 203, or 213 or 206 to fulfill the requirement in cell and molecular biology (CM); CAS BI 260 or 303 or 306 or 407 or 504 to fulfill the requirement in ecology, behavior, and evolution (EBE). Of the seven courses taken beyond CAS BI 107 and BI 108 or 118, five must be taken in the department, at least three must be at the 300–500 level, and three must have a laboratory or field component. A grade of C or higher is required for concentration credit in all of the following: biology courses numbered 191 or higher, required related courses, and recommended related courses. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Biology - Cell Biology, Molecular Biology and Genetics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program has provided a deeper understanding of the molecular basis for the functioning of all living organisms. The specialization in Cell Biology, Molecular Biology, and Genetics has been designed for students who wish to focus specifically on these aspects of biology. The specialization requires two introductory biology courses, three CMG foundation courses in cell biology, genetics, and molecular biology, and four courses chosen from a list of CMG advanced electives. In addition, there are Biology breadth requirements in physiology/neuroscience and ecology/behavior/evolution, as well as standard requirements in chemistry, physics, and mathematics. CMG students gain additional, specialized knowledge and experience in one or more of the CMG disciplines and are thus well prepared for graduate or professional study in the biomedical sciences. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Biology - Ecology and Conservation Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed for students seeking a greater depth of training in this critical area of contemporary biology. The specialization requires two introductory biology courses, three foundation courses in genetics, ecology, and conservation biology, and seven additional advanced electives in biology, selected from a broad range of courses in forest ecology, ecosystem ecology, tropical ecology, evolution, animal behavior, behavioral ecology, vertebrate biology, plant biology, biology of mammals, ornithology, molecular phylogenetics and evolution, and marine biology. In addition to these core biology courses, students are encouraged to take environmental science and policy courses offered by the Department of Geography and Environment. Qualified students may also participate in Boston University’s semester-long international Tropical Ecology Program, other approved off-campus field courses, and/or independent research projects with faculty during the summer or academic year. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Biology - Marine Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed to provide both Marine Science majors and interested Biology students with intensive academic and research experiences in marine science. Structured differently from the typical academic semester, students take four courses in successive blocks. Each block is typically 18 to 20 days, during which students focus on a single subject area. This structure allows students time for hands-on experiments, fieldwork outside the classroom, and a number of different opportunities for off-campus courses. In addition to on-campus courses, the program includes travel courses in Belize (Central America), in Scituate, MA. (departure point for the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary), at the New England Aquarium, and courses in Woods Hole, MA, and the Caribbean in partnership with the Sea Education Association. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Biology - Neurobiology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program requires students to have a broad foundation in the major disciplines of biology and at the same time provides enough flexibility for students to focus on specific areas of personal interest. The specialization requires two introductory biology courses; four foundation courses in cell biology, systems physiology, neuroscience, and animal behavior; and six additional advanced electives in biology and/or psychology. In addition to the broad range of courses, students also have many opportunities to conduct research in the laboratories of our faculty members. Research areas include: cell/molecular neurobiology, neurophysiology at both the cell/molecular and system level, and behavioral neuroendocrinology. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Biology - Quantitative Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed for qualified undergraduates interested in combining work in the biological sciences with training in mathematics. While allowing substantial flexibility, the specialization requires seven biology courses beyond Introductory Biology, many of which are designed to emphasize quantitative approaches to biological problems, plus five mathematics courses beyond calculus. By offering a comprehensive foundation in math and biology, the Quantitative Biology curriculum prepares students for a diversity of career options while preserving flexibility for changing student interests. Students who complete the QB specialization will be well prepared for graduate study in fields such as quantitative and mathematical biology, biomedical sciences, environmental and ecological sciences, and medicine. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Classical Studies - Ancient Greek | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program requires a minimum of ten courses. The requirements are as follows: CAS CL 101 or CL 321, eight courses from the offerings under ancient Greek above CAS CL 167, one additional Classical Studies course, at the 400 level or higher, in either a classical language or a topic in classical civilization or history. Up to two courses in Byzantine or modern Greek above CAS CG 112 may be used to fulfill the requirements. With the permission of the Chairman or the Director of Undergraduate Studies, one course from the offerings under classical civilization or UNI HU 539 or UNI HU 540 may be counted toward this concentration | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CAS CL 161 Beginning Greek , CAS CL 162 Intermediate Greek , CAS CL 261 Plato and Paul , CAS CL 262 Homeric Epic , CAS CL 391 Greek Seminar , CAS CL 393 Aeschylus, CAS CL 404 Advanced Topics in Greek Philosophy, CAS CL 493, 494 Directed Study in Greek , CAS CL 502 Ancient Greek and Roman Literature, CAS CL 560 Seminar in Ancient Greek History, CAS CL 561 Survey of Greek Literature I, CAS CL 562 Survey of Greek Literature II, CAS CL 563 Greek Prose Composition . | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Classical Studies - Ancient Greek and Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program requires a minimum of ten courses. The requirements are as follows: CAS CL 101 or CL 321 and CAS CL 102 or CL 322, four courses in one of the two classical languages above the 100 level, three courses in the other classical language above the 100 level, one additional Classical Studies course, at the 400 level or higher, in either a classical language or a topic in classical civilization or history. With the permission of the chairman or the Director of Undergraduate Studies, one course from the offerings under classical civilization may be counted toward this concentration. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are:CAS CL 111 Beginning Latin , CAS CL 112 Intermediate Latin, CAS CL 211 Readings in Latin Prose, CAS CL 212 Introduction to Latin Poetry, CAS CL 351 Latin Seminar, CAS CL 451 Advanced Latin Seminar, CAS CL 497, 498 Directed Study in Latin, CAS CL 520 Studies in Latin Literature, CAS CL 521 Survey of Latin Literature I, CAS CL 522 Survey of Latin Literature II, CAS CL 525 Studies in the Augustan Age, CAS CL 530 Latin Prose Composition. CAS CL 161 Beginning Greek , CAS CL 162 Intermediate Greek , CAS CL 261 Plato and Paul, CAS CL 262 Homeric Epic , CAS CL 391 Greek Seminar, CAS CL 393 Aeschylus, CAS CL 404 Advanced Topics in Greek Philosophy, CAS CL 493, 494 Directed Study in Greek, CAS CL 502 Ancient Greek and Roman Literature, CAS CL 560 Seminar in Ancient Greek History. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Classical Studies - Classical Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program in Classical Studies at Boston University comprises Latin and Ancient and Modern Greek; Greek and Roman history, literature, and culture; and the classical tradition. The students are thus engaged with some of the most profound and exciting thinkers and writers of all time. In their study of the founding cultures of the Western world, students explore issues of enduring importance in ethics, politics, art, literature, and history. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: CAS CL 101 Classical Civilization: The Glory of Greece , CAS CL 102 Classical Civilization: The Grandeur of Rome , CAS CL 202 Warfare in Antiquity, CAS CL 213 Greek and Roman Mythology, CAS CL 300 The Age of Pericles, CAS CL 302 Age of Augustus, CAS CL 303 The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, CAS CL 305 Topics in Mythology, CAS CL 310 The Classical Tradition in Modern Literature, CAS CL 314 Women in Ancient Rome, CAS CL 317 Greek and Roman Religion , CAS CL 321 Greek History , CAS CL 322 Roman History , CAS CL 324 Greek Drama in Translation , CAS CL 326 Ancient Epic, CAS CL 329 Roman Comedy, CAS CL 401, 402 Senior Independent Work , CAS CL 405 Advanced Topics in Ancient History, CAS CL 406 Advanced Topics in Classical Civilization, CAS CL 491, 492 Directed Study in Classical Studies . | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Classical Studies - Classics and Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program requires a minimum of twelve courses: six in classics and six in philosophy. Classics requirements: CL 101 or CL 321,CL 261 (Note that CL 161 and CL 162, or their equivalent, are prerequisites for enrollment in CL 261, which is the third semester of ancient Greek), four other courses at or above the 200 level in classical civilization or classical languages. Philosophy requirements: one of the following: CAS PH 100, 110, 140, 150, 155, or 160, PH 300 , PH 310, two courses in philosophy at the 200 level or above , one of the following: PH 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, or 480 . | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Classical Studies - Classics and Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program is especially recommended for students with a particular interest in myth studies. While this concentration does not require work in Greek or Latin, second- and third-year classical language courses are counted toward this concentration. Students are encouraged to consider the study of a classical language and reminded that both Greek and Latin fulfill the CAS language requirement. Students interested in a concentration in classics and religion must consult an advisor in both the Department of Classical Studies and the Department of Religion. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Classical Studies - Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program requires a minimum of ten courses. The requirements are as follows: CAS CL 102 or CL 322 , eight courses from the offerings under Latin above CAS CL 117 , one additional Classical Studies course, at the 400 level or higher, in either a classical language or a topic in classical civilization or history. With the permission of the Chairman or the Director of Undergraduate Studies, one course from the offerings under classical civilization may be counted toward this concentration. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are:CAS CL 111 Beginning Latin , CAS CL 112 Intermediate Latin, CAS CL 211 Readings in Latin Prose, CAS CL 212 Introduction to Latin Poetry, CAS CL 351 Latin Seminar, CAS CL 451 Advanced Latin Seminar, CAS CL 497, 498 Directed Study in Latin, CAS CL 520 Studies in Latin Literature, CAS CL 521 Survey of Latin Literature I, CAS CL 522 Survey of Latin Literature II, CAS CL 525 Studies in the Augustan Age, CAS CL 530 Latin Prose Composition. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Earth Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | This program is intended to provide the student with a broad Earth Sciences background in preparation for graduate study or entry-level professional employment. A concentration in Earth Sciences requires the completion of 15 courses approved by the department, with a grade of C or better in each of the required courses. In addition, the student must pass an approved summer field course. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue STO Room 141, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2532 | This department has of 15 faculty and approximately 25 graduate and 85 undergraduate students. This department focus is in two broad thematic areas, Climate - Surface Interactions and Tectonic - Lithospheric Processes. They promote excellence in both teaching and research, in a collegial and collaborative academic setting. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Earth Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | This program is intended to provide the student with a broad Earth Sciences background in preparation for graduate study or entry-level professional employment. A concentration in Earth Sciences requires the completion of 15 courses approved by the department, with a grade of C or better in each of the required courses. In addition, the student must pass an approved summer field course. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue STO Room 141, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2532 | This department has of 15 faculty and approximately 25 graduate and 85 undergraduate students. This department focus is in two broad thematic areas, Climate - Surface Interactions and Tectonic - Lithospheric Processes. They promote excellence in both teaching and research, in a collegial and collaborative academic setting. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Earth Sciences - Environmental Earth Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | This program is intended to provide the student with vocational tools for employment in the environmental industry or an adequate scientific background for further studies in areas such as environmental policy, teaching, and government. A concentration in Environmental Earth Sciences requires the completion of 15 courses approved by the department with a grade of C or better for Earth Sciences courses and C- or better for related courses. In addition, a summer field course is strongly recommended. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue STO Room 141, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2532 | This department has of 15 faculty and approximately 25 graduate and 85 undergraduate students. This department focus is in two broad thematic areas, Climate - Surface Interactions and Tectonic - Lithospheric Processes. They promote excellence in both teaching and research, in a collegial and collaborative academic setting. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Earth Sciences - Geophysics and Planetary Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | This program is a joint major between the Earth Sciences and Astronomy departments. This multidisciplinary program is built around an array of geology, geophysics, astronomy, physics, and geography courses. Students who embark on this joint concentration develop the skills to observe structures and processes on a planetary scale. This concentration prepares students for research in geophysics, geodynamics, seismology, and planetary science or careers in science education, management, computing, or writing. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue STO Room 141, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2532 | This department has of 15 faculty and approximately 25 graduate and 85 undergraduate students. This department focus is in two broad thematic areas, Climate - Surface Interactions and Tectonic - Lithospheric Processes. They promote excellence in both teaching and research, in a collegial and collaborative academic setting. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Economics and Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program requires the Prerequisites: MA 123 and 124, or 127, or 129; EC 101 or 111 and EC 102 or 112. A minimum of eight economics courses (distributed according to the description given in the Economics section of the Boston University Undergraduate Bulletin). A minimum of six mathematics courses (in addition to Calculus 1 and 2) distributed as follows: CS 111 or 113; MA 225 or 230, MA 242 or 442; MA 569; plus two others, with at least one being numbered above 400, selected from among MA 213, 214, 226 or 231, 416, 581, 582, CS 112. Finally, students must satisfy a statistics requirement, either by taking MA 213, 214, or by taking courses with comparable statistics content offered in the Department of Economics. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Geography - Environmental Analysis and Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program requires the completion of 16 courses with the grade of C or higher, as approved by the student’s advisor. Those sixteen courses comprise seven required principal courses, five required related math and science courses, and four approved elective courses. hese seven required courses provide disciplinary foundations in biology, earth sciences, and geography relevant to interdisciplinary study in environmental science: CAS GE 100, GE 275, and GE 310; BI 107 and BI 306; ES 105, and ES 317. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Geography - Environmental Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program is flexible with elective courses in the junior and senior years, and students can include courses offered through the BU Marine Program, the Tropical Ecology Program in Ecuador, as well as many courses from summer field programs, the School for Field Studies and other environmental study abroad programs. A number of students double-major in related disciplines such as biology, marine science, or geology. There are many possible career options for students with an Environmental Science degree. Graduate school in any number of fields is possible, including both traditional fields such as biology, geology, and geography, as well as the growing number of graduate programs in Environmental Science. An Environmental Science graduate is a strong candidate for a graduate degree in ecosystem ecology; rarely do standard Biology majors have time in their schedules to take geology courses as well as courses in GIS and remote sensing. Similarly, a student applying for graduate work in remote sensing has a strong background in ecology and geomorphology, and prospective hydrogeologists will begin with a broad knowledge of biology and water chemistry. Students also can continue in non-science careers where their science degrees are strong assets, such as environmental law and environmental policy. Many students find employment in the expanding field of environmental consulting. Environmental consulting firms across the country are hiring people who are trained broadly in environmental biology, hydrogeology, and chemistry, particularly if they are skilled in the use of computers and are trained in cost-benefit analysis and risk assessment. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Geography - Human Geography | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program is the study of the spatial organization of human activity and human interaction with the physical environment. The concentration with specialization in human geography can follow either of two tracks: the general track, which covers economic, political, and cultural geography, and the more focused economic geography track. Both tracks stress the application of analytical methods, including Geographic Information Systems (GIS). Graduating human geography concentrators may find employment in urban and regional planning departments; firms consulting on transportation, industrial location, and retail site planning; and state and federal agencies with responsibilities for social services, economic development, and infrastructure policy. Human geography also provides an excellent background for students planning to do graduate studies in fields such as business administration, transportation planning, public policy, and law. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: CAS GE 100 Introduction to Environmental Science, CAS GE 101 Natural Environments: The Atmosphere, CAS GE 102 The Cultural Landscape, CAS GE 103 Economic Geography, CAS GE 104 Natural Environments: The Physical Landscape, CAS GE 110 Our Changing Planet: The Perspective from Space, CAS GE 201 World Regional Geography I, CAS GE 202 World Regional Geography II, CAS GE 226 Geography of the Boston Region, CAS GE 250 The Fate of Nations: Climate, Resources, and Institutions, CAS GE 275 Introduction to Quantitative Environmental Modeling, CAS GE 300 Geography of World Commerce, CAS GE 302 Remote Sensing of Environment. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Geography - Physical Geography | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program is the study of natural systems and cycles that interact within the Earth's life layer where land and oceans meet the atmosphere. The concentration in physical geography has been structured to provide students with a srtong background in the natural sciences and expertise in three main topical areas of physical geography: 1) vegetation science, 2) hydrology, 3) climate. The program emphasizes the application of advanced information technology to geographical analysis with courses in geographical information systems (GIS) and remote sensing. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Hospitality Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Hospitality Administration | This is a s a full-time, four year bachelor degree program. Grounded in the liberal arts, students first fulfill the core curriculum and then take specialized hospitality courses, preparing them for work in this international industry. With the breadth of the curriculum and the way integrate work experiences into the academic requirements, students here learn the business of managing hotels, food service, travel and tourism, entertainment, and people. This degree program requires students to participate in an international experience as well as 800 hours of field internships. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: HF100 Introduction to the Hospitality Industry, HF120 Fundamentals of Food Service Management, HF140 Hospitality Field Experience I, HF200 Hospitality Management for Business Majors, HF210 Financial Accounting for the Hospitality Industry, HF220 Food and Beverage Management, HF240 Hospitality Field Experience II, HF250 Hospitality Law, HF260 Hospitality Marketing Principles, HF270 Lodging Operations and Technology. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Hospitality Administration | School of Hospitality Administration, 928 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3261 | The School of Hospitality Administration is a full-time, four-year bachelor degree program. Grounded in the liberal arts, students first fulfill the core curriculum and then take specialized hospitality courses, preparing them for work in this international industry. With the breadth of the curriculum and the way integrate work experiences into academic requirements, students here learn the business of managing hotels, food service, travel and tourism, entertainment, and people. This degree program requires students to participate in an international experience as well as 800 hours of field internships. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program offer reflect a broad spectrum of areas in theory and application within the mathematical sciences. Students concentrating in mathematics may select programs emphasizing pure mathematics, classical applied mathematics, or statistics and probability. Aware of the importance of mathematics in a technological society and in keeping with the philosophy of liberal arts, the department encourages concentrators to pursue broad programs of study, building a sound foundation of core mathematical ability while learning about contemporary applications of their subject. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Mathematics - Pure and Applied Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program has the following prinicipal courses: Multivariable Calculus: MA 225 or MA 230, Elementary Differential Equations MA 226 or MA 230, Linear Algebra: MA 242 or MA 442, Introduction to Computer Sciences 1 CS 111 or CS 113, and one other mathematics or computer science course selected in consultation with a mathematics faculty advisor. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: Computability and Logic, Foundations of Mathematics: MA 531, 532 , Modern Algebra: MA 541, 542, Numerical Analysis: MA 555, 556, Methods of Applied Mathematics: MA 561, 562, Differential Geometry / Topology: MA 563, 564, Operations Research: MA 569, 570, Probability and Statistics: 2 of MA 581, 582, 583. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Mathematics - Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program requires Lower Division Calculus: CAS MA 123 and 124, or 127, or 129, or equivalent; Multivariate Calculus: CAS MA 225 or 230; Linear Algebra: CAS MA 242 or 442; Introduction to Probability and Statistics: CAS MA 213, 214; Introduction to Computer Science: CAS CS 111. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: CAS MA 416 Analysis of Variance, CAS MA 575 Linear Models, Two of the following three courses: CAS MA 581 Probability, CAS MA 582 Mathematical Statistics, CAS MA 583 Introduction to Stochastic Processes. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Mathematics and Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Lower Division:CAS MA 123 and 124, or 127, or 129, or equivalent, 225 or 230, 242 or 442, 293, and 294. CAS CS 111 and 112 or equivalent, and CS 210. Upper Division CAS CS 330, 332, and 350; two additional computer science courses numbered above 400; one two-course sequence selected from: CAS MA 531–532, MA 541–542, MA 555–556, MA 569–570; two additional MA courses numbered 200 or above. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Mathematics and Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program with the mathematics education courses required for high school teaching certification. Advisors in both the CAS Mathematics Department and the SED Mathematics Education Department should be consulted, as the scheduling of course programs requires careful planning. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS MA 123 Calculus I, CAS MA 124 Calculus II, CAS MA 213 Basic Statistics and Probability, CAS MA 225 Multivariate Calculus , CAS MA 226 Differential Equations, CAS MA 242 Linear Algebra , CAS MA 242 Linear Algebra , CAS MA 341 Introduction to Number Theory, CAS MA 505 History of Mathematics , CAS MA 528 Introduction to Modern Geometry. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Mathematics and Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program with the mathematics education courses required for high school teaching certification. Advisors in both the CAS Mathematics Department and the SED Mathematics Education Department should be consulted, as the scheduling of course programs requires careful planning. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS MA 123 Calculus I, CAS MA 124 Calculus II, CAS MA 213 Basic Statistics and Probability, CAS MA 225 Multivariate Calculus , CAS MA 226 Differential Equations, CAS MA 242 Linear Algebra , CAS MA 242 Linear Algebra , CAS MA 341 Introduction to Number Theory, CAS MA 505 History of Mathematics , CAS MA 528 Introduction to Modern Geometry. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Mathematics and Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This degree program is for students who wish to combine the fields of mathematics and philosophy, usually with an emphasis on logic. The Prerequisites are CAS MA 123 and 124, or 127, or 129, or equivalent; MA 225 or 230; MA 293; and CAS PH 100 or 110. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The required courses are : CAS MA 242 or 442; MA 531 (or PH 461 or PH 661) and MA 532 (or PH 462 or PH 662); MA 411–412 or 511–512; any one of the following: MA 294, 341, or any course numbered 400 or higher. Required Philosophy Courses:CAS PH 468; three courses in philosophy above the 100 level; any two of the following: CAS PH 422, 443, 460, 474. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Philosophy and Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program provides a framework within which students can better understand some of the more theoretical aspects of the field of Physics. With this degree option, the Physics and Philosophy departments enable students to study the fundamental, philosophical questions underlying modern physics, the study of matter and energy, and how they interact.The prerequisites are: One course in philosophy at the 100 level; Principles of Physics (PY 251, 252) OR General Physics (PY 211, 212); PY 353 (Offered depending on student interest); Calculus I and II (CAS MA 123, 124). | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: History of Ancient Philosophy (PH 300), History of Modern Philosophy (PH 310), Philosophy of Science (PH 270); Symbolic Logic (PH 360), PH 467 OR Philosophical Problems of Logic and Mathematics (PH 468); Philosophy of Physics (PH 470) OR a directed study in philosophy. Physics Requirements: Multivariate Calculus (MA 225); Modern Physics (PY 354), Methods of Theoretical Physics (PY 355), Electromagnetic Fields and Waves I and II (PY 405, 406), Intermediate Mechanics (PY 408), Quantum Physics (PY 451, 452). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Physics - Option One | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program provides students with a strong physics preparation, but also allows them the flexibility to pursue an inter-disciplinary academic program combining physics with training in a related science (Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Mathematics, Geography, Energy and Environmental Studies or Earth Sciences). It is well suited for students planning to pursue graduate studies in another discipline or entering a career in a related field upon graduation. Students pursuing Option I must consult closely with their physics advisor and file a formal plan of study with the department. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The principal courses: Electromagnetic Fields and Waves I (PY 405), Intermediate Mechanics (PY 408), and Quantum Physics (PY 451). Two additional physics courses at the 300 level or above (but not including PY 313, 354, 355, 401, 402, 482, 491, 492, or 581) are also required. Multivariate Calculus (MA225), recommended courses: Electronics for Scientists (PY 371), Electromagnetic Fields and Waves II (PY 406), Advanced Scientific Computing in Physics (PY 421), Statistical Thermodynamics (PY 410), Quantum Physics (PY 452) , Undergraduate Physics Seminar (PY 482). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Physics - Option Two | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program provides students with a comprehensive and rigorous education in classical and modern physics. It is well suited for students intending to pursue graduate study in physics or a closely related field, or planning to enter a technical physics-related career upon graduation. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | This program requires Electromagnetic Fields and Waves I and II (PY 405, 406), Intermediate Mechanics (PY 408), Statistical Thermodynamics (PY 410), Quantum Physics (PY 451, 452) and Advanced Laboratory (PY 581). An additional physics course is also required. This may be any physics course at the 300 level or higher with the exceptions of PY 313, 354, 401, 402, 482, 491, and 492, Multivariate Calculus (MA225) , recommended courses: Electronics for Scientists (PY 371), Senior Independent Work (PY 401, 402), Advanced Scientific Computing (PY 421), Undergraduate Physics Seminar (PY 482), Introduction to Solid State Physics (PY 543), and Introduction to Particle Physics (PY 551). Students planning to pursue a graduate program in physics or a closely related discipline are strongly encouraged to enhance their mathematics education with some or all of the following: Linear Algebra (MA 242), Advanced Calculus (MA 411), Complex Variables (MA 412), and Methods of Applied Mathematics (MA 561). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A. in Physics and Other CAS Field | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program major with another CAS field, such as Mathematics or English Literature are paired. Students choose between Option I and II for their Physics major. All requirements of both majors must be met, and any overlapping courses may be credited toward both majors, within a specified limit. Students should plan carefully with a faculty advisor in each department before they declare two majors. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A/M.A in Astrophysics and Space Physics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program in Astrophysics and Space Physics is designed for those well-prepared students who wish to obtain a master’s degree by adding a fifth year of intensive study in Astrophysics and Space Physics. The requirements of the BA/MA program consist of those for the BA in Astronomy and Physics plus those of the MA in Astronomy. There are two tracks in the program, one comprising 38 courses plus a master’s thesis, and one comprising 40 courses without a thesis. Further details may be obtained at the Department of Astronomy office or from the Director of Graduate Studies. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. Only those students with a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 overall and 3.3 in mathematics, Physics, and astronomy courses will normally be admitted. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A/M.A in Physics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program is intended for students who want to continue their education in Physics at a graduate level, as well as for students who want to extend their knowledge of Physics beyond the undergraduate level before entering the job market. Students should enroll in this program no later than the end of their sophomore year. No student will be admitted to the program later than the end of the junior year. Before entering the program, students must achieve an overall GPA of 3.0 and a minimum GPA of 2.7 (B–) in sciences and mathematics, as well as complete the 300-level course requirements for the BA with a concentration in Physics. Before award of the dual degree, students must satisfy all CAS degree requirements. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Electromagnetic Fields and Waves I and II (PY 405, 406), Intermediate Mechanics (PY 408), Statistical Thermodynamics (PY 410), Quantum Physics (PY 451, 452), Mathematical Physics (PY 501), Quantum Mechanics I and II (PY 511, 512), Electromagnetic Theory I (PY 521), Statistical Mechanics I (PY 541), Advanced Laboratory (PY 581), and either Introduction to Solid State Physics (PY 543) OR Introduction to Particle Physics (PY 551). In addition, students are required to enroll for two semesters of Directed Research (GRS PY 901, 902) in their final year, in connection with their work on a master’s thesis, or to achieve a “low pass” on the graduate comprehensive examination. In the latter case, the student must also take one additional Physics course at the 500 level or above. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.A/M.A in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion - Undergraduate | This is a is a flexible program that can be designed to meet a broad range of intellectual and personal needs-including the needs of those students preparing for teaching careers in secondary education. The concentration consists of at least 18 courses (including CAS RN 495 for concentrators) completed with a grade of B or higher, 10 of which must be at the 500 level or above. Admission to the program is competitive and normally occurs at the beginning of the student's junior year. Students considering the program should consult with an advisor as early as possible in order to formulate an appropriate plan of study. They should also meet with the departmental Director of Undergraduate Studies to discuss the application procedure. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion - Undergraduate | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion - Undergraduate, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2635 | This department inspires individuals to make peace, and to commit unspeakable violence. It transforms cultures and societies, and is transformed by them. In the Department of Religion at Boston University, explore religion in its many manifestations. The aim is not to make students more (or less) religious, but to explore with them the beliefs and practices, symbols and rites that have moved the faithful throughout time and across the globe, and to explore perennial questions about the meaning of life and death. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Acting | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program prepares talented and committed students for careers in the professional world of Theatre and the related media of Film and Television. The program curriculum stresses the development of imagination, intellect, physical and vocal skills, technique, and professional behavior. This allows students to create a wide range of roles in performances of varying styles. During each year of the program, courses in acting, movement, voice and speech, and dramatic literature follow a carefully integrated sequence of class exercises and related public performance. The committed students who pursue an Acting degree at Boston University discover who they are, what they do well, and what they are capable of doing. They learn to be believable actors and to work productively under the stress of the theatrical profession. Most importantly, they learn to integrate performance skills with personal sensibility. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Costume Design | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program program at the School of Theatre is an intensive conservatory program with a national reputation. The goal of the program is to help students achieve professional competence. This program requires a serious commitment of time and energy from students. The program stresses collaboration and process. The School's complex at the BU Theatre site consists of three interconnected buildings that house two theatres as well as all of the shops for creating the productions scenery, costumes, lighting, sound classrooms and offices for the School, and some Huntington Theatre offices. The design students and faculty all work there together, in close association with the staff for the professional theatre in residence the Huntington Theatre Company many of whom are also adjunct faculty. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS WR Writing Requirement 4cr, CFA DR 159 A1 Drawing and Painting Lab 2cr, CFA DR 165 A1 Drafting 1 1cr, CFA DR 153 Intro to Design 2cr, CFA DR 161 Intro to Theatre Practice 2cr, CFA DR 350 A1 Scenery Colloquium 1cr, CFA DR 650 Production 4cr, CAS Liberal Arts Elective, CFA DR 160 A1 Drawing and Painting Lab, CFA DR 166 Drafting 2, CFA DR 154 Intro to Design, CFA DR 350 A1 Scenery Colloquium, CFA DR 650 Production, CFA DR 127 Theatre Ensemble. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Costume Production | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program program prepares students for professional careers in the practical realization of scenery and costumes. In order to establish a common vocabulary and a set of fundamental perceptions about goals and procedures, the first two years of the curriculum closely parallel those of the design program. As the content of the classes becomes more sophisticated and specific, the production curriculum begins to diverge from that of the design disciplines, emphasizing its own particular orientations. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Lighting Design | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program program at the School of Theatre is an intensive conservatory program with a national reputation. The goal of the program is to help students achieve professional competence. This program requires a serious commitment of time and energy from students. The program stresses collaboration and process. The School's complex at the BU Theatre site consists of three interconnected buildings that house two theatres as well as all of the shops for creating the productions scenery, costumes, lighting, sound classrooms and offices for the School, and some Huntington Theatre offices. The design students and faculty all work there together, in close association with the staff for the professional theatre in residence the Huntington Theatre Company many of whom are also adjunct faculty. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS WR Writing Requirement 4cr, CFA DR 159 A1 Drawing and Painting Lab 2cr, CFA DR 165 A1 Drafting 1 1cr, CFA DR 153 Intro to Design 2cr, CFA DR 161 Intro to Theatre Practice 2cr, CFA DR 350 A1 Scenery Colloquium 1cr, CFA DR 650 Production 4cr, CAS Liberal Arts Elective, CFA DR 160 A1 Drawing and Painting Lab, CFA DR 166 Drafting 2, CFA DR 154 Intro to Design, CFA DR 350 A1 Scenery Colloquium, CFA DR 650 Production, CFA DR 127 Theatre Ensemble. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Performance Core | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program provides a foundation for all future study in either the Acting or Theatre Arts majors. Through improvisation, scene study, ensemble work, and exercise, students begin the journey toward the free, integrated, and transformable expression of the voice, body, intellect, imagination, and emotion. Performance Core classes include:Acting, Movement, Voice and Speech, Alexander Technique, Theatre Ensemble, Stagecraft, ntroduction to Dramatic Literature. The Freshman Core is designed to provide an appropriate context for faculty evaluations of each student's strengths, interests, and potential for success in the upper years of training. At the end of the freshman year, each student declares a major in either Acting or Theatre Arts. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Scenic Design | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program program at the School of Theatre is an intensive conservatory program with a national reputation. The goal of the program is to help students achieve professional competence. This program requires a serious commitment of time and energy from students. The program stresses collaboration and process. The School's complex at the BU Theatre site consists of three interconnected buildings that house two theatres as well as all of the shops for creating the productions scenery, costumes, lighting, sound classrooms and offices for the School, and some Huntington Theatre offices. The design students and faculty all work there together, in close association with the staff for the professional theatre in residence the Huntington Theatre Company many of whom are also adjunct faculty. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS WR Writing Requirement 4cr, CFA DR 159 A1 Drawing and Painting Lab 2cr, CFA DR 165 A1 Drafting 1 1cr, CFA DR 153 Intro to Design 2cr, CFA DR 161 Intro to Theatre Practice 2cr, CFA DR 350 A1 Scenery Colloquium 1cr, CFA DR 650 Production 4cr, CAS Liberal Arts Elective, CFA DR 160 A1 Drawing and Painting Lab, CFA DR 166 Drafting 2, CFA DR 154 Intro to Design, CFA DR 350 A1 Scenery Colloquium, CFA DR 650 Production, CFA DR 127 Theatre Ensemble. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Sound Design | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program program at the School of Theatre is an intensive conservatory program with a national reputation. The goal of the program is to help students achieve professional competence. This program requires a serious commitment of time and energy from students. The program stresses collaboration and process. The School's complex at the BU Theatre site consists of three interconnected buildings that house two theatres as well as all of the shops for creating the productions scenery, costumes, lighting, sound classrooms and offices for the School, and some Huntington Theatre offices. The design students and faculty all work there together, in close association with the staff for the professional theatre in residence the Huntington Theatre Company many of whom are also adjunct faculty. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS WR Writing Requirement 4cr, CAS AH 111 A1Art History 1 4cr, CFA DR 159 A1Drafting 1 1cr, CFA DR 153 Intro to Design 2cr, CFA DR 161 Intro to Theatre Practice 2cr, CFA DR 350 C1Sound, Colloquium 0.5cr CFA DR 650 Production 2cr, CAS Liberal Arts Elective 4cr, CAS AH 112 A1Art History 2 4cr, CFA DR 269 A1Vectorworks 1 1cr , CFA DR 154 ? Intro to Design 2cr, CFA DR 127 Theatre Ensemble 2cr, CFA DR 172 A1Systems Basics 1cr, CFA DR 350 C1Sound Colloquium 0.5cr, CFA DR 162 A1Methods of Construction2cr , CFA DR 650 Production 2cr. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Stage Management | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program experience the process of mounting a theatrical event that is precisely organized and plays with seamless artistry. These students crave knowledge in all aspects of theatre production, and their program of study provides training in most major areas of theatre activity. The program also orchestrates a series of progressively demanding assignments in the management of productions. Students within this program consequently share a common experience of both specific focus and broad responsibility that leads to an unusually strong sense of community. In the first two years, study includes basic work in design, production, and performance. Curricular choices include courses in the principles of design and crafts for the stage, as well as in voice and speech, movement, acting, theatre history and literature, and in stage management. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS WR Writing Requirement 4cr, CFA DR 159 A1 Drawing & Painting Lab 2cr, CFA DR 165 A1 Drafting 1 1cr, CFA DR 153 ? Intro to Design 2cr, CFA DR 161 Intro to Theatre Practice 2cr, CFA DR 350 G1Stage Mgnt Colloquium 0.5cr , CFA DR 650 Production 4c, CAS Liberal Arts Elective 4cr, PDP First Aid 0.5 , CFA DR 154 Intro to Design 2cr, CFA DR 127 Theatre Ensemble 1 2cr, CFA DR 162 A1 Methods of Construction 2 cr, CFA DR 356 A1 Stage Management 2cr, CFA DR 350 G1Stage Mgnt Colloquium 0.5cr, CFA DR 650 Production. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Technical Production | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program program prepares students for professional careers in the practical realization of scenery and costumes. In order to establish a common vocabulary and a set of fundamental perceptions about goals and procedures, the first two years of the curriculum closely parallel those of the design program. As the content of the classes becomes more sophisticated and specific, the production curriculum begins to diverge from that of the design disciplines, emphasizing its own particular orientations. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.F.A. in Theatre Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program offers unique training for students with vital theatrical sensibilities and wide-ranging interests and abilities. The Performance track offers two approaches that serve two kinds of students: those who demonstrate the maturity to create an interdisciplinary program combining theatre with another field of study and those who demonstrate the sustained motivation and imagination to create original works. The Design, Production and Management Track offers students interested in exploring the greater vision of creating and staging theatre a chance to blend disciplines and create their own program. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.S. in Advertising | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program requires total of 32 courses. Of these, 17 must be in the liberal arts. To satisfy the requirements of any of the three 16-course concentrations offered by the Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations, students take a combination of two courses required of all students, two selected from a list of options, three selected from liberal arts and five from one of the three major areas of concentration (each of which has its own pattern of requirements). The remaining three or four courses (depending on the concentration) are electives. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | COM CM 331 Writing for Mass Communication, COM CM 380 Theory and Process of Communication, COM CM 303 Organizational Structure and Behavior, COM CM 311 Oral Presentations, COM CM 321 Mass Communication Research, COM CM 409 Persuasion and Public Opinion, COM CM 510 Computers in Communication, COM CM 481 Law of Communication, COM CM 509 Principles of Persuasion. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.S. in Communication Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program requires 32 courses. Of these, 17 must be in the liberal arts. To satisfy the requirements of any of the three 16-course concentrations offered by the Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations, students take a combination of two courses required of all students, two selected from a list of options, three selected from liberal arts and five from one of the three major areas of concentration (each of which has its own pattern of requirements). The remaining three or four courses (depending on the concentration) are electives. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | COM CM 331 Writing for Mass Communication, COM CM 380 Theory and Process of Communication, COM CM 303 Organizational Structure and Behavior, COM CM 311 Oral Presentations, COM CM 321 Mass Communication Research, COM CM 409 Persuasion and Public Opinion, COM CM 510 Computers in Communication, COM CM 481 Law of Communication, COM CM 509 Principles of Persuasion. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.S. in Interdisciplinary Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | This program specializations that cross disciplinary or departmental lines or involve the drawing together of a unique combination of courses to meet particular career goals are organized by the student with a faculty advisor. Each individual program must meet tests of coherence of design and relevance. A formal application must be submitted to the College of Engineering Undergraduate Committee during the sophomore or junior year of study to gain acceptance into this program. A coordinated sequence of courses that provides mastery of the important principles and techniques in a well-defined field ordinarily will be approved. Some recent interdisciplinary or innovative concentrations include environmental science and music technology. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering, 15 Saint Marys Street, Boston University, BROOKLINE, Massachusetts, 02446, +1 617 353 2842 | The Department of Manufacturing Engineering (MFG) at Boston University is a truly interdisciplinary enterprise. It was the first manufacturing engineering program in the United States and remains in the top tier of academic programs in this field. Teaching and research focus on engineering design, manufacturing processes and materials, and the management and control of man-made systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | B.S. in Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program requires total of 32 courses. Of these, 17 must be in the liberal arts. To satisfy the requirements of any of the three 16-course concentrations offered by the Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations, students take a combination of two courses required of all students, two selected from a list of options, three selected from liberal arts and five from one of the three major areas of concentration (each of which has its own pattern of requirements). The remaining three or four courses (depending on the concentration) are electives. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | COM CM 331 Writing for Mass Communication, COM CM 380 Theory and Process of Communication, COM CM 303 Organizational Structure and Behavior, COM CM 311 Oral Presentations, COM CM 321 Mass Communication Research, COM CM 409 Persuasion and Public Opinion, COM CM 510 Computers in Communication, COM CM 481 Law of Communication, COM CM 509 Principles of Persuasion. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | B.S. in Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program requires total of 32 courses. Of these, 17 must be in the liberal arts. To satisfy the requirements of any of the three 16-course concentrations offered by the Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations, students take a combination of two courses required of all students, two selected from a list of options, three selected from liberal arts and five from one of the three major areas of concentration (each of which has its own pattern of requirements). The remaining three or four courses (depending on the concentration) are electives. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | COM CM 331 Writing for Mass Communication, COM CM 380 Theory and Process of Communication, COM CM 303 Organizational Structure and Behavior, COM CM 311 Oral Presentations, COM CM 321 Mass Communication Research, COM CM 409 Persuasion and Public Opinion, COM CM 510 Computers in Communication, COM CM 481 Law of Communication, COM CM 509 Principles of Persuasion. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | BA in Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | This program in astronomy begin by surveying the solar system and beyond (AS 202-203). As they advance their mathematical and physics understanding, they study Planetary Physics (AS 311) and Stellar and Galactic Astrophysics (AS 312) in more depth. As upperclassmen, astronomy concentrators select from a number of advanced astronomy classes (AS 413, AS 414 and/or AS 441). Astronomy concentrators often engage in directed research with a faculty advisor (CAS AS 491, 492). They also often complement their studies with computer science, math and geology classes. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy, 725 Commonwealth Avenue Room 514, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2625 | This department guides students at the undergraduate and graduate levels toward the advanced mathematical skills and physical insight they need to understand the nature of the universe from the modern scientific perspective. The department offers three undergraduate concentrations: astronomy, astronomy and physics, and planetary and space sciences. It offers an M.A. for students interested in careers in scientific applications, scientific computing, and related fields, and a Ph.D. for students interested in research and academic careers in astrophysics and space physics. The department has two outstanding affiliated research centers, the Center for Space Physics and the Institute for Astrophysical Research. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA in Astronomy - Astronomy and Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | This program is a joint program of the astronomy and physics departments designed to prepare students for entering a graduate program in astronomy, physics, astrophysics or other physical sciences. In addition to the classes required of an astronomy concentrator, astronomy and physics concentrators take a number of additional physics courses. This concentration may be the most demanding and rigorous program of study in the College of Arts and Sciences. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy, 725 Commonwealth Avenue Room 514, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2625 | This department guides students at the undergraduate and graduate levels toward the advanced mathematical skills and physical insight they need to understand the nature of the universe from the modern scientific perspective. The department offers three undergraduate concentrations: astronomy, astronomy and physics, and planetary and space sciences. It offers an M.A. for students interested in careers in scientific applications, scientific computing, and related fields, and a Ph.D. for students interested in research and academic careers in astrophysics and space physics. The department has two outstanding affiliated research centers, the Center for Space Physics and the Institute for Astrophysical Research. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA in Astronomy - Planetary and Space Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | This program has sparked a golden age of discovery in planetary and space science which scientists are now turning into a more complete understanding of near-earth space, planets and stellar systems. The Planetary and Space Science (PSS) concentration is a multidisciplinary program including astronomy, geology, physics, and calculus jointly organize by the Astronomy and Earth Science Departments that allows students to develop the skills to study the nature of our solar system and planets. PSS concentrators begin with the astronomy survey classes (AS 202-203), physics (PY 211, 212 or PY 251, 252), chemistry (CH 101), Earth Science (ES 101 or ES 105) and calculus (MA 123, 124 or equivalent). They then continue with more advanced astronomy (AS 311) physics (PY 313 or PY 354) and calculus (MA 225) and then select from a range of additional astronomy, Earth Science, and Geology classes. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy, 725 Commonwealth Avenue Room 514, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2625 | This department guides students at the undergraduate and graduate levels toward the advanced mathematical skills and physical insight they need to understand the nature of the universe from the modern scientific perspective. The department offers three undergraduate concentrations: astronomy, astronomy and physics, and planetary and space sciences. It offers an M.A. for students interested in careers in scientific applications, scientific computing, and related fields, and a Ph.D. for students interested in research and academic careers in astrophysics and space physics. The department has two outstanding affiliated research centers, the Center for Space Physics and the Institute for Astrophysical Research. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA in Computer Science and Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program has two additional CS courses numbered above 400. One two-course sequence selected from the following:MA 531, 532, MA 541, 542 , MA 555, 556, MA 569, 570. Two additional mathematics courses numbered above 200. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Boston University, 111 Cummington Street Room 138, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8919 | This department has a distinguished track record of academic excellence and major achievement in an increasingly vital field that is expanding at a rapid pace. Faculty research is published in the most prominent venues and recognized by significant citations and awards, both national and international. B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. students are recruited for internships and positions by such industry-leading firms as Motorola Labs, Google, and Microsoft and are recruited by some of the best computer science departments in the country as Ph.D. students, postdoctoral researchers, and tenure-track professors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA in Economics and Mathematics / MA in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program is identical to that of the BA/MA program in economics, except that the candidate must satisfy all requirements for the joint concentration in economics and mathematics as well as the MA in economics. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent education may apply for graduate admission to the Economics Department. Applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). The GRE is a major component in the admission decision and is especially crucial for PhD Applicants applying for financial aid from the University. GRE scores are valid for two years. Thus, for applicants for Fall 2008, GRE scores taken in 2007 and 2006 are valid. Official results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), as administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), are required of all applicants whose native language is not English. The minimum score requirement is 213 (computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). TOEFL scores over two years old will not be accepted. Students applying for entry into the Master Programs are normally expected to have passed some advanced undergraduate preparation in economics that includes one year of intermediate macro and microeconomic analysis and courses in statistics, calculus, and linear algebra. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA with a Major Concentration in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program requires a minimum grade of C in all courses taken towards the CS concentration. CS concentrators must take fifteen courses in the following three categories. The assignment of a given course to one of these categories is determined by the bulletin listing in effect at the time of a student's enrollment in the course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The required courses are: CS 320, CS 330, CS 332, and CS 350, Elective CS Courses:CS courses numbered 400 or higher. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Boston University, 111 Cummington Street Room 138, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8919 | This department has a distinguished track record of academic excellence and major achievement in an increasingly vital field that is expanding at a rapid pace. Faculty research is published in the most prominent venues and recognized by significant citations and awards, both national and international. B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. students are recruited for internships and positions by such industry-leading firms as Motorola Labs, Google, and Microsoft and are recruited by some of the best computer science departments in the country as Ph.D. students, postdoctoral researchers, and tenure-track professors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | BA with a Minor Concentration in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program play an important role in many areas of intellectual inquiry, as well as in society generally; a minor concentration in computer science can enhance the value of a wide variety of concentrations. Students must earn a minimum grade of C in courses taken toward a minor concentration. All minor concentrators develop their programs in consultation with an advisor. The minor requires completion with a grade of C or higher six courses chosen as follows: two CS courses designated as CS background courses in their bulletin description, plus three more CS courses numbered 300 or higher, plus one more CS course (excluding CS 101) or, with prior approval by the CS department, another computational course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The required courses are: CS 320, CS 330, CS 332, and CS 350, Elective CS Courses:CS courses numbered 400 or higher. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Boston University, 111 Cummington Street Room 138, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8919 | This department has a distinguished track record of academic excellence and major achievement in an increasingly vital field that is expanding at a rapid pace. Faculty research is published in the most prominent venues and recognized by significant citations and awards, both national and international. B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. students are recruited for internships and positions by such industry-leading firms as Motorola Labs, Google, and Microsoft and are recruited by some of the best computer science departments in the country as Ph.D. students, postdoctoral researchers, and tenure-track professors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA Joint Degree Program | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program is designed for undergraduates may be admitted to a program of study leading to the completion of the requirements for both the BA and the MA degrees at the end of the academic year following the senior year. | Applicants should have completed the equivalent of an undergraduate major in philosophy, typically with an average of B or higher. Students with minors in philosophy are also encouraged to apply. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Minimum TOEFL Scores: Paper-based Test 550, Computer Based Test 213. student must have completed by the end of the sophomore year at least two of the following with a grade of B or better in each course: PH 300, PH 310, PH 350, and PH 360. Any of these courses not completed by the end of the sophomore year must be taken in the junior year. During the junior and senior years, the BA/MA candidate must complete all requirements for a BA degree in philosophy. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA Joint Degree Program in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program needs complete six graduate courses and two 900-level directed studies on a topic selected in consultation with his or her advisor. The student must also submit a Master's thesis (written under the direction of a faculty member) to be defended in an oral examination. The two 900-level directed studies courses are intended to provide occasion for the student to write the thesis. Students who have written an Independent Work for Distinction thesis during the senior year may, with the permission of his or her advisor, turn that thesis into a Master's thesis. Additonally, reading knowledge of any foreign language required for the Master's thesis must be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the student's advisor. | Students must have completed by the end of the sophomore year at least two of the following with a grade of B or better in each course: PH 300, PH 310, PH 350, and PH 360. Any of these courses not completed by the end of the sophomore year must be taken in the junior year. During the junior and senior years, the BA/MA candidate must complete all requirements for a BA degree in philosophy. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA Program in Economics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program is designed for the superior undergraduate student. It provides a strong base of knowledge and skills in economics, and at the same time accelerates completion of the Master of Arts degree. The program is limited to the Master of Arts in Economics and does not apply to the other MA degrees awarded by the department. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent education may apply for graduate admission to the Economics Department. Applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). The GRE is a major component in the admission decision and is especially crucial for PhD Applicants applying for financial aid from the University. GRE scores are valid for two years. Thus, for applicants for Fall 2008, GRE scores taken in 2007 and 2006 are valid. Official results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), as administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), are required of all applicants whose native language is not English. The minimum score requirement is 213 (computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). TOEFL scores over two years old will not be accepted. Students applying for entry into the Master Programs are normally expected to have passed some advanced undergraduate preparation in economics that includes one year of intermediate macro and microeconomic analysis and courses in statistics, calculus, and linear algebra. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA Program in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program is intended for outstanding students (see the GPA requirements in the undergraduate section of this bulletin) who wish to pursue intensive study in a specialized area of political and social science beyond the level of the BA. The work of a BA/MA candidate will be reviewed at the end of the first and second semesters following the student admission to the program. The reviewers will include the BA/MA Program Advisor and those professors with whom the student has worked. This committee will decide, after consultation with the student, whether the student shall continue in the BA/MA Program or be required to stop at the BA level. | Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2540 | This department studies how communities attempt to reconcile the claims of justice, power, liberty, and authority. Drawing on history, law, economics, psychology, sociology, and philosophy, political science is a broadly based social science that shares the traditional aims of a liberal arts education while attempting to grapple with the major issues of our time. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Biology and Cognitive and Neural Systems | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | This program is an interdepartmental program in the College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The program allows undergraduate majors in biology to begin working toward an MA in Cognitive and Neural Systems while still completing the Department of Biology BA requirements. | College of Arts and Sciences students currently in or entering the junior year are eligible to apply for admission. Students must apply before March 1 of their junior year and must meet a GPA requirement of at least 3.0 through the end of their junior year. Students admitted to the BA/MA program will typically have completed at least one CNS course. In order to be admitted into the BA/MA program, students must have completed at least Calculus I and II (MA 123 and 124, or equivalent) and Linear Algebra (MA 242). The application should include a letter from the students Department of Biology advisor. Application forms for admission to the BA/MA program may be obtained from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Office, Room 112, 705 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9481 | This department provides advanced training and research experience for graduate students and qualified undergraduates interested in the neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of technological problems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Classical Studies | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program offers a combined BA/MA program leading to the Bachelor of Arts (BA) and the Master of Arts (MA) degrees. Advanced-level study in one or both classical languages is required. To fulfill the BA requirements, students must choose one of the following eligible undergraduate major concentrations: Ancient Greek (1120), Latin (1119), Ancient Greek and Latin (1121). On the MA level, students concentrate in classical studies (1504), which have a minimum requirement of eight courses (32 credits). Students typically concentrate in either Latin or Greek. One course in Greek or Roman art or classical archaeology and one course in ancient history are recommended. Students who wish to take more than two related courses must receive department approval. Requirements for both the BA and MA can be completed with a minimum of 36 courses and a maximum of 40 courses. Graduate classes can be utilized to meet the CAS graduation requirement of a minimum of 32 courses. Advanced placement and/or prior fulfillment of college requirements on the undergraduate level may result in the completion of the BA/MA requirements in fewer than 40 courses. The usual completion time is five years. Approved course overloads, summer study, advanced placement, and/or exemption from college requirements may allow students to complete the program in less than five years. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Computer Science and Cognitive and Neural Systems | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | This program is an interdepartmental program in the College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The program allows undergraduate majors in computer science to begin working toward an MA in Cognitive and Neural Systems while still completing the Department of Computer Science BA requirements | College of Arts and Sciences students currently in or entering the junior year are eligible to apply for admission. Students must apply before March 1 of their junior year and must meet a GPA requirement of at least 3.0 through the end of their junior year. Students admitted to the BA/MA program will typically have completed at least one CNS course. The application should include a letter from the students Department of Computer Science advisor. Application forms for admission to the BA/MA program may be obtained from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Office, Room 112, 705 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9481 | This department provides advanced training and research experience for graduate students and qualified undergraduates interested in the neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of technological problems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Earth Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | This program offers exceptionally qualified students an opportunity to earn both the bachelor’s and the master’s degree in less time than when the degrees are obtained separately. Admission normally occurs during the fifth semester of undergraduate study, at which time a coherent program is designed to suit the student’s special interests and needs. Requirements for admission are satisfactory completion of at least three Earth Science courses and an overall grade point average of 3.5 or higher. Students combine coursework and directed research leading to a required thesis. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue STO Room 141, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2532 | This department has of 15 faculty and approximately 25 graduate and 85 undergraduate students. This department focus is in two broad thematic areas, Climate - Surface Interactions and Tectonic - Lithospheric Processes. They promote excellence in both teaching and research, in a collegial and collaborative academic setting. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Earth Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | This program offers exceptionally qualified students an opportunity to earn both the bachelor’s and the master’s degree in less time than when the degrees are obtained separately. Admission normally occurs during the fifth semester of undergraduate study, at which time a coherent program is designed to suit the student’s special interests and needs. Requirements for admission are satisfactory completion of at least three Earth Science courses and an overall grade point average of 3.5 or higher. Students combine coursework and directed research leading to a required thesis. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue STO Room 141, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2532 | This department has of 15 faculty and approximately 25 graduate and 85 undergraduate students. This department focus is in two broad thematic areas, Climate - Surface Interactions and Tectonic - Lithospheric Processes. They promote excellence in both teaching and research, in a collegial and collaborative academic setting. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Geography | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program in geography provides qualified juniors and seniors an opportunity to earn a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in one coherent program. Candidates and their faculty advisors outline a program designed to suit the candidates’ special interests. This normally entails work in other departments offering directly related subject matter. Candidates complete two research seminars in the program. Requirements include eight graduate-level courses, a thesis, and a departmental colloquium presentation. The departmental BA/MA statement and further information are available from the Directors of Undergraduate Studies or Graduate Studies. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program of BA/MA in Mathematics will elect one of two options: Mathematics or Statistics. Both options emphasize breadth of coverage of basic topics of current general importance, as opposed to narrow specialization. The objective of the program in statistics is to train general practitioners capable of making immediate contributions in industry, the medical sciences, government, or private educational and research institutions. | Students in the BA/MA program must complete the BA concentration in mathematics (1701) with specialty in mathematics or statistics. In addition, students must complete the master's degree requirements, which consist of a coherent program of eight graduate-level (500 or above) mathematics courses and comprehensive exams. No overlap is permitted between mathematics courses taken to satisfy the BA requirements and those taken to satisfy the MA requirements. The total number of courses taken for both degrees, including distribution courses, elective, and so on, can be reduced to as few as 36, provided that all requirements are met. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Mathematics and Cognitive and Neural Systems | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | This program an interdepartmental program in the College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The program allows undergraduate majors in mathematics to begin working toward an MA in Cognitive and Neural Systems while still completing the Department of Mathematics BA requirements. | College of Arts and Sciences students currently in or entering the junior year are eligible to apply for admission. Students must apply before March 1 of their junior year and must meet a GPA requirement of at least 3.0 through the end of their junior year. Students admitted to the BA/MA program will typically have completed at least one CNS course. The application should include a letter from the students Department of Mathematics advisor. Application forms for admission to the BA/MA program may be obtained from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Office, Room 112, 705 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9481 | This department provides advanced training and research experience for graduate students and qualified undergraduates interested in the neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of technological problems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BA/MA in Psychology and Cognitive and Neural Systems | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | This program is an interdepartmental program in the College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The program allows undergraduate majors in psychology to begin working toward an MA in cognitive and neural systems while still completing the Department of Psychology BA requirements. | College of Arts and Sciences students currently in or entering the junior year are eligible to apply for admission. Students must apply before March 1 of their junior year and must meet a GPA requirement of at least 3.0 through the end of their junior year. Students admitted to the BA/MA program will typically have completed at least one CNS course. In order to be admitted into the BA/MA program, students must have completed at least Calculus I and II (MA 123 and 124, or equivalent) and Linear Algebra (MA 242). The application should include a letter from the students Department of Psychology advisor. Application forms for admission to the BA/MA program may be obtained from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Office, Room 112, 705 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9481 | This department provides advanced training and research experience for graduate students and qualified undergraduates interested in the neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of technological problems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BFA/MFA Five-Year Program | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $18300 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program will offer both bachelor and masters degree. Undergraduate students in the School of Visual Arts' BFA studio programs in Painting, Sculpture, or Graphic Design may also consider taking graduate Art Education courses during their junior and senior years. A fifth year of additional coursework and student teaching completes their MFA in Studio Teaching. Students in this BFA/MFA program gain an exceptionally strong studio background, as well as a master's degree. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). All applicants are required to submit a portfolio of 15–20 examples of recent work. Portfolios should include at least 15 examples of the student best graphic design work. Although some of the images can be taken from other disciplines such as architecture, the majority must be in computer-based graphic design. Portfolios may be submitted in CD or slide format. The graphic design faculty reserves the right to request that students complete certain courses as prerequisites. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BFA/MFA Program | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This Program is possible for serious, focused and organized undergraduate students to combine the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree, majoring in a studio area (painting, sculpture, or graphic design) with the Master of Fine Arts in Studio Teaching degree, completing both courses of study in five years. The courses in bold are those that count toward the MFA in Studio Teaching. They total 20 credits and may be taken as soon as a student has completed the Foundation requirements (including Intro to Art Ed. during the sophomore year). The other courses in the list should be taken as electives in compliance with licensing requirements in Massachusetts and most other states. They may be taken at any point during BFA studies and do no count toward the MFA Studio Teaching degree. They do, however, count as electives in your major. The 5th year of the program is then pursued at the graduate level, following completion of a BFA in Graphic Design, Painting, or Sculpture. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Visual Computing (or equivalent), General Psychology, General Psychology, Child Growth and Devel. (fall only; senior), Ceramics, Photography, Printmaking, Processes and Structures, Teaching Art K-9, Teaching Art 5-12. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | BS/MPH in Biostatistics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | This is a dual-degree program which provides the skills to design, analyze, and interpret the result of public health studies. Through such courses as statistics, advanced regression analysis, and statistical computing, students learn the statistical applications important to research, including study design, data management, and statistical analysis. Graduates are prepared for further study or careers in research, project management, academia, or the private sector. | All applications for admission are made through the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Students entering the program are expected to have at least the equivalent of the Bachelor of Arts degree. At the time of application, previously completed coursework must include at least one year of calculus including multivariate calculus and one formal course in linear algebra. Applicants also must demonstrate competency in computer programming and elementary statistical methods. GRE scores are required. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core course requirements are highly encouraged to take the BS703, though the core course requirement for all MPH students may be met by successfully completing BS701 or BS703 in Biostatics. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617638 5207 | The school has grown tremendously in recent years with more than 4,000 alumni, 140 full-time faculty, and students from over 40 countries. In keeping with the School service-oriented philosophy, each department combines research and academics with a practicum requirement, resulting in a rigorous, well-rounded curriculum enhanced by work experience in a public health environment. Through longstanding collaborations with such institutions as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Public Health Commission, and the Veterans Affairs Administration; and international alliances with the Red Cross, the Peace Corps, and foreign governments, our students, faculty, and alumni draw on their own diverse backgrounds to carry out the School mission in a variety of settings. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | BS/MPH in Environmental Health | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the School of Public Health. This program assess and design strategies to manage environmental and occupational hazards. Clean air, safe drinking water, pesticides, electromagnetic fields, asbestos, carcinogens, hazardous waste, global warming, asthma in urban children, West Nile virus, bioterror. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4620 | The department houses two basic research laboratories in immunotoxicology and is home to a Superfund Basic Research Center, which investigates reproductive and developmental hazards. The department research agenda is also firmly rooted in community health and environmental justice; for example, a collaborative project with public officials and community groups seeks to better the health of low-income families by improving conditions in public housing. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BS/MPH in Epidemiology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the School of Public Health. This program will study the occurrence of disease and other health outcomes in populations. Design, conduct, analyze, and interpret epidemiologic studies focusing on preventing disease and promoting health. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7775 | Department of Epidemiology has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BS/MPH in Health Law | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the School of Public Health. This program focuses on how to protect public health and safety through federal and state statutes. Protect and promote civil and universal rights and prevent discrimination of disadvantaged populations. Regulate the financing and operation of the health care system. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4626 | This department teaching and research activities explore both individual rights and governmental authority to protect health. In the human rights arena the department considers connections between health and social justice in the United States and abroad. Its bioethics courses analyze not only what can be done in the health care system but what should be done, and explicitly examines the values and beliefs that govern both the people and the institutions that affect health today. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BS/MPH in Health Policy and Management | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the School of Public Health. This program focus on the organization, financing, administration, regulation, and research of health services and on improving health care delivery. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BS/MPH in International Health | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the School of Public Health. This program will address the organization, delivery, and financing of health care in middle- and low-income countries including in refugee or disaster situations. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | School of Public Health, Department of International Health, 715 Albany Street Crosstown Ctr 3rd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5234 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BS/MPH in Maternal and Child Health | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the School of Public Health. The goal is to improve the health of women, families and communities, with a strong commitment to address health inequities and the systems and policies that contribute to them. Graduates are equipped with the knowledge, critical thinking, technical skills, and professional vitality essential to assessing community needs and assets, designing and evaluating programs and policies, and advocating for health equity. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5375 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | BS/MPH in Social and Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the School of Public Health. This program focus on how to identify and analyze the social determinants and behavioral risk factors associated with public health problems and promoting healthy behaviors. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5160 | The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health.Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Arts in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program requires 32 four-credit courses, which, with a normal load of four courses per semester, typically demands four academic years of study. Information on the College of Arts and Sciences requirements for the BA may be found in the Boston University Undergraduate Programs Bulletin. Some graduate courses are open to undergraduates with the proper prerequisites, the written consent of the instructor, and guidance from the undergraduate advisor. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Arts in Economics and Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program is identical to that of the BA/MA program in economics, except that the candidate must satisfy all requirements for the joint concentration in economics and mathematics as well as the MA in economics. The minimum requirement is ten courses in economics (in addition to EC 101 or 111, and EC 102 or 112) and six in mathematics in addition to Calculus I and II (MA 123 and 124), with grades of C or higher, to be distributed as follows: ECONOMICS: Economic Statistics (EC 305), Macroeconomic Analysis (EC 502), Microeconomic Analysis (EC 501), Introduction to Econometrics (EC 414), and any four others to be taken from EC 311 to EC 699. MATHEMATICS: Introduction to Computer Science (CS 111 or CS 113), Calculus III (MA 225), Optimization Methods in Operations Research (MA 569), and three other courses, with at least one being above the 400 level, selected from the following list: Differential Equations (MA 226), Linear Algebra (MA 242), Basic Statistics and Probability (MA 213), Applied Statistics (MA 214), Data Analysis (MA 416), Stochastic Methods (MA 570), Probability (MA 581), Mathematical Statistics (MA 582), or Introduction to Computer Science II (CS 112). Substitutions may be made with consent of the interdepartmental committee only. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS EC 201 Intermediate Microeconomics Analysis, CAS EC 202 Intermediate Macroeconomic Analysis, CAS EC 291 International Economic Relations I , CAS EC 292 International Economic Relations II , CAS EC 305 Economic Statistics , CAS EC 320 Economics of Less-Developed Regions , CAS EC 325 Economics of Poverty and Discrimination in the United States, CAS EC 326 The Economics and Politics of Racial Discrimination , CAS EC 332 Market Structure and Economic Performance , CAS EC 333 Seminar on Market Organization and Public Policy. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program must be completed within seven years after a student first matriculates, whether at Boston University or at another institution. Students wishing to register for 19 or 20 credits, but not more than 20, may do so without prior College approval if they are in good academic standing and their faculty advisor approves; however, first-semester freshmen and first-semester transfers may not take five 4-credit courses. Additional tuition will be charged for all credits in excess of 18, except to students with a cumulative GPA of 3.3 or higher, or students in their senior year who have accumulated at least 88 credits. Additional tuition will be charged to all students for credits in excess of 20. Course overload fee waiver forms should be submitted to CAS Room B3. Enrollment in fewer than three courses (12 credits) in any semester requires advance approval. Petitions for course-overload fee waiver and part-time status, along with guidelines explaining these procedures, are available in CAS Room 105 and CAS Room B3. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: Philosophy of Law, Politics, and Society, Philosophy and History of Science, Philosophy in the Ancient World, Philosophy of the Biomedical Sciences. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Fine Arts - Painting | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program program continues to promote painting in its varied manifestations as a fundamental form of visual and artistic expression. The principal component of the program is studio activity, with students exploring various forms of painting to develop an individual vision. The program is intended to provide a solid base for postgraduate involvement in the larger art world. Painting majors also explore painting's elements of color, light, space, volume, tone, texture, and composition through still-life, landscape, and invented motifs. In addition, instructors place emphasis on composing from memory and imagination, allowing art students to give personal expression to what they have learned. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are:Drawing and Print electives, Sculpture, Painting Major Studios (min 4 sem), Painting Techniques, Contemporary Issues Seminars (2), Art History, Liberal Arts electives, Studio or Liberal Arts electives. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program concentrates on understanding the processes involved in art making and learning. The faculty encourage students to teach children and adolescents to think visually, rather than to simply create products without personal meaning. Students are further prepared to demonstrate the vital relationships between art and culture, art and emotion, and art and history. By studying art in context, young artists are more inclined to treat the creation of art seriously and with individual expression. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Visual Computing, General Psychology (CAS), Child Growth and Development, Ceramics, Photography, Processes and Structures, Art Education I, II, Special Populations, Contemporary Issues in Art Education, Art Ed. Seminars I and II, Practicum Pre-K–8, Practicum 5–12, Art Education III, Art History. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program concentrates on understanding the processes involved in art making and learning. The faculty encourage students to teach children and adolescents to think visually, rather than to simply create products without personal meaning. Students are further prepared to demonstrate the vital relationships between art and culture, art and emotion, and art and history. By studying art in context, young artists are more inclined to treat the creation of art seriously and with individual expression. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Visual Computing, General Psychology (CAS), Child Growth and Development, Ceramics, Photography, Processes and Structures, Art Education I, II, Special Populations, Contemporary Issues in Art Education, Art Ed. Seminars I and II, Practicum Pre-K–8, Practicum 5–12, Art Education III, Art History. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Graphic Design | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program is traditionally based with a modern orientation and is supported by a stellar faculty. Graphic design students learn photography from the darkroom to critical evaluation of the print; study typography as an element of design; and learn to relate three-dimensional graphics to architectural and package design. tudents can experiment with print production and other graphic imagery as well as explore the latest technology in the School's computer-aided design workshop. Seniors may choose a directed study project in order to pursue their own design ideas. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Photography I, Web Page Design, Graphic Design (Major Studios: min 4 sem), Typography Design, Senior Degree Project, History of Graphic Design, Liberal Arts electives, Studio or Liberal Arts electives. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program develops drawing skills that are necessary in the creation of bas-relief and use those skills to facilitate the exploration of creative ideas and observational form. In art history classes taken throughout the program, students learn to appreciate sculpture's evolution in style and imagery across the centuries. They gain a large vocabulary of expressive form and composition to draw upon in their own work. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: Additional Drawing or Print electives, Painting, Sculpture Major Studios (min 4 sem), Sculpture Techniques, Contemporary Issues Seminars (2), Art History, Liberal Arts electives, Studio or Liberal Arts electives. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Art History | This program prepares students for careers at museums, galleries, educational institutions, and architectural and planning firms, as well as publishing and municipal or state cultural programs. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | MET AH 111 Survey of Western Art I, MET AH 112 Survey of Western Art II, MET AH 215 Basic Photography, MET AH 233 Greece, Gods, and Art, MET AH 234 Rome, Emperors, and Art, MET AH 234 Rome, Emperors, and Art, MET AH 336 Medieval Art and Architecture, MET AH 342 Masters of the Renaissance: Giotto to Botticelli, MET AH 344 Artists, Princes, and Popes, MET AH 364 Architecture and City Planning in Old Boston, MET AH 370 Nineteenth Century Art, MET AH 372 Modern Art, MET AH 380 Special Topics in Art History, MET AH 389 Impressionism, MET AH 395 Art, Computers, and Digital Imaging, MET AH 419 Seminar: The Avant-Garde in the Arts, MET AH 517 Seminar: The Art World, MET AH 588 The Arts in Cuba, MET AH 588 The Arts in Cuba. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Art History | Metropolitan College, Department of Art History, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, Room 302, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2520 | This department is concerned with the multifaceted historical implications personal, social, political, economic, and aesthetic of imagery and objectsbuildings, paintings, sculpture, prints, drawings, photographs, films, and decorative arts. Drawing on this interdisciplinary approach, the Bachelor of Liberal Studies (BLS) in Art History combines study in the humanities and social sciences, and complements the natural sciences. The Art History degree program prepares students for careers at museums, galleries, educational institutions, and architectural and planning firms, as well as publishing and municipal or state cultural programs. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Art History | This program prepares students for careers at museums, galleries, educational institutions, and architectural and planning firms, as well as publishing and municipal or state cultural programs. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | MET AH 111 Survey of Western Art I, MET AH 112 Survey of Western Art II, MET AH 215 Basic Photography, MET AH 233 Greece, Gods, and Art, MET AH 234 Rome, Emperors, and Art, MET AH 234 Rome, Emperors, and Art, MET AH 336 Medieval Art and Architecture, MET AH 342 Masters of the Renaissance: Giotto to Botticelli, MET AH 344 Artists, Princes, and Popes, MET AH 364 Architecture and City Planning in Old Boston, MET AH 370 Nineteenth Century Art, MET AH 372 Modern Art, MET AH 380 Special Topics in Art History, MET AH 389 Impressionism, MET AH 395 Art, Computers, and Digital Imaging, MET AH 419 Seminar: The Avant-Garde in the Arts, MET AH 517 Seminar: The Art World, MET AH 588 The Arts in Cuba, MET AH 588 The Arts in Cuba. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Art History | Metropolitan College, Department of Art History, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, Room 302, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2520 | This department is concerned with the multifaceted historical implications personal, social, political, economic, and aesthetic of imagery and objectsbuildings, paintings, sculpture, prints, drawings, photographs, films, and decorative arts. Drawing on this interdisciplinary approach, the Bachelor of Liberal Studies (BLS) in Art History combines study in the humanities and social sciences, and complements the natural sciences. The Art History degree program prepares students for careers at museums, galleries, educational institutions, and architectural and planning firms, as well as publishing and municipal or state cultural programs. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies in English and American Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of English | This program is a focused liberal arts concentration rather than a professional or pre-professional program. Many students go on to graduate or professional study and find employment in teaching, writing, and editing, as well as less traditional areas. Students utilize their degree in English to develop analytic reading and writing skills, an excellent background for work in law, government, business, medicine, journalism, advertising, literature, and education. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: MET EN 104 English Composition, MET EN 201 Intermediate Composition, MET EN 202 Introduction to Creative Writing, MET EN 305 Advanced Writing of Fiction, MET MG 310 Business Communication. Literature : MET EN 125 Readings in Modern Literature, MET EN 127 Readings in American Literature, MET EN 141 Literary Types: Fiction, MET EN 142 Literary Types: Poetry, MET EN 143 Literary Types: Drama, MET EN 175 Literature and the Art of Film, MET EN 201 Intermediate Composition, MET EN 202 Introduction to Creative Writing, MET EN 220 Religion in Literature, MET EN 305 Advanced Writing of Fiction, MET EN 322 Survey of British Literature I, MET EN 323 Survey of British Literature II, MET EN 355 Modern Drama, MET EN 355 Modern Drama, MET EN 363 Shakespeare I, MET EN 364 Shakespeare II, MET EN 373 Detective Fiction. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of English | Metropolitan College, Department of English, 236 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2506 | This college is one of the seventeen degree granting bodies that make up Boston University, Metropolitan College gives part-time, full-time, and international students a remarkable range of choices for study to enrich their lives and advance their careers. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies in History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of History | This program offers study in American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. History degree students gain skills applicable to many careers: the ability to criticize, organize, and synthesize extensive materials, and to write with clarity and precision. Few fields of study better prepare one to navigate the demands and manage the needs of the society and world. Bachelor degree in history career options include teaching, politics and government, law and legislation, medicine and research, publishing, landmark preservation, and more. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: MET HI 101 The History of Western Civilization I, MET HI 102 The History of Western Civilization II, MET HI 151 American History, 1607-1865, MET HI 152 American History, 1865- Present, MET HI 225 Maritime History in the Atlantic World, MET HI 300 The American Immigrant Experience, MET HI 305 Pivotal Trials in Massachusetts History, MET HI 317 Europe in World Politics, 1870-Present, MET HI 331 History of Europe, 1815-1914, MET HI 333 The Middle East in the Twentieth Century, MET HI 342 History of Warfare, MET HI 355 Modern China, MET HI 363 Twentieth-Century United States, 1901-41, MET HI 364 Twentieth-Century United States, 1941-Present, MET HI 371 History of African Americans, MET HI 373 History of Boston, MET HI 374 Women in American History, MET HI 380 Magic, Sorcery, and Witchcraft in History, MET HI 395 Film and History, MET HI 425 Women in European History, MET HI 440 Twentieth-Century American Social History, MET HI 450 American Popular Culture: Film and Humor. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of History | Metropolitan College, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8312 | This college College provides students with an affordable, flexible learning environment, supporting the academic needs of working adults looking to advance their careers or to open up new opportunities for enriching their lives. With over 800 courses to choose from in more than 30 areas of study, students can pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees, diploma and certificate programs, or simply take courses to advance their knowledge in an interest area including: actuarial science, applied social sciences, advertising, computer science, gastronomy, and liberal studies. Classes are offered at convenient locations in Boston, Tyngsboro, Brussels, at corporate and military locations, and more, as well as online. Most classes are scheduled in the evening to accommodate students' busy life and work schedules and are taught by our full-time and part-time faculty or professionals who are experts in their fields. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Philosophy | This program is on the Western philosophy and a thorough understanding of the systematic foundation of philosophical views. Philosophy degree students learn logic, languages, and the exegesis of texts and arguments. The program centers on the history of philosophy; the history and philosophy of science, mathematics, and logic; and the philosophy of religion. The faculty is especially well versed in ancient and early modern philosophy; the Scottish Enlightenment; German Idealism; phenomenology; Continental philosophy; analytic philosophy; American philosophy; and the philosophy of logic and mathematics. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET PH 101 Basic Problems of Philosophy, MET PH 110 Great Philosophers, MET PH 150 Introduction to Ethics, MET PH 160 Reasoning and Argumentation, MET PH 248 Existentialism, MET PH 248 Existentialism, MET PH 270 Philosophy of Science, MET PH 300 History of Ancient Philosophy, MET PH 310 History of Modern Philosophy. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Philosophy | Metropolitan College, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4580 | This college provides students with an affordable, flexible learning environment, supporting the academic needs of working adults looking to advance their careers or to open up new opportunities for enriching their lives. With over 800 courses to choose from in more than 30 areas of study, students can pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees, diploma and certificate programs, or simply take courses to advance their knowledge in an interest area including: actuarial science, applied social sciences, advertising, computer science, gastronomy, and liberal studies. Classes are offered at convenient locations in Boston, Tyngsboro, Brussels, at corporate and military locations, and more, as well as online. Most classes are scheduled in the evening to accommodate students’ busy life and work schedules and are taught by full-time and part-time faculty or professionals who are experts in their fields. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies/Science in Interdisciplinary Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies | This program in Interdisciplinary Studies provides an opportunity to pursue a course of study developed around a unifying theme, problem, or issue. Students must complete an application that proposes ten upper-level courses (40 credits), selected from various Metropolitan College departments and programs, that relate to their proposed interdisciplinary study topic. The application must include a statement of rationale for the topic and be sponsored by a faculty member. The application must then be reviewed and approved by the assistant dean for student academic affairs. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET IS 360 Literature, Film, and the American Dream, MET IS 423 The Experience of Forgiveness: Psychological, Sociological and Spiritual Perspectives, MET IS 491 Directed Study, MET IS 492 Directed Study. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies, 808 Commonwealth Avenue Mezz, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 358 0005 | The Department of Liberal Studies at Metropolitan College seeks to guide students on an exploration of the significance of liberal learning in the twenty-first century. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies/Science in Interdisciplinary Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies | This program in interdisciplinary Studies provides an opportunity to pursue a course of study developed around a unifying theme, problem, or issue. Students must complete an application that proposes ten upper-level courses (40 credits), selected from various Metropolitan College departments and programs, that relate to their proposed interdisciplinary study topic. The application must include a statement of rationale for the topic and be sponsored by a faculty member. The application must then be reviewed and approved by the assistant dean for student academic affairs. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET IS 360 Literature, Film, and the American Dream, MET IS 423 The Experience of Forgiveness: Psychological, Sociological and Spiritual Perspectives, MET IS 491 Directed Study, MET IS 492 Directed Study. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies, 808 Commonwealth Avenue Mezz, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 358 0005 | The Department of Liberal Studies at Metropolitan College seeks to guide students on an exploration of the significance of liberal learning in the twenty-first century. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Music in Composition and Theory | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | This program in Music performance opportunities with ensembles and the Boston University Symphony Orchestra are combined with comprehensive training in theory, counterpoint, harmony, orchestration, and contemporary techniques. Resident ensemble conducted by Theodore Antoniou, provides regular opportunities to experience new music. At the Composers Forum student interact with visiting composers. The electronic and computer music facility is alive with energy and innovation. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | This program takes coursework in instrumental and vocal pedagogy; conducting; rehearsal and performance techniques for choral and instrumental ensembles; child growth and development; creative movement; improvisation; and elementary, middle, and secondary school methods of instruction and administration. All graduate students will have unique opportunities in their coursework and independent studies to conduct original research. The programs provide for growth as professional educators within a dynamic environment of research and musicianship. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The Department of Music Education at Boston University’s School of Music has a long and distinguished tradition. In 1967, it was actively involved in the Tangle wood Symposium, one of the watershed events in the history of American music education. Today, the department continues its leadership role in the development and exploration of new strategies for effective and creative instruction in music. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Music in Musicology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | This program has structured curriculum, and distinguished graduates. The faculty aim to help all students develop their specific area of research interest within the context of a broader knowledge of the main trends in the history of music. In this way, students are prepared either to pursue their interests at higher levels of graduate study, or to embark directly on careers in teaching, research, and writing. The roster of courses is often supplemented by guest lecturers delivered by visiting scholars. Every spring, students in our master’s and doctoral programs have the opportunity to present their research in our Graduate Student Forum in Musicology and Ethnomusicology. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | This department faculty members are actively involved in research with specific strengths in the music and music theory of the Middle Ages; the music of J. S. Bach, Beethoven, and Mahler; the history of music criticism and aesthetics; the music of the Renaissance and Baroque; nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian music; and jazz studies. Faculty has produced books and monographs on their areas of interest and have received awards for their scholarship and teaching. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Harpsichord | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | This program has instrumental and voice majors combine performance studies with courses in theory, musicology, pedagogy, and other general music studies. All music performance majors must audition for a faculty panel of their instrument or voice. The audition may be in Boston, a regional audition site, or by self-prepared audition recording. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | Pianists and keyboard performing artists play a central role in the life of the School of Music. They are present as keyboardists in large ensembles, chamber groups, choral organizations, and individual lessons. They perform with fellow students in master classes and degree recitals. They study solo literature, duo sonata and chamber works, orchestral reductions, and song. No student in the School of Music graduates without some musical contact with a pianist. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Piano | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | This program has instrumental and voice majors combine performance studies with courses in theory, musicology, pedagogy, and other general music studies. All music performance majors must audition for a faculty panel of their instrument or voice. The audition may be in Boston, a regional audition site, or by self-prepared audition recording. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | Pianists and keyboard performing artists play a central role in the life of the School of Music. They are present as keyboardists in large ensembles, chamber groups, choral organizations, and individual lessons. They perform with fellow students in master classes and degree recitals. They study solo literature, duo sonata and chamber works, orchestral reductions, and song. No student in the School of Music graduates without some musical contact with a pianist. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Strings and Harp | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | This program has instrumental and voice majors combine performance studies with courses in theory, musicology, pedagogy, and other general music studies. All music performance majors must audition for a faculty panel of their instrument or voice. The audition may be in Boston, a regional audition site, or by self-prepared audition recording. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | This department faculty members are actively involved in research with specific strengths in the music and music theory of the Middle Ages; the music of J. S. Bach, Beethoven, and Mahler; the history of music criticism and aesthetics; the music of the Renaissance and Baroque; nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian music; and jazz studies. Faculty has produced books and monographs on their areas of interest and have received awards for their scholarship and teaching. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Voice | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice | This program offers a double major within the School of Music with the permission of the faculty concerned. Students must complete all courses required in each field. Such a course of study may be completed in five years, or in four years with summer study. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The Voice faculty at Boston University is dedicated to a program of study commensurate with the demands of professional singing. At each level of study, students pursue the highest standards of training in the development of technique, repertoire, languages, and musicianship. The artist, we believe, synthesizes all aspects of training with heart, mind, and body. Performance opportunities may include degree and nondegree recitals, auditioned roles in choral works, opera scenes, and productions (upper classmen and graduate students only), performance and diction courses, as well as contemporary chamber works. All students study with faculty members in a positive and collegial atmosphere. The Voice department takes pride in its tradition of esprit de corps among its vocal performance majors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | This program has a variety of pedagogical ideas presented by faculty members and artists and through guest master classes. The brass artist faculty includes those with experience at the highest echelons of orchestral, quintet, and solo performance, including the Boston Symphony and Pops; the Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras; the Empire, Atlantic, and New York Brass Quintets; and laureates of numerous international solo competitions. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science and Master of Public Health | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program is available to Sargent students who are majoring in all of the concentrations except for the combined BS/MSOT and BS/DPT degree programs. This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Boston University Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the Boston University School of Public Health. his program seeks to enroll outstanding undergraduates who will be fully capable of successfully completing their undergraduate degree requirements while beginning a master’s degree. The selection process is rigorous and designed to identify students capable of excelling in a dual undergraduate/ graduate course of study. The BS/MPH program is available to Sargent students, except those majoring in the combined Bachelor of Science/Master of Science in Occupational Therapy and Bachelor of Science/Doctor of Physical Therapy degree programs. The BS/MPH program requires a minimum of five years of full time study - four years to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Sargent College, and a minimum of one year for the Master of Public Health degree in any concentration at the School of Public Health. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science and Master of Public Health | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program is available to Sargent students who are majoring in all of the concentrations except for the combined BS/MSOT and BS/DPT degree programs. This dual degree program requires 5 years of full time study to acquire a Bachelor of Science degree in one of the specified concentrations at Boston University Sargent College and the Master of Public Health degree in any one of the concentrations at the Boston University School of Public Health. | Applicants are required to complete a baccalaureate degree with a minimum grade point average of 3.0. All applicants must complete the Graduate Record Exam General Test with a minimum score of 1000 on the combined verbal and quantitative sections (institutional code 3028). Prerequisite courses in nutrition and the biological and chemical sciences must be completed at a four year college or university. In general, credits from community colleges are not accepted. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | This program focuses on the technologies and sciences involved in transportation systems, including flight through the atmosphere and space as well as transport across the ocean and over the ground. Engineers trained in this discipline have potential employment opportunities in the aircraft industry, the commercial and governmental use of spacecraft, the turbomachinery industry, the automotive and ship-building industries, and a multitude of other industries that make use of fluid flows and moving structures. The program prepares students to work in these diverse areas by providing a strong foundation in aerodynamics, aerospace materials, structures, propulsion, flight mechanics, and stability and control. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 2814 | The Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) at Boston University provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace and mechanical engineering. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training | This program identifies and monitors functions and pathological conditions of the human body. The program provides the preparation needed to develop rehabilitation programs, manage acute injuries, recognize the need for referral to other health care professionals, organize and administer athletic training programs, prevent injuries and illnesses. Completion of the program leads to eligibility to take the Board of Certification examination as well as apply for admission to graduate programs. Students participating in intercollegiate athletics may not be eligible to enroll in the athletic training major or may require additional time to complete program. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CAS BI 105 Intro. Biology for Health Sciences (4), CAS CH 171 Life Sciences Chemistry I (4), CAS WR 100 Writing Seminar (4), CAS MA 118/121 College Algebra & Trig/Calculus for the Life and Social Sciences I (4),SAR HP 151 Intro. to Health & Rehab Professions (2), CAS BI 106 Human Anatomy (4), CAS CH 172 Life Sciences Chemistry II (4), CAS PS 101 General Psychology (4), CAS PS 101 General Psychology (4), SAR AT 205 Athletic Training Practicum I (1), CAS BI 211 Human Physiology (4), CAS PS 211 Intro. to Exp. Design in Psychology (4), CAS PY 105 Elementary Physics I (4), AR AT 355 Prevention of Injuries and Illnesses (4), SAR AT 304 Athletic Training Practicum II (2), SAR HS 369 Gross Human Anatomy (4), SAR HS 369 Gross Human Anatomy (4), SAR AT 356 Exam & Diagnosis of Orthopedic Injuries (4), SAR AT 305 Athletic Training Practicum III (2). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department strives to develop critically thinking, innovative, and evidence-based professionals who engage in life-long learning and leadership in the areas of clinical practice, research and community service. The mission of the Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training is to advance, disseminate, and apply knowledge in the fields of physical therapy and athletic training. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Biology | This program provides fundamental knowledge in biological and related sciences. Students learn to appreciate the unity and diversity of living systems and gain an understanding of basic biological principles and processes. The undergraduate biology degree program provides the necessary foundation for careers in applied biology, biological research, or teaching, or further study in graduate or professional schools. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | MET BI 105 Introductory Biology for Health Sciences (N), MET BI 106 Human Anatomy (N), MET BI 107 Biology I: Evolution, Ecology, and Behavior, MET BI 108 Biology II: Cells, Genetics, Development, and Physiology, MET BI 203 Cell Biology (CM), MET BI 206 Genetics (CM), MET BI 207 Introduction to Field Ecology, MET BI 211 Human Physiology (N), MET BI 303 Ecology (EBE), MET BI 305 Plant Biology (EBE), MET BI 315 Systems Physiology (PER), MET BI 407 Animal Behavior (EBE), MET BI 425 General Endocrinology (PER), MET BI 491 Research in Biology, MET BI 492 Research in Biology. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Biology | Metropolitan College, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2476 | This college is one of the seventeen degree granting bodies that make up Boston University. Metropolitan College gives part-time, full-time, and international students a remarkable range of choices for study to enrich their lives and advance their careers. The degree options provide the knowledge and training needed to achieve success and secure the job really wanted. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | This program is a broad, interdisciplinary field that applies the art of engineering to problems in biology, medicine, and biotechnology. These problems include the design and analysis of physiologic measuring and diagnostic systems as well as quantitative analysis and experimentation directed toward obtaining a clearer understanding of the human body’s normal and abnormal functions. The curriculum provides students with rigorous training in engineering, mathematics, and the basic sciences. It incorporates a strong interdisciplinary component that combines the quantita-tive aspects of engineering analysis and design with the full spectra of biology and physiology, from the molecular and cellular levels to entire systems and organisms. All premedical requirements can be satisfied in this program of study. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering, 44 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2805 | The department of biomedical engineering founded in 1966, was among the first to offer a bachelor’s degree in the discipline. Today, the department offers a full suite of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees, and is rated among the top 10 in the nation by US News and World Report. With 32 full-time faculty, the Biomedical Engineering Department at Boston University is among the largest in the country. Research and teaching primarily focus on applying engineering, computational, and analytical techniques to biological systems from the nanoscale level of DNA to the macroscopic level of organ systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Laboratory and Clinical Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Biomedical Laboratory and Clinical Sciences | This program is offered by the Boston University School of Medicine, the Bachelor of Science (BS) in Biomedical Laboratory and Clinical Sciences prepares students for jobs and careers in the biomedical field. Certificate and degree concentrations include biomedical research, clinical research, biotechnology (manufacturing or bioprocessing), and DNA analysis (cytogenetics or forensic science). | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are:GMS BT 104 Medical Terminology, GMS BT 106 Medical Terminology II, GMS BT 108 Introductory Math for the Laboratory, GMS BT 108 Introductory Math for the Laboratory, GMS BT 110 Introduction to Biomedical Laboratory Sciences, GMS BT 160 Biotechnology, GMS BT 170 Biotechnology II, GMS BT 201 Anatomy and Physiology, GMS BT 202 Anatomy & Physiology II, GMS BT 208 Math for the Laboratory, GMS BT 210 Technical Writing in Clinical Research, GMS BT 220 Principles of Instrumentation, GMS BT 240 Current Good Manufacturing Practices and Quality Assurance, GMS BT 280 Office Applications in the Laboratory, GMS BT 305 Introductory Biochemistry, GMS BT 320 Laboratory Automation and Robotics, GMS BT 330 Medical Devices, GMS BT 336 Applications in Bioinformatics, GMS BT 342 Cell Biology, GMS BT 360 Auditing in Clinical Research, GMS BT 404 Medical Virology, GMS BT 405 Biochemistry, GMS BT 406 Clinical Laboratory Genetics, GMS BT 407 Cytogenetics Laboratory, GMS BT 408 Immunology Lecture. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Biomedical Laboratory and Clinical Sciences | Metropolitan College, Biomedical Laboratory and Clinical Sciences, 801 Albany Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 5622 | This innovative university within a university, MET spans a wide range of disciplines, formats, and locales. The students span generations, nations, and professions. The faculty has been recognized for their excellence. The distance learning programs are emerging as the state of the art. The graduate programs are among the most populated in the greater Boston area. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program must complete four accounting courses (16 credits) beyond SMG AC 221 and SMG AC 222. All concentrators must take SMG AC 347 Intermediate Accounting I, SMG AC 348 Intermediate Accounting II, SMG AC 414 Financial Statement Analysis, SMG AC 445 Advanced Managerial Accounting, SMG AC 469 Principles of Income Taxation I, SMG AC 541 Advanced Accounting, SMG AC 544 International Accounting etc. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | some of the modules are: SMG AC221: Financial Accounting, SMG AC222: Managerial Accounting, SMG AC347: Intermediate Accounting I, SMG AC348: Intermediate Accounting II, SMG AC414: Financial Statement Analysis, SMG AC445: Advanced Managerial Accounting, SMG AC469: Principles of Income Taxation I, SMG AC541: Advanced Accounting I, SMG AC544: International Accounting, SMG AC555: Not for Profit Accounting, SMG AC565: Auditing, SMG AC579: Principles of Income Taxation II. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Business Policy and Law | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | some of the modules are: SMG IM345: International Management Environment, SMG IM345: International Management Environment, SMG LA245: Introduction to Law, SMG LA346: Law and Ethics, SMG LA349: The Law of the Internet, SMG LA355: Employment Law, SMG LA 360: Real Estate Law, SMG LA450: Advanced Business Law. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Career Planning | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are: SMG SM411: Charting Career Path. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Finance and Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | some of the modules are: SMG FE323: Financial Management, SMG FE427: International Financial Management, SMG FE429: Futures, Options, and Financial Risk Management, SMG FE442: Money, Financial Markets, and Economic Activity, SMG FE445: Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management, SMG FE449: Corporate Financial Management, SMG FE450: Private Equity: Leveraged Buyouts, SMG FE469: Real Estate Finance. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Management Information Systems (IS) | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | some of the modules are:CAS CS108: Introduction to Applications Programming, CAS CS111: Introduction to Computer Science I, SMG IS323: Introduction to Information Systems, SMG IS465: Managing Data Resources, SMG IS467: Networking and Data Communications, SMG IS469: Designing Information Systems, SMG IS472: Electronic Commerce, SMG IS474: Information Products: Applied Economics and Strategy, SMG IS479: Innovating with Information Technology. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | some of the modules are:SMG MK323: Marketing Management, SMG MK445: Consumer Behavior, SMG MK447: Marketing Research, SMG MK449: Business Marketing, SMG MK463: Services Marketing and Management, SMG MK465: Retailing Management, SMG MK466: Personal Selling and Sales Force Management, SMG MK467: International Marketing Management, SMG MK468: Advanced Marketing Strategy, SMG MK469: Advertising and Communication Strategy, SMG MK470: Pricing Strategy and Tactics, SMG MK486: Internet Marketing, SMG MK487: Brand Management. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Operations and Technology Management | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are:SMG OM323: Operations and Technology Management, SMG OM440: Operations Strategy, SMG OM441: Operations Analysis, SMG OM443: Supply Chain Modeling Practicum, SMG OM447: Operations Management in Service Sector, SMG OM456: Technology and Management, SMG OM465: Improving Quality: Six Sigma Certification, SMG OM467: Global Supply Management. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Organizational Behavior | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are:SMG OB221: Dynamics of Leading Organizations, SMG OB441: Human Resource Management, SMG OB442: Effective Group Dynamics, SMG OB444: International Management, SMG OB445: Managing the Family Firm, SMG OB445: Managing the Family Firm, SMG OB460: The Leadership Challenge. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Organizational Behavior | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are:SMG OB221: Dynamics of Leading Organizations, SMG OB441: Human Resource Management, SMG OB442: Effective Group Dynamics, SMG OB444: International Management, SMG OB445: Managing the Family Firm, SMG OB445: Managing the Family Firm, SMG OB460: The Leadership Challenge. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Quantitative Methods | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are:SMG QM450: Modeling in Excel, SMG SM221: Probabilistic and Statistical Decision-Making for Management, SMG SM222: Modeling Business Decisions and Market Outcomes. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Strategy and Innovation | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program consists of 33 courses in both the liberal arts and management. Each course is one semester. Students normally take four academic courses each semester. Students take 18 courses in the School of Management and 12 courses in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, they take three “Level C electives,” two of which must be from schools and colleges of the University other than SMG. One Level C elective may be an SMG course. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are: SMG MG422 (SI422 beginning Fall 2009): Strategy and Policy, SMG MG429 (SI429 beginning Fall 2009): The European Business Environment: ‘Institutions and Enterprise, SMG MG444 (SI444 beginning Fall 2009): Entrepreneurship, SMG MG445 (SI445 beginning Fall 2009): Small Business Management, SMG MG449 (SI449 beginning Fall 2009): Corporate Entrepreneurship and Innovation, SMG MG455 (SI455 beginning Fall 2009): Leadership and Management of Nonprofit Organizations, SMG MG 468 (SI468 beginning Fall 2009): Entrepreneurship in High-Technology Environments, SMG MG471 (SI471 beginning Fall 2009): International Entrepreneurship, SMG MG472 (SI472 beginning Fall 2009): Women Entrepreneurs and Leaders, SMG SM121/122: Management as a System, SMG SM299: Management as a System (Intensive). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program is offered by the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering as part of its mission to educate, create, and disseminate knowledge, and to serve as a resource at the local, regional, and national levels. The rapid evolution of computers has produced the need for a new type of computer professional fluent in both the hardware and the software aspects of computer systems. The Computer Engineering Program provides the necessary training to meet this need, teaching students to apply engineering principles to the design of a full range of computer products, from dedicated processors and stand-alone CPUs to data communication networks and software systems. The program also provides students with the design skills needed to work in such diverse areas as telephone and data communication, manufacturing, information processing, embedded control systems, and medical instrumentation. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science | This program places students at the cutting edge of this fundamental and exciting field. Many graduates go on to rewarding computer related careers in software engineering, system administration and management, and research and development in industrial and governmental laboratories. Others use their undergraduate computer science degree background (and analytical skills) to prepare for careers in medicine, law, education, physical and life sciences, social sciences, and the humanities. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET CS 101 Computers and Their Applications, MET CS 201 Introduction to Computer Science with C++, MET CS 231 Introduction to Computer Science for Programmers with C++, MET CS 232 Introduction to Computer Science with Java, MET CS 248 Introduction to Discrete Mathematics, MET CS 250 Applied Mathematics for Telecommunication, MET CS 272 Introduction to Computer Systems, MET CS 331 Introduction to Object- Oriented Programming with C++, MET CS 341 Data Structures with C++, MET CS 342 Data Structures with Java, MET CS 382 Information Systems for Management, MET CS 405 Introduction to Human-Computer Interface Design with .Net, MET CS 425 Introduction to Business Data Communications and Networks, MET CS 469 Introduction to Database Design and Implementation for Business, MET CS 495 Directed Study, MET CS 503 Windows .NET Application Programming with C# (C Sharp), MET CS 532 Computer Graphics, MET CS 535 Data Communications and Computer Networks, MET CS 546 Quantitative Methods for Information Systems, MET CS 560 Organization of Programming Languages, MET CS 563 C++ Programming for Mathematical Finance, MET CS 563 C++ Programming for Mathematical Finance, MET CS 565 Advanced Java Programming, MET CS 565 Advanced Java Programming, MET CS 568 Language Theory and Compilers, MET CS 572 Computer Organization, MET CS 572 Computer Organization, MET CS 579 Database Management, MET CS 594 Special Topic: Medical Informatics, MET CS 599 Special Topics in Biometrics. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science, 808 Commonwealth Avenue Room 250, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2566 | This department give an immersion in both the latest technologies and the ideas that drive them. By combining theory and technical skills in education at MET, students will find can more easily stay on top of new technology and remain more competitive. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program provides students with general knowledge in the methods and theories of social science, and a specialized understanding of criminal activity, policing, corrections, criminal court procedures, and social policy as they relate to crime control. The degree in criminal justice specialization core courses, electives, and related courses introduce students to critical thinking, computer applications, and quantitative analysis in relation to criminal study. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET CJ 101 Principles of Criminal Justice, MET CJ 251 Policing the Urban Milieu, MET CJ 271 Corrections: Concepts, Systems, and Issues, MET CJ 351 Criminal Law, MET CJ 352 Courts, Society, and Criminal Procedure, MET CJ 420 Directed Study, MET CJ 510 Special Topics in Criminal Justice. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program provides students with general knowledge in the methods and theories of social science, and a specialized understanding of criminal activity, policing, corrections, criminal court procedures, and social policy as they relate to crime control. The degree in criminal justice specialization core courses, electives, and related courses introduce students to critical thinking, computer applications, and quantitative analysis in relation to criminal study. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | MET CJ 101 Principles of Criminal Justice, MET CJ 251 Policing the Urban Milieu, MET CJ 271 Corrections: Concepts, Systems, and Issues, MET CJ 351 Criminal Law, MET CJ 352 Courts, Society, and Criminal Procedure, MET CJ 420 Directed Study, MET CJ 420 Directed Study. Additional Courses: MET SO 344 Drugs and Society, MET UA 507 Law and Justice in the City. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Economics | This program is designed for those who wish to enter government, legal, business, or teaching professions. Intellectually challenging, the Economics degree offers sound training in economic theory and institutions and fosters the ability to analyze the problems of business and society through modern quantitative methods. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The Courses are: MET EC 101 Introductory Microeconomic Analysis, MET EC 102 Introductory Macroeconomic Analysis, MET EC 201 Intermediate Microeconomic Analysis, MET EC 202 Intermediate Macroeconomic Analysis, MET EC 333 Market Organization and Public Policy, MET EC 341 Monetary and Banking Institutions, MET EC 391 International Economics I, MET EC 392 International Economics II: Problems and Policy. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Economics | Metropolitan College, Department of Economics, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2742 | This college provides students with an affordable, flexible learning environment, supporting the academic needs of working adults looking to advance their careers or to open up new opportunities for enriching their lives. With over 800 courses to choose from in more than 30 areas of study, students can pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees, diploma and certificate programs, or simply take courses to advance their knowledge in an interest area including: actuarial science, applied social sciences, advertising, computer science, gastronomy, and liberal studies. Classes are offered at convenient locations in Boston, Tyngsboro, Brussels, at corporate and military locations, and more, as well as online. Most classes are scheduled in the evening to accommodate our students' busy life and work schedules and are taught by our full-time and part-time faculty or professionals who are experts in their fields. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program is offered by the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering as part of its mission to educate, create, and disseminate knowledge, and to serve as a resource at the local, regional, and national levels. Electrical engineering is a broad discipline that encompasses a wide range of technologies, including compact discs, cellular phones, high-definition TV, lasers, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), digital computers, the Internet, and the like. Students in this field are required to develop a strong foundation in electronics, computers, electrophysics, and signals and systems analysis. The diversity, flexibility, and design emphases of the Electrical Engineering Program provide students with a broad foundation of creative problem-solving skills. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Film | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | This program provides a comprehensive examination of film while ensuring that students also receive a strong liberal arts education. The program focuses on three areas: film studies, screenwriting, and film production. Students study the works of master filmmakers, practice the art of storytelling through their screenwriting courses, and then apply what they have learned to their production courses. This threefold approach has resulted in students achieving national recognition in film festivals, screenwriting competitions, and film editing contests. The program emphasizes independent filmmaking, offering courses in acting, directing, cinematography, lighting, sound design, and postproduction. The aim of the curriculum is to enable each student to graduate with at least one festival-quality short film and one feature-length screenplay in hand. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: COM FT 304 Film Industry, COM FT 325 Producing I, COM FT 351 Film Production I, COM FT 353 Video Production I, COM FT 402 Video Production II, COM FT 403 Film Production II, COM FT 411 Screenwriting II, COM FT 412 Screenwriting III, COM FT 428 Interactive/Broadband TV, COM FT 456 Acting for Directors and Writers. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3483 | The Department is divided into two programs: Film and Television. Film and television have developed as individual media with their own histories of production techniques, artistic disciplines, content, and business operations. The Department of Film and Television responds to this situation by providing flexible programs of study. Although students are required to select an area of concentration in the second semester of the sophomore year - either the film or the television program - they also have options for tailoring a major that fits their interests and career goals. Students may vary the number of courses in hands-on production, critical studies, and management-related courses. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Health Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program offers students an interdisciplinary approach to study health science, the broad perspective of health and wellness at the population level and to explore health care systems. Preparing students to work in a health-care environment and to pursue graduate study in clinical and non clinical health professions. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CAS BI 105 Intro to Biology, CAS CH 171 Chemistry for Life Sciences, CAS WR 100 Writing Seminar, SAR HP 151 Intro to Health & Rehab. Sci. (2), Humanities elective, CAS BI 106 Human Anatomy, CAS MA 113 Elementary Statistics or CAS PS 211 Intro to Experimental Design in Psychology, CAS PS 101 General Psychology, SAR HS 210 Intro to Critical Inquiry (2), Social Science elective, CAS BI 211 Human Physiology, CAS SO 215 Health and Society, SAR HP 252 Health and Disability Across the Life Span, Humanities elective, SAR HP 353 Organization and Delivery of Health Care Systems, CAS EC 101 Intro to Microeconomics, SAR HP Health Professions Course, Minor speciality or social science elective, SAR HS 300 Epidemiology 1, HAR HS 352 Health Care Information Systems, Humanities elective, Minor/specialty area elective, CAS PH 251 Medical Ethics or CAS PH 452 Ethics of Health Care, CAS PH 251 Medical Ethics or CAS PH 452 Ethics of Health Care, Minor/specialty area elective, SAR HS 405 Health Science Practicum, SAR HS 480 Honors Thesis, Minor/specialty area of study, SAR HS 405 Health Science Practicum, SAR HS 480 Honors Thesis, Minor/specialty area of study. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Human Physiology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program is an excellent option for those individuals seeking a career in one of the health care professions, including medicine, and who have a strong interest in the sciences. The curriculum has pre-medical courses built directly into the program as requirements. With its focus on the study of human biology, a major in Human Physiology provides an alternative to the traditional biology degree, expanding upon the required premedical requirements with the addition of classes such as gross human anatomy, exercise physiology, neuroanatomy and neurophysiology, and cardiopulmonary pathophysiology. Breadth of academic preparation is insured by elective distribution requirements in the humanities and social sciences. ich resources are available to our students who wish to engage in a clinical internship or practicum as part of their undergraduate experience. |
Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are CAS BI 107 Biology I, CAS CH 101 General Chemistry, CAS WR 100 Writing Seminar, SAR HP 151 Introduction to Health & Rehabilitation Sciences (2), PDP Activity (2), SAR HP 150 Freshman Experience Seminar (0), CAS BI 108 Biology II, CAS CH 102 General Chemistry, CAS PS 101 General Psychology, Humanities elective, CAS CH 203 Organic Chemistry, CAS BI 203 Cell Biology, CAS MA 121 Calculus, Humanities elective, CAS CH 204 Organic Chemistry, CAS BI 315 Systems Physiology, CAS MA 122 Calculus, ocial science elective. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Management Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Office of Student and Corporate Outreach | This program, culminates in receipt of a Bachelor of Science (BS) in Management Studies, puts motivated professionals on an accelerated track with others of the same energy level and dedication who seek the satisfaction and added professional distinction of earning a bachelor’s degree. The degree completion program provides a comprehensive foundation in the liberal arts and sciences, as well as state-of-the-art management theory and practice in a wide range of management topics such as finance, electronic commerce, market analysis, and project and operations management. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET HU 400 Great Works of the Modern Era, MET IS 400 Great Ideas in Western Thought, MET IS 401 Communication Skills, MET IS 402 Natural Science in Contemporary Society, MET IS 402 Natural Science in Contemporary Society, MET MG 470 Organizational Behavior and Dynamics, MET MG 471 Financial and Managerial Accounting, MET MG 472 Financial Analysis, MET MG 473 Operations Management and Quantitative Decision Making, MET MG 474 Principles of Marketing, MET MG 475 Quantitative Applications for Management, MET MG 476 Business Strategy Seminar, MET TM 448 Introduction to E-Commerce and Web Design I, MET TM 520 Developing, Implementing, and Organizing for New Products and Services. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Office of Student and Corporate Outreach | Metropolitan College, Office of Student and Corporate Outreach, 755 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 6000 | This college is one of the seventeen degree granting bodies that make up Boston University, Metropolitan College gives part-time, full-time, and international students a remarkable range of choices for study to enrich their lives and advance their careers. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Manufacturing Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | This program is highly diverse and exciting technologies and disciplines, such as design, robotics, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), manufacturing systems and control, and green manufacturing, into a comprehensive educational program. If a new product or system is needed, it is the manufacturing engineer who will work on the team to design and produce it efficiently, economically, safely, and in an environmentally benign manner. Consequently, manufacturing engineers are in high demand in U.S. industries and throughout the world. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering, 15 Saint Marys Street, Boston University, BROOKLINE, Massachusetts, 02446, +1 617 353 2842 | The Department of Manufacturing Engineering (MFG) at Boston University is a truly interdisciplinary enterprise. It was the first manufacturing engineering program in the United States and remains in the top tier of academic programs in this field. Teaching and research focus on engineering design, manufacturing processes and materials, and the management and control of man-made systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program prepares students for employment in the mathematical sciences or for future study. Mathematics degree concentration opportunities combine math study with philosophy, economics, computer science, and math education. Faculty focuses include dynamical systems, number theory, and geometry. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: MET MA 100 Elementary Algebra, MET MA 113 Elementary Statistics, MET MA 118 College Algebra and Trigonometry, MET MA 120 Applied Mathematics for Social and Management Sciences, MET MA 121 Calculus for the Life and Social Sciences I, MET MA 121 Calculus for the Life and Social Sciences I, MET MA 123 Calculus I, MET MA 124 Calculus II, MET MA 213 Basic Statistics and Probability, MET MA 214 Applied Statistics, MET MA 225 Multivariate Calculus, MET MA 226 Differential Equations, MET MA 242 Linear Algebra. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | Metropolitan College, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This college provides students with an affordable, flexible learning environment, supporting the academic needs of working adults looking to advance their careers or to open up new opportunities for enriching their lives. With over 800 courses to choose from in more than 30 areas of study, students can pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees, diploma and certificate programs, or simply take courses to advance their knowledge in an interest area including: actuarial science, applied social sciences, advertising, computer science, gastronomy, and liberal studies. Classes are offered at convenient locations in Boston, Tyngsboro, Brussels, at corporate and military locations, and more, as well as online. Most classes are scheduled in the evening to accommodate students’ busy life and work schedules and are taught by full-time and part-time faculty or professionals who are experts in their fields. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | This program is the largest and broadest of the mechanically oriented engineering disciplines. Mechanical engineers are concerned with the analysis and design of structures and mechanisms, such as the brakes in your car or the International Space Station. Mechanical engineers are also concerned with the flow of fluids, including air and water, and the transfer of heat, as in the air conditioner in your car or in the engine of a jet plane. Some other examples of where mechanical engineers apply their knowledge of structures, mechanisms, fluids, and thermal science are the fabrication of physical structures on electronic microchips (such as those found in automobile air bags) and the improvement of medical ultrasound equipment. The basic background learned in mechanical engineering also prepares students to specialize in any of the fields that employ mechanical engineers, such as environmental engineering, electric power- and energy-system engineering, electronics packaging, acoustics and noise control, structural and materials engineering, product manufacturing, thermal and fluids engineering, chemical and petroleum processing, automotive engineering, aerospace engineering, bioengineering, micro- and nanotechnology, robotics, and automation. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering, 15 Saint Marys Street, Boston University, BROOKLINE, Massachusetts, 02446, +1 617 353 2842 | The Department of Manufacturing Engineering (MFG) at Boston University is a truly interdisciplinary enterprise. It was the first manufacturing engineering program in the United States and remains in the top tier of academic programs in this field. Teaching and research focus on engineering design, manufacturing processes and materials, and the management and control of man-made systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Nutritional Science - Dietetics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | The program provides students with a broad background in the biological, chemical and nutritional sciences. Students choose one of two curricula options: the nutritional sciences option or the dietetics option. The option provides a thorough understanding of nutrition theory and dietetic practice. Through a structured series of academic coursework, laboratory experiences, and practica, the curriculum emphasizes the development of critical and innovative thinking skills that will enable graduates to best serve the health care needs of society. The dietetics option focuses on professional practice. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS BI 107 Biology I, CAS CH 171 Life Science Chemistry I, CAS WR 100 Writing Seminar, CAS PS 101 General Psychology, AR HP 151 Health Professions (2), CAS BI 108 Biology II, CAS BI 108 Biology II, CAS BI 108 Biology II, Elective, CAS BI 114 Human Infectious Diseases, CAS BI 211 Human Physiology, SAR HS 251 Nutrition Science, CAS MA 115 Statistics I, CAS MA 115 Statistics I, SAR HS 230 Food Science, CAS MA 116 Statistics II. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Nutritional Science - Nutritional Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program provides students with a broad background in the biological, chemical and nutritional sciences. Students choose one of two curricula options: the nutritional sciences option or the dietetics option. The option prepares graduates for entry-level employment in the biomedical sciences in both academic and industrial settings. This option provides strong academic preparation for those students intending to go to graduate school in any of the life sciences, conduct biomedical research, or pursue medical or other professional studies. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS BI 107 Biology I, CAS CH 171 Life Science Chemistry I, CAS WR 100 Writing Seminar, CAS PS 101 General Psychology, AR HP 151 Health Professions (2), CAS BI 108 Biology II, CAS BI 108 Biology II, CAS BI 108 Biology II, Elective, CAS BI 114 Human Infectious Diseases, CAS BI 211 Human Physiology, SAR HS 251 Nutrition Science, CAS MA 115 Statistics I, CAS MA 115 Statistics I, SAR HS 230 Food Science, CAS MA 116 Statistics II. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program exposes students to a broad range of thinking about psychology and provides opportunity for research experience. The psychology degree program prepares students for a number of vocations and a variety of professional and graduate training programs, including further study of psychology, medicine, and law. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET PS 101 General Psychology, MET PS 221 Psychology of Love and Sexuality, MET PS 234 Psychology of Learning, MET PS 241 Developmental Psychology, MET PS 250 Violence and Trauma, MET PS 251 Psychology of Personality, MET PS 253 Psychology of Dreams, MET PS 261 Social Psychology, MET PS 273 Introduction to Clinical Psychology, MET PS 275 Principles of Counseling and Motivational Interviewing, MET PS 295 Psychology and Film: Images of Madness, MET PS 320 Play and Art Therapy, MET PS 323 Experimental Psychology: Learning, MET PS 325 Experimental Psychology: Personality, MET PS 330 Leadership in the Workplace, MET PS 335 How the Brain Works: An Introduction to Neuropsychology, MET PS 350 Depression and Disorders of Mood, MET PS 371 Abnormal Psychology, MET PS 371 Abnormal Psychology, MET PS 401 Psychological Perspectives on Self and Identity, MET PS 404 Senior Seminar in Psychology and Culture, MET PS 472 Psychology of Women, MET PS 515 Forensic Psychology: Methods, Practice, and Theory. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Psychology | This program exposes students to a broad range of thinking about psychology and provides opportunity for research experience. The psychology degree program prepares students for a number of vocations and a variety of professional and graduate training programs, including further study of psychology, medicine, and law. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: MET PS 101 General Psychology, MET PS 221 Psychology of Love and Sexuality, MET PS 234 Psychology of Learning, MET PS 241 Developmental Psychology, MET PS 250 Violence and Trauma, MET PS 251 Psychology of Personality, MET PS 253 Psychology of Dreams, MET PS 261 Social Psychology, MET PS 273 Introduction to Clinical Psychology, MET PS 275 Principles of Counseling and Motivational Interviewing, MET PS 295 Psychology and Film: Images of Madness, MET PS 320 Play and Art Therapy, MET PS 323 Experimental Psychology: Learning, MET PS 323 Experimental Psychology: Learning, MET PS 330 Leadership in the Workplace, MET PS 335 How the Brain Works: An Introduction to Neuropsychology, MET PS 350 Depression and Disorders of Mood, MET PS 371 Abnormal Psychology, MET PS 401 Psychological Perspectives on Self and Identity, MET PS 404 Senior Seminar in Psychology and Culture, MET PS 472 Psychology of Women, MET PS 515 Forensic Psychology: Methods, Practice, and Theory. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Psychology | Metropolitan College, Department of Psychology, 270 Bay State Road, Suite B30, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 5381 | This college provides students with an affordable, flexible learning environment, supporting the academic needs of working adults looking to advance their careers or to open up new opportunities for enriching their lives. With over 800 courses to choose from in more than 30 areas of study, students can pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees, diploma and certificate programs, or simply take courses to advance their knowledge in an interest area including: actuarial science, applied social sciences, advertising, computer science, gastronomy, and liberal studies. Classes are offered at convenient locations in Boston, Tyngsboro, Brussels, at corporate and military locations, and more, as well as online. Most classes are scheduled in the evening to accommodate students’ busy life and work schedules and are taught by full-time and part-time faculty or professionals who are experts in their fields. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program offers strong preparation in analytic skills and a broad knowledge of human relations and social systems. The discipline provides useful tools for a variety of careers, including those in law, business, social work, criminal justice, and policy impact analysis. For example, prelaw students may wish to take courses in the sociology of law, criminology and criminal justice, and deviance and social control. Students pursuing careers in business may wish to take courses in the sociology of work, business and society, formal organizations, technology, and law. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET SO 100 Principles of Sociology, MET SO 201 Sociological Methods, MET SO 203 Sociological Theories, MET SO 204 Contemporary Social Problems, MET SO 205 Marriage and the Family, MET SO 207 Sociology of Minority Groups, MET SO 209 Crime and Delinquency, MET SO 233 Sociology of Occupations, Professions, and the Workplace, MET SO 301 Women of the Third World, MET SO 302 Women and Health in the 21st Century, MET SO 305 Violence in the Family, MET SO 306 Sociology of Aging, MET SO 308 Self and Society, MET SO 310 Business and the Social Environment, MET SO 311 Religion and Society, MET SO 335 Technology, Environment, and Society, MET SO 344 Drugs and Society, MET SO 510 Rehabilitation and Re-Integration, MET SO 533 Sociology of Medicine. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Speech, Language and Hearing | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | This program combines coursework in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences, as well as in areas related to human communication, such as linguistics, phonetics, anatomy and physiology, and language acquisition. In professional study, students are introduced to the procedures used in the evaluation and treatment of communication disorders. Electives are chosen according to individual interest. Undergraduates should note that an advanced degree in speech-language pathology or audiology is required for certification by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CAS BI 105 Introductory Biology for Health Sciences, CAS WR100 Writing Seminar, CAS PS 101 General Psychology, SAR HP 150 Freshman Experience (0), SAR SH 531 Introduction to Communication Disorders, CAS BI 106 Human Anatomy, CAS PS 241 Developmental Psychology, SAR HP 151 Introduction to the Health and Rehabilitation Professions (2), CAS WR 150, SAR SH 522 Anatomy and Physiology of the Speech Mechanism, Sargent College elective, Social science elective (non-Psychology), Social science elective (non-Psychology), SAR SH 521 Phonetics (2), SAR HP 252 Health and Disability Across the Life Span or SAR HP 353, AS MA 118 College Algebra and Trigonometry or CAS MA 121 Calculus for the Life and Social Sciences, AS MA 118 College Algebra and Trigonometry or CAS MA 121 Calculus for the Life and Social Sciences, General elective. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3188 | At Boston University Sargent College, the study of human communication disorders combines an understanding and appreciation of scientific inquiry with a strong foundation in the basic sciences and the normal processes related to communication, swallowing, and cognition. The Boston University Conference on Language Development (BUCLD) was started in 1976 by students in the Applied Psycholinguistics Program. Last year the 32nd annual BUCLD took place on November 2-4, 2007. The Conference, which has become one of the best known conferences on language development in the world, is now run by students in the Program in Applied Linguistics, under the guidance of a faculty adviser. The Conference involves year-round planning and draws over 500 people from all over the U.S. and around the world. It includes presentations in such areas as theoretical approaches to language acquisition, cross-cultural language development, second language development, language disorders, and literacy development. Each year, close to 500 abstracts are submitted to the conference, from which about 87 papers and 66 posters are chosen for presentation. Internationally renowned researchers also give keynote and plenary addresses, as well as a lunch symposium on a topic of current interest. The Conference is funded largely by the money taken in each year at the Conference, including registration fees. In addition, the Conferences in 2007 through 2011 are supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. BCS 0548399 and the National Institutes of Health under Grant No. R13 HD42130-01. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Television | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | This program recognizes that the creative and intellectual center of all television production is to be found in the person of the producer. This is true whether the project is a fiction or nonfiction production. The producer is not simply responsible for the budgeting and costing of a project. Often, it is the producer who conceives, writes, and sometimes even directs it. The television producer is a creative entity unique in the media, and it is around this role that the television course of study has been shaped. The program builds upon a solid foundation of liberal arts and requires production of creative work, the study of business practices of the industry, a script writing sequence, and the study of both critical and social aspects of television. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are:COM FT 314 Writing for Television, COM FT 325 Producing I, COM FT 353 Video Production I, COM FT 363 The Television Revolution, COM FT 303 Introduction to the Television and Radio Industry, COM FT 402 Video Production II, COM FT 415 International Television, COM FT 428 Interactive/Broadband TV, COM FT 456 Acting for Writers and Directors, COM FT 465 Video Production III, COM FT 502 Sound Design for Film and Television, COM FT 504 Video Post Production I, COM FT 505 Television Production Hothouse, COM FT 507 Television Studio Production. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3483 | The Department is divided into two programs: Film and Television. Film and television have developed as individual media with their own histories of production techniques, artistic disciplines, content, and business operations. The Department of Film and Television responds to this situation by providing flexible programs of study. Although students are required to select an area of concentration in the second semester of the sophomore year - either the film or the television program - they also have options for tailoring a major that fits their interests and career goals. Students may vary the number of courses in hands-on production, critical studies, and management-related courses. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Therapeutic Studies and Master of Science in Occupational Therapy (BS/MSOT) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | This program leads to the Bachelor of Science in Therapeutic Studies after the fourth year and the Master of Science in Occupational Therapy after five years of coursework and a minimum of 24 weeks of supervised fieldwork. The student is then eligible to apply to take the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT) National Certification Examination. | Candidates must achieve a cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0. No grade below C is acceptable for credit. Students may not repeat more than 2 required courses in the professional program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling at Boston University Sargent College is dedicated to promoting the health, well-being, and quality of life of persons experiencing disabilities. Students in the occupational therapy and rehabilitation counseling programs receive outstanding preparation for roles in both traditional settings and newly emerging areas of need. Sargent College’s distinctive interdisciplinary, evidence-based approach combines challenging coursework, custom-tailored clinical placements, and the opportunity to collaborate with faculty who are leaders in their fields. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Urban Affairs | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program prepares students for further study and jobs in urban public policy, community development and service delivery, and the administration of public and private agencies in urban settings. The urban planning degree program combines a foundation in the liberal arts with disciplinary and interdisciplinary concentrations in the fields related to the chosen course of study. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET UA 301 Introduction to Urban Affairs, MET UA 401 Supervised Fieldwork, MET UA 403 Boston Urban Seminar, MET UA 409 Urban Affairs Senior Project, MET UA 502 Undergraduate Directed Study, MET UA 505 Urban Management, MET UA 507 Law and Justice in the City, MET UA 508 Real Estate Development, MET UA 509 Urban and Public Finance and Budgeting, MET UA 510 Selected Topics in Urban Affairs, MET UA 515 Urban Planning, MET UA 521 Environmental Law, MET UA 533 Environmental Management and Sustainability, MET UA 590 International Comparative Urbanization and Planning. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Bachelor of Science in Urban Affairs | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program prepares students for further study and jobs in urban public policy, community development and service delivery, and the administration of public and private agencies in urban settings. The urban planning degree program combines a foundation in the liberal arts with disciplinary and interdisciplinary concentrations in the fields related to the chosen course of study. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: MET UA 301 Introduction to Urban Affairs, MET UA 401 Supervised Fieldwork, MET UA 403 Boston Urban Seminar, MET UA 409 Urban Affairs Senior Project, MET UA 502 Undergraduate Directed Study, MET UA 505 Urban Management, MET UA 507 Law and Justice in the City, MET UA 508 Real Estate Development, MET UA 509 Urban and Public Finance and Budgeting, MET UA 510 Selected Topics in Urban Affairs, MET UA 515 Urban Planning, MET UA 521 Environmental Law, MET UA 533 Environmental Management and Sustainability, MET UA 590 International Comparative Urbanization and Planning. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Clinical Speciality / Master of Science in Dental Public Health | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | The program exposes future clinical specialists to health care issues at a societal level through in-depth clinical training and study of a wide range of current issues in health care delivery and public health. The duration of the program depends on clinical specialty training requirements. The MSD in Dental Public Health is normally of one year's duration in the dual program. The department encourages students also to enroll in the one-year CAGS program in Dental Public Health in order to meet the residency requirement of the American Board of Dental Public Health. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Clinical Specialty/Doctor of Science in Dentistry in Dental Public Health | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $49514 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | This program combines a clinical specialty with dental public health graduate training in the principles, practices, and issues relevant to Dental Public Health. This program prepares dentists for leadership roles in academic and government settings. The duration of the program depends on the clinical specialty training requirements. The Department of Dental Public Health encourages students also to enroll in an additional one-year CAGS program in Dental Public Health in order to meet the residency requirement of the American Board of Dental Public Health. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Collaborative Degree Program | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program has additional 8-15 courses, to be completed by AP credit, summer work, and overloading, and/or extra semester. The most common BUCOP combination with SMG are (in order) Economics (CAS), International Relations (CAS), miscellaneous CAS concentrations, and COM, though students have combined with SHA, ENG, SED and CFA. Students who are in BUCOP are fully-fledged students in both colleges, with all associated rights and responsibilities. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Combined B.A/M.A Program in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program is for students who are looking ahead toward careers or post-baccalaureate education may wish to consider the combined bacherlor's degree-master's degree program in Political Science offered jointly by the College and the Graduate School or Arts and Sciences. In this joint program, students complete all requirements for the Bacherlor of Arts and Master of Arts. The last two years of undergraduate study are integrated with the first year of graduate work, eliminating duplication of courses and reducing the time required to earn the two degrees. Successful completion of the BA/MA Program may lead to enhanced career employment opportunities, professional training, or doctoral studies. However, the BA/MA Program is not open to students outside of the CAS or Boston Collaborative Degree Program (BUCOP) student | Applicants must have completed four political science courses, including a 500 level course or above, by the time of application. They must have received a GPA of 3.7 or above in these courses and any other political science courses taken. Applicants must also have an overall GPA of 3.5 to be considered for the program. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2540 | This department studies how communities attempt to reconcile the claims of justice, power, liberty, and authority. Drawing on history, law, economics, psychology, sociology, and philosophy, political science is a broadly based social science that shares the traditional aims of a liberal arts education while attempting to grapple with the major issues of our time. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Combined BA/MA in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program is designed for highly qualified students. Students must apply during their junior year and must have a cumulative grade point average of 3.5 in computer science with an overall average of 3.0. When the average is computed, the applicant must have completed at least three computer science courses on level 200 or above. The program requires 36 courses. Students must complete all BA concentration requirements and an additional eight graduate-level computer science courses. Of the eight graduate-level courses, five must be from the graduate core curriculum and in those five core courses an average grade of B is required. Students enrolled in the BA/MA program must also complete a master's project under the supervision of a faculty member. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CS 111, CS 112, CS 210, CS 330, CS 332, CS 350, MA 123 and 124, or 127, or 129, MA 225 or 230, MA 242 or 442, MA 293 and 294, MA 531, 532, MA 541, 542, MA 555, 556, MA 569, 570. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Boston University, 111 Cummington Street Room 138, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8919 | This department has a distinguished track record of academic excellence and major achievement in an increasingly vital field that is expanding at a rapid pace. Faculty research is published in the most prominent venues and recognized by significant citations and awards, both national and international. B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. students are recruited for internships and positions by such industry-leading firms as Motorola Labs, Google, and Microsoft and are recruited by some of the best computer science departments in the country as Ph.D. students, postdoctoral researchers, and tenure-track professors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Combined Bachelor of Science in Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences/Master of Science in Speech-Language Pathology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | This program is offered to highly motivated and talented students wishing to complete an undergraduate degree in speech, language and hearing sciences and a master's degree in speech-language pathology in five years rather than the customary six years of study. | Applicants should have a master's degree from an accredited college or university is required for admission and scores on the Graduate Record Examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3188 | At Boston University Sargent College, the study of human communication disorders combines an understanding and appreciation of scientific inquiry with a strong foundation in the basic sciences and the normal processes related to communication, swallowing, and cognition. The Boston University Conference on Language Development (BUCLD) was started in 1976 by students in the Applied Psycholinguistics Program. Last year the 32nd annual BUCLD took place on November 2-4, 2007. The Conference, which has become one of the best known conferences on language development in the world, is now run by students in the Program in Applied Linguistics, under the guidance of a faculty adviser. The Conference involves year-round planning and draws over 500 people from all over the U.S. and around the world. It includes presentations in such areas as theoretical approaches to language acquisition, cross-cultural language development, second language development, language disorders, and literacy development. Each year, close to 500 abstracts are submitted to the conference, from which about 87 papers and 66 posters are chosen for presentation. Internationally renowned researchers also give keynote and plenary addresses, as well as a lunch symposium on a topic of current interest. The Conference is funded largely by the money taken in each year at the Conference, including registration fees. In addition, the Conferences in 2007 through 2011 are supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. BCS 0548399 and the National Institutes of Health under Grant No. R13 HD42130-01. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Combined Master of Science/Doctor of Philosophy in Speech-Language Pathology | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | This program is designed who plan to pursue doctoral studies may request to be considered for parallel admission to the PhD program in speech-language pathology. Under this option, the master's degree student integrates doctoral coursework and supervised research experiences into the plan of study, with the help of an advisory committee of departmental faculty. | Applicants should have an AuD from an accredited college or university is required for admission and scores on the Graduate Record Examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3188 | At Boston University Sargent College, the study of human communication disorders combines an understanding and appreciation of scientific inquiry with a strong foundation in the basic sciences and the normal processes related to communication, swallowing, and cognition. The Boston University Conference on Language Development (BUCLD) was started in 1976 by students in the Applied Psycholinguistics Program. Last year the 32nd annual BUCLD took place on November 2-4, 2007. The Conference, which has become one of the best known conferences on language development in the world, is now run by students in the Program in Applied Linguistics, under the guidance of a faculty adviser. The Conference involves year-round planning and draws over 500 people from all over the U.S. and around the world. It includes presentations in such areas as theoretical approaches to language acquisition, cross-cultural language development, second language development, language disorders, and literacy development. Each year, close to 500 abstracts are submitted to the conference, from which about 87 papers and 66 posters are chosen for presentation. Internationally renowned researchers also give keynote and plenary addresses, as well as a lunch symposium on a topic of current interest. The Conference is funded largely by the money taken in each year at the Conference, including registration fees. In addition, the Conferences in 2007 through 2011 are supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. BCS 0548399 and the National Institutes of Health under Grant No. R13 HD42130-01. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Combined Pediatric Dentistry and Dental Public Health | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry | The combined program offers both clinical training in pediatric dentistry and a perspective that includes both community and global concerns. After completing two years in pediatric dentistry and one year in dental public health, a CAGS and an MSD in dental public health are awarded. In addition to the CAGS, students completing three years in dental public health are awarded a DScD in dental public health. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Combined Periodontology and Dental Public Health | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | This program offers excellent clinical training and a perspective that includes both community and global concerns. After successfully completing three years of specialty training in periodontology and one year of the dental public health program, the student will be awarded a certificate in periodontology and an MSD in dental public health. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Combined Periodontology and Doctor of Philosophy in Oral Biology | Full Time | 7 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | The curriculum for this combined program is individualized but comprises all essential elements of both programs (see CAGS in periodontology and PhD in oral biology). The clinical requirements for the CAGS in periodontology and the research requirements for the PhD degree must be fulfilled to the satisfaction of the department's faculty. The research project is conducted with faculty in the Division of Oral Biology (see general requirements for PhD and see course listings for oral biology). | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Combined Periodontology and Doctor of Science in Dentistry in Oral Biology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | This program's curriculum for this combined program is individualized but comprises all essential elements of both programs (see CAGS in periodontology and DSc in oral biology). The research project is conducted with faculty in the Division of Oral Biology. The clinical requirements for the CAGS in periodontology and the research requirements for the DSc degree must be fulfilled to the satisfaction of the department's faculty. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | DSc in Dermatology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $42734 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology | This program provide clinical dermatology training with a sound basis in the fundamentals of dermatologic science. Students in these programs are assigned to clinical outpatient sessions (4 to 6 per week) at the Boston Medical Center and the Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center, where they have primary patient responsibility under faculty supervision, as well as rotations in the Department's Section of Dermatopathology and inpatient consultation service. Specific rotations in dermatologic surgery and laser surgery provide additional instruction in these increasingly important dermatologic treatment modalities. Courses include Clinical Dermatology, Clinical Pathological Correlation, Basic Dermatopathology, Diagnostic Dermatopathology, Cutaneous Microbiology, Photobiology, Dermatologic and Laser Surgery, Structure and Function of the Skin, and Sexually Transmitted Diseases and AIDS. | Admission requirements include a medical degree (M.D. or M.B.B.S.) from a recognized university, a year of internship and one or more years of experience in medicine (preferably with an emphasis in dermatology), and proficiency in English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, 715 Albany Street J-100, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5500 | The Department of Dermatology at Boston University provides care to inpatients and outpatients at Boston Medical Center and the Jamaica Plain Veterans Administration Hospital. The Department occupies a 36,000 sq. ft (4000 m2) building on the Boston University Medical Center campus adjacent to the Medical School, School of Public Health, School of Dental Medicine and Boston Medical Center, the principal teaching hospital. Faculty and clinical associates offer expertise in practically all subspecialty areas within dermatology, including: skin oncology, dermatologic surgery, phototherapy, laser and cosmetic surgery, photopheresis, alopecia, skin ulcers, wound management, pediatric dermatology, geriatric dermatology, sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS, and tropical dermatology. Departmental researchers are leaders in fields such as skin aging, pigmentation, skin cancer, and malignant melanoma. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | DSc in Environmental Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | This program provides students with specialized training and research experience. The doctoral program prepares students for roles as research scientists in environmental and occupational epidemiology, toxicology, microbiology, or environmental and occupational policy. It also prepares them for management and staff positions in organizations concerned with environmental management and regulation as well as with public policy affecting environmental or occupational health. Graduates of the doctoral program continue the department's tradition of rigorous, innovative, and socially engaged research. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4620 | The department houses two basic research laboratories in immunotoxicology and is home to a Superfund Basic Research Center, which investigates reproductive and developmental hazards. The department research agenda is also firmly rooted in community health and environmental justice; for example, a collaborative project with public officials and community groups seeks to better the health of low-income families by improving conditions in public housing. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | DSc in Epidemiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | This program is intended for the health professional who seeks advanced graduate study to prepare for a career as a professional epidemiologist. Areas of study include infectious diseases, cancer, pharmacoepidemiology, cardiovascular disease, and adverse reproductive, perinatal and pediatric outcomes. It is anticipated that graduates of this program will obtain leadership positions in research, teaching, and administration. Applicants should hold a graduate degree in a field relevant to public health. Exceptional candidates without a graduate degree may apply, but will be required to complete additional coursework. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7775 | Department of Epidemiology has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | DSc in Health Services Research | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This program engages the individual in a comprehensive, hands-on experience. Students have the opportunity to collaborate with senior faculty in innovative research crucial to the improvement of healthcare delivery, treatment outcomes and government policies. Graduates are known for their excellent methodological skills and substantive knowledge of health care settings and policies; skills that enable students to translate research findings into practical applications. This program offers students two fields of specialization Health Outcomes and Quality and Health Economics. | Applicants should hold a Bachelor or Master degree in a field related to health services research (i.e. social/behavioral science, epidemiology, management, biological sciences or health professions), or should have completed substantial course work in these fields. A high level of past academic performance is expected, particularly in courses within the applicant undergraduate major/Master field or his/her course work related to health services: recommended GPA > 3.5/4.0. Applicants must have completed a minimum of one semester of college-level calculus and one semester of college-level statistics, each with a passing grade of B or better. All candidates will be required to submit GRE or equivalent test scores with a waiver from the DSc Program Directors (LSAT, GMAT, MCAT). Recommended GRE scores (verbal, analytic and quantitative) should be above the 50th percentile. Applicants must demonstrate competence in English. Candidates from countries where English is not the language of instruction must submit either TOEFL or IELTS scores to the DSc Admissions Committee. Scores of 600 and above on the paper-based test or 250 and above on the computer-based test are preferred. Language testing may be waived if the applicant demonstrates substantial experience in English conversation and composition at the college level. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | DSc in Oral Biology | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | This program is designed for students who wish to pursue an academic and research-oriented career. As such, the program is flexible and is especially suited for students whose interests may span more than one discipline. This program conducts broad scientific inquiries, including investigations into the exocrine biology of the oral cavity, the structure-function relationships of salivary proteins, the cellular biology of growth factors, oral host defense systems including both acquired and innate immunity, the physiology of bone, the mechanisms of extracellular matrix accumulation in mineralized and nonmineralized tissues, the function of neutrophils and macrophages in adult and juvenile forms of periodontitis, and the role of cytokines in periodontal diseases and wound healing. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Management | This program providing in-depth knowledge of particular field, enabling students to approach management issues from a broad perspective. May be fulfilled through courses from a second management concentration, or by defining a conceptual minor that integrates related courses in other departments or Boston University schools. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Dental Medicine | Full Time | Variable | $49514 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of General Dentistry | This program offers this degree via two different educational pathways. The first is the traditional four-year curriculum open to students who have completed undergraduate educational programs in the United States or abroad. The second is a two-year program open only to individuals who have already completed dental school in a country other than the United States or Canada. The Department of General Dentistry is a central component of both of these educational programs. | Applicants should have successfully completed of a minimum of three years in an accredited four-year college or university is a requirement for admission to Boston University Goldman School of Dental Medicine. The committee takes into account the applicant’s scores on the Dental Admissions Test, as well as factors such as the quality and difficulty of courses taken, demonstrated leadership ability, and motivation for the study of dentistry. Applicants’ personal statements submitted as part of the AADSAS application and letters of recommendation are important elements in the evaluation | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of General Dentistry | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of General Dentistry, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Ministry | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This program is designed to assist religious professionals to deepen their understanding of and commitment to ministry, by providing a context in which to update and refine their theological knowledge, sharpen old skills, and learn new ones. The aim is to help students to bring together their experience with additional academic studies to create a fresh synthesis of theory and practice. | Applicants must have the MDiv or equivalent degree from an accredited seminary with a minimum GPA of 3.3. Applicants also must have completed a minimum of three years of full-time professional ministry or its equivalent. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Students have a coherent Plan of Study to integrate a solid academic foundation with practical work in the field. The student must choose at least one from each of the following sections for a total of five courses Psychology and Religion, Theories of Personality, Integration of Theory and Practice, Application of Theory: Special Interests, Plan of Study: Spirituality, Plan of Study: Evangelism, Plan of Study: Liturgical Studies, Liturgical History, Liturgical Theology and Congregational Studies/Practical Theology. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Choral Conducting | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities | This program in Conducting must give two public recitals. The programs for the recitals can reflect the specific interest of the individual student, but the programs must include literature from a broad historical span. Orchestral conductors must present recitals that include literature from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. Choral conductors must present recitals that include literature from the time periods listed above, as well as from the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries; orchestral accompaniment must also be included. | Applicants program should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Composition | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | This program will carefully review the students at the end of the first year of study. Faculty will consider the work in composition, academic record, and overall achievement of each student. Students who are not considered likely to complete the doctoral program successfully may be advised to apply for transfer into the MusM degree program. Students whose work is considered unsatisfactory for any reason will be withdrawn from the doctoral program. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). Candidates are required to audition for admission. Candidates for the Theory and Composition program must audition and present a portfolio. Each candidate must submit a preliminary video by December 15, before an audition can be scheduled. Candidates should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Historical Performance | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of Applied Music and Baroque Ensembles. Applied Music is an instrumental and vocal study with department faculty drawn from Boston Baroque, and members of the BU voice and opera departments. In Baroque Ensembles Students will have the opportunity to learn Baroque orchestral repertory, technique, and style, and absorb the Orchestra’s professional culture by rehearsing and performing side-by-side with BCO members as they are directed by Martin Pearlman. | Applicants should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music Artist-in-Residence, is the founding Music Director of Boston Baroque, America’s leading period-instrument orchestra and chorus, now serving as resident professional ensemble of the School’s Historical Performance Program. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Historical Performance - Harpsichord | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | This program prepare professional musicians in composition and performance for the concert stage and for nation professional musical organizations. This program strive to provide the means for societies most talented and creative musicians to realize their own potential. The mission of this program is to prepare students for music teaching in elementary and secondary schools, as well as in colleges and universities. | Applicants program should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | Pianists and keyboard performing artists play a central role in the life of the School of Music. They are present as keyboardists in large ensembles, chamber groups, choral organizations, and individual lessons. They perform with fellow students in master classes and degree recitals. They study solo literature, duo sonata and chamber works, orchestral reductions, and song. No student in the School of Music graduates without some musical contact with a pianist. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | This program gives advanced courses and directed study distributed approximately as follows: music education and professional education and music history and music theory. | Applicants should possess a master’s degree with a major in music or music education. A completed application form and evidence of successful teaching experience must also be submitted. Admission is based on a student’s profile. The writing sample may be a paper submitted in another degree program or a statement of the candidate’s goals as an educator. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The Department of Music Education at Boston University’s School of Music has a long and distinguished tradition. In 1967, it was actively involved in the Tangle wood Symposium, one of the watershed events in the history of American music education. Today, the department continues its leadership role in the development and exploration of new strategies for effective and creative instruction in music. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Music Education (MusAD) | Distance / Online | 3 Year(s) | $592 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program combines a time-honored curriculum with cutting-edge technology to make this valuable credential available to leading music educators around the world. A focus on music theory and musicology and techniques for applying them in the classroom prepares educators to accomplish their personal and professional goals. | Students applying for admission should have either a bachelor's degree in music education or a master's degree in music education. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Program modules covered are: CFA MU 400 Graduate Theory Review 2 cr; CFA MU 600 Analytical Techniques 4 cr; CFA MU 735 Critique in Music Education 4 cr; CFA MU 747 Research and Bibliography 4 cr; CFA MU 755 American Music 4 cr; CFA MU 757 Crossroads: Musical and Cultural Perspectives on the Blues 4 cr; CFA MU 765 Introduction to Music Education Research 4 cr; CFA MU 766 Jazz and Popular Arranging 4 cr; CFA MU 767 African Music and Culture: Creative Exploration 4 cr; CFA MU 777 Foundations of Music Education I: Philosophy and History 4 cr; CFA MU 778 Foundations of Music Education II: Sociology and Psychology 4 cr; CFA MU 779 Orchestration 1 4 cr; CFA MU 780 Research and Directed Study in Music Education 1 cr; CFA MU 803 Ethno Fieldwork Methods; CFA MU 803 4 cr; CFA MU 867 Doctoral Seminar 1 cr; CFA MU 871 Quantitative Research Methods in Music Education. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | The Department of Music Education at Boston University’s School of Music has a long and distinguished tradition. In 1967, it was actively involved in the Tangle wood Symposium, one of the watershed events in the history of American music education. Today, the department continues its leadership role in the development and exploration of new strategies for effective and creative instruction in music. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Orchestral Conducting | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities | This program includes Orchestral Conducting, Choral Conducting. Orchestral Emphasis tape should include 20–30 minutes of the candidate in rehearsal and/or performance with an orchestral ensemble. The audition will also include an individual interview that will examine skills in conducting, sight-singing (in all clefs), keyboard, dictation, musical terminology, score-reading, orchestration, and analysis. Each candidate will also be asked to perform on his or her principal instrument. Selected candidates will conduct an ensemble as the final part of the audition. Choral Emphasis tape should include 20–30 minutes of the candidate in rehearsal and/or performance with a choral ensemble. Each candidate will also be asked to sing an art song and play a solo keyboard composition at the level of a Bach two-part invention. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). Candidates are required to audition for admission. Candidates for the Theory and Composition program must audition and present a portfolio. Each candidate must submit a preliminary video by December 15, before an audition can be scheduled. Candidates should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance - Brass | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | This program emphasis is placed on chamber music, both as an end in itself and as a way to develop critical musical skills necessary in all settings, from solo to orchestral. There are ample opportunities for intensive coachings with master teachers and for public performance on and off campus. A wide variety of pedagogical ideas are presented by faculty members and artists and through guest master classes. The brass artist faculty includes those with experience at the highest echelons of orchestral, quintet, and solo performance, including the Boston Symphony and Pops; the Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras; the Empire, Atlantic, and New York Brass Quintets; and laureates of numerous international solo competitions. | Applicants should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance - Organ | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | This program prepare professional musicians in composition and performance for the concert stage and for nation professional musical organizations. This program strive to provide the means for societies most talented and creative musicians to realize their own potential. The mission of this program is to prepare students for music teaching in elementary and secondary schools, as well as in colleges and universities. | Applicants program should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | Pianists and keyboard performing artists play a central role in the life of the School of Music. They are present as keyboardists in large ensembles, chamber groups, choral organizations, and individual lessons. They perform with fellow students in master classes and degree recitals. They study solo literature, duo sonata and chamber works, orchestral reductions, and song. No student in the School of Music graduates without some musical contact with a pianist. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance - Percussion | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | This program will give opportunities to students to perform with the Boston University Symphony Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra, Wind Ensemble, and Percussion Ensemble. Beyond the University, students are encouraged to perform in ensembles based in and traveling through Boston. Students are strongly encouraged to attend lectures and master classes given by many of the world-class artists based in the city. Prior to graduation, students will experience all avenues of the percussion world and feel confident in performing in genres ranging from classical to contemporary to world music. Past graduates have sustained successful careers as orchestral musicians; solo and new music performers; freelance musicians; musical directors; and educators at the elementary, secondary, and collegiate levels. | Applicants should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance - Piano | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | This program prepare professional musicians in composition and performance for the concert stage and for nation professional musical organizations. This program strive to provide the means for societies most talented and creative musicians to realize their own potential. The mission of this program is to prepare students for music teaching in elementary and secondary schools, as well as in colleges and universities. | Applicants program should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | Pianists and keyboard performing artists play a central role in the life of the School of Music. They are present as keyboardists in large ensembles, chamber groups, choral organizations, and individual lessons. They perform with fellow students in master classes and degree recitals. They study solo literature, duo sonata and chamber works, orchestral reductions, and song. No student in the School of Music graduates without some musical contact with a pianist. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance - Strings and Harp | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Strings and Harp | This program includes prizewinners of major competitions, recital concerto soloists, professional chamber players, and members of major symphony orchestras. The faculty is devoted to the thorough musical development of each student. Performance opportunities with faculty feedback abound. Several string master classes with guest artists are offered each year, and students may participate in the annual concerto/aria competition and string solo competitions. | Applicants should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Strings and Harp | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Strings and Harp, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The world-renowned string faculty of Boston University’s School of Music includes prizewinners of major competitions, recital concerto soloists, professional chamber players, and members of major symphony orchestras. The faculty is devoted to the thorough musical development of each student. Performance opportunities with faculty feedback abound. Several string master classes with guest artists are offered each year, and students may participate in the annual concerto/aria competition and string solo competitions. In addition to BU’s highly regarded orchestral program, the esteemed Muir String Quartet presents a series of concerts on campus each year and leads a comprehensive program of chamber music coachings, master classes, and student performances. Many of BU’s string graduates now enjoy positions as orchestral, chamber music, and solo performers and as teachers throughout the world. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance - Voice | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice | This program commensurate with the demands of professional singing. At each level of study, students pursue the highest standards of training in the development of technique, repertoire, languages, and musicianship. The artist, believe, synthesizes all aspects of training with heart, mind, and body. Performance opportunities may include degree and nondegree recitals, auditioned roles in choral works, opera scenes, and productions (upper classmen and graduate students only), performance and diction courses, as well as contemporary chamber works. All students study with faculty members in a positive and collegial atmosphere. | Applicants should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The Voice faculty at Boston University is dedicated to a program of study commensurate with the demands of professional singing. At each level of study, students pursue the highest standards of training in the development of technique, repertoire, languages, and musicianship. The artist, we believe, synthesizes all aspects of training with heart, mind, and body. Performance opportunities may include degree and nondegree recitals, auditioned roles in choral works, opera scenes, and productions (upper classmen and graduate students only), performance and diction courses, as well as contemporary chamber works. All students study with faculty members in a positive and collegial atmosphere. The Voice department takes pride in its tradition of esprit de corps among its vocal performance majors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance - Woodwinds | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | This program will give students to teach in leading universities and perform in well-known chamber ensembles and major symphony orchestras, including the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, and Cleveland Orchestra. Many have demonstrated their excellence in competitions, winning appearances with major ensembles. | Applicants should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance Music | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of performance, history, theory, and literature of music. | Applicants should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are MU 749 Music Research Technique and MU 719 Doctoral Proseminar in Theory. MU 749 and MU 719. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music Artist-in-Residence, is the founding Music Director of Boston Baroque, America’s leading period-instrument orchestra and chorus, now serving as resident professional ensemble of the School’s Historical Performance Program. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Occupational Therapy | Distance / Online | 20 Month(s) | $1228 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program allows students to earn their doctorate without disrupting their careers or relocating their families. Now a doctoral level education is readily accessible to occupational therapists who wish to shape the future of our profession and healthcare. This program will prepare skilled occupational therapists to take on leadership roles in developing and testing innovative responses to healthcare needs related to occupational performance and societal participation. The post-professional OTD will develop visionary practitioners who have the necessary knowledge and skills to conduct critical evaluation of theory and evidence in their area of practice, to identify gaps or shortcomings in current intervention methods and programs, and to design innovative responses to the identified needs. | This program is open to graduates from any ACOTE accredited entry-level occupational therapy program, or (for International applicants) graduates of a WFOT approved program. Graduates of US programs must have passed the NBCOT certification examination. International applicants must have met all requirements for practice in their own country and must have graduated from an accredited (or WFOT-approved) occupational therapy program. International applicants must provide documentation that they are eligible to practice as an occupational therapist in their home country. They should also have a 3.0 GPA in the master's level degree program with no grade below a C. | Doctoral | Boston University | Program modules covered are: Foundation courses - HP561: Evidence Based Practice, OT618: Directed Study in Evidence Based Practice, OT900: Scholarly Paper I, OT901: Scholarly Paper II, HP650: Healthcare Management and OT617: Contemporary Trends in Occupational Therapy. Core courses include: OT610: Health Promotion and Wellness, HP720: Educational Theory and Practice, OT910: Social Policy and Disability, OT911: Practicum in Social Policy and Disability, OT915: Evaluating Clinical Theory and Research, OT916: Practicum in Theory Analysis, OT920: Outcomes Measurement and Monitoring I: Program Evaluation, OT921: Outcomes Measurement and Monitoring II: Individual Client Monitoring, OT925: Capstone and OT930_OL: Doctoral Project. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Music Artist-in-Residence, is the founding Music Director of Boston Baroque, America’s leading period-instrument orchestra and chorus, now serving as resident professional ensemble of the School’s Historical Performance Program. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Aerospace Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | This program focus research on five areas: Acoustics and vibrations, Fluid mechanics (experimental, theoretical, CFD), Dynamics, control, and mechatronic systems, MEMS and nano-mechanics and Biomechanics. | Admission normally requires a bachelor’s or master’s degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor's or post-master’s PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor’s degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor's PhD program and applicants who hold a master’s degree are eligible to apply for a post-master’s PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 2814 | The Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) at Boston University provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace and mechanical engineering. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Ancient Christianity, Origins to Late Empire | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program focuses on Hellenistic history, literature, religions, and/or philosophy; Roman history and religions; Jewish history and literature, from the Second Temple period through the early Byzantine period; rabbinic literature; Biblical studies; Mediterranean archaeology of the appropriate period(s). Some acquaintance with interdisciplinary interpretation (literary criticism, social anthropology) is also useful. Ideally, students will enter with at least one ancient language (usually Greek) and one modern research language (usually either French or German) well established, with the understanding that advanced research will entail more language work as well. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Applied Anatomy and Physiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program includes researches in cellular and molecular physiology, cytoskeletal biology, protein-protein interactions, mechanisms of neurodegenerative diseases and preterm labor, cardiovascular disease regulation of skeletal muscle gene expression by alterations in physical activity patterns, effects of aging on muscle physiology and function, cardiovascular and stress responses to environmental challenges, cognition and neural information processing, organization of the frontal cortex, the interaction of cognitive and emotional processes in the nervous system. | Applicants may be admitted with either a bachelor’s or master’s degree in the biological or health sciences. Test results of the Graduate Record Examination general test (institutional code 3028) and three letters of reference (two from a person familiar with academic background) must be submitted. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Bioinformatics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of Protein and DNA Sequence Analysis (ENG BF 527 may substitute for this class), Application in Bioinformatics (ENG BE 561 may substitute for this class), Biological Database Systems, Computational Genomics I, Computational Genomics II, Bioinformatics Graduate Seminar, Molecular Biology I, Biotechnology Law and Ethics. | Applicants must take the GRE General Test and TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language). Students who have completed a bachelor’s degree may apply for direct admission to the post-bachelor’s Ph.D. program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Cell and Molecular Biology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program includes courses and research opportunities in developmental biology, cell signaling and gene regulation, cancer biology, genetics, biochemistry, microbiology, physiology, and membrane structure and function. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program includes study in computer communications and reliable systems as well as software engineering and multimedia. | Admission normally requires a bachelor or master degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor or post-master PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor’s degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor PhD program and applicants who hold a master degree are eligible to apply for a post-master PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Counseling Psychology and Religion | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is a multidisciplinary doctoral program (PhD) committed to training professional psychologists. CPAR is a unique, post-masters psychology program which requires students to have prior graduate study in a religious and/or theological discipline. Graduates of program are equipped to practice professional psychology with knowledge of and sensitivity to systems of meaning, value and belief. Students take courses in counseling psychology, religious and theological studies, and in methods of coordinating research and scholarship across disciplines. The program requires a two year part-time clinical practicum and a full-time (or equivalent) internship. Dissertation research is situated in a multidisciplinary context and uses empirical methods and designs. Following this scholar/practitioner model of training, graduates are prepared to serve as professors as well as clinicians. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Ecology, Behavior, and Evolution | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program includes courses and research opportunities in behavioral ecology and sociobiology, molecular ecology and evolution, community ecology, biochemical ecology, population biology, tropical ecology, and ecosystem ecology. A broad biological perspective is emphasized, including microbes, protests, fungi, plants, insects, fish, birds, and mammals. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program acquiring the core analytic tools of the profession (microeconomics, macroeconomics, and quantitative methods), with the balance spent applying those tools in particular fields of specialization. All students must complete a doctoral dissertation (thesis). | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent education may apply for graduate admission to the Economics Department. Applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). The GRE is a major component in the admission decision and is especially crucial for PhD Applicants applying for financial aid from the University. GRE scores are valid for two years. Thus, for applicants for Fall 2008, GRE scores taken in 2007 and 2006 are valid. Official results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), as administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), are required of all applicants whose native language is not English. The minimum score requirement is 213 (computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). TOEFL scores over two years old will not be accepted. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program includes research activities are broadly classified into three main areas: (i) Electro-Physics, (ii) Information Systems and Sciences, and (iii) Computer Systems Engineering. | Admission normally requires a bachelor or master degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor or post-master PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor PhD program and applicants who hold a master degree are eligible to apply for a post-master’s PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules contain ENG EC 560 Introduction to Photonics, ENG EC 561 Error-Control Codes, ENG EC 563 Fiber-Optic Communication Systems, ENG EC 565 Electromagnetic Energy Transmission, ENG EC 566 The Atmosphere and Space Environment, ENG EC 568 Optical Fiber Sensors, ENG EC 569 Introduction to Subsurface Imaging, ENG EC 570 Lasers, ENG EC 571 VLSI Principles and Applications, ENG EC 572 VLSI Design Project, ENG EC 574 Physics of Semiconductor Materials, ENG EC 575 Semiconductor Devices, ENG EC 578 Fabrication Technology for Integrated Circuits, ENG EC 579/MN 579 Microelectronic Device Manufacturing, ENG EC 580 Modern Active Circuit Design and ENG EC 582 RF/Analog IC Design Fundamentals. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in French Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program provides a thorough professional preparation in the selected field of study through the acquisition of (1) skill in the use and critical evaluation of research materials; (2) a thorough knowledge of a specialized area; and (3) experience in the interpretation and communication of acquired knowledge and the results of original research. | Candidate must have an master degree or the equivalent in French and must submit results of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test. The candidate should include a summary page of all courses and grades taken in the field of French Literature to accompany transcripts. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Geography and Environment | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of nervy-environmental systems and policy, economic geography and transportation studies, remote sensing and geographic information systems and physical geography emphasizing biogeography, biophysical ecology, climatology and hydrology. | Student is expected to have an MA degree or the equivalent upon admission to this program. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Hispanic Language and Literatures | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program provides a thorough professional preparation in the selected field of study through the acquisition of (1) skill in the use and critical evaluation of research materials; (2) a thorough knowledge of a specialized area; and (3) experience in the interpretation and communication of acquired knowledge and the results of original research. | Applicants should send an academic paper of not more than fifteen pages, written in Spanish, with the application. Applicants must have an MA degree or the equivalent in Spanish and must submit results of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test. The candidate should include a summary page of all courses and grades taken in the field of Hispanic Literature to accompany transcripts. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in History of Christianity | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program intends to train students to read historical literature critically, and to write history according to rigorous standards of method and style. To initiate this purpose the program offers all entering students a proseminar on historiography that examines interpretive and theoretical literature on the nature and purposes of historical material that focuses on classical texts on the History of Christianity from Augustine to Martin Luther King, Jr. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Islamic Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is flexible and may be configured according to the student interests and professional goals. The focus is on the religious, literary, and intellectual history of Islam, with emphasis on both the medieval and the modern periods. Students entering the program should have a broad range of courses in one or more of these fields: history of religion, Islamic history, late antique background of Islam, medieval studies, and an Islamic language (Arabic, Persian, or Turkish) and its literature. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Judaic Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is flexible and has several tracks. Students can concentrate on biblical studies, on the Bible and the history of biblical interpretation up to the late Middle Ages, on Classical Jewish history and literature, Medieval Studies, Modern Jewish history and thought, or Holocaust studies. In each instance, students will be expected to master the necessary languages and other skills required for scholarly expertise in their chosen field of study. In every case, the course of study will be configured according to the student special academic interests and professional goals. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Manufacturing Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | This program prepares students for either teaching and research at an educational institution or a research career in industry or government laboratories. Active research areas include: Manufacturing Engineering and Management and Systems Engineering and Management Science. | Admission normally requires a bachelor or master degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor or post-master PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor PhD program and applicants who hold a master degree are eligible to apply for a post-master PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering, 15 Saint Marys Street, Boston University, BROOKLINE, Massachusetts, 02446, +1 617 353 2842 | The Department of Manufacturing Engineering (MFG) at Boston University is a truly interdisciplinary enterprise. It was the first manufacturing engineering program in the United States and remains in the top tier of academic programs in this field. Teaching and research focus on engineering design, manufacturing processes and materials, and the management and control of man-made systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Marine Biology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of Marine Biology, Cell and Molecular Biology, Ecology, Behavior, and Evolution, Neurobiology, Physiology, Endocrinology, and Reproduction. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of acoustics and vibrations; dynamics, control, and robotics; fluid mechanics; MEMS; and nanotechnology. | Admission normally requires a bachelor’s or master’s degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor's or post-master’s PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor’s degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor's PhD program and applicants who hold a master’s degree are eligible to apply for a post-master’s PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 2814 | The Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) at Boston University provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace and mechanical engineering. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Musicology | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | This program will prepare students either to pursue their interests at higher levels of graduate study, or to embark directly on careers in teaching, research, and writing. The roster of courses is often supplemented by guest lectures delivered by visiting scholars. Every spring, students in master and doctoral programs have the opportunity to present their research in Graduate Student Forum in Musicology. | Applicants should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | This department faculty members are actively involved in research with specific strengths in the music and music theory of the Middle Ages; the music of J. S. Bach, Beethoven, and Mahler; the history of music criticism and aesthetics; the music of the Renaissance and Baroque; nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian music; and jazz studies. Faculty has produced books and monographs on their areas of interest and have received awards for their scholarship and teaching. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Neurobiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program offers courses and research opportunities in areas of contemporary neurobiology, including: synaptic morphology and neurotransmission; genetic and hormonal control of neural development; sensory physiology, including retinal circuitry and neurochemistry, as well as olfactory processing; and neuroendocrinology, specifically hormonal control of behavior. The organisms under investigation include C. elegans, crayfish, Drosophilia, lobster, turtle, mudpuppy, goldfish, chicken, rat, mouse, and ferret. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Philosophy of Religion | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program explores the reasons and rationalities embedded in a variety of religious traditions and the religious dimensions embedded in a variety of philosophical traditions. Graduate students in the philosophy of religion program are expected to become conversant with the methods of religious studies (including the history and phenomenology of religion), with traditional areas of philosophical study (metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and the history of ideas), and with the texts and normative discourses of the particular religious traditions relevant to their area of interest. Graduate students in the Division of Religious and Theological Studies (DRTS) have access to the faculties of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS), the Boston University School of Theology, and, through the Boston Theological Institute, other universities in the Boston area. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Physiology, Endocrinology, and Reproduction | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program includes faculty with specific interests in endocrinology and hormone action; neuroendocrinology; stress and metabolism; reproductive physiology, anatomy and biochemistry; developmental biology; regulation of gametogenesis; behavioral physiology; cell signaling and gene regulation. The associated Animal Models Research Center encourages development of unconventional models for research in biology and administers an NIH-funded Training Program in Reproductive Biology. Opportunities are available for research at the Boston University Marine Program at the Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratories, Maine. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology of Religion | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is a post-masters non-clinical degree for those who plan to teach in colleges, serve as chaplains in colleges and universities, coordinate programs where religion and psychology interact, or do research and writing in the psychological approach to religious experience and behavior. The main purposes of the specialization are to provide an intellectual context for considering a wide variety of approaches to the conceptualization of personality, culture, and religious development; to offer an understanding of the dynamics of religious experiences and their implications for a wide range of self-world modes; to provide an opportunity to relate the disciplines of religious studies and psychological studies in meaningful and creative ways; and to offer guidance in planning, conceptualizing, researching, and writing on problems and issues generated by the religion/psychology interface. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Religion and Literature | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is dictated by the competencies and academic goals of the student. A strong sense of self-direction is essential, given the range of specialized concentrations in religion and literature. Students may choose courses and mentors from a wide range of departments (e.g., Classics, English, Modern Foreign Languages, Philosophy, Religion, Theology, and University Professors) and are strongly encouraged to attend and to participate in the numerous special lectures, seminars, and symposia offered annually by the Luce Program in Scripture and Literary Arts on topics encompassed by religion and literature. This department currently not accepting applicants for Fall ’08. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Religion and Society | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is an interdisciplinary program on the relation of religion and culture in modern or traditional societies. Applicants to this specialization should have a solid background in religious or theological disciplines or in one of the humanities or social sciences. It is assumed that the graduate student will take approximately one-third of the course work in religious and theological studies and two-thirds in a relevant cognate discipline OR one-third in a relevant cognate discipline and two-thirds in religious and theological studies. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Science, Philosophy, and Religion | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program provides an academic setting for advanced studies in the philosophy of religion and philosophy of science, as well as in mathematics and one or more of the natural sciences, with a view to developing professional competency in the interdisciplinary area defined by the relationship of philosophy, religion, and the sciences. Graduate students in this specialization have access to courses offered by the School of Theology, the Department of Philosophy, the Department of Mathematics and relevant departments in the sciences. In addition, there are unique opportunities offered by the Boston University Institute for Philosophy and Religion, the Boston Center for the Philosophy and History of Science, and surrounding Boston schools. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Social Ethics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is designed to integrate the social teachings of religions, philosophical ethics, and the data of social and natural sciences into the study of values and moral judgment. It provides critical skills for the study of theoretical and practical approaches to contemporary global and regional issues of social justice and sustainable development. Applicants must be well grounded in religious and theological studies, philosophical ethics, the social sciences, and, for ecological ethics, in the natural sciences. The program, which has evolved from the historical tradition of Social Ethics developed at Boston University by Walter Muelder, pertains to two larger areas of study, namely, Global Ethics (focused on globalization, human diversity, and human rights issues); and Ecological Ethics (focused on human rights in human communities, and human responsibilities toward Earth and the extended biotic community). | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The objective of this program is to produce well-rounded sociologists capable of advancing knowledge in the field through research, teaching and practice. The program involves course work, demonstration of language skills, extensive private reading, and varied research experiences. Progress in the program is shown by passing through four stages: (1) satisfying course (usually 16) and language requirements, (2) writing a critical essay and successfully defending it, (3) writing and securing approval of the Dissertation Prospectus, and (4) defending the dissertation at a (Final Oral Examination). | Students should have a demonstrate proficiency at an advanced level in a foreign language. In Sociology, that is understood to be a language in which there is a significant sociological literature and/or in which the student’s research will be conducted. There is no fixed minimum in GRE. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Boston University, 96 cummington street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2591 | This department confront the relevant issue that societies and civilizations struggle with every day. Faculty in the Department of Sociology are research experts committed to directing students at all levels of study to a broad knowledge of human relations and social systems, examining such issues as race and ethic relations, law and crime, families, work and organizations, politics, gender, urban life, ethics, and science and technology. The discipline provides the tools for a variety of professional paths, including law, business, education, social work, and journalism. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Speech Language Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | This program offers a research track to students who may have previously obtained clinical certification. | Applicants should have a master degree from an accredited college or university is required for admission and scores on the Graduate Record Examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3188 | At Boston University Sargent College, the study of human communication disorders combines an understanding and appreciation of scientific inquiry with a strong foundation in the basic sciences and the normal processes related to communication, swallowing, and cognition. The Boston University Conference on Language Development (BUCLD) was started in 1976 by students in the Applied Psycholinguistics Program. Last year the 32nd annual BUCLD took place on November 2-4, 2007. The Conference, which has become one of the best known conferences on language development in the world, is now run by students in the Program in Applied Linguistics, under the guidance of a faculty adviser. The Conference involves year-round planning and draws over 500 people from all over the U.S. and around the world. It includes presentations in such areas as theoretical approaches to language acquisition, cross-cultural language development, second language development, language disorders, and literacy development. Each year, close to 500 abstracts are submitted to the conference, from which about 87 papers and 66 posters are chosen for presentation. Internationally renowned researchers also give keynote and plenary addresses, as well as a lunch symposium on a topic of current interest. The Conference is funded largely by the money taken in each year at the Conference, including registration fees. In addition, the Conferences in 2007 through 2011 are supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. BCS 0548399 and the National Institutes of Health under Grant No. R13 HD42130-01. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Systems Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program is an interdisciplinary program for those wishing to do advanced work in areas such as control systems, robotics, information processing, or intelligent systems. | Admission normally requires a bachelor or master degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor or post-master PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor PhD program and applicants who hold a master degree are eligible to apply for a post-master PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Philosophy in Theology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program brings students into the public discussion of theology in a world-wide context. Degree programs take account of motifs from the intellectual reflection of religions and religious philosophies from all over the world. Programs emphasize understanding these motifs and learning how to use them in constructive theological work. The program has two tracks. The single-tradition track emphasizes in-depth knowledge of and constructive skills in relation to theological reflection in the tradition of study, which is usually Christianity (other traditions may be employed as resources permit). The comparative track develops linguistic and theological competence in two traditions and maintains a focus on comparative questions. In both tracks, the training provided is designed for those whose theological interests are strongly academic, whether or not they are deeply involved with the life of a religious community. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Physical Theraphy | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training | This program is designed for those who possess a baccalaureate degree and wish to become qualified a physical therapist. Students have the opportunity to acquire clinical competence in all areas of physical therapy practice, participate in supervised clinical experiences, develop skills in education, management, research, and a clinical special-interest area. | Applicants should have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university is required for admission and scores on the Graduate Record Examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department strives to develop critically thinking, innovative, and evidence-based professionals who engage in life-long learning and leadership in the areas of clinical practice, research and community service. The mission of the Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training is to advance, disseminate, and apply knowledge in the fields of physical therapy and athletic training. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Science in Dentistry in Dental Public Health (for Dentists) | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | Applications for all Boston University School of Dental Medicine Postdoctoral Programs must be submitted through PASS, the Postdoctoral Application Support Service run by ADEA (The American Dental Education Association). PASS is a centralized application service for advanced dental education programs. PASS simplifies the application process by providing one standardized format, relieving applicants of the need to complete multiple applications. In addition to the electronic application and the PASS processing fee, the following materials should be submitted to PASS: Curriculum Vitae/Resume (2 pages maximum, 8 ½” X 11”, white paper). Professional Evaluations (e-form, or special paper format). Official Institution Evaluation (e-form, or special paper format). Official Dental School Transcript (send one only; PASS will copy). Explanation Form (if the dental transcript or Institution Evaluation cannot be obtained). PASS, 1400 K Street, N.W., Suite 1100B, Washington, DC 20005-2403 USA. Phone: (202) 289-8123 or (800) 353-2237. Fax: (202) 289-8702. E-mail: csrpass@adea.org www.adea.org/pass. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Science in Dentistry in Endodontics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Endodontics | This program prepare students to meet the scholarly requirements that familiarize them with the development of endodontic theory and practice and an evidence-based approach that permits an intelligent evaluation of current and future technologies and materials. is a four-year program in which a Doctor of Science in Dentistry degree is combined with a CAGS(Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study in Endodontics) in endodontics. The course of study is developed by the chair of the Department of Endodontics and the student's research mentor. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Endodontics | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Endodontics, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Science in Dentistry in Operative Dentistry | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | This program is specifically intended for students pursuing teaching careers, the program includes training in basic sciences, biomaterials, lecture presentation, research methods, and the clinical aspects of restorative dentistry. The program provides an opportunity to develop the academic and clinical skills required to participate in a dental school faculty. A limited number of candidates are accepted into this program, which takes at least three years in addition to the time commitment for the CAGS (Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study in Operative Dentistry) to complete. Candidates must complete all basic science and clinical requirements for the CAGS program as listed above. The program also requires that candidates complete a major research effort related to operative dentistry. This research is usually conducted in conjunction with research faculty of the university. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Science in Dentistry in Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | This program is to educate students to become competent clinicians who can successfully analyze and treat dentofacial deformities. Emphasis is placed on craniofacial growth and development, cephalometrics, biomechanics, occlusion, and neuromuscular physiology. The program provides the formal educational requirements for the examinations of the American Board of Orthodontics. A limited number of candidates are accepted into the DScD program, which takes at least three years in addition to the CAGS to complete. Candidates must complete all basic science and clinical requirements for the CAGS program as listed above. In addition, the program requires that candidates complete a major research effort related to orthodontics. This research is usually conducted in conjunction with research faculty of the university. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules includes in 1st year: SDM OR 803 Craniofacial Growth and Development 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.SDM OR 805 Orthodontic Seminar I overall 20 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, OR 805.1 Orthodontic Orientation (4 cr, 1st sem.) OR 805.2 Biomechanics (2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.) OR 805.3 Diagnosis and Treatment Planning (4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.) OR 805.4 Scope of Orthodontics (5 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.) OR 805.5 Literature Review (4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.) OR 805.6 Review ABO Reading List (1 cr, 2nd sem.) SDM OR 820 Orthodontic Documentation 1 cr, 1st and 4th sem, SDM OR 822 Surgical Orthodontics 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM OR 900 Histopathology of Tooth Movement 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM OR 911 Orthodontic Clinical Practice 15 cr, 1st and 2nd sem. Year 2: SDM OR 821 Orthodontic Seminar II overall 8 cr, 3rd and 4th sem OR 821.1 Case Review (4 cr, 3rd and 4th sem.) OR 821.2 Practice Alternatives After Graduation (1 cr, 3rd sem.) OR 821.3 Practice Management (1 cr, 4th sem.) OR 821.4 Non-Bracket Therapy (1 cr, 3rd and 4 the sem.) OR 821.5 Review ABO Reading List (1 cr, 4th sem.) SDM OR 912 Orthodontic Clinical Practice 17 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM OR 920 Literature Review 6 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM OR 990 Research: Orthodontics 2 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM OS 866 Orthographic Surgery 1 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PE 817 Seminar: Grand Rounds 2 cr, 3rd and 4th sem. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Science in Dentistry in Pediatric Dentistry | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry | This program is concerned with dentistry for children and the disabled. It includes training children to accept dentistry; restoring and maintaining the primary, mixed, and permanent dentitions; and correcting various problems of occlusion. The department participates in several community service programs. This program requires a minimum of three years in addition to the CAGS (Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study in Pediatric Dentistry) in pediatric dentistry. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules consists of Year 1: SDM OB 761 Oral Microbiology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OB 830 Research Writing 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM OS 831 Head and Neck Anatomy 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM PH 763 Bioethics and the Law .5 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PH 803 Biostatistics 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PA 801 Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PD 802 Fundamentals of Pediatric Dentistry 3 cr, 1st sem, SDM PD 822 Advanced Seminar in Pediatric Dentistry 4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PD 832 Growth and Development 1/2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PD 911 Clinical Pediatric Dentistry 10 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PD 918 Clinical Anesthesia 1 cr, 1st or 2nd sem, SDM PD 922 Clinical Oral Surgery 1 cr, 1st or 2nd sem, SDM PD 981 Research in Pediatric Dentistry 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem. Year 2: SDM PD 808 Orthodontics for Pediatric Dentists 1 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 824 Advanced Case Presentations in Pediatric Dentistry 4 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 823 Advanced Seminar in Pediatric Dentistry 4 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 982 Research in Pediatric Dentistry 2 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 912 Clinical Pediatric Dentistry 10 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 916 Clinical Orthodontics 4 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 920 Clinical Pediatric Medicine 1 cr, 3rd or 4th semester. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Science in Dentistry in Prosthodontics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | This program in fixed, removable, and implant prosthodontics provides the candidate with clinical proficiency and comprehensive knowledge of the diagnosis, treatment planning, rehabilitation, and maintenance of oral function, comfort, appearance ,and health of patients with missing/damaged teeth and orofacial defects by using biocompatible artificial substitutes. The curriculum includes didactic and clinical instruction in complete dentures, removable partial dentures, fixed prosthodontics, implant dentistry (including implant surgery), geriatrics, temporomandibular disorders, and maxillofacial prosthodontics. The didactic background and the clinical and laboratory skills of these areas of prosthodontics are stressed. A limited number of candidates are accepted into this program. Candidates must complete all biomedical science and clinical requirements for the CAGS(Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study in Prosthodontics) program as described above. The program also requires that candidates successfully complete a major research effort related to the specialty, a doctoral thesis, and thesis defense. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules include Year 1: SDM EN 819 Endodontics for Prosthodontists .5 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OB 761 Oral Microbiology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OB 767 Oral Immunology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OS 761 Medical Concerns of the Dental Patient 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM OS 828 Pain and Anxiety Control 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM OS 831 Head and Neck Anatomy 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM PD 832 Growth and Development 1/2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PE 764 Current Concepts in Periodontology 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM PE 817 Seminar: Grand Rounds 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PE 827 Applied Dental Pharmacology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PH 741 Behavioral Sciences 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM PH 763 Bioethics and Law 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PH 800 Introduction to Biostatistics/Epidemiology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PR 720 Practice Management 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM PR 801 Fixed Prosthodontics 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 803 Complete Denture Prosthodontics 3 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 805 Esthetic Dentistry for the Prosthodontist 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PR 806 Removable Partial Dentures 3 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 807 Patient Presentation and Treatment Planning Seminar 1 cr, 1st and 2nd sem. SDM PR 814 Removable Prosthodontics: Overlay Dentures 1 cr, 2nd sem.SDM PR 815 Basic Prosthodontic Techniques 3 cr, 1st sem. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Science in Rehabilitation Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | This program offers many of the crucial components for graduate education in this field, including interdisciplinary collaboration among all of the programs in Sargent College and with related disciplines such as speech, language and hearing, health sciences, physical therapy, and occupational therapy. The program’s strengths include internationally renowned faculty members, state-of-the-art research facilities, existing interdisciplinary collaboration and mentorship model. | Applicants must have completed at least an undergraduate degree in a related field at an accredited college or university. Students who have completed a master’s degree in a related field also may enter the program. While professional experience is not an explicit requirement, applicants with relevant experience will be given priority for admission. Test scores on the Graduate Record Examination General Tests, which must have been taken within the previous five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling at Boston University Sargent College is dedicated to promoting the health, well-being, and quality of life of persons experiencing disabilities. Students in the occupational therapy and rehabilitation counseling programs receive outstanding preparation for roles in both traditional settings and newly emerging areas of need. Sargent College’s distinctive interdisciplinary, evidence-based approach combines challenging coursework, custom-tailored clinical placements, and the opportunity to collaborate with faculty who are leaders in their fields. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Science in Rehabilitation Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | This program prepare students for research and teaching careers in a number of areas of specialization in the rehabilitation sciences domain. | Applicants must have completed at least an undergraduate degree in a related field at an accredited college or university. Students who have completed a master’s degree in a related field also may enter the program. While professional experience is not an explicit requirement, applicants with relevant experience will be given priority for admission. Test scores on the Graduate Record Examination General Tests, which must have been taken within the previous five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling at Boston University Sargent College is dedicated to promoting the health, well-being, and quality of life of persons experiencing disabilities. Students in the occupational therapy and rehabilitation counseling programs receive outstanding preparation for roles in both traditional settings and newly emerging areas of need. Sargent College’s distinctive interdisciplinary, evidence-based approach combines challenging coursework, custom-tailored clinical placements, and the opportunity to collaborate with faculty who are leaders in their fields. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Doctor of Theology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This program is offered to students wishing to enhance their knowledge and ministerial skills or teaching competence in certain advanced areas of theology and ministry. It has a stronger academic specialization than the DMin, but also differs from the PhD in its integrative character and clear connection to the church. The student’s selection of major and minor must be sufficiently distinct so that the proposed integration can be significant. | Student must meet the entrance requirements of each School. MDiv/MSW and MTS/MSW require a 3.0 GPA and a minimum score of 50 on the MAT. DMin/MSW requires a Master of Divinity degree with a minimum 3.3 GPA and the results of either the Miller Analogies Test or the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The following disciplines are eligible for majors: Biblical and Historical Studies, Philosophy, Theology, and Ethics, Religion, Culture, and Personality, Ministry in Church and Society. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Double Degree/BUCOP | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program permits qualified undergraduates to enroll in two of the University’s schools or colleges and earn two baccalaureate degrees simultaneously. The program has become a popular option with students whose professional goals can be met by acquiring two degrees, as well as with students who have strong academic interests in disciplines which are based in two different colleges. The program is a demanding one, requiring a substantial commitment on the part of the student. To be eligible for enrollment in BUCOP, a student must have a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.00; this level of performance must be maintained for the duration of the program. At least 144 credits must be earned in no fewer than 36 courses (as opposed to the 128 credits and 32 courses normally required for the baccalaureate). This is the equivalent of nine semesters of coursework. Students may be required to go beyond the 144 credit minimum in order to meet both sets of degree requirements. Some BUCOP students enroll in summer courses, use AP credit, and/or overload to ensure that they graduate with their class. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Double Major in Music Education/Musicology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | This program offers a double major within the School of Music with the permission of the faculty concerned. Students must complete all courses required in each field. Such a course of study may be completed in five years, or in four years with summer study. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The Department of Music Education at Boston University’s School of Music has a long and distinguished tradition. In 1967, it was actively involved in the Tangle wood Symposium, one of the watershed events in the history of American music education. Today, the department continues its leadership role in the development and exploration of new strategies for effective and creative instruction in music. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Double Major in Musicology/Theory and Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | This program offers a double major within the School of Music with the permission of the faculty concerned. Students must complete all courses required in each field. Such a course of study may be completed in five years, or in four years with summer study. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | This department faculty members are actively involved in research with specific strengths in the music and music theory of the Middle Ages; the music of J. S. Bach, Beethoven, and Mahler; the history of music criticism and aesthetics; the music of the Renaissance and Baroque; nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian music; and jazz studies. Faculty has produced books and monographs on their areas of interest and have received awards for their scholarship and teaching. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Double Major in Performance/Music Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | This program offers a double major within the School of Music with the permission of the faculty concerned. Students must complete all courses required in each field. Such a course of study may be completed in five years, or in four years with summer study. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The Department of Music Education at Boston University’s School of Music has a long and distinguished tradition. In 1967, it was actively involved in the Tangle wood Symposium, one of the watershed events in the history of American music education. Today, the department continues its leadership role in the development and exploration of new strategies for effective and creative instruction in music. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Double Major in Performance/Musicology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | This program offers a double major within the School of Music with the permission of the faculty concerned. Students must complete all courses required in each field. Such a course of study may be completed in five years, or in four years with summer study. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | This department faculty members are actively involved in research with specific strengths in the music and music theory of the Middle Ages; the music of J. S. Bach, Beethoven, and Mahler; the history of music criticism and aesthetics; the music of the Renaissance and Baroque; nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian music; and jazz studies. Faculty has produced books and monographs on their areas of interest and have received awards for their scholarship and teaching. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Double Major in Performance/Theory and Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | This program offers a double major within the School of Music with the permission of the faculty concerned. Students must complete all courses required in each field. Such a course of study may be completed in five years, or in four years with summer study. | Applicants should submit three scores and complete an audition on an instrument offered at Boston University. Work submitted for application evaluation should be in good manuscript form and should demonstrate talent, some knowledge of contemporary music, and some technical skill. Students applying to enter the major at the sophomore level must present to the department evidence of their work at a level equal to that of CFA MU 561, 562 Basic Compositional Techniques. Composition majors are required to enroll in the honors-level theory sequence. Students in Composition and Theory must audition on an instrument offered at Boston University and according to the requirements of the Bachelor of Music in Performance. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | DrPH in International Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | This program is an interdepartmental offering intended for experienced public health professionals who seek advanced training for leadership positions in public health. This program is the highest professional degree in public health. This practice-oriented degree program will train public health professionals to develop, implement, and evaluate public health programs and policies nationally and internationally. | Students with a master degree prior to admission will be allowed a maximum of 5 years from matriculation to graduation to complete the degree program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | School of Public Health, Department of International Health, 715 Albany Street Crosstown Ctr 3rd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5234 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | DrPH in Maternal and Child Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | This program is an interdepartmental offering intended for experienced public health professionals who seek advanced training for leadership positions in public health. The DrPH is the highest professional degree in public health. This practice-oriented degree program will train public health professionals to develop, implement, and evaluate public health programs and policies nationally and internationally. | Student with a master degree prior to admission will be allowed a maximum of 5 years from matriculation to graduation to complete the degree program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5375 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | DrPH in Social and Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | This program is an interdepartmental program intended for experienced public health professionals seeking advanced training for leadership positions in public health. Currently students may choose a home department in International Health, Maternal and Child Health or Social and Behavioral Sciences. The DrPH is the highest professional degree in public health. This practice-oriented degree program will train public health professionals to: develop, implement, and evaluate public health programs and policies nationally and internationally. | Student with a master degree prior to admission will be allowed a maximum of 5 years from matriculation to graduation to complete the degree program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5160 | The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health.Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Dual Degree JD/MA in Preservation Studies | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provided the interdisciplinary training necessary for the effective and judicious management of cultural resources. Students in the Program engage firsthand with both traditional and innovative forms of preservation practice and receive essential preparation in architectural history, preservation planning, building conservation, preservation law, and adaptive use. Together these provide a broad grounding that emphasizes the variety of historic resources and the diversity of approaches to their preservation. First year Boston University Law students may apply to the joint Program during their first semester in the Law School. To earn the joint JD/MA degrees, students must complete two specific courses in the Law School: Historic Preservation Law and either Land Use or Real Estate Finance. Students should also consider Administrative Law, Environmental Law, Land Use, Introduction to Federal Taxation, Federal Law, Real Estate Transactions, and Housing Law. Within the Preservation Studies Program students are required to take a total of six additional courses. Students must first apply to and be accepted by the Boston University School of Law. Once students are accepted to the School of Law, they submit a separate application to and must be accepted by the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, normally before the end of their first year in law school. The Graduate School allows the following modifications to the application requirements: the substitution of LSAT for GRE scores and the submission of copies of recommendations and transcripts already submitted for admission to the law school. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Dual Degree Philosophy (Ph.D.) and Classical Studies (M.A.) | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program encourages combined or comparative programs of study designed to take advantage of Boston University offerings in such other areas as the Romance languages, comparative studies in literature and the arts program, archaeology, and philosophy, as well as the possibilities provided by cross-registration in the Boston Area Graduate School Consortium. Graduates of these programs are expected to have acquired a range and depth of knowledge of antiquity that will provide the basis for innovative scholarship as well as for professional careers in university or college teaching and in other positions that require a background in humanities. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent international education. Important factors in the department ranking of applicants are the breadth and quality of the undergraduate experience --particularly the language components, the quality of the essay and writing sample, the strength of the letters of recommendation, GRE scores, and the suitability of the department programs to the particular applicant. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Courses are: SED CT 575 General Methods of Instruction, Grades 5-12, SED DS 502 Intro to Adolescent Development, SED ED 500 Foundations of Educational Practices, SED ED 501 Foundations of Educational Practices, SED SE 510 Special Education: Curriculum and Instruction, SED RS 600 Perspectives on Inquiry, SED CL 520 Methods of Teaching: Latin and Classical Studies, SED CL 540 Student Teaching Practicum: Latin and Classical Studies. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | EdD in Administration, Training and Policy | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy | This program is for students who plan to work as leaders or policy specialists in education; some are already certified to teach and are seeking licensure as school administrators. This program seeks to develop a broad understanding of education at all levels, administrative skills valuable in many capacities, and an understanding of the principles supporting responsible leadership. Two courses, SED AP 662 and SED RS 600, are required for all master’s students in this program. Students may select courses from the department as well as University-wide graduate course offerings for the additional 24 credits. | Candidates must hold a master’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdD in Counseling Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program is based on a traditional scientist-practitioner model, emphasizing psychological theory and knowledge, as well as the development of counseling practitioner skills. The curriculum is grounded in an educational/developmental model with intervention methods appropriate to the stage and phase of life of the individual and/or group. Personal transformations, whether positive or negative, are understood as the outcome of maturation, education, and experience. The program prepares students to work primarily in educational settings (such as college counseling centers and public and private schools) and with those whose goal is optimal performance (such as elite athletes, performing artists, teams, and sports organizations). | Candidates must hold a master’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdD in Curriculum and Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program will give a thorough understanding of key areas essential to professional leadership in education. These include building a solid academic content foundation for individual field; strengthening the knowledge base and professional skills pertinent to forming, designing, implementing, and evaluating specific educational programs; and developing research capabilities enabling to conduct and evaluate research. In addition, students may pursue study in one of the many specializations available in the Department of Curriculum and Teaching. All students must complete study in four areas: basic School of Education and departmental core courses, educational research courses, academic content courses, and specialized courses in a professional education area. | Candidates must hold a master’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdD in Developmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program fill a variety of professional roles, including university teaching and research in schools of education and other professional schools, and in hospital and clinical settings. The Human Development and Education specialization highlights the developmental foundations of education and attracts students interested in a particular developmental domain, age group, or setting. This program may emphasize the interrelationship of developmental domains, or focus on a specific domain. | Candidates must hold a master’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdD in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program will develop a coherent and integrated program of study in collaboration with their faculty advisors in specialization areas such as teaching and learning among students with mild/moderate or severe disabilities, social justice, or they may focus on policies affecting and administration of programs for students with disabilities. An additional option is that of the combination of social work and special education through a multifaceted course of study that leads to a master's degree in Social Work and a doctoral degree in Special Education. Doctoral degree program graduates often pursue careers as teachers and scholars in colleges or universities, as program directors in schools or government agencies, or as community or organization leaders. | Candidates must hold a master’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Counseling | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program specialized in School Counseling, Community Counseling and Sport Psychology. This program emphasis on wellness, performance enhancement, and positive psychology. The program is available to individuals who have completed bachelor’s degrees in accredited colleges and universities throughout the world; it is not necessary to have majored in the social or behavioral sciences. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are SED CE 726 Clinical Assessment: Psychological Testing, SED CE 737 Counseling: Philosophy, Theory, and Practice, SED CE 741 Cross-Cultural Perspectives in Counseling Psychology, SED CE 746 Clinical Practice I (2 semesters), SED CE 841 Theories of Human Development (Infancy, Childhood, and Early Adolescence). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Curriculum and Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program emphasizes the professional talents of planning and designing instruction, creating comprehensive interdisciplinary curriculum, broadening and deepening the knowledge base of one’s teaching, and evaluating the results of teaching. The goal is to graduate educators who are knowledgeable and innovative in a demanding and rewarding profession. Curriculum planning and carefully designed teaching methods are fundamental to providing quality education in nation schools. Students in Boston University Curriculum and Teaching graduate program dedicate themselves to learning about the complex issues of contemporary education as they prepare to be outstanding leaders in teaching and supervisory positions. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Developmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program offers the opportunity to develop specialized knowledge in one area while achieving an understanding of related disciplines. This degree program includes a wide range of disciplines that are defined by: Discipline: psychology, philosophy, history, or literacy studies. Population: age or stage. Setting: clinic, social agency, home, school, or workplace. Domain: cognitive, ociomoral, psychological, etc. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Early Childhood Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program is designed for students who wish to prepare for a variety of professional assignments related to the education of the young child (three to eight years). Students concentrate on the preschool and young school-age child in preschool and school classrooms. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Education of the Deaf | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program affords students the opportunity to develop insight and genuine appreciation for the culture, contributions, and contemporary issues of Deaf people in the United States. Students in program explore the issues of human dignity and the quality of life of Deaf people in society. Competence in American Sign Language, the language of the Deaf, is fundamental in gaining an in-depth understanding of the Deaf community. The initial focus of the program is to understand the bilingual/bicultural issues within other societies and how these issues parallel similar issues with the Deaf in North America. Many of the program's core courses are taught by Deaf faculty. The master's degree is required for full preparation and certification as a teacher of the Deaf. Students are required to take additional courses in one of the following areas: linguistics, curriculum development, the education of multiple-handicapped children, counseling, administration, English as a second language, or bilingual/bicultural education. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Educational Media and Technology | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program prepares graduates for professional careers as educators, instructional designers, developers of educational resources, and managers of the resources necessary to support education and training with technology. Graduates who concentrate on the design and development of educational resources often pursue careers in publishing as authors, designers, producers, and evaluators of all kinds of educational materials, especially computer-based multimedia and educational television. As managers, graduates are often responsible for directing the human and technological resources of media labs and computer centers in both formal education and training environments. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program prepares teachers for the joys and challenges of working with children from diverse backgrounds in grades 1–6. Candidates bring to bear their strong liberal arts preparation courses that explore the research-based pedagogy specific to the subject matter of the elementary curriculum and fieldwork that takes place in both urban and suburban classrooms. The graduate program is designed for a candidate with a liberal arts or professional undergraduate degree who seeks licensure as an elementary education teacher. This licensure program includes prepracticum field experiences, foundations in education, curriculum courses, as well as a full semester of student teaching. Candidates who hold an initial license may complete the requirements for professional licensure as an elementary education teacher. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in English and Language Arts Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program provide advanced study for practicing English and language arts teachers who develop specific plans of study, in consultation with their academic advisors, for careers as supervisors, department chairmen, or consultants. It is also possible for a student to earn a professional license for classroom teaching with the appropriate experience and holding initial licensure. Programs of study emphasize recent research and successful practices in English and language arts education. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Health Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program prepares the students for physical education, health education, and coaching responsibilities in elementary, middle, and secondary schools and colleges, youth agencies, fitness and social service organizations, as well as community associations. Graduate curriculum includes study in teaching physical education (kindergarten through college level), pedagogy, coaching, health, fitness, sports management, and sport theory. Students who are seeking licensure in health or physical education can meet the necessary requirements in state-approved program. Students do not need an undergraduate degree in health or physical education to enter licensure track master degree programs. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are SED ED 500 - Foundations of Educational Practices (6 credits) Fall/Summer, SED ED 501 - Foundation of Educational Practices Lab (0 credits), SED CE 841 - Theories of Human Development (4.0 credits) Fall, SED HE 722 - Development of the Health Curriculum (4 credits) Fall, SED HE 523 - - Applied Nutrition (4 credits) Spring, SED HE 724 - Sexuality, Culture and Development (4 credits) Spring, SED RS 600 - Perspectives on Inquiry (4 credits) Fall/Spring/Summer, SED HE 720 - Selected Problems in Health Education (2 credits) Spring, SED SE 510 - Special Education: Curriculum and Instruction (2 credits) Fall/Spring/Summer, SED HE 554 - Health Education Student Teaching (8 credits) Fall or Spring, Requisite for Health Education Licensure Track-A minimum of one university class in Human Anatomy/Physiology or Exercise Science and an updated certification in Basic First Aid, and CPR. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in History and Social Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program has expanded beyond the familiar and traditional goal of preparing classroom history and social science teachers. Though the development of effective classroom teachers remains a high priority, history and social science education serves a wide range of specialized professional career goals, including classroom teachers, museum educators, developers of learning materials, history and political science curriculum specialists, and educators for the judicial system and community agencies. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Human Movement | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program prepares students for physical education, health, and coaching responsibilities in elementary, middle, and secondary schools, colleges, youth agencies, fitness and social service organizations, as well as community associations. Students seeking to become health or physical education teachers, coaches, sports analysts, fitness trainers and consultants, or specialists in all branches of these fields may enroll in this program. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Human Resource Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy | This program may be considered a general overview of the field, allowing the students to determine an area of interest or specialization. This program has its foundation in theory and research, with an emphasis on practical application. This program will focus on the following competencies: reflecting on key events; thinking strategically about business problems and solutions; analyzing work performance, organizational structures, and organizational processes; designing and implementing business solutions; managing people, processes and projects; and assessing the effectiveness of business interventions. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The Core Requirements: SED AP 662 Administrative Planning (4 cr.) (ATP requirement) , SED RS 600 - Perspectives on Inquiry (4 cr.) (SED requirement). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in International Educational Development | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy | This program prepares graduates to work with government and non-government agencies to design, implement, and evaluate programs at the local, regional, and national levels. This comprehensive graduate program reaches far beyond the classroom by helping people around the world develop new knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors including in the U.S. In addition to developing a broad understanding of education and training, students gain insight into political, social, cultural, and organizational dynamics. Students are well-equipped with the technical skills and conceptual frameworks to develop and implement educational programs for cultural, social, and economic development in their own or other countries. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program is designed for those who hold a license and wish to broaden their understanding of mathematics and mathematics education. This program helps to develop expertise in fundamental mathematical concepts and processes, the development of mathematics curriculum materials, and teaching methods applicable to a variety of age levels, interests, and aptitudes. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Modern Foreign Language Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program is designed for candidates who are already licensed to teach a modern foreign language or do not wish to be licensed, and who want to increase their knowledge of language and culture and improve their language teaching abilities. Students take courses in linguistic theory, language acquisition, literacy development, culture, and methodology. Electives may include modern foreign language courses. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Policy, Planning and Administration | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy | This program will prepare the students for a career as a policy specialist or leader in education. This program will help to develop a broad understanding of education at all levels, administrative skills valuable in many capacities, and an understanding of the principles supporting responsible leadership. This program is designed for students who typically have worked for several years in some branch of the human services, such as teaching, higher education administration, social work, health care, job training, or community development. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Students take the following courses or approved substitutes: SED AP 524 Citizen Participation (2 credits), SED AP 525 - Community Education (2 credits), SED AP 600 - Diversity and Justice in Education, SED AP 662 - Administrative Planning (Principal) or SED AP 761 - Organizational Analysis (Superintendent), SED AP 720 - Performance-Based Educational Leadership, SED AP 750 - Performance Appraisal and Supervision, SED AP 754 - Educational Equity and the Law (2 credits), SED AP 757 - School Labor Relations (2 credits), SED AP 758 - School Management, SED AP 802 - Practicum Pre-K-6 or SED AP 803 - Practicum 5-8 or SED AP 804 - Practicum 9-12 or SED AP 805 - Practicum Superintendent/Assistant Superintendent, SED CT 760 - Contemporary Curriculum. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy | School of Education, Department of Administration, Training, and Policy, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Reading Education | Full Time | 2 Semester(s) | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program prepares teachers, specialists, clinicians, and consultants in the area of reading and writing assessment and instruction. Coursework includes the study of current research and practice in reading and writing assessment and instruction, and analysis of commonly used assessments and instructional materials. Particular attention is paid to instructional practices that accelerate learning for struggling readers and writers. Students will gain a deep and thorough understanding of research and theory that is fundamental to sound and successful teaching, and they will work with university faculty who are, themselves, currently engaged in research and teaching in area schools. As such, degree recipients leave the program with broad and comprehensive academic knowledge and important practical insights about what works in diverse school settings. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program prepares for professional responsibilities in designing, teaching, and supervising science programs at the elementary, secondary, and college levels. This program connects emerging and experienced teachers to the foundations of what makes a quality science educator today: up-to-date science content with innovative, diverse pedagogy. It focuses on the identification of concepts and skills helpful in teaching science and technology to students in elementary school through college. While this specialized program is individually tailored for each of students, it contains a balance of study in teaching strategies and classroom materials as well as examination of current research. This program emphasizes the development of research skills and prepares individuals for post-secondary positions in community or technical colleges and in teacher training colleges and universities. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program provides opportunities for students to prepare for a variety of careers working with and supporting the needs of individuals with disabilities and their families, in positions as teachers, residential care support, administrators and, through a dual degree program with the School of Social Work, as counselors. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core courses are as follows: SED SE 706 - Introduction to Special Education, SED SE 760 - Cognitive, Learning, and Behavior, SED LS 560 - Language Acquisition: Introduction, SED SE 751 - Assessment in Special Education: Procedures, SED RS 600 - Perspectives of Inquiry. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | EdM in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program is for graduate students interested in teaching English to speakers of other languages may prepare either for work in college and adult language programs in this country or for college, adult, primary, or secondary school programs abroad (nonlicensure programs), or they may take an appropriate sequence of courses and fieldwork to become licensed to teach in public schools at the Pre-K–6 or 5–12 level. | Candidates must hold a master’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Executive MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 1.5 Year(s) | Contact provider | School of Management | This program creates a high-impact learning environment that satisfies the unique demands—and taps into the talents—of seasoned executives from diverse fields. Provide an interactive curriculum that engages participants through strategic workouts. Team projects. Visioning exercises. Simulations. Role-playing. And other learning techniques. | The admissions committee selects Executive MBA class members with diverse skills and backgrounds, all of whom: Have 10+ years of work experience , Are experienced managers or senior professionals, Continue to work full-time and Represent diverse industries and professional backgrounds. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Independent Work in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program encourages interested and qualified students to pursue a special course of independent work in psychology in the senior year and to have completed one experimental course prior to that time. Interested sophomores and juniors are encouraged to discuss independent work with their advisors in the department at the beginning of the second semester. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CAS PS 101 General Psychology, CAS PS 202 Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience, CAS PS 205 Memory and Brain, CAS PS 211 Introduction to Experimental Design in Psychology, CAS PS 222 Perception and Behavior, CAS PS 231 Physiological Psychology, CAS PS 234 Psychology of Learning, CAS PS 241 Developmental Psychology, CAS PS 243 Life Span Developmental Psychology in Health and Illness, CAS PS 251 Psychology of Personality: Theories and Application. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston University, 64 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2580 | This department's faculty, more than 30 strong, continues to attract agency-funded research, publish extensively, and maintain a serious commitment to teaching B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. students. The department’s affiliated research centers, the Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders and the Center for Memory and Brain, provide opportunities for research experience, as do affiliated laboratory studies in topics including child cognition, neurophysiology, developmental behavior genetics, neuroscience, psycholinguistics, and vision sciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Interdisciplinary Major in History - History and International Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS IR 303 Universal History, CAS IR 320 The Military Experience, CAS IR 325 Great Powers and the Eastern Mediterranean, CAS IR 330 Diplomatic Practice, CAS IR 341 Central Europe, CAS IR 349 History of International Relations, 1900-45, CAS IR 350 History of International Relations since 1945, CAS IR 363 Soviet Politics, 1917-1991, CAS IR 367 Introduction to Latin American Politics and International Relations, CAS IR 369 Southeast Asia in World Politics, CAS IR 370 China: From Revolution to Reform, CAS IR 382 Understanding the Middle East, CAS IR 465 The United States and the Cold War. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Interdisciplinary Major in History - History and Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS AH 111 Introduction to Art History I: Antiquity to the Middle Ages, CAS AH 112 Introduction to Art History II: Renaissance to Today, CAS AH 215 Arts of Africa, CAS AH 225 The Arts of Asia. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Interdisciplinary Major in History - History and Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the course are: CAS HI 204 Europe Between Renaissance and Revolution, CAS HI 223 Jews in the Modern World, CAS HI 306 Magic, Science, and Religion, CAS HI 308 History of the Crusades, CAS RN 103 Religions of the World: Eastern, CAS RN 104 Religions of the World: Western, CAS RN 210 Buddhism, CAS RN 211 Chinese Religion, CAS RN 212 Christianity, CAS RN 212 Christianity, CAS RN 212 Christianity, CAS HI 407 Topics in Medieval Religious Culture, CAS HI 443 Jews in Modern German History, CAS HI 456 Religion and American Culture, CAS HI 552 Topics in Jewish History. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | J.D./M.P.H. in Law and Public Health | Full Time | 3.5 - 4 years | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This program that reflects the interrelationship between the legal system and the delivery of health-care services. BU Law's strong program in health law complements the BUSPH curriculum, which explores the nature and context of public health programs and the organizational, behavioral, legal and bureaucratic constraints they face. Successful candidates receive the J.D. degree followed by the M.P.H.—a three-and-a-half to four-year sequence that otherwise would take at least one-and-a-half more year. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MA in Law and International Relations | Full Time | 3.5 Year(s) | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This dual-degree program in Law and International Relations provides an essential background for positions in national governments or international agencies, and gives the international lawyer a perspective on the global environment. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MA in Law and Philosophy | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This dual degree focus on Public life in constitutional democracies depends on a theoretical understanding of the nature and application of law. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MBA in Law and Health Care Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $37502 for 12 to 18 credits | School of Law | This dual degree program equips with an understanding of the interaction of legal and management principles in the field of health-services delivery. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MBA in Law and Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $37502 for12 to 18 credits | School of Management | This dual degree program provides the legal and analytical tools for results-oriented decision-making. The worlds of law and business have become increasingly intertwined. More than ever before, attaining successful management results requires careful attention to legal and regulatory issues, often on a global scale. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MBA in Management and Law | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | School of Management | This program is a dual-degree which provides the legal and analytical tools for results-oriented decision-making. The worlds of law and business have become increasingly intertwined and more than ever before, attaining successful management results requires careful attention to legal and regulatory issues, often on a global scale. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in Biostatistics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | This is a dual-degree program which provides the skills to design, analyze, and interpret the result of public health studies. Through such courses as statistics, advanced regression analysis, and statistical computing, students learn the statistical applications important to research, including study design, data management, and statistical analysis. Graduates are prepared for further study or careers in research, project management, academia, or the private sector. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core course requirements are highly encouraged to take the BS703, though the core course requirement for all MPH students may be met by successfully completing BS701 or BS703 in Biostatics. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617638 5207 | The school has grown tremendously in recent years with more than 4,000 alumni, 140 full-time faculty, and students from over 40 countries. In keeping with the School service-oriented philosophy, each department combines research and academics with a practicum requirement, resulting in a rigorous, well-rounded curriculum enhanced by work experience in a public health environment. Through longstanding collaborations with such institutions as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Public Health Commission, and the Veterans Affairs Administration; and international alliances with the Red Cross, the Peace Corps, and foreign governments, our students, faculty, and alumni draw on their own diverse backgrounds to carry out the School mission in a variety of settings. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in Environmental Health | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | This program offers dual degree program is an accelerated four-year course of study leading to the award of both the degrees. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4620 | The department houses two basic research laboratories in immunotoxicology and is home to a Superfund Basic Research Center, which investigates reproductive and developmental hazards. The department research agenda is also firmly rooted in community health and environmental justice; for example, a collaborative project with public officials and community groups seeks to better the health of low-income families by improving conditions in public housing. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in Epidemiology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | This dual degree program is an accelerated four-year course of study leading to the award of both the degrees. This program include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7775 | Department of Epidemiology has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in Health Law | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | This program offers a unique opportunity to combine professional training in law and public health. This program offers the essential systematic knowledge of the health field and its disciplines to prepare students for careers in law, government service, administration and research. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4626 | This department teaching and research activities explore both individual rights and governmental authority to protect health. In the human rights arena the department considers connections between health and social justice in the United States and abroad. Its bioethics courses analyze not only what can be done in the health care system but what should be done, and explicitly examines the values and beliefs that govern both the people and the institutions that affect health today. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in Health Policy and Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This dual-degree program reflects the University's longstanding recognition of the role of law in protecting public health and safety. This program will teach about the health policy, health care management, and pharmaceutical policy and administration. The pharmaceutical policy and administration option is new and offers student opportunities for preparing for a variety of careers in the pharmaceutical industry or in sectors of the health care industry that support or engage with pharmaceutical or biotechnology companies. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in International Health | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | This dual degree program reflects the University's longstanding recognition of the role of law in protecting public health and safety. Just as law is central to protecting public health, knowledge of public health disciplines is essential to today's health law practice. Protecting and enhancing the health of populations, as well as individuals, demand multidisciplinary training to identify and resolve complex problems of major social and economic importance. This program is to improve the health of populations in resource-poor and transitional economies through teaching, research, and service activities. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | School of Public Health, Department of International Health, 715 Albany Street Crosstown Ctr 3rd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5234 | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in Law and Public Health | Full Time | Variable | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This program offer a dual degree program that reflects the interrelationship between the legal system and the delivery of health-care services. BU Law's strong program in health law complements the BUSPH curriculum, which explores the nature and context of public health programs and the organizational, behavioral, legal and bureaucratic constraints they face. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in Maternal and Child Health | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | This dual-degree program reflects the University's longstanding recognition of the role of law in protecting public health and safety. This program will teach how to improve the health and well-being of women, mothers, children, and families. The possible careers in this programs are planning, implementation, management, and evaluation of MCH services and development of MCH policy in local, state, and federal agencies and other health care organizations. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5375 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MPH in Social and Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | This dual degree program reflects the University's longstanding recognition of the role of law in protecting public health and safety. This program focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health. Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5160 | The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health.Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | JD/MS in Law and Mass Communication | Full Time | 3.5 Year(s) | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This dual degree program will teach the growth of new communications technologies has created a need for lawyers with awareness of the technological, marketing and legal changes brought about by a wide spectrum of new media. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Joint Degree in International Relations and International Communication | Full Time | 4 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program develops language skills, cultural sensitivities, historical and political acumen and a well-honed ability to understand international and transnational organizations, events and issues are valuable assets in increasingly interconnected global society. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for programs in the College of Business. Students who have studied at an NON-English speaking school must take the TOEFL and not the GRE. TOEFL test breakdown: aper TOEFL (PBT) -- minimum score 600, Computer based TOEFL -- minimum score 250. |
Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Joint Doctor of Ministry and Master of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This dual degree is designed to prepare candidates for various forms of pastoral ministry. ?Although not all students in the program intend to seek ordination, the program aims to prepare students to be candidates for ordination. It includes courses ranging from practical arts of ministry to academic studies in which students lacking pastoral interests are as welcome as ministerial candidates. However, all the courses are designed to cohere in the preparation for pastoral ministry. | Student must meet the entrance requirements of each School. MDiv/MSW and MTS/MSW require a 3.0 GPA and a minimum score of 50 on the MAT. DMin/MSW requires a Master of Divinity degree with a minimum 3.3 GPA and the results of either the Miller Analogies Test or the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Joint Master of Divinity and Master of Sacred Music | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This program is designed to prepare candidates for various forms of pastoral ministry. ?Although not all students in the program intend to seek ordination, the program aims to prepare students to be candidates for ordination. It includes courses ranging from practical arts of ministry to academic studies in which students lacking pastoral interests are as welcome as ministerial candidates. However, all the courses are designed to cohere in the preparation for pastoral ministry. This program is at the forefront of professional training in sacred music. Students are prepared for leadership roles in communities of faith, and as performers, scholars, and teachers using the incomparable resources of the Boston University School of Music and School of Theology. | Applicants for the Master of Divinity degree must have graduated with a minimum grade point average of 3.0 from an accredited college and are often candidates for the Christian ministry. Besides the ability to write and speak English with clarity, applicants should have a broad understanding of the humanities and social sciences, and have some competence in the natural sciences. Also helpful is general knowledge of theological subjects and foreign language experience. Applicants must hold a BA or its equivalent, have a minimum grade point average of 3.0, and have a general academic background represented by at least 20 semester credits in the humanities and social sciences. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Joint Master of Divinity and Master of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This dual degree program are designed for students who wish to combine the knowledge and disciplines of theology and ministry with those of social work. | Student must meet the entrance requirements of each School. MDiv/MSW and MTS/MSW require a 3.0 GPA and a minimum score of 50 on the MAT. DMin/MSW requires a Master of Divinity degree with a minimum 3.3 GPA and the results of either the Miller Analogies Test or the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Joint Master of Science and Juris Doctor in Mass Communication and Law | Full Time | 3.5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program recognize the added benefits of special training in the technological, marketing and legal changes that are occurring so rapidly today find this a great opportunity to earn a Law Degree and a Master degree in Mass Communication in about three-and-a-half years, taking all the required courses from both institutions. The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations and the Boston University Law School provide a dual-degree program. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for programs in the College of Business. Students who have studied at an NON-English speaking school must take the TOEFL and not the GRE. TOEFL test breakdown: aper TOEFL (PBT) -- minimum score 600, Computer based TOEFL -- minimum score 250. |
Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Joint Master of Science and Master of Business Administration in Television Management | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | This is a dual-degree program and designed for those with no previous television experience. Also, customize programs for those with prior education or employment in mass communication. Another strong component of the program is its flexibility. While there are substantial core requirements, there is also the opportunity for students to customize curriculum to meet specific interests. Personalizing the program allows students to pursue several courses in areas such as sales and marketing, programming, writing, and new media. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3483 | The Department is divided into two programs: Film and Television. Film and television have developed as individual media with their own histories of production techniques, artistic disciplines, content, and business operations. The Department of Film and Television responds to this situation by providing flexible programs of study. Although students are required to select an area of concentration in the second semester of the sophomore year - either the film or the television program - they also have options for tailoring a major that fits their interests and career goals. Students may vary the number of courses in hands-on production, critical studies, and management-related courses. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Joint Master of Theological Studies and Master of Social Work | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This dual degree program are designed for students who wish to combine the knowledge and disciplines of theology and ministry with those of social work. This program is designed for those who wish to prepare themselves for diaconal ministry or other public religious leadership, for further graduate work, or for personal enrichment, but for whom the professional degree (Master of Divinity) is not entirely appropriate. The program is structured so that students attain a survey knowledge of and interdisciplinary perspective on the various theological disciplines and a focused knowledge of a specific field. | Student must meet the entrance requirements of each School. MDiv/MSW and MTS/MSW require a 3.0 GPA and a minimum score of 50 on the MAT. DMin/MSW requires a Master of Divinity degree with a minimum 3.3 GPA and the results of either the Miller Analogies Test or the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Joint Ph.D. Program in Sociology and Social Work | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program is designed for graduates of Social Work and other masters programs who wish to enhance their professional competence through further study at the doctoral level. Students who successfully complete the program will be awarded the degree in Sociology and Social Work. | Students should have a demonstrate proficiency at an advanced level in a foreign language. In Sociology, that is understood to be a language in which there is a significant sociological literature and/or in which the student’s research will be conducted. There is no fixed minimum in GRE. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Boston University, 96 cummington street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2591 | This department confront the relevant issue that societies and civilizations struggle with every day. Faculty in the Department of Sociology are research experts committed to directing students at all levels of study to a broad knowledge of human relations and social systems, examining such issues as race and ethic relations, law and crime, families, work and organizations, politics, gender, urban life, ethics, and science and technology. The discipline provides the tools for a variety of professional paths, including law, business, education, social work, and journalism. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Juris Doctor in Law | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This program combines the best of traditional legal education with a forward-looking perspective --and carefully balances theory and practical training. This program concentrates on Business Organizations and Finance Law, Health Law, International Law, Intellectual Property Law and Litigation and Dispute Resolution. | Candidates must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, or be enrolled in a course of study that will result in the award of a baccalaureate degree. Applicants whose native language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English and must take the English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Successful applicants usually score at least 250 on the TOEFL (computer based) or 100 (Internet based). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | LLM in American Law | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This program provides foreign-trained lawyers with a basic grounding in American law and the U.S. legal system. This is specifically designed to prepare foreign lawyers for the challenge of global practice. Foreign trained attorneys are increasingly called upon to handle the complex demands of their global clients -- clients whose cross-border interests implicate U.S. law. | Candidates must hold a first degree in law, or its equivalent, from an accredited or comparably recognized law school or law faculty outside the United States. Admission is highly competitive and depends to a great extent on the demonstration of outstanding ability in previous law studies. While work experience is not required, it is highly valued. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | LLM in Banking and Financial Law Studies | Full Time | Variable | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This program is designed specifically for students who wish to obtain a graduate-level legal education in the field of financial services law. This was the first graduate program in the United States to devote itself entirely to the study of the field of banking and financial services law. The three principal types of courses in the Graduate Program curriculum include: Regulatory: provide solid grounding in the structure and content of financial law and regulation. Transactional: familiarize students with typical transactions in areas like lending, securities, mergers and acquisitions. Business-oriented: introduce students to the economics and business principles which underlie banking and financial law. | Candidates must hold a first degree in law at the time of matriculation at Boston University. If the candidate received his or her legal education in the United States, the candidate must have been conferred a Juris Doctor degree or a Bachelor of Laws degree by an accredited law school. Candidates whose legal education was done outside the United States must hold a first degree in law from a duly accredited or comparably recognized law school or law faculty. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | LLM in Intellectual Property Law | Full Time | 2 Semester(s) | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This program gives the opportunity to pursue an advanced degree in one of the most dynamic fields of legal practice today. All students complete a substantial three-credit analytical paper addressing an intellectual property law issue, either in connection with a seminar or as an independent study. Students' faculty advisors are responsible for certifying that papers meet the standard of a substantial research and analytical undertaking in intellectual property law. | Candidates must hold a first degree in law, or its equivalent, from an ABA-accredited law school or a comparably recognized law school or law faculty outside the United States. Admission is highly competitive and depends to a great extent on the demonstration of outstanding ability in previous law studies. Prior work experience in the intellectual property field is strongly recommended, though not required. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | LLM in Taxation | Full Time | 2 Semester(s) | $37502 (12-18 credits) | School of Law | This program offers a balance between tax law theory and practical application, meeting the needs of lawyers who wish to excel as tax practitioners. The curriculum makes it possible for students either to select a wide spectrum of elective courses and gain exposure to all areas of tax, or to concentrate on courses that will prepare for specialization in a particular area such as business organizations and transactions; estate planning and wealth management; or international tax. | Candidates must hold a J.D. or LL.B. degree from a law school that is accredited by the American Bar Association, or an equivalent first degree in law from a comparably recognized law school or law faculty outside the United States. Admission is competitive and depends to a great extent on the demonstration of outstanding ability in previous law studies, particularly in the field of taxation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Law | School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3100 | School of Law was established in 1872 by a group of educators, lawyers, law teachers and jurists united by two beliefs. Firstly, a superior legal education requires instruction in the theory, analysis and practice of law. Secondly, the founders believed that educational opportunities should be available to anyone, with merit as the only test. Boston University School of Law had been home to distinguished figures in law and legal scholarships, to judges and other public servants, to prominent members of the bar, and to some of the finest teachers an institute can boast. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | M.S. in Systems Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Division of Systems Engineering | This program is designed to provide graduate students with the quantitative and analytical science theory, methods and tools that will enable them to model, design, analyze, and optimize human-made and physical systems within a broad array of applications. SE methodologies usually account for such real-world complexities as uncertainty, constraints, multiple objectives, and the relationships among the various parts or subsystems that constitute the system being studied. | Admission normally requires a bachelor’s or master’s degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor's or post-master’s PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor’s degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor's PhD program and applicants who hold a master’s degree are eligible to apply for a post-master’s PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Division of Systems Engineering | College of Engineering, Division of Systems Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Division of Systems Engineering at Boston University is home to world-class award-winning faculty, high-achieving students, and research activities at the cutting edge of areas such as sensor networks, cooperative control, robotics, intelligent simulation, systems biology, and manufacturing systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in African American Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is focused on building the conceptual, theoretical, and research skills that will allow students to become life-long critical investigators of cross-cultural interaction. While the focus is on the African American experience, this program approaches that experience in the context of global processes and in terms of its relationship to other groups such as Latinos, Asians, European Americans, Africans, and Native Americans. | Candidates must hold a bachelor degree from an accredited institution. Because of the broad focus of this program, there are no specific undergraduate concentration requirements except that the student must have completed some study in both the humanities and the social sciences. Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Tests are required of all applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Anatomy and Neurobiology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology | This program is designed to give students a solid exposure to the core areas of expertise in our department. Students choose a core curriculum that includes one of our anatomy courses: Gross Anatomy or Histology, one of our Neurobiology courses, and either Cell or Molecular Biology. Master's students who desire formal training and mentored experience in teaching also have the option of completing our Vesalius module. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, 715 Albany Street L-1004, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4200 | This school was formed in 1873 when Boston University merged with the New England Female Medical College, becoming the first coeducational medical school. The New England Female Medical College, founded in 1848, was the first institution to medically train women and graduated the first black woman physician. Throughout our history we have maintained a strong commitment to the study and practice of medicine in the context of a mission of service to society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Archaeological Heritage Management | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | This program is intended for those planning a career in public archaeology. The program seeks to provide a balance between the academic study of archaeology and practical training in the identification, evaluation, and management of archaeological resources. It includes a practicum, internship, or other apprenticeship designed to provide the requisite experience. This might involve a semester-long internship with an approved cultural-resource management group, state historic preservation office, or other governmental office. | Applicants must have a BA or BS in a discipline or program related to archaeology. Students lacking sufficient preparation must make up the deficiency as determined by the Department Graduate Studies Committee, in addition to meeting the requirements of the program | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology, 675 Commonwealth Avenue Suite 347, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3415 | This department is the only distinct, fully constituted university department of archaeology in the United States. In the field, laboratory, and classroom, students pursue B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees with concentrations in Old and New World Prehistoric and Historical Archaeology, including Classical, Mesoamerican, Geoarchaeology, and Heritage management specializations. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | This program provides appropriate education and training in the recovery, analysis, and interpretation of archaeological materials and context while simultaneously assuring that sufficient background is obtained in one or more traditional cognate fields such as classics, art history, anthropology, and history. In recognition of the importance of scientific techniques in the analysis, dating, and interpretation of archaeological finds, the program is also designed to include classroom and practical training in the biological and physical sciences and in quantitative methods, either within the framework of the archaeological curriculum itself or within that of other departments or programs [such as the Center for Remote Sensing]. | Applicants must have a BA or BS, preferably from a program in archaeology or one related to archaeology (such as anthropology or classical studies, with a concentration in archaeology). Students lacking sufficient preparation in archaeology will be required to take courses, as determined by the Graduate Studies Committee, to make up the deficiency. On occasion these courses may be beyond the minimum specified by the Graduate School. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology, 675 Commonwealth Avenue Suite 347, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3415 | This department is the only distinct, fully constituted university department of archaeology in the United States. In the field, laboratory, and classroom, students pursue B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees with concentrations in Old and New World Prehistoric and Historical Archaeology, including Classical, Mesoamerican, Geoarchaeology, and Heritage management specializations. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Art History | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History | This program offers graduate courses in all areas of Western, Asian, Meso-American, Islamic and African art. Graduate students may enroll in four types of courses: Colloquia, seminars, practice, and directed studies. | Candidates must hold a bachelor degree from an accredited institution. Because of the broad focus of this program, there are no specific undergraduate concentration requirements except that the student must have completed some study in both the humanities and the social sciences. Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Tests are required of all applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History, 725 Commonwealth Ave Room 302, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2520 | The 20 members of the Department of Art History at Boston University comprise a group of professional art historians and teachers of art history who are dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge and the education of students. This department believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present but also enables them to acquire valuable skills that are applicable to many careers. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | This program gives give evidence of the candidate ability to understand, evaluate critically, and carry forward competently a scientific investigation. This is achieved by an advancement in an experimental technique, an extension in the application of a physical theory, or the accumulation of new data or observational material. A thesis is required to demonstrate the candidate ability to present the results of his or her work in a logical and coherent manner. The thesis is judged in an oral examination administered by a committee of three faculty members, including the student advisor. A prospectus of the thesis must be approved by the committee at least six months prior to the oral examination. | Applicants should have the strong physics background implied by a Bachelor degree in either physics or astronomy. Undergraduate credits in physics should include courses in mechanics, electromagnetism, atomic and nuclear physics, optics, and thermodynamics/statistical mechanics. Mathematics through differential equations and a course in introductory astronomy and/or astrophysics are highly recommended. Applicants should have a cumulative GPA equivalent to B or higher. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy, 725 Commonwealth Avenue Room 514, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2625 | This department guides students at the undergraduate and graduate levels toward the advanced mathematical skills and physical insight they need to understand the nature of the universe from the modern scientific perspective. The department offers three undergraduate concentrations: astronomy, astronomy and physics, and planetary and space sciences. It offers an M.A. for students interested in careers in scientific applications, scientific computing, and related fields, and a Ph.D. for students interested in research and academic careers in astrophysics and space physics. The department has two outstanding affiliated research centers, the Center for Space Physics and the Institute for Astrophysical Research. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry | This program covering the major sub disciplines of biochemistry, cell biology and molecular biology by faculty with particular expertise in these areas. These advanced courses emphasize recent findings as well as relevant fundamental background information. | Students who have completed an undergraduate degree usually with a major in biochemistry, biology, or chemistry and have taken courses in general biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, physical chemistry, and calculus may apply for this program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry, 715 Albany Street K-225, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5090 | The department is located on four floors of the Silvio O. Conte building at the Boston University School of Medicine. The graduate program in the Department of Biochemistry accepts qualified applicants into M.A, Ph.D., and M.D./Ph.D. programs. The emphasis of the last two programs is on research training in the laboratory of a faculty member. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Biostatistics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | This is a dual-degree program which offers students the opportunity not only to gain expertise in mathematical statistics but also to specialize in the epidemiologic, medical, and bioscience applications of statistics. The program offers students the opportunity to specialize in one of three areas: 1) clinical trials, 2) statistical genetics, and 3) observational studies. | All applications for admission are made through the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Students entering the program are expected to have at least the equivalent of the Bachelor of Arts degree. At the time of application, previously completed coursework must include at least one year of calculus including multivariate calculus and one formal course in linear algebra. Applicants also must demonstrate competency in computer programming and elementary statistical methods. GRE scores are required. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core courses are: CAS MA 575 Applied Regression and ANOVA I CAS MA 581 Probability ?or MET MA 581 Probability CAS MA 582 Mathematical Statistics ?or MET MA 581 Mathematical Statistics SPH EP 712 Epidemiologic Methods SPH BS 852 Statistical Methods in Epidemiology SPH BS 805 Intermediate Statistical Computing and Applied Regression Analysis. Electives are: CAS MA 576 Applied Regression and ANOVA II CAS MA 578 Bayesian Statistics CAS MA 583 Survival Analysis CAS MA 587 Sampling Design: Theory and Methods CAS MA 684 Multivariate Analysis CAS MA 685 Advanced Topics in Statistics GRS MA 751 Methods of Statistical Modeling II GRS MA 781 Estimation Theory GRS MA 782 Hypothesis Testing GRS MA 861 Mathematical and Statistical Methods for Bioinformatics GRS MA 882 Seminar: Statistics SPH BS 722 Design and Conduct of Clinical Trials SPH BS 790 Data Management in Public Health Research SPH BS 810 Meta-analysis for Public Health and Medical Research SPH EP 813 Intermediate Epidemiology SPH BS 820 Logistic Regression/Survival Analysis SPH BS 821 Categorical Data Analysis | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617638 5207 | The school has grown tremendously in recent years with more than 4,000 alumni, 140 full-time faculty, and students from over 40 countries. In keeping with the School service-oriented philosophy, each department combines research and academics with a practicum requirement, resulting in a rigorous, well-rounded curriculum enhanced by work experience in a public health environment. Through longstanding collaborations with such institutions as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Public Health Commission, and the Veterans Affairs Administration; and international alliances with the Red Cross, the Peace Corps, and foreign governments, our students, faculty, and alumni draw on their own diverse backgrounds to carry out the School mission in a variety of settings. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program focuses on Physical Biochemistry, Natural Products Chemistry, Electrochemistry, Molecular Structure Determination, Separation Methods in Chemistry and Biochemistry, Biochemistry I, Biochemistry II, Advanced Inorganic Chemistry and Metallobiochemistry. | Students are expected to have received a bachelor’s or master’s degree prior to matriculation, usually (but not necessarily) in chemistry. All applicants are requested to submit Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores, including the subject test in chemistry. Foreign applicants must have a TOEFL examination score of at least 550; applicants requesting support through teaching fellowships are required to have a score of at least 600. Requests for further information about admissions should be addressed to Graduate Admissions, Department of Chemistry, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Boston University Metcalf Center for Science and Engineering, 590 Commonwealth Avenue Room 299, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2500 | This department has long been recognized for excellence in research and training at the undergraduate and graduate levels. They are dedicated to providing fundamental education in the chemical sciences, which at the same time, exposes students to the outstanding current questions in chemical research. They are also committed to the careful mentorship of undergraduate majors, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows that will serve them well as they enter careers in chemical research, medicine, law, or education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Classical Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program focuses on courses in the following list are divided into five categories: Classical ivilization, Greek Language and Literature, Latin Language and Literature, Reading Courses in Latin and Ancient Greek, and Teaching Fellowships. |
Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent international education. Important factors in the department ranking of applicants are the breadth and quality of the undergraduate experience --particularly the language components, the quality of the essay and writing sample, the strength of the letters of recommendation, GRE scores, and the suitability of the department's programs to the particular applicant. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Cognitive and Neural Systems | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | This program provides advanced training in the neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of technological problems. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9481 | This department provides advanced training and research experience for graduate students and qualified undergraduates interested in the neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of technological problems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program prepare students for careers at the forefront of computing research, teaching, and industrial progress. Areas of current interests are theory of computation, information theory, complexity theory, analysis of algorithms, cryptography, programming language theory, fault-tolerant computing, image and video computing, real-time computing, parallel and distributed computing, large-scale networked information systems, distributed systems, networking, database systems, and performance evaluation. | Candidate must have met the requirements for a bachelor’s degree with the equivalent of a concentration in computer science. Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test results are required. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Boston University, 111 Cummington Street Room 138, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8919 | This department has a distinguished track record of academic excellence and major achievement in an increasingly vital field that is expanding at a rapid pace. Faculty research is published in the most prominent venues and recognized by significant citations and awards, both national and international. B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. students are recruited for internships and positions by such industry-leading firms as Motorola Labs, Google, and Microsoft and are recruited by some of the best computer science departments in the country as Ph.D. students, postdoctoral researchers, and tenure-track professors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Earth Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | This program prepares students for careers in academia, applied research, employment with state and federal agencies, and positions of responsibility in private consulting organizations. | Student is expected to have completed a bachelors degree, in earth sciences or archaeology (or closely related fields), prior to admission to the department. Students lacking sufficient preparation in either archaeology or earth sciences will be required to take courses, as determined by the faculty advisers, to make up the deficiency. On occasion these may be beyond the minimum specified by the Graduate School. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue STO Room 141, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2532 | This department has of 15 faculty and approximately 25 graduate and 85 undergraduate students. This department focus is in two broad thematic areas, Climate - Surface Interactions and Tectonic - Lithospheric Processes. They promote excellence in both teaching and research, in a collegial and collaborative academic setting. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Geoarchaeology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | This program is aimed at providing a broad background in both the geosciences and archaeology. Such a broad-based program provides flexibility to students coming from a variety of different backgrounds such as geology or other natural sciences, anthropology, or archaeology, but who are equally interested in associating geological techniques and methods with archaeological and geological data. | Student is expected to have completed a bachelors degree, in earth sciences or archaeology (or closely related fields), prior to admission to the department. Students lacking sufficient preparation in either archaeology or earth sciences will be required to take courses, as determined by the faculty advisers, to make up the deficiency. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology, 675 Commonwealth Avenue Suite 347, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3415 | This department is the only distinct, fully constituted university department of archaeology in the United States. In the field, laboratory, and classroom, students pursue B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees with concentrations in Old and New World Prehistoric and Historical Archaeology, including Classical, Mesoamerican, Geoarchaeology, and Heritage management specializations. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Geography and Environment | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program focuses on energy-environmental systems and policy, economic geography and transportation studies, remote sensing and geographic information systems and physical geography emphasizing biogeography, biophysical ecology, climatology and hydrology. | Student must have a bachelors degree or the equivalent in the relevant field. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Geography and Environment with Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program focuses on energy-environmental systems and policy, economic geography and transportation studies, remote sensing and geographic information systems and physical geography emphasizing biogeography, biophysical ecology, climatology and hydrology. | Student must have a bachelors degree or the equivalent in the relevant field. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in History | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program enables them to acquire valuable skills that are applicable to many careers. The ability to criticize, organize, and synthesize extensive materials and to write with clarity and precision are important qualities for success in a variety of jobs not directly related to history. | Student need not have a Graduate Record Examination (GRE) score, since the admissions committee looks at many other factors, such as letters of recommendation and transcripts. It may be helpful, however, to know that the average verbal score of those entering the program in September 2007 was 616 (which translated to an average percentile of 85%). Students must take the Test of English as a Foreign Language. The minimum score requirement is 213 (for the computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). The TOEFL requirement is waived only if an applicant has received, or expects to receive, an undergraduate or graduate degree from a college or university in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, or New Zealand. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Mathematical Finance | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program focuses on the crux of mathematical concepts that led to the development of the Black and Scholes option pricing method and have grown recently into a universal tool for creating effective investment strategies and risk-analysis. Currently, sophisticated mathematical tools are used not only by traders of derivatives, but also by any bank or corporation that has to determine how much to spend for development and research, the best time to enter/exit the market, to make a merger-acquisition decision, or to manage risk. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. are expected to have a total score of at least 100 in the internet-based TOEFL, with sub-scores of at least 25 in listening, reading, speaking and writing, OR, a total score of at least 250 in the computer-based TOEFL, OR, a total score of at least 600 in the paper-based TOEFL. Applicants whose TOEFL scores are lower, but are otherwise qualified, may still file an application, but they may be asked to re-take TOEFL before a decision for admission can be made. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Mathematics, Including Statistics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program offers graduate coursework and degree programs across a broad range of subject areas within the mathematical sciences. This curriculum rich in both theory and application is available to graduate students in mathematics, the natural sciences, engineering, and mathematics education, as well as to advanced undergraduates in mathematics. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Students are expected to have a total score of at least 100 in the internet-based TOEFL, with sub-scores of at least 25 in listening, reading, speaking and writing, OR, a total score of at least 250 in the computer-based TOEFL, OR, a total score of at least 600 in the paper-based TOEFL. Applicants whose TOEFL scores are lower, but are otherwise qualified, may still file an application, but they may be asked to re-take TOEFL before a decision for admission can be made. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Medical Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine | This program provided with the opportunity of undertaking study and research in the well-equipped laboratory facilities of the preclinical departments that make up the Division. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | This degree is available in Anatomy and Neurobiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Neuroscience, Biophysics, Genetics and Genomics, Immunology, Medical Nutrition Sciences, Microbiology, Pathology, Pharmacology and Physiology. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine | School of Medicine, 715 Albany Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5300 | Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) is a major research institution, providing an exceptional environment for students interested in basic science, clinical investigation, or public health and health services oriented research. BUSM has660 medical students, and a similar number of graduate students in the medical school actively engaged in the study of medicine and the biomedical sciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provide a solid foundation in these related disciplines through coursework and research, and to prepare students for teaching or research positions in academia, industry, or government. Participating faculty are from the Departments of Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Biomedical Engineering (College of Engineering), and Health Sciences (Sargent College). | Students are expected to have strong undergraduate backgrounds in biology and chemistry (general and organic). College-level courses in physics, calculus, and statistics are also expected to have been completed. Any deficiencies in these areas may have to be made up after matriculation into the program, but without graduate course credit. Applicants are required to submit scores for both the General and Subject Graduate Record Examination. Normally, the Subject test should be taken in Biology, Chemistry, or Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Applicants whose native language is not English are also required to submit results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Admission is limited to September enrollment. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program focuses on music history, music theory, and music analysis, from antiquity through contemporary, as well as ethnomusicology, popular music, and interdisciplinary and cross-cultural studies. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates in all fields of specialization must possess an undergraduate degree in music or its equivalent. Students accepted for the program may be required by the faculty to take prerequisite courses if their undergraduate degree was not taken with a concentration in the field of specialization chosen at the graduate level. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Boston University, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8789 | This department offers major and minor concentrations leading to the B.A. degree; programs leading to the M.A. in music with specializations in musicology, composition, or music education; and the Ph.D. in musicology or a double concentration in musicology and music theory. Courses are offered in all areas of historical and theoretical study and research in the Western art music tradition, as well as in music theory and composition. The musicology faculty is strong in medieval, Renaissance, eighteenth-century, romantic, world music, and early twentieth-century musical studies; in the history of music theory and criticism; and in research methodology. The department is closely allied with the School of Music at BU’s College of Fine arts, from where all its faculty are drawn. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Music Theory | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program breadth of course offerings and wide research interests of its faculty make the department particularly attractive for graduate study. The department’s graduates are educated to prosper as teachers and influential scholars, and for this reason the department competes for the best graduate students. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates in all fields of specialization must possess an undergraduate degree in music or its equivalent. Students accepted for the program may be required by the faculty to take prerequisite courses if their undergraduate degree was not taken with a concentration in the field of specialization chosen at the graduate level. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Boston University, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8789 | This department offers major and minor concentrations leading to the B.A. degree; programs leading to the M.A. in music with specializations in musicology, composition, or music education; and the Ph.D. in musicology or a double concentration in musicology and music theory. Courses are offered in all areas of historical and theoretical study and research in the Western art music tradition, as well as in music theory and composition. The musicology faculty is strong in medieval, Renaissance, eighteenth-century, romantic, world music, and early twentieth-century musical studies; in the history of music theory and criticism; and in research methodology. The department is closely allied with the School of Music at BU’s College of Fine arts, from where all its faculty are drawn. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Musicology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program breadth of course offerings and wide research interests of its faculty make the department particularly attractive for graduate study. The department’s graduates are educated to prosper as teachers and influential scholars, and for this reason the department competes for the best graduate students. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates in all fields of specialization must possess an undergraduate degree in music or its equivalent. Students accepted for the program may be required by the faculty to take prerequisite courses if their undergraduate degree was not taken with a concentration in the field of specialization chosen at the graduate level. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Boston University, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8789 | This department offers major and minor concentrations leading to the B.A. degree; programs leading to the M.A. in music with specializations in musicology, composition, or music education; and the Ph.D. in musicology or a double concentration in musicology and music theory. Courses are offered in all areas of historical and theoretical study and research in the Western art music tradition, as well as in music theory and composition. The musicology faculty is strong in medieval, Renaissance, eighteenth-century, romantic, world music, and early twentieth-century musical studies; in the history of music theory and criticism; and in research methodology. The department is closely allied with the School of Music at BU’s College of Fine arts, from where all its faculty are drawn. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine | This program focuses on the basic science and laboratory techniques of anatomic pathology and related disciplines. Graduates will be prepared to work in basic science, biotechnology and other biomedical research laboratories designing, performing, and evaluating research using methods based on morphology. Students learn to prepare and evaluate animal or human cells and tissues for the effects of test compounds, devices or procedures using morphologic methods. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, 715 Albany Street L-804, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4500 | This department focuses particularly on the biology, genetics, and immunology of cancer, and on neurologic disorders. It offers multiple research and training opportunities in experimental and applied pathology, and has a diverse faculty composed of core and joint members. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program focuses on experimental particle physics, particle astrophysics, theoretical particle physics and cosmology, molecular biophysics, experimental biophysics, experimental condensed matter physics, theoretical quantum condensed matter physics statistical physics, polymer physics, and computational physics. | Students should have a bachelor degree in Physics or a closely related field. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Physiology and Biophysics | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics | This program stresses laboratory training and original research performed under the direction of a faculty member, as well as satisfactory performance in graduate course work. A core curriculum of biophysics, physiology and biochemistry is supplemented with courses in cell and molecular biology, physics, or chemistry. | GRE General Test and a Subject Test in an area related to biophysics are required. For applicants from foreign countries, TOEFL is also required. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, 715 Albany Street W-302, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4001 | The Department of Physiology and Biophysics is a research oriented department, located at the Boston University School of Medicine. This research encompasses many facets of Cell Biology, Molecular and Cellular Physiology, Structural Biology, and Molecular Biophysics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | The department does not have a regular M.A. program and does not accept applications for that degree. Most students interested in the study of political science at the graduate level are admitted to the Ph.D. program. The Graduate Program in Political Science does, however, admit a few students who wish to wish to enroll in the MA Program for Professionals and the BA/MA program. Also, will award an M.A. to a PhD student who requests it and has completed all the requirements for the PhD except the dissertation. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2540 | This department studies how communities attempt to reconcile the claims of justice, power, liberty, and authority. Drawing on history, law, economics, psychology, sociology, and philosophy, political science is a broadly based social science that shares the traditional aims of a liberal arts education while attempting to grapple with the major issues of our time. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Preservation Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program has provided the interdisciplinary training necessary for the effective and judicious management of cultural resources. Students in the Program engage firsthand with both traditional and innovative forms of preservation practice and receive essential preparation in architectural history, preservation planning, building conservation, preservation law, and adaptive use. Together these provide a broad grounding that emphasizes the variety of historic resources and the diversity of approaches to their preservation. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Courses are: AM 546 Historic Preservation. This course is usually the first course taken in the Program and is offered annually during the fall semester, AM 553 Documenting Historic Buildings. This course is offered annually during the fall or spring semester. AM 747 Building Conservation, AM 751 Financing for Historic Preservation, AM 754 Planning and Preservation. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MA in Teaching Latin and Classical Humanities (MAT) | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program encourages combined or comparative programs of study designed to take advantage of Boston University offerings in such other areas as the Romance languages, comparative studies in literature and the arts program, archaeology, and philosophy, as well as the possibilities provided by cross-registration in the Boston Area Graduate School Consortium. Graduates of these programs are expected to have acquired a range and depth of knowledge of antiquity that will provide the basis for innovative scholarship as well as for professional careers in university or college teaching and in other positions that require a background in humanities. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent international education. Important factors in the department ranking of applicants are the breadth and quality of the undergraduate experience --particularly the language components, the quality of the essay and writing sample, the strength of the letters of recommendation, GRE scores, and the suitability of the department programs to the particular applicant. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Courses are: SED CT 575 General Methods of Instruction, Grades 5-12, SED DS 502 Intro to Adolescent Development, SED ED 500 Foundations of Educational Practices, SED ED 501 Foundations of Educational Practices, SED SE 510 Special Education: Curriculum and Instruction, SED RS 600 Perspectives on Inquiry, SED CL 520 Methods of Teaching: Latin and Classical Studies, SED CL 540 Student Teaching Practicum: Latin and Classical Studies. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MBA - Master of Business Administration Program | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program is designed for the superior undergraduate student. It provides a strong base of knowledge and skills in economics, and at the same time accelerates completion of the Master of Arts degree. The program is limited to the Master of Arts in Economics and does not apply to the other MA degrees awarded by the department. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent education may apply for graduate admission to the Economics Department. Applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). The GRE is a major component in the admission decision and is especially crucial for PhD Applicants applying for financial aid from the University. GRE scores are valid for two years. Thus, for applicants for Fall 2008, GRE scores taken in 2007 and 2006 are valid. Official results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), as administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), are required of all applicants whose native language is not English. The minimum score requirement is 213 (computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). TOEFL scores over two years old will not be accepted. Students applying for entry into the Master Programs are normally expected to have passed some advanced undergraduate preparation in economics that includes one year of intermediate macro and microeconomic analysis and courses in statistics, calculus, and linear algebra. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MBA - Master of Business Administration Program | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program is designed for the superior undergraduate student. It provides a strong base of knowledge and skills in economics, and at the same time accelerates completion of the Master of Arts degree. The program is limited to the Master of Arts in Economics and does not apply to the other MA degrees awarded by the department. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent education may apply for graduate admission to the Economics Department. Applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). The GRE is a major component in the admission decision and is especially crucial for PhD Applicants applying for financial aid from the University. GRE scores are valid for two years. Thus, for applicants for Fall 2008, GRE scores taken in 2007 and 2006 are valid. Official results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), as administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), are required of all applicants whose native language is not English. The minimum score requirement is 213 (computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). TOEFL scores over two years old will not be accepted. Students applying for entry into the Master Programs are normally expected to have passed some advanced undergraduate preparation in economics that includes one year of intermediate macro and microeconomic analysis and courses in statistics, calculus, and linear algebra. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MBA - Master of Business Administration in Economics and Management | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management | This program is offered as a dual degree program. It has shown that training in the related fields of management and economics is professionally desirable in an increasing number of areas. This specialized dual degree satisfies this need by allowing students to complement their studies while fulfilling requirements for both degree programs. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MBA - Master of Business Administration in International Relations and Management | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management | This dual degree program is offered to meet the needs of students seeking careers in administrative management, international affairs, consulting, international banking or finance. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MBA - Master of Business Administration in Medical Sciences | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | School of Management | This dual-degree offers an opportunity to combine a broad-based program in the medical sciences with professional study in health sector management and administration. Students are required to take a number of medical school courses and courses in advanced basic medical science, as well as core MBA and specific health sector management related coursework. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MPH in Biostatistics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | This is a dual-degree program which offers students the opportunity not only to gain expertise in mathematical statistics but also to specialize in the epidemiologic, medical, and bioscience applications of statistics. The program offers students the opportunity to specialize in one of three areas: 1) clinical trials, 2) statistical genetics, and 3) observational studies. | All applications for admission are made through the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Students entering the program are expected to have at least the equivalent of the Bachelor of Arts degree. At the time of application, previously completed coursework must include at least one year of calculus including multivariate calculus and one formal course in linear algebra. Applicants also must demonstrate competency in computer programming and elementary statistical methods. GRE scores are required. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core courses are: CAS MA 575 Applied Regression and ANOVA I CAS MA 581 Probability ?or MET MA 581 Probability CAS MA 582 Mathematical Statistics ?or MET MA 581 Mathematical Statistics SPH EP 712 Epidemiologic Methods SPH BS 852 Statistical Methods in Epidemiology SPH BS 805 Intermediate Statistical Computing and Applied Regression Analysis. Electives are: CAS MA 576 Applied Regression and ANOVA II CAS MA 578 Bayesian Statistics CAS MA 583 Survival Analysis CAS MA 587 Sampling Design: Theory and Methods CAS MA 684 Multivariate Analysis CAS MA 685 Advanced Topics in Statistics GRS MA 751 Methods of Statistical Modeling II GRS MA 781 Estimation Theory GRS MA 782 Hypothesis Testing GRS MA 861 Mathematical and Statistical Methods for Bioinformatics GRS MA 882 Seminar: Statistics SPH BS 722 Design and Conduct of Clinical Trials SPH BS 790 Data Management in Public Health Research SPH BS 810 Meta-analysis for Public Health and Medical Research SPH EP 813 Intermediate Epidemiology SPH BS 820 Logistic Regression/Survival Analysis SPH BS 821 Categorical Data Analysis | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617638 5207 | The school has grown tremendously in recent years with more than 4,000 alumni, 140 full-time faculty, and students from over 40 countries. In keeping with the School service-oriented philosophy, each department combines research and academics with a practicum requirement, resulting in a rigorous, well-rounded curriculum enhanced by work experience in a public health environment. Through longstanding collaborations with such institutions as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Public Health Commission, and the Veterans Affairs Administration; and international alliances with the Red Cross, the Peace Corps, and foreign governments, our students, faculty, and alumni draw on their own diverse backgrounds to carry out the School mission in a variety of settings. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MPH in Environmental Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | This program offer a dual degree that is broadly based in preclinical medical sciences and public health. Environmental factors are the predominant determinants of health in individuals and communities. The twentieth century saw public health triumphs in the developed world--providing a safe and clean water supply, clearing the air, and getting the lead out of gasoline--though these problems remain critical in other parts of the world. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4620 | The department houses two basic research laboratories in immunotoxicology and is home to a Superfund Basic Research Center, which investigates reproductive and developmental hazards. The department research agenda is also firmly rooted in community health and environmental justice; for example, a collaborative project with public officials and community groups seeks to better the health of low-income families by improving conditions in public housing. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MPH in Epidemiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | This program offer a dual degree that is broadly based in preclinical medical sciences and public health. This program will teach about the Study the occurrence of disease and other health outcomes in populations. Design, conduct, analyze, and interpret epidemiologic studies focusing on preventing disease and promoting health. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7775 | Department of Epidemiology has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MPH in Health Law | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | This program offer a dual degree that is broadly based in preclinical medical sciences and public health. This program focuses on how to protect public health and safety through federal and state statutes. Protect and promote civil and universal rights and prevent discrimination of disadvantaged populations. Regulate the financing and operation of the health care system. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4626 | This department teaching and research activities explore both individual rights and governmental authority to protect health. In the human rights arena the department considers connections between health and social justice in the United States and abroad. Its bioethics courses analyze not only what can be done in the health care system but what should be done, and explicitly examines the values and beliefs that govern both the people and the institutions that affect health today. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MPH in Health Policy and Management | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This dual degree that is broadly based in preclinical medical sciences and public health. This program focus on the organization, financing, administration, regulation, and research of health services and on improving health care delivery. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MPH in International Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | This program offer a dual degree that is broadly based in preclinical medical sciences and public health. This program has historical strengths in management and finance issues in developing countries and pharmaceutical policy issues, as well as the largest focus of any American school of public health on the needs of the states of the former Soviet Union. Increased emphasis on issues related to infectious diseases (particularly HIV/AIDS, malaria, and pneumonia). | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | School of Public Health, Department of International Health, 715 Albany Street Crosstown Ctr 3rd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5234 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MPH in Maternal and Child Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | This program offer a dual degree that is broadly based in preclinical medical sciences and public health. The curriculum of this programs are assumes the health of women, children, families, communities, and society at large are integrally related; emphasizes learning by doing; translates research into practice; and launches a life-long process of self-directed learning and action. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5375 | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | MA/MPH in Social and Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | This program offer a dual degree that is broadly based in preclinical medical sciences and public health. This program Emerging knowledge about the dangers of obesity, substance abuse, and other threats to physical and mental health presents new and ongoing challenges. By creating innovative ways to address these challenges, and presenting these areas of new knowledge and innovative interventions to the next generation of public health professionals, this Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences contributes to the enhancement of the health of the public. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5160 | The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health.Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MAT in English Education | Full Time | 12 Month(s) | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program will help in preparation for middle or secondary school English teaching currently complete a program of graduate-level English courses, professional education courses, and student teaching. This sequence enables students to earn an initial license. The professional courses emphasize diverse teaching methodologies and innovative curriculum reforms. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MAT in History and Social Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program is designed for the student who has earned a liberal arts degree in history, government, political philosophy, or political science. Students who have other liberal arts degrees emphasizing social issues and social policy or interdisciplinary study may also apply. For purposes of licensure in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, there are two licenses: 1) History and 2) Political Science/Political Philosophy. The professional education courses prepare students for teacher licensure. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MAT in Latin and Classical Humanities | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program offers a comprehensive course of study that leads to an initial teaching license in Latin and Classical Humanities. This program designed for liberal arts majors who want to continue their graduate studies in an academic field and at the same time secure teacher licensure. Students may be admitted to licensure programs in preparation for teaching English, Latin and classical humanities, history, modern foreign languages (French, Spanish), political science, government, political philosophy, sociology, mathematics, physics, chemistry, and biology. Students must pass the appropriate Massachusetts subject matter test to be eligible for licensure in that field. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MAT in Mathematics Education | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program is designed for liberal arts majors who want to continue their graduate studies in an academic field and at the same time secure teacher licensure. This program helps to develop expertise in fundamental mathematical concepts and processes, the development of mathematics curriculum materials, and teaching methods applicable to a variety of age levels, interests, and aptitudes. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MAT in Modern Foreign Language Education | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | This program is designed for liberal arts majors who want to continue their graduate studies in an academic field and at the same time secure teacher licensure. This program emphasizes effective communication and leadership skills while preparing teachers of modern languages. This program offers the advantage of learning in an environment that offers close coordination of class work in education, field experiences, and modern foreign language methodology. Also, given the opportunity to student teach, allowing to put knowledge into practice and refine skills. Boston University's foreign language courses emphasize communication, as well as grammar, culture, and literature. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development | School of Education, Department of Literacy and Language, Counseling and Development, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MAT in Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $34930 per year | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | This program emphasizes the development of research skills and prepares individuals for post-secondary positions in community or technical colleges and in teacher training colleges and universities. The program prepares to teach and supervise science programs in a variety of settings, including schools, museums, and other educational organizations. The program focuses on the identification of concepts and skills helpful in teaching science and technology to students in elementary school through college. While this specialized program is individually tailored for each of students, it contains a balance of study in teaching strategies and classroom materials as well as examination of current research. | Candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree or its academic equivalent from an accredited institution. Applicants must submit an official score from the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). International applicants who have not completed a previous degree at an English-speaking university should also submit a TOEFL score. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching | School of Education, Department of Curriculum and Teaching, Boston University School of Education, Two Sherborn Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4237 | School of Education is honored to stand directly at the crossroads of engagement and enlightenment. This school has a tradition of direct involvement in public education that grounds our understanding of teaching and learning in hard-won experience. The School roots stretch beyond the greater Boston area and extend across the globe. Students in International Educational Development Program volunteer and study in communities as far away as Africa and Cambodia. Whether in on-campus Reading and Writing Clinic, at the Intergenerational Literacy Project in nearby Chelsea, Massachusetts, or at the HOPE initiative in Pokhara, Nepal, the School of Education fosters integral connections on both a local and global scale. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in International Management Program | Full Time | Variable | $2932 per 21 credits | School of Management | This program gives the understand the advantages and limitations of international deal-making, gives embrace global thinking and also gives different methods of collaboration. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are IM842: Field Course—Business in Asia Pacific, OB712: Managing Organizations and People, OM726: Creating Value Through Operations and Technology, MK724: Marketing Management, AC711: Financial Reporting and Control, and ES701: Executive Written Communication. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Public and Nonprofit Management | Full Time | Variable | US $34,930 a year | School of Management | This program is designed for students who seek to use core business management skills to address society's most challenging humanitarian and social problems in the global economy. This course of study will prepare students with the financial, operational, leadership, and entrepreneurial skills to lead and manage in today's changing environment. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MBA - Master of Business Administration/MPH in Health Policy and Management | Full Time | 2.5 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This program will develop a deep and practical understanding of the unique context in which international health policy, financing, and management decisions are made. Students will have the opportunity to apply management skills to practical challenges in their field of programmatic interest, such as pharmaceutical policy and management, HIV/AIDS, or global health management consulting. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Anesthesiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology | This program providing exceptional clinical training for its residents and fellows. We are committed to using avant-garde educational approaches, and we are recognized leaders in the field of computer-assisted instruction. Simulation and Media Centers complement outstanding clinical instruction. Upon completion of their training, residents and fellows become competent consultants in anesthesiology, second to none. The broad and comprehensive instruction trainees receive assure their becoming not only superb clinicians, but also physicians with an understanding of practice management and the efficient administration of preoperative medicine. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology | School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, 88 East Newton Street, Boston Medical Center, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 6950 | This department is a private, not-for-profit, 581-licensed bed, academic medical center located in Boston’s historic South End. The hospital is the primary teaching affiliate for Boston University School of Medicine. Emphasizing community-based care, Boston Medical Center, with its mission to provide consistently accessible health services to all, is the largest safety net hospital in New England. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry | This program focus of the biochemistry research in the department is on the fields of molecular and cellular biology. Specific research interests include extracellular matrix biochemistry and molecular biology, regulation of gene expression in eukaryotic cells, developmental biochemistry, vesicle trafficking and signal transduction, protein structure and function, mechanisms of catalysis, porphyrin biochemistry, protein membrane interactions, growth control and cell cycle, neurobiochemistry, mechanism of action of steroid hormones, and mechanisms of oncogenesis. Research activities are well supported by a variety of interdisciplinary research program project grants, graduate student training grants, and individual research grants. | Students who have completed an undergraduate degree usually with a major in biochemistry, biology, or chemistry and have taken courses in general biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, physical chemistry, and calculus may apply for this program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry, 715 Albany Street K-225, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5090 | The department is located on four floors of the Silvio O. Conte building at the Boston University School of Medicine. The graduate program in the Department of Biochemistry accepts qualified applicants into M.A, Ph.D., and M.D./Ph.D. programs. The emphasis of the last two programs is on research training in the laboratory of a faculty member. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Dermatology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $42734 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology | This program provide clinical dermatology training with a sound basis in the fundamentals of dermatologic science. Students in these programs are assigned to clinical outpatient sessions (4 to 6 per week) at the Boston Medical Center and the Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center, where they have primary patient responsibility under faculty supervision, as well as rotations in the Department's Section of Dermatopathology and inpatient consultation service. Specific rotations in dermatologic surgery and laser surgery provide additional instruction in these increasingly important dermatologic treatment modalities. Courses include Clinical Dermatology, Clinical Pathological Correlation, Basic Dermatopathology, Diagnostic Dermatopathology, Cutaneous Microbiology, Photobiology, Dermatologic and Laser Surgery, Structure and Function of the Skin, and Sexually Transmitted Diseases and AIDS. | Admission requirements include a medical degree (M.D. or M.B.B.S.) from a recognized university, a year of internship and one or more years of experience in medicine (preferably with an emphasis in dermatology), and proficiency in English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, 715 Albany Street J-100, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5500 | The Department of Dermatology at Boston University provides care to inpatients and outpatients at Boston Medical Center and the Jamaica Plain Veterans Administration Hospital. The Department occupies a 36,000 sq. ft (4000 m2) building on the Boston University Medical Center campus adjacent to the Medical School, School of Public Health, School of Dental Medicine and Boston Medical Center, the principal teaching hospital. Faculty and clinical associates offer expertise in practically all subspecialty areas within dermatology, including: skin oncology, dermatologic surgery, phototherapy, laser and cosmetic surgery, photopheresis, alopecia, skin ulcers, wound management, pediatric dermatology, geriatric dermatology, sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS, and tropical dermatology. Departmental researchers are leaders in fields such as skin aging, pigmentation, skin cancer, and malignant melanoma. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Medicine | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Medicine | This program is dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in patient care, teaching, and research. This program involves in the sections of Cardiovascular Medicine, Clinical Epidemiology, Endocrinology, Diabetes, Nutrition Gastroenterology, General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics Hematology and Medical Oncology Hypertension, Infectious Diseases, Molecular Medicine, Nephrology, Preventive Medicine, Pulmonary and Rheumatology. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Medicine | School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, 715 Albany Street E-113, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 414 1519 | The Department of Medicine is based at the School of Medicine and at two principal teaching hospitals, Boston Medical Center and the Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Microbiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology | This program participates in two interdepartmental graduate training programs: the Immunology Training Program and the Host-Pathogen Interactions Training Program. The goal is to provide rigorous training to exceptional students in a supportive and collaborative environment and to prepare them for a career in research science. Students in these graduate programs participate in formal coursework, seminars and journal clubs, and directed research in the broad fields of microbiology and immunology, including focuses in host-pathogen interactions, immune regulation, molecular virology, and prokaryotic molecular biology. | Students must have received a baccalaureate degree from an accredited university with a strong background in biological and physical sciences. The applicants academic record, references, GRE test results and related work experience are considered in the admissions process. Both the GRE General Test and the Subject Test are required. Recommended sciences for the Subject Test are biochemistry, cell and molecular biology, and biology. International students must demonstrate competence in English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology, 715 Albany Street L-504, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4284 | The department focuses on the molecular mechanisms underlying microbial infection and the host immune response. This department faculty investigate a number of areas integral to these topics that can be loosely grouped under the research themes of bacterial genetics, virus molecular biology, parasitology, host-pathogen interactions and immunology. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Neurology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Neurology | This program provides excellent, state-of-the-art medical care to patients with neurological diseases, contribute to the advancement of new knowledge through basic and clinical neuroscience research and train physicians who will possess the skills to deliver comprehensive neurological care and advance new knowledge in the clinical neurosciences. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Neurology | School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, 715 Albany Street C-329, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5350 | The primary missions of the Department of Neurology are: to provide excellent, state-of-the-art medical care to patients with neurological diseases, to contribute to the advancement of new knowledge through basic and clinical neuroscience research, and to train physicians who will possess the skills to deliver comprehensive neurological care and advance new knowledge in the clinical neurosciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Neurosurgery | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Neurology | This program diagnosis and treatment of diseases and conditions of the brain, spine, spinal cord and nerves. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Neurology | School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, 715 Albany Street C-329, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5350 | The primary missions of the Department of Neurology are: to provide excellent, state-of-the-art medical care to patients with neurological diseases, to contribute to the advancement of new knowledge through basic and clinical neuroscience research, and to train physicians who will possess the skills to deliver comprehensive neurological care and advance new knowledge in the clinical neurosciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Obstetrics and Gynecology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology | This program offers comprehensive women's health care along the life continuum: from adolescence, through pregnancy, to menopause as well as end of life care for patients with gynecological cancers. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology | School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, One Boston Medical Center Place, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 8000 | The primary missions of the Department of Neurology are: to provide excellent, state-of-the-art medical care to patients with neurological diseases, to contribute to the advancement of new knowledge through basic and clinical neuroscience research, and to train physicians who will possess the skills to deliver comprehensive neurological care and advance new knowledge in the clinical neurosciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Ophthalmology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Ophthalmology | This program trains graduate physicians to be ophthalmologists and prepares them for certification by the American Board of Ophthalmology. The Department also provides advanced training for ophthalmologists in the subspecialty areas of 1) Corneal and External Ocular Diseases and Refractive Surgery, and 2) Retinal and Vitreous Diseases and Surgery. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Ophthalmology | School of Medicine, Department of Ophthalmology, 715 Albany Street Surg-8, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 414 2020 | This department participates in and has responsibility for a broad range of clinical, research and teaching activities. Faculty members provide all levels of medical and surgical eye care in a wide range of locations in Massachusetts. These include one of Bostons premier teaching hospitals, the Boston Medical Center (the private facility resulting from the merger of the Boston University Hospital and the Boston City Hospital), the Department of Veterans' Affairs primary referral center for New England, the Boston Veterans Administration Healthcare System, a free-standing Ambulatory Surgical and Laser Refractive Center in Raynham, and the private offices of Boston University Eye Associates, Inc. in Boston, Taunton, Middleboro, Natick and Brockton. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Orthopedic Surgery | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Orthopedic Surgery | This program graduate knowledgeable orthopedic surgeons who possess the critical analysis skills needed to make the best treatment decisions for their patients, and who have acquired superior operative expertise. The greatest strength of the training program is the dedication of the faculty and the relationship between the faculty and the residents. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Orthopedic Surgery | School of Medicine, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, 720 Harrison Avenue DOB-808, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5633 | This department is a leader in the care of sports and traumatic injuries of the musculoskeletal system and conducts some of the most cutting-edge basic and clinical research on the biology of musculoskeletal tissue healing. Indeed, our faculty, residents and fellows have obtained award recognition for their groundbreaking investigations in these areas and obtain competitive peer-reviewed grant support to further the acquisition of new knowledge of musculoskeletal conditions and their treatments. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Otolaryngology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery | This program is to educate and train physicians to function independently as specialists in the field of otolaryngology - head and neck surgery. This specialty provides comprehensive medical and surgical care of patients with diseases and disorders of the head and neck that affect the ears, the face and its skeleton, the respiratory and upper alimentary systems and structures. Specialists in this discipline have knowledge, skills and understanding of the basic medical sciences relevant to the head and neck, the respiratory and upper alimentary systems, the communication sciences including audiology and speech - language pathology, the chemical senses of smell and taste, as well as allergy, cosmetics, endocrinology, and neurology as they relate to the head and neck. Included are the diagnosis and the medical and surgical therapy, reconstruction or prevention of diseases, neoplasms, deformities, disorders and injuries of the head and neck. | Applicants must have a M.D. degree from a School of Medicine which is approved by the Liaison Committee of Medical Education or by the Canadian Council of Medicine. Graduates of foreign medical schools must have passed the FMGEMS examinations. Further request that applicants have or will obtain a clerkship in otolaryngology. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery | School of Medicine, Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 715 Albany Street FGH-608, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7933 | This department is a leader in the care of sports and traumatic injuries of the musculoskeletal system and conducts some of the most cutting-edge basic and clinical research on the biology of musculoskeletal tissue healing. Indeed, our faculty, residents and fellows have obtained award recognition for their groundbreaking investigations in these areas and obtain competitive peer-reviewed grant support to further the acquisition of new knowledge of musculoskeletal conditions and their treatments. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine | This program comprises study in lecture- and discussion-based courses and laboratory experience extending over one to two years, followed by a comprehensive written and oral qualifying examination. A proposal for dissertation research is then prepared and presented to the student's individual dissertation committee; the research is performed under the guidance of the major advisor with the help and advice of the committee over the ensuing two or more years. Ultimately, the student writes and defends a dissertation based upon the research performed. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, 715 Albany Street L-804, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4500 | This department focuses particularly on the biology, genetics, and immunology of cancer, and on neurologic disorders. It offers multiple research and training opportunities in experimental and applied pathology, and has a diverse faculty composed of core and joint members. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Pharmacology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | This program encompasses the interdisciplinary nature of this field and prepares students to study chemical interactions with biological systems on multiple levels, from the behavior of atoms in macromolecules to the effect of molecules on the behavior of organisms. A major focus of research training is in areas of molecular, cellular, and behavioral neurosciences. Newly renovated and expanded research facilities provide students with state-of-the-art opportunities for training in molecular genetics, molecular modeling, electrophysiology, biophysical methods, psychophysical methods and other tools for elucidating the interaction of drugs with biological targets. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | School of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 715 Albany Street L-603, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4300 | This department was formally established in the fall of 1918. At that time, the School was reorganized and the association with homeopathy, which had been established in 1873, was terminated. A pharmacology curriculum of lectures, recitations, and laboratory exercises was established and taught by faculty from other institutions. The first appointment of a BUSM professor of pharmacology occurred with the arrival of Dr. Walter L. Mendenhall in 1921. He was succeeded in 1946 by Dr. George L. Maison. By the early 1950s medical students were exposed to a 190-hour course in pharmacology that emphasized the experimental aspect of the science. Research and training of graduate students were in areas of high altitude physiology, cardiac pharmacology, and the pharmacology of veratrum alkaloids. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Physiology and Biophysics | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics | This program includes researches in the areas of Cellular Physiology and Biophysics, with strong concentrations in Structural Biology, Vision Research and the Biology and Physical Chemistry of Lipids. | GRE General Test and a Subject Test in an area related to biophysics are required. For applicants from foreign countries, TOEFL is also required. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, 715 Albany Street W-302, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4001 | The Department of Physiology and Biophysics is a research oriented department, located at the Boston University School of Medicine. This research encompasses many facets of Cell Biology, Molecular and Cellular Physiology, Structural Biology, and Molecular Biophysics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Radiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Radiology | This program provides comprehensive diagnostic imaging services using appropriate radiological evaluations to deliver the highest quality of care with optimal patient outcomes. Committed to improving healthcare by achieving excellence in diagnostic imaging and image-guided treatments. Dedicated to the highest standards of excellence in training medical students, residents, fellows, and technologists. This program emphasize clinical indications, imaging protocols, and outcome expectations. Facilitates information-sharing and, in so doing, educates healthcare providers and trainees to enable them to utilize radiological techniques optimally. Promotes scientific inquiry among its faculty and trainees for advancement of radiological sciences and clinical practice through basic biomedical research, technology assessment, clinical research, practice guidelines, and outcomes research. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Radiology | School of Medicine, Department of Radiology, 715 Albany Street FGH-3007, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 6610 | The Department of Radiology at Boston University Medical Center provides comprehensive diagnostic imaging services using appropriate radiological evaluations to deliver the highest quality of care with optimal patient outcomes. Committed to improving healthcare by achieving excellence in diagnostic imaging and image-guided treatments. Dedicated to the highest standards of excellence in training medical students, residents, fellows, and technologists. This department emphasize clinical indications, imaging protocols, and outcome expectations. Facilitates information-sharing and, in so doing, educates healthcare providers and trainees to enable them to utilize radiological techniques optimally. Promotes scientific inquiry among its faculty and trainees for advancement of radiological sciences and clinical practice through basic biomedical research, technology assessment, clinical research, practice guidelines, and outcomes research. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Rehabilitation Medicine | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine | This program provides comprehensive clinical services to patients who require physiatric expertise. Faculty is committed to medical education and research. It strive to provide care to patients without regard to financial status. In addition, the department is committed to training capable physiatrists who will be sensitive to community medical needs. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine | School of Medicine, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, 715 Albany Street F-511, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 414 0044 | This department focuses on specialty, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, is to improve function for patients with all levels of impairment. We treat a wide variety of disorders including traumatic brain injury, stroke, spinal cord injury, amputees, and musculoskeletal disorders. The department also conducts research, and has been designated by the United States Department of Education as a model systems spinal cord injury center. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD in Surgery | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Surgery | This program is a non-pyramidal two-track system, with five house officers in the categorical track and twenty in the preliminary track. Those in the categorical track plan to complete five years of general surgical training. Those in the preliminary track come to the training program for one or two years and then leave to pursue a surgical subspecialty career. The first two years of the Surgical Residency Program are a time of broad exposure to a variety of surgical settings. In the next 3 years, categorical residents begin to accept more decision-making responsibility and participate in the surgical management of more and more complex cases. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Surgery | School of Medicine, Department of Surgery, 715 Albany Street C-500, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 8442 | This department strive to provide the finest surgical patient care, to conduct world-class research, and to provide state-of-the art education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/MPH in Biostatistics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | This is a dual-degree program which provides the skills to design, analyze, and interpret the result of public health studies. Through such courses as statistics, advanced regression analysis, and statistical computing, students learn the statistical applications important to research, including study design, data management, and statistical analysis. Graduates are prepared for further study or careers in research, project management, academia, or the private sector. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core course requirements are highly encouraged to take the BS703, though the core course requirement for all MPH students may be met by successfully completing BS701 or BS703 in Biostatics. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617638 5207 | The school has grown tremendously in recent years with more than 4,000 alumni, 140 full-time faculty, and students from over 40 countries. In keeping with the School service-oriented philosophy, each department combines research and academics with a practicum requirement, resulting in a rigorous, well-rounded curriculum enhanced by work experience in a public health environment. Through longstanding collaborations with such institutions as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Public Health Commission, and the Veterans Affairs Administration; and international alliances with the Red Cross, the Peace Corps, and foreign governments, our students, faculty, and alumni draw on their own diverse backgrounds to carry out the School mission in a variety of settings. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/MPH in Environmental Health | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | This dual degree program is designed for students who envision a medical career that incorporates public health and medicine. The MD/MPH program prepares physicians for academic careers or for practice in today's health care environment. This flexible program combines traditional MD preparation with a concentration in one of the following areas of public health: health policy and management; environmental health; health law, human rights and bioethics; epidemiology; biostatistics; international health, maternal and child health; or social and behavioral sciences. In addition, students are required to complete a practicum project that provides an opportunity to focus on public health issues within the context of their clinical rotations. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4620 | The department houses two basic research laboratories in immunotoxicology and is home to a Superfund Basic Research Center, which investigates reproductive and developmental hazards. The department research agenda is also firmly rooted in community health and environmental justice; for example, a collaborative project with public officials and community groups seeks to better the health of low-income families by improving conditions in public housing. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/MPH in Epidemiology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | This dual program is designed for students who envision a medical career that incorporates public health and medicine. The MD/MPH program prepares physicians for academic careers or for practice in today's health care environment. This flexible program combines traditional MD preparation with a concentration in one of the following areas of public health: health policy and management; environmental health; health law, human rights and bioethics; epidemiology; biostatistics; international health, maternal and child health; or social and behavioral sciences. In addition, students are required to complete a practicum project that provides an opportunity to focus on public health issues within the context of their clinical rotations. This program will teach increased concerns about emerging infections, toxic environmental hazards, and global health disparities have led to an increased recognition of the importance of the field of epidemiology. | Admission to the dual degree program is contingent upon admission to both the School of Medicine (MED) and the School of Public Health (SPH). | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7775 | Department of Epidemiology has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/MPH in Health Law | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | This dual degree program is designed for students who envision a medical career that incorporates public health and medicine. This program prepares physicians for academic careers or for practice in today's health care environment. This flexible program combines traditional MD preparation with a concentration in one of the following areas of public health: health policy and management; environmental health; health law, human rights and bioethics; epidemiology; biostatistics; international health, maternal and child health; or social and behavioral sciences. In addition, students are required to complete a practicum project that provides an opportunity to focus on public health issues within the context of their clinical rotations. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4626 | This department teaching and research activities explore both individual rights and governmental authority to protect health. In the human rights arena the department considers connections between health and social justice in the United States and abroad. Its bioethics courses analyze not only what can be done in the health care system but what should be done, and explicitly examines the values and beliefs that govern both the people and the institutions that affect health today. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/MPH in Health Policy and Management | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This dual degree program prepares physicians for academic careers or for practice in today's health care environment. This flexible program combines traditional MD preparation with a concentration in one of the following areas of public health: health policy and management; environmental health; health law, human rights and bioethics; epidemiology; biostatistics; international health, maternal and child health; or social and behavioral sciences. In addition, students are required to complete a practicum project that provides an opportunity to focus on public health issues within the context of their clinical rotations. The possible careers in this program are Health care management, policy, and research in federal, state, and local agencies, hospitals, health centers, home health agencies, managed care and insurance organizations, and research and consulting companies. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/MPH in International Health | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | This dual-degree program prepares physicians for academic careers or for practice in today's health care environment. This flexible program combines traditional MD preparation with a concentration in one of the following areas of public health: health policy and management; environmental health; health law, human rights and bioethics; epidemiology; biostatistics; international health, maternal and child health; or social and behavioral sciences. In addition, students are required to complete a practicum project that provides an opportunity to focus on public health issues within the context of their clinical rotations. The possible careers in this program are Program management, policy, and analytic roles with ministries of health, nongovernmental and private voluntary organizations, donor and lending agencies, and consulting groups, or with refugees. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | School of Public Health, Department of International Health, 715 Albany Street Crosstown Ctr 3rd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5234 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/MPH in Maternal and Child Health | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | This dual degree program prepares physicians for academic careers or for practice in today's health care environment. This flexible program combines traditional MD preparation with a concentration of maternal and child health. In addition, students are required to complete a practicum project that provides an opportunity to focus on public health issues within the context of their clinical rotations. This program conduct research, education and service in partnership with community-based organizations, advocates, local, national and international government agencies. Graduates from the MCH Department are equipped with the knowledge, critical thinking, technical skills, and professional vitality essential to assessing community needs and assets, designing and evaluating programs and policies, and advocating for health equity. They are employed as managers, researchers, and advocates within private and public sector organizations in the U.S. and across the globe. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5375 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/MPH in Social and Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | This dual degree program is designed for students who envision a medical career that incorporates public health and medicine. This program prepares physicians for academic careers or for practice in today's health care environment. This flexible program combines traditional MD preparation with a concentration in social and behavioral sciences. In addition, students are required to complete a practicum project that provides an opportunity to focus on public health issues within the context of their clinical rotations. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5160 | The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health.Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/PhD Program in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | This program allows highly qualified students to obtain their MD and PhD degrees simultaneously. BME students in the MD/PhD program obtain their training in biology at the School of Medicine, and thus are excused from taking BE 505 and BE 706. Medical school courses can be counted for two of the four required courses beyond the Core Curriculum. | Admission normally requires a bachelor or master degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor or post-master PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor PhD program and applicants who hold a master degree are eligible to apply for a post-master’s PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Students with a Master's degree are required to take a total of 32 credits (structured courses plus research). The structured requirements are: BE 505: Molecular Bioengineering I or equivalent, BE 706: Quantitative Physiology for Engineers or equivalent and Three technical electives (at least two from BME). Students may petition to count as many as three of these five courses from previous coursework, by showing that the previous courses were substantially equivalent to offerings from BU. Students who receive such credit can meet the overall requirement for 32 credits through research credits. Each post-MS PhD student must pass the qualifying exams, serve as a teaching fellow for one semester, and successfully propose and defend an original body of dissertation work. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering, 44 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2805 | The department of biomedical engineering founded in 1966, was among the first to offer a bachelor’s degree in the discipline. Today, the department offers a full suite of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees, and is rated among the top 10 in the nation by US News and World Report. With 32 full-time faculty, the Biomedical Engineering Department at Boston University is among the largest in the country. Research and teaching primarily focus on applying engineering, computational, and analytical techniques to biological systems from the nanoscale level of DNA to the macroscopic level of organ systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MD/PhD in Anatomy and Neurobiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology | This program is designed to produce well-rounded biomedical scientists who expect to include teaching and research in their career portfolio. This program includes courses in Anatomy and Neuroscience within the Medical School curriculum as well as a number of advanced courses within this department and related departments at the Medical School. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, 715 Albany Street L-1004, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4200 | This school was formed in 1873 when Boston University merged with the New England Female Medical College, becoming the first coeducational medical school. The New England Female Medical College, founded in 1848, was the first institution to medically train women and graduated the first black woman physician. Throughout our history we have maintained a strong commitment to the study and practice of medicine in the context of a mission of service to society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MEng Program in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | This program is a collaborative, interdisciplinary approach focuses on biotechnology, molecular bioengineering, neural engineering, biophotonics, nanotechnology, and sub cellular and systems biomechanics. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Courses are: BE 790 Biomedical Engineering Seminar (0 credits), BE 505 Molecular Bioengineering or BE 706 Quantitative Physiology for Engineers (4 credits), BME Technical Electives from Specified List (12 credits), ENG Technical Electives at 500-level or higher may include additional BE coursework (8 credits), EK 731 Technology Commercialization (4 credits), Mathematics Requirement (4 credits). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering, 44 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2805 | The department of biomedical engineering founded in 1966, was among the first to offer a bachelor’s degree in the discipline. Today, the department offers a full suite of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees, and is rated among the top 10 in the nation by US News and World Report. With 32 full-time faculty, the Biomedical Engineering Department at Boston University is among the largest in the country. Research and teaching primarily focus on applying engineering, computational, and analytical techniques to biological systems from the nanoscale level of DNA to the macroscopic level of organ systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Art Education | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $18300 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This programs concentrate on developing methods that teach children and adolescents to think visually and create art with personal meaning. This program is designed for teachers who already have state licensure or for individuals interested in the field of art education but not teaching licensure. Students design an individual course of study and select from a combination of art education, liberal arts, and studio art classes. An undergraduate degree in studio art is required. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). All applicants are required to submit a portfolio of 15–20 examples of recent work. Portfolios should indicate drawing ability as well as strength in both two-dimensional and three-dimensional media, including printmaking and ceramics. Portfolios may be submitted in slide or CD format. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Design | Full Time | Variable | $18272 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | The objective of this program is to help students become consummate professionals. Each student is encouraged to hone skills that enable expression of a bold personal aesthetic. The key to this training lies in a mix of classes and design/production assignments, individually tailored to each student by a faculty of practicing professionals. Individualized programs of study vary greatly depending on the level of preparation each graduate student brings to his or her first year of training, and there exists no model that is truly representative. In general, students in the Design program can expect their training regimen to mix both ongoing studio classes - that enhance rendering skills - with design classes that alternate short-term exercises with long-term projects in applied design. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Directing | Full Time | Variable | $18272 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program provides early career directors with the opportunity to refine and enhance their technical skills and range, while cultivating their artistic identity and professional objectives. The program is individually designed with each student's artistic strengths and personal ambitions in mind. Its goals are to extend, intensify, and focus the director's theatrical technique, sensibilities, and imaginations; to explore and enhance their creative relationships with actors, designers, and playwrights; to envision possibilities for new artistic leadership in American theatre; and to consider the pragmatic aspects of the profession. The School of Theatre admits one or two students each year to the program, which is jointly sponsored by the School of Theatre and the Huntington Theatre Company. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Graphic Design | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $18300 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program consists of regular critiques by a faculty of practicing professionals as well as professional training in advanced design technology. Research and discussion involves both modernist and postmodernist design theory and their application to contemporary graphic design. Students are encouraged to explore new ideas, maintain and promote the highest design standards, and be fully informed of contemporary developments in the graphic design field. The program provides an intimate learning experience within the stimulating environment of a major university in a culturally rich city. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). All applicants are required to submit a portfolio of 15–20 examples of recent work. Portfolios should include at least 15 examples of the student best graphic design work. Although some of the images can be taken from other disciplines such as architecture, the majority must be in computer-based graphic design. Portfolios may be submitted in CD or slide format. The graphic design faculty reserves the right to request that students complete certain courses as prerequisites. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Management | Full Time | Variable | $18272 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | The objective of this program is to help students become consummate professionals. Each student is encouraged to hone skills that enable expression of a bold personal aesthetic. The key to this training lies in a mix of classes and design/production assignments, individually tailored to each student by a faculty of practicing professionals. Individualized programs of study vary greatly depending on the level of preparation each graduate student brings to his or her first year of training, and there exists no model that is truly representative. Candidates will participate in both hands-on assignments and in-class instruction designed to enhance and broaden their skills sets. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Painting | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $18300 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program concentrates on developing a personal artistic vision. Student work is enriched through contact with the ideas and experiences of the distinguished painting faculty, visiting artists, and fellow students. Students acquire and practice new painting techniques and explore ideas and images by generating paintings, drawings, and prints. Consideration of works by contemporary and past painters challenges students to adhere to the highest standards while developing a personal artistic sensibility in a unique body of work. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). All applicants are required to submit a portfolio of 15–20 examples of recent work. Slides should include paintings and drawings that indicate the applicant particular interests in subject matter and/or stylistic direction. Most successful applicants have spent at least one year painting independently after the completion of their undergraduate degree. The graduate painting department prefers that portfolios be submitted in a slide carousel (portfolios in CD format are NOT acceptable). Applicants unable to obtain a carousel should submit their portfolios in slide sheets. The painting faculty may request additional samples of work or require certain courses as prerequisites. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Production | Full Time | Variable | $18272 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | The objective of this program is to help students become consummate professionals. Each student is encouraged to hone skills that enable expression of a bold personal aesthetic. The key to this training lies in a mix of classes and design/production assignments, individually tailored to each student by a faculty of practicing professionals. Individualized programs of study vary greatly depending on the level of preparation each graduate student brings to his or her first year of training, and there exists no model that is truly representative. Candidates will participate in both hands-on assignments and in-class instruction designed to enhance and broaden their skills sets. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Sculpture | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $18300 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program encouraged students to explore personal expression through a variety of media and diverse stylistic forms. Work ranges from intense observation to imagination and invention, and reflects various philosophical and artistic points of view. Graduate sculptors work closely with the sculpture faculty while sharing seminars and visiting artist lectures with the graduate painters. Graduate sculptors are allotted private studios in close proximity to other graduate students in sculpture and painting, allowing for a fruitful dialogue. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). All applicants are required to submit a portfolio of 15–20 examples of recent work. The sculpture faculty evaluates slide portfolios based on evidence of a solid body of work that displays consistency, seriousness, and depth of purpose. Acceptance is based on the faculties determination that an applicant can develop artistically within the context of the School's program. Supplemental photographs and other visual materials are acceptable. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Stage and Production Management | Full Time | Variable | $18272 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | The objective of this program is to help students become consummate professionals. Each student is encouraged to hone skills that enable expression of a bold personal aesthetic. The key to this training lies in a mix of classes and design/production assignments, individually tailored to each student by a faculty of practicing professionals. Individualized programs of study vary greatly depending on the level of preparation each graduate student brings to his or her first year of training, and there exists no model that is truly representative. Candidates will participate in both hands-on assignments and in-class instruction designed to enhance and broaden their skills sets. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Studio Teaching | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $18300 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | This program is designed for the student with an undergraduate studio art degree who wishes to teach in the public school system. Upon completion of all the Boston University degree requirements, students are eligible for initial licensure and after three years of teaching may apply for professional licensure under Massachusetts Regulations for Educators. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). All applicants are required to submit a portfolio of 15–20 examples of recent work. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts, School of Visual Arts, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3371 | School of Visual Arts in the College of Fine Arts was established in 1954 as a professional training school at Boston University. With a faculty composed of practicing professional artists, the School offers an intensive program of studio training combined with liberal arts studies leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees. Courses prepare students for future study or professional practice in painting, sculpture, graphic design, or art education. Notable alumni include painters Brice Marden and Pat Steir; Gael Towey, chief creative officer of Martha Stewart Living; Ira Yoffe, vice president/creative director of PARADE magazine; and Rick Heinrichs, production designer whose credits include the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, Fargo, and Sleepy Hollow, for which he received an Oscar for Best Art Direction in 2000. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MFA in Theatre Education | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $18272 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | This program provides a unique opportunity for experienced, able, and mature theatre artists who want to become professional trainers in movement, voice and speech, or other related theatrical crafts. Drawing on the professional training expertise of the faculty, Theatre Education students and their faculty mentors design individualized programs of study that focus on strong teaching specialties set in a full understanding of all aspects of performance and production. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre | College of Fine Arts, School of Theatre, 855 Commonwealth Avenue Room 470, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3390 | School of Theater in the College of Fine Arts at Boston University was established in 1954 as one of the country leading institutions for the study of acting, stage management, design and production, and all aspects of the theatrical profession. Since 1982, the School of Theatre has enjoyed an educational and artistic collaboration with the Huntington Theater Company, the professional theater-in-residence at Boston University. Other professional theater affiliations include Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Actors Shakespeare Project, The Guthrie Theater, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Olney Theatre Center, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre. Notable alumni include Andrew Lack, chairman of Sony BMG, and actors Jason Alexander, Michael Chiklis, Geena Davis, Faye Dunaway, Julianne Moore, and Alfred Woodard. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in Biostatistics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | This is a dual-degree program which provides the skills to design, analyze, and interpret the result of public health studies. Through such courses as statistics, advanced regression analysis, and statistical computing, students learn the statistical applications important to research, including study design, data management, and statistical analysis. Graduates are prepared for further study or careers in research, project management, academia, or the private sector. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core course requirements are highly encouraged to take the BS703, though the core course requirement for all MPH students may be met by successfully completing BS701 or BS703 in Biostatics. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617638 5207 | The school has grown tremendously in recent years with more than 4,000 alumni, 140 full-time faculty, and students from over 40 countries. In keeping with the School service-oriented philosophy, each department combines research and academics with a practicum requirement, resulting in a rigorous, well-rounded curriculum enhanced by work experience in a public health environment. Through longstanding collaborations with such institutions as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Public Health Commission, and the Veterans Affairs Administration; and international alliances with the Red Cross, the Peace Corps, and foreign governments, our students, faculty, and alumni draw on their own diverse backgrounds to carry out the School mission in a variety of settings. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in Environmental Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | This program assess and design strategies to manage environmental and occupational hazards. Clean air, safe drinking water, pesticides, electromagnetic fields, asbestos, carcinogens, hazardous waste, global warming, asthma in urban children, West Nile virus, bioterrorism. This program offers a program of study that gives students both a firm foundation and the flexibility to pursue their own interests, supported by a faculty with deep experience in teaching and research. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4620 | The department houses two basic research laboratories in immunotoxicology and is home to a Superfund Basic Research Center, which investigates reproductive and developmental hazards. The department research agenda is also firmly rooted in community health and environmental justice; for example, a collaborative project with public officials and community groups seeks to better the health of low-income families by improving conditions in public housing. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in Epidemiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | This program provides training in the principles and methodology of epidemiological research and practice. Students in this program explore the theories and methodologies underlying the science, and learn how to design, conduct, analyze, and interpret research studies in such areas as genetic epidemiology, cardiovascular epidemiology, and infectious disease epidemiology. Graduates pursue advanced degrees or research or management careers in the public, private, or academic sectors. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7775 | Department of Epidemiology has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in Health Law | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | This program provides foundational instruction in public health law, which students complement with advanced studies in bioethics or other selected topics within the discipline. This degree is appropriate for students planning careers in law, public policy, advocacy, or academia. In addition, the program prepares students for a variety of careers across the spectrum of public health, including hospital administration, biomedical research, law, and regulatory affairs. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4626 | This department teaching and research activities explore both individual rights and governmental authority to protect health. In the human rights arena the department considers connections between health and social justice in the United States and abroad. Its bioethics courses analyze not only what can be done in the health care system but what should be done, and explicitly examines the values and beliefs that govern both the people and the institutions that affect health today. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in Health Policy and Management | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This program develop students abilities to solve health care problems in practical ways within sound conceptual frameworks. This includes understanding health services delivery from the distinct viewpoints of those who receive, provide, finance, and regulate care. Department courses emphasize the connection between financing care and delivering care, between developing sound policy and implementing it through good management. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in Health Services Research | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This program is designed to develop a solid base of analytic skills and knowledge that encompasses the four key areas of health policy and management: health policy administration/management; policy, politics, and planning; financial skills; and organization and delivery of care. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in International Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | This program provides students with the skills and knowledge necessary to work effectively in an overseas setting. Students combine coursework in economics, financial management, and policy analysis with comparative studies addressing the social and cultural issues that impact access to health care across the globe. Graduates are equipped for further study or to assume careers in relief organizations, international consulting groups and policy research institutions, and lending agencies or other organizations doing business abroad. | All the requirements for the degree must be completed within five calendar years after initial registration for the School. A degree candidate in good standing may request up to a one-year leave of absence from the School. Leaves of absence will be included in this five-year period. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | To fulfill concentration requirements, students must select a minimum of 16 credits from the following course and certificate program list.IH 700 Health in Lower-Income and Transitional Countries: Issues and Approaches, IH 725 Teaching Public Health: Design and Evaluation of Competency-based Instruction, IH 731 Designing, Renewing, and Leading Health Care Organizations, IH 735 Power, Gender, and Development, IH 736 Current Issues in International Health, IH 742 Medical Anthropology in Public Health, IH 747 Topics in International Health, IH 749 Health Care Management for Developing Countries IH 755 Public Health Management in Disasters and Complex Humanitarian Emergencies IH 760 Health Systems Research for Developing Countries IH 761 Essentials of Economics for International Health IH 763 Financial Management for International Health IH 777 International Health Concentration Paper Seminar IH 809 Essential Quantitative Techniques in Population Analysis for Public Health IH 810 Public Health Writing IH 820 Pharmaceutical Policy and Programming Issues for Developing Countries IH 830 Human Resource Management for Developing Countries IH 840 Advanced Mortality Analysis for Public Health IH 881 Population Dynamics and Reproductive Health Programs IH 883 Management of Reproductive Health Programs in Developing Countries IH 887 Planning and Managing Maternal and Child Health Programs in Developing Countries IH 888 Seminar on International Health Policy Issues IH 941 Directed Studies in International Health IH 942 Directed Research in International Health | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | School of Public Health, Department of International Health, 715 Albany Street Crosstown Ctr 3rd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5234 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in Maternal and Child Health | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | This program is directed at students who seek to protect and enhance the health and well-being of women, children, and families. Students explore the unique physical needs of this population through coursework in maternal and infant health, child and adolescent health, and community-based needs assessment in maternal and child health. They then place this knowledge into a sociopolitical context, obtaining a comprehensive understanding of the cultural influences affecting women, children, and the larger community. Graduates are equipped for careers in community and international health organizations, advocacy groups, and government agencies that address compelling issues in maternal and child health. | Candidates must have a minimum cumulative grade point average of 3.0, and earn at least a B- final grade (2.70) in each of the six core courses (or core course equivalents). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Approved Maternal and Child Health Concentration Elective Courses are MC759 Perinatal Epidemiology (4), MC763 Maternal and Child Health Policymaking (2), MC770 Children with Special Health Care Needs (4), MC771 Topics in Maternal and Child Health (2-4), MC775 Health Disparities among Vulnerable Populations (4), MC782 Substance Use among Women: Issues and Promising Practices (2), MC785 Reproductive Health Advocacy (2), MC790 Global Maternal and Child Health (4), MC820 Planning, Implementation, and Management of MCH Programs (4), MC825 Research and Evaluation in MCH (4), MC831 Infant, Child and Adolescent Mental Health: Integrating Developmental Science and Public Health (4), MC840 Women's Health: Policy Controversies (4), MC845 Perinatal Health Services (2), MC871 Advanced Topics in Maternal and Child Health (2-4), EP759 Reproductive Epidemiology (4), IH735 Power, Gender, and Ethnicity: Issues in Inequity and Health (4), IH753 Beyond Reproductive Health: Women's Health in Developing Countries (2), IH881 Evidence-based Strategies for International Reproductive Health (4), IH883 Managing Reproductive Health Programs in Developing Countries (2), IH887 Planning and Managing MCH Programs in Developing Countries (4), SB750 Family Violence and the Practice of Public Health (4), SB751 Sexual Violence: Public Health Perspectives in Intervention and Prevention (4), SB802 Public Health and Women: Social and Behavioral Approaches (4), SB808 Merging Clinical and Population Based Perspective in Public Health: Tension and Resolution (4). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5375 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH in Social and Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | This program trains students to plan, implement, and administer programs designed to resolve compelling public health problems created or exacerbated by individual behaviors and social disparities. Students explore the social and behavioral aspects of health, quantitative and behavioral research, and program planning and evaluation, applying their skills and knowledge to selected topics in the discipline. Graduates are prepared for careers in a variety of public health settings, including hospitals, nonprofit agencies, academic institutions, and public health. | Candidates must have a minimum cumulative grade point average of 3.0, and earn at least a B- final grade (2.70) in each of the six core courses (or core course equivalents). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5160 | The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health.Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MPH/MBA - Master of Business Administration in Health Sector Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | School of Management | The goal of this program is to provide students with a solid foundation in both management and public health in an integrated, structured curriculum that focuses on the U.S. health care system. Applicants are provided a perspective with a larger public health care systems approach and receive knowledge and skills to make them more effective and efficient managers. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MS in Dermatology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $42734 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology | This program is designed for medical graduates seeking advanced training in dermatology or dermatopathology, are based on U.S. graduate medical training methods, encompassing didactic lectures, seminars, conferences, direct patient contact. This program provide clinical dermatology training with a sound basis in the fundamentals of dermatologic science. | Admission requirements include a medical degree (M.D. or M.B.B.S.) from a recognized university, a year of internship and one or more years of experience in medicine (preferably with an emphasis in dermatology), and proficiency in English. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology | School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, 715 Albany Street J-100, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5500 | The Department of Dermatology at Boston University provides care to inpatients and outpatients at Boston Medical Center and the Jamaica Plain Veterans Administration Hospital. The Department occupies a 36,000 sq. ft (4000 m2) building on the Boston University Medical Center campus adjacent to the Medical School, School of Public Health, School of Dental Medicine and Boston Medical Center, the principal teaching hospital. Faculty and clinical associates offer expertise in practically all subspecialty areas within dermatology, including: skin oncology, dermatologic surgery, phototherapy, laser and cosmetic surgery, photopheresis, alopecia, skin ulcers, wound management, pediatric dermatology, geriatric dermatology, sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS, and tropical dermatology. Departmental researchers are leaders in fields such as skin aging, pigmentation, skin cancer, and malignant melanoma. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MS in Global Manufacturing | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | This program will teach the highly trained, well-rounded engineering leader and practitioner, capable of operating in a global economy. The global economy which is increasingly becoming borderless and dominated by multi-national companies requires tomorrows engineers to be able to work efficient in multicultural teams. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering, 15 Saint Marys Street, Boston University, BROOKLINE, Massachusetts, 02446, +1 617 353 2842 | The Department of Manufacturing Engineering (MFG) at Boston University is a truly interdisciplinary enterprise. It was the first manufacturing engineering program in the United States and remains in the top tier of academic programs in this field. Teaching and research focus on engineering design, manufacturing processes and materials, and the management and control of man-made systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MS in Investment Management | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Management | This program trains students in leading-edge theory and practice in the field of investment management. Students gain expertise in the design, management, and marketing of investment products. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MS/MBA - Master of Business Administration in Engineering and Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | School of Management | This program gives a next-generation concept in graduate business education programs, the MS·MBA trains aspiring CEOs and entrepreneurs. It responds to the digital revolution's impact on organizations, fusing a traditional business administration and management curriculum with expertise about the IT systems that have fundamentally changed business strategies and operations. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MS/MBA - Master of Business Administration in Information Systems | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | School of Management | This is a dual-degree program. This program gives a next-generation concept in graduate business education programs, the MS·MBA trains aspiring CEOs and entrepreneurs. It responds to the digital revolution's impact on organizations, fusing a traditional business administration and management curriculum with expertise about the IT systems that have fundamentally changed business strategies and operations. | Official Score of the TOEFl required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSD in Implantology | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | This program is offered to candidates who have previous training in oral and maxillofacial surgery, periodontology, or prosthodontics and who wish to be cross-trained for either the restoration or placement of dental implants. This program includes both the core didactic curriculum and clinical components. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules include SDM OB 761 Oral Microbiology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OB 763 Basic Processes in Oral Biology 4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM OB 767 Oral Immunology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OS 761 Medical Concerns of the Dental Patient 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM OS 831 Head and Neck Anatomy 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM PE 807 Seminar: Treatment Planning in Periodontics 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PE 817 Seminar: Grand Rounds 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PE 819 Seminar: periodontal Surgery 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PE 827 Applied Dental Pharmacology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PE 830 Clinical Applications of Oral Pathology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PE 840 Periodontic/Prosthodontic Literature Review 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 761 Occlusion 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PR 801 Fixed Partial Dentures 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 803 Complete Denture Prosthodontics 3 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 806 Removable Partial Dentures 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 807 Patient Presentation and Treatment Planning Seminar 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 814 Removable Prosthodontics-Overlay Dentures 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM PR 815 Basic Prosthodontic Techniques 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PR 816 Implantology Seminar 2 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PR 825 Postdoctoral Biomaterials 4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 844 Implantology Literature Review 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem. SDM PR 845 Implantology Literature Topics 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 846 Implantology Case Presentations 1 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PR 850 Basic Implantology Techniques 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PR 920 Clinical Implantology (Restorative) 10 cr, 1st and 2nd sem. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MSD in Oral Biology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | This program conducts broad scientific inquiries, including investigations into the exocrine biology of the oral cavity, the structure-function relationships of salivary proteins, the cellular biology of growth factors, oral host defense systems including both acquired and innate immunity, the physiology of bone, the mechanisms of extracellular matrix accumulation in mineralized and no mineralized tissues, the function of neutrophils and macrophages in adult and juvenile forms of periodontitis, and the role of cytokines in periodontal diseases and wound healing. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW in Social Work | Full Time | Variable | $20972 per year | School of Social Work | The objective of this program is to educate outstanding social workers in an intellectually rigorous environment so they can integrate and apply clinical and macro practice methods in urban settings and diverse communities. The multi-method curriculum prepares students for social work practice with: Individuals, Families, Groups, Organizations and Communities. Students begin with foundation courses in clinical and macro practice methods, human behavior in social environment, social welfare policy, and research, and a foundation field practicum and field education integrative seminar. In the advanced curriculum, students choose to specialize in either Clinical Practice or Macro Practice. They acquire in-depth knowledge and practice skills by taking advanced methods courses in Clinical or Macro Practice, implications of racism, social work ethics, electives, and an advanced field practicum. | Applicants are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) for proof of English proficiency. A minimum score of 550 is required on the written test and a minimum score of 213 is required on the computer-based test. In addition, applicants are required to take the GRE, or the MAT. (Test scores for standardized tests are valid for five years.) An applicant currently living in the United States and whose first language is not English must also take the TOEFL in addition to the GRE or the MAT. For further information on the TOEFL, call 609-771-7760; the GRE, 800-GRE-CALL or 609-921-9000; and the MAT, 800-228-0752 or 210-299-1061. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Sherborn Street, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4636 | The Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW) is committed to education which furthers social and economic justice in the urban environment and strives to incorporate this commitment into its programs and activities. The School is especially concerned with empowerment of all oppressed groups. BUSSW recognizes the ever-changing demands on the profession and strives to meet them through the highest quality of teaching, scholarship, research, practice, and political action. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/DMin in Social Work and Ministry | Full Time | 4.5 Year(s) | $20972 per year | School of Social Work | This joint program provides an opportunity for returning MDivs with three subsequent years of community practice to advance and deepen knowledge and skills at a doctoral level of scholarship, teaching, and faith community practice. | Applicants are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) for proof of English proficiency. A minimum score of 550 is required on the written test and a minimum score of 213 is required on the computer-based test. In addition, applicants are required to take the GRE, or the MAT. (Test scores for standardized tests are valid for five years.) An applicant currently living in the United States and whose first language is not English must also take the TOEFL in addition to the GRE or the MAT. For further information on the TOEFL, call 609-771-7760; the GRE, 800-GRE-CALL or 609-921-9000; and the MAT, 800-228-0752 or 210-299-1061. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Sherborn Street, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4636 | The Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW) is committed to education which furthers social and economic justice in the urban environment and strives to incorporate this commitment into its programs and activities. The School is especially concerned with empowerment of all oppressed groups. BUSSW recognizes the ever-changing demands on the profession and strives to meet them through the highest quality of teaching, scholarship, research, practice, and political action. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/EdD in Social Work and Education | Full Time | Variable | $20972 per year | School of Social Work | This dual degree program is designed to give students skills that cross cut these disciplines. The goal is to prepare leaders who have a rich understanding of work with families and can also design and administer creative programmatic responses to the changing needs of schools and communities. The program is a multifaceted course of study leading to the dual master's degree-Master of Social Work (MSW) and Master of Education (EdM)-or to an MSW and a doctorate in Education (EdD). Interested students may concentrate in either Special Education or Administration, Training, and Policy in education. Teacher certification may also be obtained with additional coursework. Program graduates are currently working in a wide variety of positions from early intervention programs to AIDS education, from school administration and school social work to WMCA program planning. Some describe themselves as primarily social workers, others as primarily teachers/administrators and still others as all of the above. | Applicants are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) for proof of English proficiency. A minimum score of 550 is required on the written test and a minimum score of 213 is required on the computer-based test. In addition, applicants are required to take the GRE, or the MAT. (Test scores for standardized tests are valid for five years.) An applicant currently living in the United States and whose first language is not English must also take the TOEFL in addition to the GRE or the MAT. For further information on the TOEFL, call 609-771-7760; the GRE, 800-GRE-CALL or 609-921-9000; and the MAT, 800-228-0752 or 210-299-1061. Students applying to this degree must have at least three years experience in education or a related field and must complete their MSW before beginning their dissertation. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Sherborn Street, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4636 | The Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW) is committed to education which furthers social and economic justice in the urban environment and strives to incorporate this commitment into its programs and activities. The School is especially concerned with empowerment of all oppressed groups. BUSSW recognizes the ever-changing demands on the profession and strives to meet them through the highest quality of teaching, scholarship, research, practice, and political action. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/EdM in Social Work and Education | Full Time | Variable | $20972 per year | School of Social Work | This dual degree program is designed to give students skills that cross cut these disciplines. The goal of this program is the goal to prepare leaders who have a rich understanding of work with families and can also design and administer creative programmatic responses to the changing needs of schools and communities. The program is a multifaceted course of study leading to the dual master's degree-Master of Social Work (MSW) and Master of Education (EdM)-or to an MSW and a doctorate in Education (EdD). Interested students may concentrate in either Special Education or Administration, Training, and Policy in education. Teacher certification may also be obtained with additional coursework. Program graduates are currently working in a wide variety of positions from early intervention programs to AIDS education, from school administration and school social work to WMCA program planning. Some describe themselves as primarily social workers, others as primarily teachers/administrators and still others as all of the above. | Applicants are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) for proof of English proficiency. A minimum score of 550 is required on the written test and a minimum score of 213 is required on the computer-based test. In addition, applicants are required to take the GRE, or the MAT. (Test scores for standardized tests are valid for five years.) An applicant currently living in the United States and whose first language is not English must also take the TOEFL in addition to the GRE or the MAT. For further information on the TOEFL, call 609-771-7760; the GRE, 800-GRE-CALL or 609-921-9000; and the MAT, 800-228-0752 or 210-299-1061. Students applying to this degree must have at least three years experience in education or a related field and must complete their MSW before beginning their dissertation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Sherborn Street, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4636 | The Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW) is committed to education which furthers social and economic justice in the urban environment and strives to incorporate this commitment into its programs and activities. The School is especially concerned with empowerment of all oppressed groups. BUSSW recognizes the ever-changing demands on the profession and strives to meet them through the highest quality of teaching, scholarship, research, practice, and political action. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MDiv in Social Work and Pastoral Education | Full Time | 4.5 Year(s) | $20972 per year | School of Social Work | This joint degree prepares candidates for ministerial leadership roles, church and community organization and activism, and pastoral or chaplaincy counseling roles in health and religious institutions, clinics and day programs, prison ministries, hospices, and other community settings. | Applicants are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) for proof of English proficiency. A minimum score of 550 is required on the written test and a minimum score of 213 is required on the computer-based test. In addition, applicants are required to take the GRE, or the MAT. (Test scores for standardized tests are valid for five years.) An applicant currently living in the United States and whose first language is not English must also take the TOEFL in addition to the GRE or the MAT. For further information on the TOEFL, call 609-771-7760; the GRE, 800-GRE-CALL or 609-921-9000; and the MAT, 800-228-0752 or 210-299-1061. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Sherborn Street, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4636 | The Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW) is committed to education which furthers social and economic justice in the urban environment and strives to incorporate this commitment into its programs and activities. The School is especially concerned with empowerment of all oppressed groups. BUSSW recognizes the ever-changing demands on the profession and strives to meet them through the highest quality of teaching, scholarship, research, practice, and political action. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in Biostatistics | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | This is a dual-degree program which provides the skills to design, analyze, and interpret the result of public health studies. Through such courses as statistics, advanced regression analysis, and statistical computing, students learn the statistical applications important to research, including study design, data management, and statistical analysis. Graduates are prepared for further study or careers in research, project management, academia, or the private sector. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core course requirements are highly encouraged to take the BS703, though the core course requirement for all MPH students may be met by successfully completing BS701 or BS703 in Biostatics. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617638 5207 | The school has grown tremendously in recent years with more than 4,000 alumni, 140 full-time faculty, and students from over 40 countries. In keeping with the School service-oriented philosophy, each department combines research and academics with a practicum requirement, resulting in a rigorous, well-rounded curriculum enhanced by work experience in a public health environment. Through longstanding collaborations with such institutions as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Public Health Commission, and the Veterans Affairs Administration; and international alliances with the Red Cross, the Peace Corps, and foreign governments, our students, faculty, and alumni draw on their own diverse backgrounds to carry out the School mission in a variety of settings. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in Environmental Health | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | This dual degree program is based on the recognition that many social workers are involved in the health delivery system and are interested in taking a broader, population-based look at the system. In addition, new roles are evolving for social workers in the health sector. This program assess and design strategies to manage environmental and occupational hazards. Clean air, safe drinking water, pesticides, electromagnetic fields, asbestos, carcinogens, hazardous waste, global warming, asthma in urban children, West Nile virus, bioterrorism. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health | School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4620 | The department houses two basic research laboratories in immunotoxicology and is home to a Superfund Basic Research Center, which investigates reproductive and developmental hazards. The department research agenda is also firmly rooted in community health and environmental justice; for example, a collaborative project with public officials and community groups seeks to better the health of low-income families by improving conditions in public housing. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in Epidemiology | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | This dual degree program is a three-year course of study leading to the award of both the degrees. The program is based on the recognition that many social workers are involved in the health delivery system and are interested in taking a broader, population-based look at the system. In addition, new roles are evolving for social workers in the health sector. This program has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7775 | Department of Epidemiology has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in Health Law | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | This dual-degree program based on the recognition that many social workers are involved in the health delivery system and are interested in taking a broader, population-based look at the system. Law is the primary means for putting public health policy into effect. Federal and state laws set standards for clean air, water, food, and product and workplace safety, just to mention a few examples. Law is also the primary tool for promoting individual civil and human rights such as privacy and freedom from discrimination or involuntary treatment. Although law embodies enduring principles of justice, it is no static set of rules, but evolves in response to new research and new challenges. Students will discover this dynamic process in a wide range of subjects, such as genetic testing and privacy, tobacco control, dangerous consumer products, workplace hazards, managed care, biomedical research, and national emergencies. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights | School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4626 | This department teaching and research activities explore both individual rights and governmental authority to protect health. In the human rights arena the department considers connections between health and social justice in the United States and abroad. Its bioethics courses analyze not only what can be done in the health care system but what should be done, and explicitly examines the values and beliefs that govern both the people and the institutions that affect health today. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in Health Policy and Management | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This dual-degree program is based on the recognition that many social workers are involved in the health delivery system and are interested in taking a broader, population-based look at the system. This program focuses on three areas, health policy, health care management, and pharmaceutical policy and administration. The pharmaceutical policy and administration option is new and offers student opportunities for preparing for a variety of careers in the pharmaceutical industry or in sectors of the health care industry that support or engage with pharmaceutical or biotechnology companies. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in International Health | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | This dual-degree program is based on the recognition that many social workers are involved in the health delivery system and are interested in taking a broader, population-based look at the system. The goal is to improve the health of populations in resource-poor and transitional economies through teaching, research, and service activities. Members of the faculty are drawn from public health, clinical, and social/behavioral sciences to provide a multidisciplinary faculty that can address the complex issues of health and development and meet the needs of a diverse student body. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of International Health | School of Public Health, Department of International Health, 715 Albany Street Crosstown Ctr 3rd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5234 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in Maternal and Child Health | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | This dual degree program is based on the recognition that many social workers are involved in the health delivery system and are interested in taking a broader, population-based look at the system. The possible careers in this program are planning, implementation, management, and evaluation of MCH services and development of MCH policy in local, state, and federal agencies and other health care organizations. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health | School of Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5375 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in Social Work and Public Health | Full Time | Variable | $20972 per year | School of Social Work | This dual degree program in Social Work and Public Health is an interdisciplinary course of study leading to the award of both the Master of Social Work (MSW) and the Master of Public Health (MPH) degrees. This unique program is based on the recognition that the social work profession is deeply involved in both health promotion and the delivery of health care services. As the health care sector has evolved, new roles for social workers trained in public health have emerged. The objective of the Boston University dual degree program in Social Work and Public Health is to make it possible for interested students to merge these two fields of study into one academic endeavor over the course of three years. | Applicants are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) for proof of English proficiency. A minimum score of 550 is required on the written test and a minimum score of 213 is required on the computer-based test. In addition, applicants are required to take the GRE, or the MAT. (Test scores for standardized tests are valid for five years.) An applicant currently living in the United States and whose first language is not English must also take the TOEFL in addition to the GRE or the MAT. For further information on the TOEFL, call 609-771-7760; the GRE, 800-GRE-CALL or 609-921-9000; and the MAT, 800-228-0752 or 210-299-1061. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Sherborn Street, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4636 | The Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW) is committed to education which furthers social and economic justice in the urban environment and strives to incorporate this commitment into its programs and activities. The School is especially concerned with empowerment of all oppressed groups. BUSSW recognizes the ever-changing demands on the profession and strives to meet them through the highest quality of teaching, scholarship, research, practice, and political action. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MPH in Social and Behavioral Sciences | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | This dual degree program is based on the recognition that many social workers are involved in the health delivery system and are interested in taking a broader, population-based look at the system. This program focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health. Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. Emerging knowledge about the dangers of obesity, substance abuse, and other threats to physical and mental health presents new and ongoing challenges. By creating innovative ways to address these challenges, and presenting these areas of new knowledge and innovative interventions to the next generation of public health professionals, this Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences contributes to the enhancement of the health of the public. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences | School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5160 | The Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences focuses on the effects of social factors and individual behaviors on health. By understanding these social and behavioral factors, public health professionals can help people to change their unhealthy behaviors and can advocate to change social conditions that have an adverse impact on health.Departmental faculty have testified on behalf of plaintiffs seeking to curb destructive marketing practices by tobacco companies and have advocated for stricter gun control and drunken driving laws. Together with social service organizations, faculty provide outreach and advocacy services to substance abusers and victims of domestic violence, and have helped public health officials and the private sector coordinate a nationwide program designed to help smokers overcome their habit. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSW/MTS in Sociology and Theological Studies | Full Time | 3.5 Year(s) | $20972 per year | School of Social Work | This dual degree program focus on the history, philosophy, polity, and ethics of Christian faith and practice. This joint degree adds historical, philosophical, and spiritual dimensions to clinical and macro social work assessment, planning, and practice. The MTS degree is an educational and spiritual enrichment, rather than a professional degree. | Applicants are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) for proof of English proficiency. A minimum score of 550 is required on the written test and a minimum score of 213 is required on the computer-based test. In addition, applicants are required to take the GRE, or the MAT. (Test scores for standardized tests are valid for five years.) An applicant currently living in the United States and whose first language is not English must also take the TOEFL in addition to the GRE or the MAT. For further information on the TOEFL, call 609-771-7760; the GRE, 800-GRE-CALL or 609-921-9000; and the MAT, 800-228-0752 or 210-299-1061. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Sherborn Street, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4636 | The Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW) is committed to education which furthers social and economic justice in the urban environment and strives to incorporate this commitment into its programs and activities. The School is especially concerned with empowerment of all oppressed groups. BUSSW recognizes the ever-changing demands on the profession and strives to meet them through the highest quality of teaching, scholarship, research, practice, and political action. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSc in Epidemiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | This program is intended for qualified students, especially physicians and other heath professionals, who seek advanced graduate study to prepare for research careers in epidemiology and clinical epidemiology. The objectives are conduct a stratified analysis to assess confounding and effect measure modification, Use collapsibility criteria to build an etiologic regression model in a data set with several covariates and distinguish between an association and a causal relation using appropriate principles of causal inference. | Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or higher. To apply for the MPH, students are requested to submit test scores from one of the following: GRE, GMAT, LSAT, or MCAT. For test score requirements for other programs and additional requirements for international applicants, please see http://sph.bu.edu/admissions. Standardized test scores are required of all applications. Tests must have been completed within the last five years. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology | School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 7775 | Department of Epidemiology has particular strengths in a number of important areas. These include the epidemiology of infectious diseases, such as AIDS, tuberculosis, and vaccine-preventable diseases; cancer epidemiology, with regard to chemical and radiation exposures and genetic factors; cardiovascular epidemiology, with regard to nutritional, lifestyle, and genetic factors; reproductive, perinatal, and pediatric epidemiology; and epidemiologic methods, including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional study designs. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | MSc in Health Services Research | Full Time | 12 Month(s) | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | This program equips graduates with an expansive breadth of knowledge and advanced technical skills. The MSc degree distinguishes an individual in both the professional world and academia, functioning as a distinct degree or serving as preparation for a doctoral program. Graduates go on to pursue careers as health care consultants, project and research managers, and analysts for insurance entities or provider-based organizations. | Applicants should hold a Bachelor degree in a field related to health services research (i.e. social/behavioral science, epidemiology, management, the biological sciences or health professions) or must have completed substantial course work in one of these fields. A high level of past academic performance is expected, particularly in courses within the applicant undergraduate major/Master's field or his/her course work related to health services: recommended GPA > 3.2/4.0. All candidates will be required to submit GRE scores or equivalent test scores (LSAT, MCAT, GMAT). It is recommended that relevant test scores (verbal, analytic and quantitative) be above the 50th percentile. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management | School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5042 | This department is an internationally renowned academic department for studying the financing, organization, and delivery of health care services. This department consists of over 25 faculty members who are experts in many of the most critical issues and challenges facing the US health care system. HPM faculty members are actively engaged in innovative research pertaining to such topics as reducing the number of uninsured, assessing the competitive effects of hospital mergers, and developing more effective ways to manage surgical services. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Human Physiology Program | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program is an excellent option for students who want to apply to medical school and other health related graduate programs. The curriculum has the required pre-medical courses built directly into the program. Other coursework, such as gross human anatomy, exercise physiology, and nutrition has an applied, human focus. The program also fulfills many prerequisites for the following graduate programs. Sargent College provides students with a broad liberal arts education and, in addition to requiring a select number of humanities and social science electives, we encourage students to study abroad and to declare a minor in an area beyond their concentration. Minors are available in over 30 fields, including: applied music, archaeology, modern foreign languages, psychology, biology, chemistry, and speech, language and hearing sciences. Sargent students interested in medical school use the BU Preprofessional Advising Office Services. Students also have the option in their last semester to do an internship in a hospital or clinical setting. This is set up by program faculty in any one of over 70 internship sites in the greater Boston area. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Modular Medical Integrated Curriculum | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program provides students with the opportunity for early selection to the Boston University School of Medicine while they are still undergraduates. Students apply to the program in the spring of their second year. Upon acceptance, MMEDIC students enroll in courses that enable them to simultaneously fulfill undergraduate science requirements and certain requirements of the first and second year of medical school. This approach allows students a greater degree of flexibility once they are in medical school. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Nutritional Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program incorporates courses required by most medical schools in the United States. Students should become familiar with the particular requirements of the medical schools to which they intend to apply. incorporates courses required by most medical schools in the United States. Students should become familiar with the particular requirements of the medical schools to which they intend to apply. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | This program in requires study in a broad set of disciplines. Aside from the required curriculum in liberal arts and courses in the Department of Archaeology, students are encouraged to have a minor in a related field and must take courses in cultural anthropology, languages, and laboratory sciences. Within the Department, only three specific courses are required for the major: AR 101 Introduction to Archaeology, AR 307 Archaeological Science, AR 450 Methods and Theory of Archaeology. Other archaeology courses fall into three categories: one topical course, which deal with general problems such as the origins of agriculture or the rise of civilization; two technical courses, which provide training in specific archaeological methods and technologies such as remote sensing or geoarchaeology; and three area courses, which are devoted to specific cultures and regions. As a minimum, Archaeology majors must take one topical, one technical, and three area courses. They may elect to take all of the area courses in one particular field, such as Mesoamerican archaeology or Classical archaeology, or they may take them in diverse areas. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: AR100 Great Discoveries in Archaeology, AR100 Great Discoveries in Archaeology, AR102 Introduction to Sciences in Archaeology, AR201 Introduction to Underwater Archaeology, AR202 Archaeological Mysteries: Pseudoscience and Fallacy in the Human Past, AR205 Origins of Civilization, AR205 Origins of Civilization, AR205 Origins of Civilization, AR205 Origins of Civilization, AR 210 Minoan and Mycenaean Civilizations, AR 215 The Contested Past , AR221 Archaeology of the Islamic World, AR222 Art and Architecture of Ancient America, AR230 Archaeology of Classical Civilizations, AR232 Archaeology of Ancient Egypt, AR232 Archaeology of Ancient Egypt, AR251 Ancient Maya Civilization, AR251 Ancient Maya Civilization, AR251 Ancient Maya Civilization, AR262 Asian Gods and Goddesses. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology, 675 Commonwealth Avenue Suite 347, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3415 | This department is the only distinct, fully constituted university department of archaeology in the United States. In the field, laboratory, and classroom, students pursue B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees with concentrations in Old and New World Prehistoric and Historical Archaeology, including Classical, Mesoamerican, Geoarchaeology, and Heritage management specializations. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History | This program requires the student to take eleven Art History courses, including one seminar plus at least four courses at the 300-level or above. All Art History concentrators are encouraged to select additional courses in related fields in consultation with their advisor. he undergraduate Art History Association sponsors trips to museums and galleries, and organizes film and lecture series. The undergraduate Architecture Society sponsors walking tours and visits to architectural offices. Both organizations enrich the department's social and intellectual life. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The eleven courses in Art History must include CAS AH 111 and 112 (survey of Western Art), plus two surveys of other artistic traditions, to be chosen from AH 215 (Arts of Africa); AH 220 (Islamic Art and Architecture); AH 222 (Art and Architecture in Ancient America); and AH 225 (Arts of Asia). Of the remaining seven courses, at least four courses must be taken at the 300-level or higher, including at least one seminar at the 400 or 500-level. Courses taken beyond the four introductory surveys must include one course each from the following four groups: A) Ancient, Medieval, and Ancient American, B) Asian, African, and Islamic, C) Renaissance, and Baroque and eighteenth century, D) nineteenth and twentieth century, including American. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History, 725 Commonwealth Ave Room 302, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2520 | The 20 members of the Department of Art History at Boston University comprise a group of professional art historians and teachers of art history who are dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge and the education of students. This department believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present but also enables them to acquire valuable skills that are applicable to many careers. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Bilingual Education (English as a Second Language) | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program helps students prepare for a teaching career in a variety of classroom settings. Whether the goal is to become a teacher at the elementary, middle or high school level, the program offers a comprehensive course of study in curriculum development, educational issues, teaching methods, and literacy development. The Bilingual Education undergraduate program, which leads to licensure for teachers of English as a Second Language for levels PreK-6 or 5-12, offers a strong liberal arts component with an emphasis on language and culture. Studies include professional development courses combining theory and practice, specialty development courses focusing on first and second-language acquisition and linguistics, literary instruction and assessment, and curriculum development. Students have the opportunity to apply the theoretical concepts learned during their coursework in supervised field placements. Placements are made in collaboration with various public school systems in the Boston area. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program requires related courses, plus two advanced four-credit courses in chemistry numbered CAS CH 401 or higher, excluding CH 421 and CH 525. Only one semester of undergraduate research (CAS CH 491 or CH 492) can be applied toward fulfillment of the advanced course requirement. These two advanced courses may be satisfied by the completion of the requirements of a major or minor concentration in astronomy, biology, biomedical engineering, geology, physics, mathematics, or computer science. Students in the MMEDIC program may substitute GMS BI 555 and CAS CH 527 for CH 421, and GMS BI 556 and CAS CH 528 for CH 422; one additional course in chemistry numbered CAS CH 401 or higher is required. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Boston University Metcalf Center for Science and Engineering, 590 Commonwealth Avenue Room 299, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2500 | This department has long been recognized for excellence in research and training at the undergraduate and graduate levels. They are dedicated to providing fundamental education in the chemical sciences, which at the same time, exposes students to the outstanding current questions in chemical research. They are also committed to the careful mentorship of undergraduate majors, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows that will serve them well as they enter careers in chemical research, medicine, law, or education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Chemistry - Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program has the related courses, CAS BI 108, 203, CAS CH 422, and one additional course in biochemistry or molecular biology from the following: CAS BB 522, CAS BI 552, or undergraduate research in biochemistry (CH 401, 402, 491, and 492). In option B the core chemistry courses (GMS BI 555 plus CAS CH 527 is substituted for CH 421), required related courses, CAS BI 108, 203, GMS BI 556, and one additional course in Biochemistry from the following; CAS BB 522, CAS BI 552, or undergraduate research in biochemistry (CH 401, 402, 491, 492). | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Boston University Metcalf Center for Science and Engineering, 590 Commonwealth Avenue Room 299, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2500 | This department has long been recognized for excellence in research and training at the undergraduate and graduate levels. They are dedicated to providing fundamental education in the chemical sciences, which at the same time, exposes students to the outstanding current questions in chemical research. They are also committed to the careful mentorship of undergraduate majors, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows that will serve them well as they enter careers in chemical research, medicine, law, or education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Chemistry - Teaching | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program is designed to meet the needs of students with a variety of interests. These include preparation for graduate education, for careers in research, teaching, industry, or regulatory agencies, and, as a premedical track, for professional training in medicine and related health fields. The concentration is built upon a core of courses covering the principal areas of chemistry (chemical principles, analytical, organic, physical, inorganic, and biochemistry), as well as calculus and physics. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Boston University Metcalf Center for Science and Engineering, 590 Commonwealth Avenue Room 299, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2500 | This department has long been recognized for excellence in research and training at the undergraduate and graduate levels. They are dedicated to providing fundamental education in the chemical sciences, which at the same time, exposes students to the outstanding current questions in chemical research. They are also committed to the careful mentorship of undergraduate majors, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows that will serve them well as they enter careers in chemical research, medicine, law, or education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Deaf Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program is the only undergraduate program in the United States that requires American Sign Language as the language of instruction and conversation. Students entering the Deaf Studies Program will explore educational, social, cultural, linguistic, and psychological issues and their application to the issues related to Deaf people, as individuals, as a community, and as a linguistic and cultural minority. A multi-disciplinary approach combined with a strong faculty, many of whom are Deaf, will provide in-depth training presenting a broad multi-cultural view. The undergraduate Deaf Studies program at Boston University employs a bilingual/bicultural philosophy in its preparation of personnel to work with Deaf people. All Deaf Studies majors are required to participate in a field placement during their senior year. Core courses detailing the history, education, literature, and language of the Deaf will be taught by Deaf faculty and are conducted in American Sign Language. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Early Childhood Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program specializing in Early Childhood Education begins with a solid foundation in the liberal arts, including the humanities, social sciences, mathematics, and science. In addition, studies focus on psychology and sociology, as well as basic professional educational studies and, of course, intense study in early childhood education. Students in the Early Childhood Education program will experience extensive field work. Beginning in the freshman year, when they enroll in ED100: Introduction to Education, they will participate in fieldwork in a local public school. During the junior year they will teach for one semester in the in-house School of Education pre-school. For a kindergarten practicum, students are placed in a local public school. As a senior they may complete the first or second grade practicum in a public school, selected by program faculty, or in one of the international schools in Australia, Ecuador, or England that provides overseas student teaching placements for Boston University students who are accepted into the international program. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program has a strong tradition of preparing exemplary teachers who care deeply about the education of children. Pre-service teachers possess not only demonstrated knowledge of the subject matter integral to the elementary curriculum, but also a passion for the ideas embodied in these disciplines. They bring a high level of pedagogical knowledge to their teaching, translating theory and research into effective practice. They are dedicated to narrowing the achievement gap to ensure that children from all walks of life reach their optimal potential. And finally, elementary education teachers reflect on the quality of their teaching at every turn, with the goal of enhancing their effectiveness. Students complete a comprehensive range of liberal arts courses as well as professional education courses to meet licensure requirements. With careful planning, students have the opportunity to complete dual licensure programs in elementary education and recommendation to the State of Massachusetts for licensure in elementary and special education or elementary and English as a second language. Earning two teaching licenses will require credits beyond the minimum undergraduate degree requirements. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in English | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program includes a core sequence which provides students with the tools of criticism and with a foundation in the study of British Literature. The remaining courses needed to complete the concentration may be selected to reflect and integrate the individual interests of each student. Students must include at least one course in American Literature before 1900 (EN 471, EN 479, EN 533, EN 534, EN 545, EN 571, EN 579, or courses designated as equivalent in any year). In addition, at least one course in Concepts and Methods of Literary Study is required. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS EN 220 Seminar in Literature, CAS HU 221 Major Authors I, CAS EN 322 Survey of British Literature I, CAS EN 323 Survey of British Literature II. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Boston University, 236 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2506 | This department offers B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. programs led by prominent literary scholars working in every period of English and American literature. The department’s Creative Writing Program, with a world-renowned faculty, has produced winners of all the major awards in poetry and fiction. The department publishes Studies in Romanticism, the leading journal on the Romantic movement, and AGNI, an important literary journal. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in English Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program is designed to prepare teachers of English (grades 5-8 and 8-12) and those planning careers in related fields such as publishing, instructional materials and curriculum development, and educational research. Students develop a wide range of classroom strategies specific to the age of the learners, the educational environment, and the subject matter. In addition to thirteen English literature and writing courses, and liberal arts courses in social sciences, mathematics and natural sciences, students complete nine courses in the School of Education including a freshman field based course, curriculum, methodology and student teaching. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in French | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program gives students intimate knowledge of a language spoken by an estimated 200 million people, with significant populations in 54 countries. As with Spanish, the study of French language, literature and culture, acquaints students with one of the world's great literary and cultural traditions, and introduces them to the encounter between European cultures and those of other parts of the world. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: CAS LF 111 1st-Semester French Four-skills sequence, CAS LF 121 French Readings 1, CAS LF 112 Four-skills sequence, CAS LF 122 French Readings 2, CAS LF 211 3rd-Semester French, CAS LF 221 French Readings 3, CAS LF 212 4th-Semester French, CAS LF 222 French Readings 4. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in German | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature | This program in German must complete a minimum of six principal courses at Boston University. Students participating in the Boston University program in Germany must complete a minimum of four principal courses in German on the Boston campus; two of these four courses must be taken at the LG 300 level or above following study in Germany. Internships taken on study abroad programs may not be credited toward a concentration in German. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Two of the following: CAS LX 250, LL222, LL223, LL224, Four language-focus courses: CAS LG 303 and 304 and two courses numbered LG 310–LG 345, CAS LG 350 and four courses numbered LG 400 or higher, One elective course numbered LG 250 or higher. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department was created in Spring 2007 as one of two successor departments along with Romance Studies to the former Department of Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures. Students and faculty in MLCL pursue the study of nine world languages, literatures and cultures and of Comparative Literature, the study of literature across linguistic boundaries. MLCL boasts an internationally distinguished faculty engaged in scholarly research on topics ranging from female impersonators in China to German translations of the Hebrew Bible to medieval Persian poetry in India to contemporary Japanese writers, and a great many other topics. MLCL is unique in BU’s College of Arts and Sciences in that its teaching and advising are oriented entirely to undergraduates (although graduate students from other programs are always welcome in our classes). Our courses enroll about 2500 students per year. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program requires minimum of ten courses required, of which no more than four may be below the 300 level. Method and Historiography: All concentrators are required to take CAS HI 200, ideally in their sophomore year, but in no event later than one semester after declaring a history concentration. Geographical/Chronological Distribution (four courses): At least one course is required in each of the following areas: American history, European history, world/regional history. One of the four courses must focus on premodern history. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in History - European History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program requires minimum of six courses required in European history, two of which must be colloquia. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in History - History of the United States and the North American Colonies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program requires minimum of six courses required in American history: CAS HI 151, 152, and four additional courses, two of which must be colloquia. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in History - Intellectual and Cultural History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program requires Minimum of six courses, two of which must be colloquia. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in History - World/Regional History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program requires minimum of eight courses required: CAS HI 175, 176, and six additional courses, two of which must be colloquia. Students develop a coherent program with their advisor. In addition to the history courses in this track, students may include designated courses from the Departments of Anthropology, Archaeology, Economics, Geography and Environment, Political Science, Religion, and Sociology. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in History and Social Science Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program prepares students for a variety of professional careers, ranging from classroom teachers to museum educators to social studies curriculum specialists. Boston University’s History and Social Science Education program reaches beyond the traditional mission of developing classroom history and social studies teachers to serve the many diverse professional goals of the students. The undergraduate degree in History and Social Science leads to licensure as a middle or senior high school teacher. It is possible to develop talents for a career in educational publishing, museum work or educational policy. The program’s professional education component is built upon field-based activities throughout the four undergraduate years, culminating in a student-teaching experience. Boston University enjoys long-standing relationships with many inner city and suburban school systems in Greater Boston that offer students rewarding field experiences under the guidance of expert teachers and faculty. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - International Economics and Business | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program requires CAS EC 392 or SMG IM 345 rather than CAS IR 292 as a principal required course. CAS EC 202 is a prerequisite for CAS EC 392. CAS EC 202 will be credited toward the International Economics and Business track. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS EC 201 Intermediate Microeconomic Analysis (prereq for CAS EC 391), CAS EC 202 Intermediate Macroeconomic Analysis (prereq for CAS EC 392), CAS EC 320 Economics of Less-Developed Regions, CAS EC 369 Economic Development of Latin America, CAS EC 391 International Economics I, CAS IR 304 Environmentally Sustainable Development (meets with CAS GE 304) , CAS IR 368 Contemporary East Asian Economics, CAS IR 369 Southeast Asia in World Politics, CAS IR 389 Current Issues in International Economics and Business, CAS IR 390 International Political Economy , CAS IR 395 North-South Relations , SMG IM 345 International Economic Relations I. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - International Political Economy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program requires CAS EC 392 or SMG IM 345 rather than CAS IR 292 as a principal required course. CAS EC 202 is a prerequisite for CAS EC 392. CAS EC 202 will be credited toward the International Economics and Business track. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS EC 320 Economics of Less-Developed Countries, CAS EC 369 Economic Development of Latin America, CAS GE 300 Geography of World Commerce, CAS GE 356 Geography of Third World Development, CAS IR 304 Environmentally Sustainable Development (meets with CAS GE 304) , CAS IR 304 Environmentally Sustainable Development (meets with CAS GE 304) , CAS IR 390 International Political Economy , CAS IR 395 North-South Relations . | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - Africa and the Middle East | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS AN 285 Coping with Crisis in Contemporary Africa, CAS AN 307 Turkey and the Middle East in Comparative Perspective, CAS AN 312 Peoples and Cultures of Africa, CAS AN 317 Power and Society in the Middle East, CAS AN 319 Anthropology of Muslim Cultures and Politics , CAS AN 320 Women in the Muslim World, CAS AN 355 Religious Fundamentalism in Anthropological Perspective, CAS AN 375 Culture and Society of South Asia, CAS GE 356 Geography of Third World Development, CAS HI 291 Reconstructing the African Past. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - East Asia | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS AN 305 Comparative Family Systems in Asia, CAS AN 318 Southeast Asia: Tradition and Development, CAS AN 344 Modern Japanese Society: Family, School, and Workplace, CAS AN 379 China: Tradition and Transition, CAS GE 381 Geography of Asia, CAS HI 390 Introduction to Modern Chinese History, CAS IR 275 The Pacific Challenge, CAS IR 368 Contemporary East Asian Economics, CAS IR 369 Southeast Asia in World Politics , CAS IR 370 China: From Revolution to Reform. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - Environment and Development Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program requires twelve courses and two pre-requisites (CAS EC 101 and CAS EC 102, see below) are required for an undergraduate concentration in international relations. The twelve courses include four required principal courses, four courses from a functional track, and four courses from a regional track (for details on tracks, see below). At least two courses must be taken at the 400 level or above. A grade of C or higher is required in all principal and track courses. Students concentrating in international relations are encouraged to fulfill their CAS mathematics requirements in statistics. Concentrators are encouraged to study abroad for one or more semesters; courses taken overseas must be approved by the department in order to receive credit toward the concentration. | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS AN 362 Culture and Environment, CAS AN 382 Wealth, Poverty, and Culture , CAS EC 320 Economics of Less-Developed Regions, CAS EC 369 Economic Development of Latin America, CAS EC 371 Environmental Economics, CAS EC 387 Introduction to Health Economics, CAS GE 103 Economic Geography, CAS GE 201 World Regional Geography I, CAS GE 202 World Regional Geography II, CAS GE 250 Man and Environment in the Western World, CAS GE 300 Geography of World Commerce, CAS GE 309 Intermediate Environmental Analysis and Policy , CAS GE 356 Geography of Third World Development, CAS IR 304 Environmentally Sustainable Development (Meets with EE 304), CAS IR 367 Introduction to Latin American Politics and International Relations, CAS IR 369 Southeast Asia in World Politics, CAS PO 251 Introduction to Comparative Politics, CAS SO 242 Sociology of Developing Countries, CAS SO 277 Technology and Society, CAS WS 305 Critical Issues in Women's Studies. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - Europe | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS HI 216 Women and Gender in European History , CAS HI 232 History of Contemporary Europe, 1900 to the Present , CAS HI 321 The Making of Modern England, CAS HI 322 Twentieth-Century England, CAS HI 338 Germany, 1914-Present, CAS HI 340 History of Modern Diplomacy: Institutions, Practices, and Principles, 1400-1919, CAS HI 345 History of Russia, 1689-1917, CAS HI 346 History of the Soviet Union and Post-Communist Russia, 1917 to the Present, CAS IR 250 Europe and International Relations , CAS IR 325 The Great Powers and the Eastern Mediterranean, CAS IR 341 Central Europe. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - Foreign Policy and Security Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS AN 362 Culture and Environment, CAS AN 382 Wealth, Poverty, and Culture , CAS EC 320 Economics of Less-Developed Regions, CAS EC 369 Economic Development of Latin America, CAS EC 371 Environmental Economics, CAS EC 387 Introduction to Health Economics, CAS GE 103 Economic Geography, CAS GE 201 World Regional Geography I, CAS GE 202 World Regional Geography II, CAS GE 250 Man and Environment in the Western World, CAS GE 300 Geography of World Commerce, CAS GE 309 Intermediate Environmental Analysis and Policy , CAS GE 356 Geography of Third World Development, CAS IR 304 Environmentally Sustainable Development (Meets with EE 304), CAS IR 367 Introduction to Latin American Politics and International Relations, CAS IR 369 Southeast Asia in World Politics, CAS PO 251 Introduction to Comparative Politics, CAS SO 242 Sociology of Developing Countries, CAS SO 277 Technology and Society, CAS WS 305 Critical Issues in Women's Studies. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - International Systems and World Order | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS GE 300 Geography of World Commerce, CAS IR 230 Fundamentals of International Politics, CAS IR 303 Universal History , CAS IR 330 Diplomatic Practice, CAS IR 360 Making Sense of the World: Conceptual Foundations of International Relations , CAS IR 373 Global Governance and International Organization , CAS IR 373 Global Governance and International Organization . | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - Latin America | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS EC 369 Economic Development of Latin America, CAS GE 356 Geography of Third World Development, CAS HI 385 Atlantic History , CAS HI 386 Modern Latin America, CAS IR 367 Introduction to Latin American Politics and International Relations , CAS IR 395 North-South Relations , CAS IR 410 Latin America Today: An Interdisciplinary Approach. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in International Relations - Regional Politics and Cultural Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | Students wishing to pursue dual bachelor’s degrees may apply to the Boston University ollaborative Degree Program (BUCOP). Students who are accepted into BUCOP enroll simultaneously in the School of Management and another undergraduate School or College within Boston University. Application to BUCOP must be made after completion of the freshman year and no later than the end of the first semester of junior year. |
Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | CAS AN 101 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, CAS AN 252 Ethnicity and Identity, CAS AN 260 Men and Women: Cultural Expectations and Gender Experiences, CAS AN 285 Coping with Crisis in Contemporary Africa, CAS AN 305 Comparative Family Systems in Asia , CAS AN 312 Peoples and Cultures of Africa, CAS AN 317 Power and Society in the Middle East, CAS AN 318 Southeast Asia: Tradition and Development, CAS AN 319 Anthropology of Muslim Cultures and Politics, CAS AN 320 Women in the Muslim World , CAS AN 344 Modern Japanese Society: Family, School, and Workplace , CAS AN 355 Religious Fundamentalism in Anthropological Perspective, CAS AN 362 Culture and Environment, CAS AN 371 Political Anthropology of the Modern World. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Italian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program acquires deep knowledge of one of Europe's oldest and richest cultural traditions, extending from Dante to the present. Given the greatness of Italy's artistic traditions, the study of Italian combines usefully with that of music and the fine arts, and gives students insight into a major component of modern North American culture. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CAS LI 111 - First-Semester Italian, CAS LI 112 - Second-Semester Italian, CAS LI 131 - Beginning Italian I for CFA Students, CAS LI 211 - Third-Semester Italian, CAS LI 212 - Fourth-Semester Italian, CAS LI 250 - Masterpieces of Modern Italian Literature, CAS LI 303 - Self-Expression, CAS LI 340 - Culture and Civilization in Italy, CAS LI 350 - Italian Literature I: Medieval, CAS LI 473 - The Masters of Italian Cinema, CAS LI 553 - Petrarch and the Tradition of Love Poetry, CAS LI 556 - Dante: The Divine Comedy II: Purgatorio and Paradiso, CAS LI 590 - Topics in Modern Italian Literature and Criticism. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Japanese Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature | This program requires a prerequisite of CAS LJ 212 (or equivalent placement) and thirteen courses with a grade of C or higher are required. Students must complete a minimum of six principal courses at Boston University. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Two of the following: CAS LX 250, CAS LL 222, 223, 224. Three language courses: CAS LJ 303, 304, and one of LJ 385, 403 or 404. Three courses in Japanese literature: CAS LJ 250 and two from LJ 350, 451, 480, and 481. Two courses in Japanese civilization: CAS LJ 281 or 445, and one additional from LJ 281, 282, 283, 441, or 445. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department was created in Spring 2007 as one of two successor departments along with Romance Studies to the former Department of Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures. Students and faculty in MLCL pursue the study of nine world languages, literatures and cultures and of Comparative Literature, the study of literature across linguistic boundaries. MLCL boasts an internationally distinguished faculty engaged in scholarly research on topics ranging from female impersonators in China to German translations of the Hebrew Bible to medieval Persian poetry in India to contemporary Japanese writers, and a great many other topics. MLCL is unique in BU’s College of Arts and Sciences in that its teaching and advising are oriented entirely to undergraduates (although graduate students from other programs are always welcome in our classes). Our courses enroll about 2500 students per year. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program is the study the nature, structure, and function of language, "both as a fundamental human faculty and as a changing social institution" (Linguistic Society of America). An undergraduate major in Linguistics is excellent preparation for a wide variety of jobs and for continued study in many related disciplines. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program is the study the nature, structure, and function of language, "both as a fundamental human faculty and as a changing social institution" (Linguistic Society of America). An undergraduate major in Linguistics is excellent preparation for a wide variety of jobs and for continued study in many related disciplines. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program helps develop expertise in fundamental mathematical concepts and processes, the development of mathematics curriculum materials, and teaching methods applicable to a variety of age levels, interests, and aptitudes. The undergraduate program leads to an initial teaching license in mathematics for grades 1-6, 5-8, or 8-12. The School of Education offers both professional preparations for teaching, including extensive fieldwork, and substantial coursework in mathematics and/or computer science. Specialty programs in the teaching of mathematics are available for students who are seeking an initial teaching license as an elementary or special education teacher. After completion of the appropriate program, graduates are qualified to teach mathematics, to act as mathematics resource leaders in team-teaching situations, and to organize and manage mathematics resource areas. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program helps develop expertise in fundamental mathematical concepts and processes, the development of mathematics curriculum materials, and teaching methods applicable to a variety of age levels, interests, and aptitudes. The undergraduate program leads to an initial teaching license in mathematics for grades 1-6, 5-8, or 8-12. The School of Education offers both professional preparations for teaching, including extensive fieldwork, and substantial coursework in mathematics and/or computer science. Specialty programs in the teaching of mathematics are available for students who are seeking an initial teaching license as an elementary or special education teacher. After completion of the appropriate program, graduates are qualified to teach mathematics, to act as mathematics resource leaders in team-teaching situations, and to organize and manage mathematics resource areas. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program in music prepares the student for graduate work in musicology, theory, and composition, and for careers in composition and theory, musicology and ethnomusicology, music and research, music teaching, music criticism, music librarianship, music publishing, music therapy, arts management, and other broad areas of the music and arts industry. Music concentrators at the College of Arts & Sciences may participate in the activities of the School of Music at the College of Fine Arts; admission to all School of Music ensembles is by audition. Required music courses are taught by the faculty of the School of Music. (Students who are primarily interested in the MusB degree in instrumental or vocal performance, composition, or music history should apply directly to the School of Music at the College of Fine Arts. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Some of the courses are: CFA MU 101 Music Theory I, CFA MU 102 Music Theory II, CFA MU 103 Honors Theory I, CFA MU 104 Honors Theory II, CFA MU 106 Introduction to Musicianship, CFA MU 107 Ear-Training and Sight-Singing I, CFA MU 108 Ear-Training and Sight-Singing II, CFA MU 201 Music Theory III, CFA MU 202 Music Theory IV, CFA MU 203 Honors Theory III, CFA MU 204 Honors Theory IV, CFA MU 207 Ear-Training and Sight-Singing III, CFA MU 208 Ear-Training and Sight-Singing IV, CFA MU 301 Music Theory V, CFA MU 302 Music Theory VI, CFA MU 303 Instrumentation, CFA MU 304 Honors Theory V, CFA MU 304 Honors Theory V, CFA MU 406 Tonal Counterpoint, CFA MU 411/611 Electronic Music I, CFA MU 411/611 Electronic Music I, CFA MU 413/613 Electronic Music III, CFA MU 414/614 Electronic Music IV, CFA MU 414/614 Electronic Music IV. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Boston University, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8789 | This department offers major and minor concentrations leading to the B.A. degree; programs leading to the M.A. in music with specializations in musicology, composition, or music education; and the Ph.D. in musicology or a double concentration in musicology and music theory. Courses are offered in all areas of historical and theoretical study and research in the Western art music tradition, as well as in music theory and composition. The musicology faculty is strong in medieval, Renaissance, eighteenth-century, romantic, world music, and early twentieth-century musical studies; in the history of music theory and criticism; and in research methodology. The department is closely allied with the School of Music at BU’s College of Fine arts, from where all its faculty are drawn. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Philosophy and Classics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program requires six courses in philosophy and six courses in classics, with a grade of C or higher. In philosophy the following is required: any one of CAS PH 100, 110, 140, 150, 155, or 160; CAS PH 300; CAS PH 310; any two courses at the 200 level or above; and any one of CAS PH 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 480. In classics the following is required: CAS CL 101 or 321; CAS CL 261; and any other four courses in classical civilization (at the 200 level or above) or classical languages. Note: Students who choose to complete the CAS foreign language requirement using a classical language may not count 100-level courses in that language toward the joint concentration in classics and philosophy. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Philosophy and Math | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program should have the following Prerequisites: CAS PH 100 or 110; CAS MA 123 and 124, or equivalent (MA 127 or MA 129 or advanced placement); CAS MA 225 or MA 230; CAS MA 293. At least six courses in philosophy and six in mathematics, with a grade of C or higher, are required. In philosophy the following is required: any three courses above the 100 level; CAS PH 468; any two courses from CAS PH 422, 443, 460, 474. In mathematics the following is required: CAS MA 242, 531, 532; CAS MA 411/12 or 511/12; CAS MA 294 or 341 or a course numbered 400 or higher. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Philosophy and Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program requires at least five courses in philosophy and eight courses in physics, with a grade of C or higher, are required. Prerequisites one course in philosophy at the 100 level; CAS PY 251, 252, 353; CAS MA 123, 124. In philosophy the following is required: CAS PH 300, 310, 270; any one of CAS PH 360, 467, 468; CAS PH 470 or a directed study in philosophy. In physics the following is required: CAS MA 225; CAS PY 354, 355, 405, 406, 408, 451, 452. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Philosophy and Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program requires at least six courses in philosophy and six in political science, with a grade of C or higher, are required. In philosophy the following is required: CAS PH 300, 310, 350; any one of CAS PH 253, 254, 255, 453, 454, 455; one course at the 200 level or above; and one other philosophy course. In political science the following is required: CAS PO 391, 392; one other political theory course; three other courses in political science. Note that no more than one 100-level political science course can count toward the major. Also, it is recommended that the first course in political science be a 100- or 200-level course in one of the following subfields: American politics, public policy, comparative politics, international relations, or political theory. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Philosophy and Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program requires at least six courses in philosophy and six in psychology, with a grade of C or higher. In philosophy the following is required: CAS PH 300, 310; any two of CAS PH 270, 277, 443, 460, 474, 477; two courses in philosophy above the 100 level. In psychology the following is required: CAS PS 101; CAS MA 115 and 116, or CAS PS 211; CAS PS 303 or 506; one course in experimental psychology; two courses in psychology above the 100 level. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Philosophy and Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program requires at least six courses in philosophy and six in religion, with a grade of C or higher. n philosophy the following is required: one course in philosophy at the 100 level; CAS PH 300, 310; any one of CAS PH 245, 246, 408, 446; and two additional courses at the 200 level or above. In religion the following is required: one 100-level course; one 200-level course; one 300-level course; one 400-level course; and two additional courses at the 300 level or above. All courses must be chosen in consultation with an advisor in the Department of Religion. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program is flexible enough to allow students to tailor programs of study to meet their particular interests. Political Science majors must complete a total of 11 courses: Three core courses at the 200-level , and eight principal courses (or seminars numbered 300-699) with a grade of C or higher. The Core Courses courses serve as introductions to the five subfields of political science: American Politics, Public Policy, Comparative Politics, International Relations, and Political Theory. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: PO 211 Introduction to American Politics, PO 241 Introduction to Public Policy, PO 251 Introduction to Comparative Politics, PO 271 Introduction to International Relations, PO 291 Introduction to Political Theory. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2540 | This department studies how communities attempt to reconcile the claims of justice, power, liberty, and authority. Drawing on history, law, economics, psychology, sociology, and philosophy, political science is a broadly based social science that shares the traditional aims of a liberal arts education while attempting to grapple with the major issues of our time. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is taught by the faculty in a variety of instructional formats. Students have many opportunities for exposure to a broad range of thinking about psychology and have significant opportunities to gain research experience. An undergraduate psychology concentration prepares students for a number of vocations and a variety of professional and graduate training programs. Students must complete eight principal courses with a grade of C or higher. Four of these must be selected from among courses at the 300 level or higher, including one experimental course selected from CAS PS 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, and 328. Principal courses in psychology are those courses listed on this site and numbered at the 200 level and above, excluding CAS PS 211. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CAS PS 101 General Psychology, CAS PS 202 Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience, CAS PS 205 Memory and Brain, CAS PS 211 Introduction to Experimental Design in Psychology, CAS PS 222 Perception and Behavior, CAS PS 231 Physiological Psychology, CAS PS 234 Psychology of Learning, CAS PS 241 Developmental Psychology, CAS PS 243 Life Span Developmental Psychology in Health and Illness, CAS PS 251 Psychology of Personality: Theories and Application. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston University, 64 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2580 | This department's faculty, more than 30 strong, continues to attract agency-funded research, publish extensively, and maintain a serious commitment to teaching B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. students. The department’s affiliated research centers, the Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders and the Center for Memory and Brain, provide opportunities for research experience, as do affiliated laboratory studies in topics including child cognition, neurophysiology, developmental behavior genetics, neuroscience, psycholinguistics, and vision sciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion - Undergraduate | This program must complete ten courses in Religion with a grade of C or higher. These courses must include two 100-level courses, two 200-level courses, two 300-level courses, and CAS RN 495. The three additional required courses may be taken at the 200, 300, or 400 level, with no more than one at the 200 level. Concentrators may elect either 1) a general program of study that ensures broad exposure to at least three areas of specialization, or 2) a specialized program that ensures expertise in one particular area of specialization. Students in the general program are required to take at least two courses in each of three chosen areas of specialization (as indicated below). Students in the specialized program are required to take at least five courses in their area of specialization; in addition, they must take four courses outside their chosen area: CAS RN 495 and three other courses. Major concentrators in either program may, with the approval of their advisor, count a maximum of two related courses taken in other departments toward the concentration. Students who have completed both CAS CC 101 (Core Humanities I) and CAS CC 102 (Core Humanities II) and who have applied those courses toward the required 100-level Religion courses will not normally be allowed to count any additional courses from other departments toward the concentration. Areas of specialization are Christian studies, comparative philosophy of religion, East Asian studies, Islamic studies, Judaic studies, religion in America, religion and culture, and South Asian studies. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Religion and Culture, The Bible, World Religions: East, World Religions: West, Death and Immortality, Buddhism, Chinese Religion, Islam, Magic, Science, and Religion, Religious Thought: The Quest for God and the Good, Early Christian Women, Early Christian Women, Introduction to Rabbinic Literature, Chinese Medicine, The Holocaust, Anthropology of Religion, New Testament Literature, Topics in South Asian Religions, Topics in Religion and Literature in East Asia, Topics in American Religion, Critique of Religion. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion - Undergraduate | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion - Undergraduate, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2635 | This department inspires individuals to make peace, and to commit unspeakable violence. It transforms cultures and societies, and is transformed by them. In the Department of Religion at Boston University, explore religion in its many manifestations. The aim is not to make students more (or less) religious, but to explore with them the beliefs and practices, symbols and rites that have moved the faithful throughout time and across the globe, and to explore perennial questions about the meaning of life and death. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Russian Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature | This program requires minimum of six principal courses in Russian at Boston University. Courses may be credited toward the concentration only if a grade of C or higher is earned. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: Two of the following: CAS LX 250, CAS LL 222, 223, 224, Four advanced language courses: CAS LR 303, 304, 403, 404, CAS LR 250 and 282, Three literature courses: CAS LR 350, 351, and one additional course numbered LR 450 or higher. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Modern Languages and Comparative Literature, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department was created in Spring 2007 as one of two successor departments along with Romance Studies to the former Department of Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures. Students and faculty in MLCL pursue the study of nine world languages, literatures and cultures and of Comparative Literature, the study of literature across linguistic boundaries. MLCL boasts an internationally distinguished faculty engaged in scholarly research on topics ranging from female impersonators in China to German translations of the Hebrew Bible to medieval Persian poetry in India to contemporary Japanese writers, and a great many other topics. MLCL is unique in BU’s College of Arts and Sciences in that its teaching and advising are oriented entirely to undergraduates (although graduate students from other programs are always welcome in our classes). Our courses enroll about 2500 students per year. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Science Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This Program prepares students for professional responsibilities in designing, teaching, and supervising science programs at the elementary, secondary, and college levels. The program connects emerging teachers to the foundations of what makes a quality science educator today: up-to-date science content with innovative, diverse pedagogy. Students are challenged to develop and practice techniques so that they will engage their students in the learning process, allowing young learners to experience science actively rather than being passive receptacles. The science education experience is one of belonging to a responsible, closely-knit learning community determined to make a difference in the lives of children and teenagers. Boston University’s Science Education undergraduate program fosters the development of motivated and versatile science educators while promoting strong roots in fundamental science content. Special courses have been developed in collaborative efforts between the School of Education and the College of Arts and Sciences combining pedagogy with in-depth exposure to contemporary science. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program provides excellent preparation for graduate study. For example, prelaw students may wish to take courses in the sociology of law, criminology and criminal justice, or the sociology of deviance and social control. Students pursuing careers in business may wish to take courses in the sociology of work, formal organizations, or the sociology of technology. Students interested in pursuing graduate study in the social sciences may wish to deepen their experience in the field by working with Department faculty on a research project or investigating a sociological research question in a Work for Distinction. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: SO100 – Introduction to Sociology, SO115 – Introduction to Law and Society, SO201 – Sociological Methods, SO 203 – Sociological Theories, SO 205 – The American Family, SO 207 – Race & Ethnic Relations, SO 208 – Current Issues in Sociology - Death and Dying in American Culture, SO 215 – Sociology of Health Care, SO 240 – Gender, Sexuality, and the Social World, SO 242 – Developing Countries , SO 244 – Urban Sociology, SO 246 – Market Transitions, SO 250 – Sociology of Religion, SO 256 – American Society. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Boston University, 96 cummington street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2591 | This department confront the relevant issue that societies and civilizations struggle with every day. Faculty in the Department of Sociology are research experts committed to directing students at all levels of study to a broad knowledge of human relations and social systems, examining such issues as race and ethic relations, law and crime, families, work and organizations, politics, gender, urban life, ethics, and science and technology. The discipline provides the tools for a variety of professional paths, including law, business, education, social work, and journalism. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program provides excellent preparation for graduate study. For example, prelaw students may wish to take courses in the sociology of law, criminology and criminal justice, or the sociology of deviance and social control. Students pursuing careers in business may wish to take courses in the sociology of work, formal organizations, or the sociology of technology. Students interested in pursuing graduate study in the social sciences may wish to deepen their experience in the field by working with Department faculty on a research project or investigating a sociological research question in a Work for Distinction. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: SO100 – Introduction to Sociology, SO115 – Introduction to Law and Society, SO201 – Sociological Methods, SO 203 – Sociological Theories, SO 205 – The American Family, SO 207 – Race & Ethnic Relations, SO 208 – Current Issues in Sociology - Death and Dying in American Culture, SO 215 – Sociology of Health Care, SO 240 – Gender, Sexuality, and the Social World, SO 242 – Developing Countries , SO 244 – Urban Sociology, SO 246 – Market Transitions, SO 250 – Sociology of Religion, SO 256 – American Society. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Boston University, 96 cummington street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2591 | This department confront the relevant issue that societies and civilizations struggle with every day. Faculty in the Department of Sociology are research experts committed to directing students at all levels of study to a broad knowledge of human relations and social systems, examining such issues as race and ethic relations, law and crime, families, work and organizations, politics, gender, urban life, ethics, and science and technology. The discipline provides the tools for a variety of professional paths, including law, business, education, social work, and journalism. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program explores the literature, culture, film and language spoken by an estimated 322 to 400 million people worldwide. A knowledge of Spanish — and of the cultures of Spain and Latin America — is of great importance in the U.S., where over 28 million people report speaking Spanish as a native language in their homes. With its origins in the multicultural Spain of the Middle Ages, literature written in Spanish is one of the world's greatest traditions. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The courses are: CAS LS 111 - First-Semester Spanish, CAS LS 112 - Second-Semester Spanish, CAS LS 122 - Second-Semester Spanish for Reading, CAS LS 123 – Beginning Spanish, Accelerated Course, CAS LS 211 - Third-Semester Spanish, CAS LS 212 - Fourth-Semester Spanish, CAS LS 221 - Third-Semester Spanish for Reading, CAS LS 222 - Fourth-Semester Spanish for Reading, CAS LS 303 - Composition and Conversation in Spanish I, CAS LS 304 - Composition and Conversation in Spanish II, CAS LS 457 -20th Century Spanish-American Literature, CAS LS504 A1 History of the Spanish Language, CAS LS 575 –Topics in Peninsular Poetry: Spanish Poetry Today, CAS LS 576 -Topics in Spanish-American Literature: Contemporary Latin American Women Writers and Artists, CAS LS 576 -Topics in Spanish-American Literature: Spanish American Short Story, CAS LL 556 Title: Fictions of Intimacy, GRS LS850 Seminar: Topics in Hispanic Literature. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program prepares students for professional responsibilities in designing, teaching, and supervising science programs at the elementary, secondary, and college levels. The program connects emerging teachers to the foundations of what makes a quality science educator today: up-to-date science content with innovative, diverse pedagogy. Students are challenged to develop and practice techniques so that they will engage their students in the learning process, allowing young learners to experience science actively rather than being passive receptacles. The science education experience is one of belonging to a responsible, closely-knit learning community determined to make a difference in the lives of children and teenagers. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Major in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Education | This program provides opportunities for students to prepare for a variety of careers working with and supporting the needs of individuals with disabilities and their families, in positions as teachers and residential care support. Undergraduate preparation in the School of Education can lead to recommendation to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for teaching licenses at the Initial Level as Teacher of Students with Moderate Disabilities (Pre-kindergarten through grade 8), Teacher of Students with Moderate Disabilities (Pre-kindergarten through grade 8) combined with Elementary Education (Grade l-6), Teacher of Students with Moderate Disabilities (Grades 5 through 12), and Teacher of Severe Disabilities (Ages 3 through 21). Field and practicum experiences are incorporated systematically throughout programs. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Major | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Education | School of Education, Two Sherborn Street or Two Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4233 | The Boston University School of Education has a long tradition of community service that began with the vision of its founders in 1918. Boston University is one of five universities involved in Step UP, an unprecedented collaboration with the Boston Public Schools (BPS) and the City of Boston to help ten local schools. Step UP was formed in the fall of 2006 and provides comprehensive, coordinated services aimed at improving student performance. Boston University’s two partner schools are the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Dorchester and the English High School in Jamaica Plain. Based on the needs identified by each partner school, BU aims to help the Trotter and the English make improvements in areas such as instruction and tutoring, after-school support, student wellness and safety, and family and community engagement. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Management Honors Program | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management | This program is designed for the most academically talented students. The Program is demanding but flexible. Unlike other honors programs, the program does not seek separate but instead to integrate students into the curriculum. There are separate colloquia and seminars which are requirements for the program, but they are taken during the regular academic semesters. If students begin the program as freshmen, they take one colloquium together as a class in each semester of their first year. The spring semester colloquium is a means for the students to prepare for their International Field Seminar in May. In the spring of their sophomore year, Honors Program students take a specialized version of Modeling Business Decisions and Market Outcomes (SM224) and will likely enroll in the first of three required honors seminars. All sections are small and taught by faculty at an advanced level. | Applicants must have four years of English, Three to four years of mathematics pre calculus/calculus, Three to four years of laboratory science, Three to four years of history and/or social science and two to four years of a foreign language. SAT or ACT with Writing Test SAT Subject Tests in: Chemistry, Math 2, Foreign Language recommended. The TOEFL scores of Writing: 22, Speaking: 23, Reading: 21, Listening: 18 are required. A score of 7 or higher will also satisfy BU’s English Language proficiency requirement for all programs in IELTS. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | some of the courses are: SM 121 Management as a System, EC 101 Introductory Microeconomics, WR 100 Writing Seminar, MA 120 Applied Math for Social and Management Science, SM 123 Honors Program Freshman Colloquium. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Management Honors Program | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | School of Management - Undergraduate | This program is designed for the most academically talented students, students who want to be molded into the next generation of outstanding organizational leaders. The Program is demanding but flexible. Unlike other honors programs, this does not seek to separate but instead to integrate students into the curriculum. There are separate colloquia and seminars which are requirements for the program, but they are taken during the regular academic semesters. udents have special extracurricular resources at their disposal. Monthly dinner meetings, social events, and special academic advisors are just a few of the dedicated resources. The social and cultural events take advantage of the outstanding location the University and city have to offer. The Program is flexible, so students can choose options such as double concentrations, minors, dual degrees, or study abroad. | Students may be invited to join the Program at two separate points in their academic career: either as incoming freshmen, or after completion of freshman year. Students who are not invited as incoming freshmen but who have a minimum 3.5 GPA on at least 32 credits of completed academic coursework at the end of freshman year may be invited to join the Program after submitting an application. The application includes two letters of recommendation and a personal interview. Selected students are invited to apply in January of their freshman year. Once grades are posted for the spring term, the final selection will be made based on academic requirements, the interview, and space availability. No invitations to the Program are extended beyond this timeframe. Intra-University Transfer Students and External Transfer students are not eligible to join the SMG Honors Program. | Bachelor degree | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are:SM 121 Management as a System, EC 101 Introductory Microeconomics, WR 100 Writing Seminar or WR 150(1) Writing and Research Seminar, MA 120 Applied Math for Social and Management Science, SM 123 Honors Program Freshman Colloquium, AC 221 Financial Accounting, SM 221 Probabilistic and Statistical Decision Making for Management, LA 245 Introduction to Law, SM 122 Management as a System, EC 102 Introductory Macroeconomics, WR 150(1) Writing Seminar or WR 150(1) Writing and Research Seminar. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management - Undergraduate | School of Management - Undergraduate, Undergraduate Program Office, 595 Commonwealth AvenueSuite 102, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2650 | Boston University School of Management, through its faculty’s research, develops new ideas and insights for business scholars and practitioners. The School also prepares undergraduate and graduate students to become innovative, ethical leaders in a globalized world. By fusing the art, science, and technology of business, the School creates leaders with deep competencies in traditional business disciplines and in the application of new technologies for strategic and operating advantage. Trained in advanced teaming skills, our graduates think holistically about business and understand both the strengths and the limitations of management systems. | Yes | All freshmen are required to live on campus.There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Most residences are coeducational. The large dormitory-style residences have around-the-clock security staff at the front entrance to monitor building access. Small dormitory-style residences are located in three areas of campus. Apartment brownstones houses from twelve to sixty-seven students. There are specialty residences.University maintains a number of apartment-style residences for our students.While the majority of these are in the South Campus area, along Buswell Street, Arundel Street, Mountfort Street, St. Mary's Street, and Park Drive, there are apartment-style residences at 10 Buick Street, on Bay State Road and on Commonwealth Avenue as well. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. Each room is double-occupancy and includes a private bathroom, air conditioning, housekeeping service twice each week, cable TV, University Ethernet access and standard dormitory furniture. University staff, including resident assistants, will be living in the Hyatt Regency Cambridge to provide supervision and support. Students are provided with transportation to and from the Boston University campus. On-campus rooms contain a dresser, a desk, a bed, and a chair for each student, as well as curtains, mini blinds, or window shades. In apartment-style residences, a refrigerator, a stove, a dining table, chairs, and some comfortable seating are provided. Students assigned to apartment-style residences must provide their own cooking utensils, dishes, silverware, and cleaning supplies. In apartment-style residences and rooms or suites with a bathroom, shower curtains are provided.Many of the small residences have coin-operated washers and dryers for student use as well. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts Concentration in Philosophy of Science | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program is designed for those who are seeking to understand the conceptual foundations of the natural sciences (physics, chemistry, biology, earth sciences), cognitive sciences, mathematics, medicine, psychology, economics, and other social sciences. While philosophy of science usually focuses on contemporary science, in this program students are also afforded the opportunity to study the history of science, as well as issues at the interface of science and religion. | Applicants should have completed the equivalent of an undergraduate major in philosophy, typically with an average of B or higher. Students with minors in philosophy are also encouraged to apply. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Minimum TOEFL Scores: Paper-based Test 550, Computer Based Test 213. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Ancient Christianity, Origins to Late Empire | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program focuses on Hellenistic history, literature, religions, and/or philosophy; Roman history and religions; Jewish history and literature, from the Second Temple period through the early Byzantine period; rabbinic literature; Biblical studies; Mediterranean archaeology of the appropriate period(s). Some acquaintance with interdisciplinary interpretation (literary criticism, social anthropology) is also useful. Ideally, students will enter with at least one ancient language (usually Greek) and one modern research language (usually either French or German) well established, with the understanding that advanced research will entail more language work as well. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program is designed for non-anthropologists who are already engaged in, or plan to enter, such fields as medicine, public health, education, journalism, law, environmental management, social services to refugee or immigrant populations, rural development, or public policy evaluation. It is designed to provide the student with a basic anthropological training and an appreciation of the significance of a cross-cultural perspective in professional practice. | Applicants must have obtained a degree in some discipline other than anthropology and have an expressed intention to continue working in, or enter, that field. Prospective students should also explain in their written statements how they expect anthropology to enhance their capability or improve their effectiveness in their chosen career. This is important because students who enter the program with well-defined goals derive the most benefit from the resources the Department and the University have to offer. Under exceptional circumstances, applications for this program may be considered after the regular application deadline date. The Graduate Record Examination must also be taken by all applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2195 | This department offers rigorous training in social and cultural theory and commitment to an anthropology capable of engaging the modern world. This departmentfocus on four interrelated topics: the culture, politics and economics of development; the anthropological study of history; the psycho cultural relationship between individual and society; and the comparative anthropology of the world religions, with special attention to Islam. The area strengths include the Middle East, Africa, and East Asia. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Art Education (MAAE) | Distance / Online | 2 Year(s) | $592 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program is designed to provide an immersive online learning environment for those who are passionate about enriching the lives of K-12 children through a relationship with art. It provides an integrated, relevant curriculum especially for the artist teacher, those who seek to expand their artistic abilities to enrich their effectiveness as teachers of art and enhance their careers. Students in the program share a belief that art has the power to impact lives and society in a positive manner, and that effective instruction in the arts at the K-12 level is vital to the development and nourishment of children's lives and to our culture. | Applicants will be reviewed for admission to the Master of Arts in Art Education Distance Education Program based on the strength of their ability for graduate study based on the following criteria: completion of a baccalaureate degree in Studio Art OR Art Education from a regionally accredited college or university. | Masters | Boston University | Program modules covered are: CFA AR 600 Contemporary Issues in Art Education 4 cr, CFA AR 610 Teaching Art to Special Populations 4 cr, CFA AR 620 Art Curriculum Planning 4 cr, CFA AR 690 History of Art Education 4 cr, CFA AR 870 Summer Studios 4 cr, CFA AR 890 Masters Research Project 8 cr and CFA PS 630 Child Growth and Development. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | This department offers rigorous training in social and cultural theory and commitment to an anthropology capable of engaging the modern world. This departmentfocus on four interrelated topics: the culture, politics and economics of development; the anthropological study of history; the psycho cultural relationship between individual and society; and the comparative anthropology of the world religions, with special attention to Islam. The area strengths include the Middle East, Africa, and East Asia. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Asian Art History | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provides graduate students interested in the arts of Asia a comprehensive and rigorous structure of study. Five of the eight semester courses taken to fulfill the MA degree course requirement are in Asian art history. Two of the five Asian art courses must be the basic colloquia courses, AH 726 Arts of Japan and AH 727 Arts of China; students take three other courses in Asian art history | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Biology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program focuses on five areas: Ecology, Behavior, and Evolution; Physiology, Endocrinology, and Reproduction; Neurobiology; Cell and Molecular Biology; and Marine Biology. Each program area has unique strengths and suggested curricula. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Broadcast Journalism | Full Time | 3 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | This program is designed to give the highly qualified student an opportunity to develop professional understanding and experience in all forms of news and public affairs programming for the electronic media. Initiative in original reporting for news programs and diligent researching for public affairs programs are emphasized as essential to broadcast journalism. Students write copy for news broadcasts and public affairs programs and learn how to seek out the information needed for such productions. This curriculum is appropriate for the student who wishes to pursue a career in television, radio news, or public affairs as a reporter, writer, editor, or producer. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for programs in the College of Business. Students who have studied at an NON-English speaking school must take the TOEFL and not the GRE. TOEFL test breakdown: Paper TOEFL (PBT) -- minimum score 600, Computer based TOEFL -- minimum score 250. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Department of Journalism, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3484 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Broadcast and Economics Journalism | Full Time | 3 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | This program teaches basics of stocks, the economy, finance, and business news coverage, and give the opportunity to have stories published in daily newspapers and financial publications. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for programs in the College of Business. Students who have studied at an NON-English speaking school must take the TOEFL and not the GRE. TOEFL test breakdown: Paper TOEFL (PBT) -- minimum score 600, Computer based TOEFL -- minimum score 250. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Department of Journalism, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3484 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Cell and Molecular Biology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program includes courses and research opportunities in developmental biology, cell signaling and gene regulation, cancer biology, genetics, biochemistry, microbiology, physiology, and membrane structure and function. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Creative Writing | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program fiction one might require readings and exercises, with the other asking for a finished story every three or four weeks. Each entering class has no more than twelve fiction writers, twelve poets, and up to six playwrights; hence, no workshop will have more than a dozen fully enrolled students, indeed, in recent years, they have been aiming for classes of no larger than ten. | Students should have demonstrated proficiency, an interesting voice, raw talent, quirks that either match or challenge own. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Boston University, 236 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2506 | This department offers B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. programs led by prominent literary scholars working in every period of English and American literature. The department’s Creative Writing Program, with a world-renowned faculty, has produced winners of all the major awards in poetry and fiction. The department publishes Studies in Romanticism, the leading journal on the Romantic movement, and AGNI, an important literary journal. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Ecology, Behavior, and Evolution | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program includes courses and research opportunities in behavioral ecology and sociobiology, molecular ecology and evolution, community ecology, biochemical ecology, population biology, tropical ecology, and ecosystem ecology. A broad biological perspective is emphasized, including microbes, protests, fungi, plants, insects, fish, birds, and mammals. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Economic Policy | Full Time | 3 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program combining a strong foundation in economics with the management skills appropriate for students interested in careers as policy analysts and decision-makers in government, nonprofit institutions, international organizations, and the private sector. The core of the program provides a foundation in economic theory and its application, quantitative methods, and the basic tools of management analysis. This program permits in-depth specialization in two policy and management fields drawn from courses offered in both the Economics Department and Boston University School of Management. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent education may apply for graduate admission to the Economics Department. Applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). GRE scores are valid for two years. Thus, for applicants for Fall 2008, GRE scores taken in 2007 and 2006 are valid. Official results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), as administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), are required of all applicants whose native language is not English. The minimum score requirement is 213 (computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). TOEFL scores over two years old will not be accepted. Students applying for entry into the Master Programs are normally expected to have passed some advanced undergraduate preparation in economics that includes one year of intermediate macro and microeconomic analysis and courses in statistics, calculus, and linear algebra. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Economics | Full Time | 2 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program comprising a core in quantitative methods, micro and macro economics, plus elective courses in the economics of development, energy, environment, finance, health, labor, international trade and finance, legal issues, money, and fiscal policy. This short, but rigorous, program provides candidates with the skills necessary either to succeed in today competitive job market or to continue with further graduate studies in economics, management or related disciplines. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent education may apply for graduate admission to the Economics Department. Applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). GRE scores are valid for two years. Thus, for applicants for Fall 2008, GRE scores taken in 2007 and 2006 are valid. Official results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), as administered by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), are required of all applicants whose native language is not English. The minimum score requirement is 213 (computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). TOEFL scores over two years old will not be accepted. Students applying for entry into the Masters Programs are normally expected to have passed some advanced undergraduate preparation in economics that includes one year of intermediate macro and microeconomic analysis and courses in statistics, calculus, and linear algebra. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Boston University, 270 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4389 | This department is one of the nation’s leading departments, ranking among the largest Ph.D. and M.A. programs in the country and one of the largest undergraduate concentrations in the College of Arts and Sciences. Outstanding faculty research is considered a critical complement to outstanding teaching; faculty in the Economics Department, working at the frontier of current economic knowledge, engage students with critical questions and exciting new developments in the field. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Energy and Environmental Analysis Non-Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program is designed to teach students the concepts and analytical tools from the natural and social sciences that are required to understand and alleviate environmental problems. The curriculum is based on a interdisciplinary, systems perspective that challenges the student to integrate theory and techniques from different disciplines. Instruction emphasizes the practical use of computer modeling in which students get hands-on experience with a variety of modeling approaches. | Students have an undergraduate GPA of 3.0 or higher in their major field of study. The average GRE score for accepted students is 475 on the verbal section, 675 on the quantitative section and 4.5 on the writing section. International students who take the TOEFL average a slightly lower GRE verbal score, around 375. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in English and American Literature | Full Time | 2 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program provides comprehensive training in all areas of English studies. Course work is offered in historical periods, individual authors, important literary movements, literary theory and the history of criticism, and philology and linguistics. | Candidates must hold a bachelor degree from an accredited institution. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Boston University, 236 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2506 | This department offers B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. programs led by prominent literary scholars working in every period of English and American literature. The department’s Creative Writing Program, with a world-renowned faculty, has produced winners of all the major awards in poetry and fiction. The department publishes Studies in Romanticism, the leading journal on the Romantic movement, and AGNI, an important literary journal. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Environmental Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems Non-Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program is designed for students with diverse natural science and social science backgrounds who desire specialized training in the use of remote sensing and GIS in environmental and natural resource analysis and management. Students are trained for careers in the private, public and non-profit sectors where there is increasing demand for professionals with advanced technical skills who can organize and analyze spatial environmental data. | Students have an undergraduate GPA of 3.0 or higher in their major field of study. The average GRE score for accepted students is 475 on the verbal section, 675 on the quantitative section and 4.5 on the writing section. International students who take the TOEFL average a slightly lower GRE verbal score, around 375. Students must have complete calculus through integration and statistics through multiple regression. Candidates who do not have the required quantitative skills may be admitted, but they will be required to do independent work or additional coursework to acquire the necessary background. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in French Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program develops an advanced general knowledge of the history of French literature; a knowledge of selected specialized areas within the field; and a knowledge of the traditions, aims, and methods of research scholarship. | Applicants should send an academic paper of not more than ten pages, written in French, with the application. Applicants must submit results of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test; they should hold a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent in French language and literature. Degree candidates are expected to possess a reasonably sound command of written and spoken French. In cases of serious deficiencies, students may be required to take additional courses in language without receiving degree credit. The candidate should include a summary page of all courses and grades taken in the field of French Literature to accompany transcripts. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Hispanic Language and Literatures | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program develops an advanced knowledge of Spanish literature from its beginnings, of Spanish-American literature, and of the traditions, aims, and methods of research scholarship. | Applicants should send an academic paper of not more than fifteen pages, written in Spanish, with the application. Applicants should hold a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent in Spanish language and literature; they must submit results of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test. The candidate should include a summary page of all courses and grades taken in the field of Hispanic Literature to accompany transcripts. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in History of Christianity | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is designed to provide a broad overview of the history and thought of World Christianity as well as to train specialists for careers in a clearly defined area. A hallmark of the program is faculty commitment to the complementarily of intellectual, social, and cultural history. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in International Relations | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program is designed as a terminal MA program for students who intend to pursue careers in the field of international relations after graduation. | Students must demonstrate proficiency in English by submitting a TOEFL (Test Of English as a Foreign Language) score. Students must also take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) exam or Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in International Relations and Environmental Policy | Full Time | 4 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program offers students an opportunity to combine study in international relations and environmental science. | Students must demonstrate proficiency in English by submitting a TOEFL (Test Of English as a Foreign Language) score. Students must also take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) exam or Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in International Relations and Environmental Policy Non-Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | This program offers students an opportunity to combine study in international relations and environmental science. Students divide their coursework between IR and CEES. This program, a joint effort between CEES and the International Relations Department (IR). Please note that admission into this program requires separate admissions decisions by IR and CEES. Students who are admitted by one department and not the other have the option to pursue the one-year MA degree in the department into which they were admitted. | Students have an undergraduate GPA of 3.0 or higher in their major field of study. The average GRE score for accepted students is 475 on the verbal section, 675 on the quantitative section and 4.5 on the writing section. International students who take the TOEFL average a slightly lower GRE verbal score, around 375. Students must have complete calculus through integration and statistics through multiple regression. Candidates who do not have the required quantitative skills may be admitted, but they will be required to do independent work or additional coursework to acquire the necessary background. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are CAS GE 504 International Resources and Environmental Issues and Management (required course), CAS GE 510 Physical Principles of the Environment, CAS GE 511 Ecological Economics, CAS GE 550 Modeling Social and Environmental Systems, GRS 703 Energy and Environmental Policy Analysis. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography and Environment, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2525 | This department offers coursework and conducts research at the cutting edge of geographical and environmental science and policy. Real world problems, world-class faculty, exciting and innovative interdisciplinary degree programs, and a dynamic student body make GE a special place. From global warming to energy systems, the interface between society and the natural environment provides the focus on our teaching and research mission. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in International Relations and International Communication | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program prepares students for careers in an international setting working in film and television, journalism, mass communication, advertising, marketing and public relations. | Students must demonstrate proficiency in English by submitting a TOEFL (Test Of English as a Foreign Language) score. Students must also take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) exam or Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in International Relations and Juris Doctor | Full Time | 3.5 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program dual degree program requires three and one half years of study (seven semesters) divided between the School of Law and the Department of International Relations. A study of international relations and law prepares students for careers in national governments or international agencies, international negotiation and human rights organizations. Admission into this dual degree program requires separate admission decisions by the Department of International Relations and the School of Law (LAW). These decisions are based on one complete application to the School of Law. Only students who are admitted to the School of Law will be considered for admission by the Department of International Relations. | Students must demonstrate proficiency in English by submitting a TOEFL (Test Of English as a Foreign Language) score. Students must also take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) exam or Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT). | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in International Relations and Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $36,540 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program is offered to meet the needs of students seeking careers in administrative management, international affairs, consulting, international banking or finance. Applicants, please note that admission into this dual degree Master of Arts in International Relations and Master of Business Administration (IR/MBA) program requires separate admissions decisions by the Department of International Relations and the Graduate School of Management (GSM). These decisions are based on one complete application to the Graduate School of Management. Students who are admitted by GSM but not IR have the option to pursue an MBA degree. Applicants not admitted by GSM will not be considered by IR. | Students must demonstrate proficiency in English by submitting a TOEFL (Test Of English as a Foreign Language) score. Students must also take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) exam or Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT). | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in International Relations and Religion | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program exposes students to various disciplinary methodologies for analyzing the impact of religion in public life at the local, national, international, and transnational levels. | Students must demonstrate proficiency in English by submitting a TOEFL (Test Of English as a Foreign Language) score. Students must also take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) exam or Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in International Relations with a Certificate in African Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program is offered under the joint direction of the Department and the African Studies Center. All the requirements for the one year MA also apply. No additional coursework is required, as courses completed for the African Studies Certificate also fulfill electives toward the MA. In some cases, it may be possible to combine the African Studies Certificate with one of joint degree programs as well. Doing so is usually more difficult, however, due to the more involved requirements of the joint degree programs. While enrolled in the One-Year MA program, students can also complete a Graduate Certificate in African Studies. | Students must demonstrate proficiency in English by submitting a TOEFL (Test Of English as a Foreign Language) score. Students must also take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) exam or Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, Boston University, 152 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9278 | This department offers a special blend of the academic and the practical applications of international affairs. The department’s multidisciplinary curriculum encompasses the traditional studies of politics, trade, investments, war and peace, but also social-science-oriented studies in history, economics, geography, anthropology, and other disciplines. Among its faculty are former military officers; two retired ambassadors; former Fulbright fellows; a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer; former Foreign Service officers; an international lawyer and best-selling author; and many more distinguished scholars, professionals, and specialists. In addition to the undergraduate B.A., the department offers six interdisciplinary M.A. programs: including a joint M.A./M.B.A. and a joint M.A./J.D. The Department is affiliated with the Center for International Relations, the African Studies Center, and the Institute for the Study of Ideology, Policy, and Conflict. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Islamic Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is flexible and may be configured according to the student interests and professional goals. The focus is on the religious, literary, and intellectual history of Islam, with emphasis on both the medieval and the modern periods. Students entering the program should have a broad range of courses in one or more of these fields: history of religion, Islamic history, late antique background of Islam, medieval studies, and an Islamic language (Arabic, Persian, or Turkish) and its literature. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Judaic Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is flexible and has several tracks. Students can concentrate on biblical studies, on the Bible and the history of biblical interpretation up to the late Middle Ages, on Classical Jewish history and literature, Medieval Studies, Modern Jewish history and thought, or Holocaust studies. In each instance, students will be expected to master the necessary languages and other skills required for scholarly expertise in their chosen field of study. In every case, the course of study will be configured according to the student special academic interests and professional goals. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Musicology | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | This program will prepare students either to pursue their interests at higher levels of graduate study, or to embark directly on careers in teaching, research, and writing. The roster of courses is often supplemented by guest lectures delivered by visiting scholars. Every spring, students in master and doctoral programs have the opportunity to present their research in Graduate Student Forum in Musicology. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, each applicant in musicology is required to submit: An example of a term paper in music history from undergraduate work or a special paper prepared on a musical topic, Two letters of recommendation from undergraduate teachers, one of whom must teach music history and Graduate Record Examination (GRE) verbal, quantitative, and analytical scores. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | This department faculty members are actively involved in research with specific strengths in the music and music theory of the Middle Ages; the music of J. S. Bach, Beethoven, and Mahler; the history of music criticism and aesthetics; the music of the Renaissance and Baroque; nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian music; and jazz studies. Faculty has produced books and monographs on their areas of interest and have received awards for their scholarship and teaching. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Neurobiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program offers courses and research opportunities in areas of contemporary neurobiology, including: synaptic morphology and neurotransmission; genetic and hormonal control of neural development; sensory physiology, including retinal circuitry and neurochemistry, as well as olfactory processing; and neuroendocrinology, specifically hormonal control of behavior. The organisms under investigation include C. elegans, crayfish, Drosophilia, lobster, turtle, mudpuppy, goldfish, chicken, rat, mouse, and ferret. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program is particularly strong in the History of Philosophy; the History and Philosophy of Science, Mathematics, and Logic; and the Philosophy of Religion. While all major periods and thinkers are represented, focus is especially in Ancient, Early Modern, the Scottish Enlightenment, German Idealism, Phenomenology, Continental Philosophy, Analytic Philosophy, American Philosophy, and the Philosophy of Logic and Mathematics. | Applicants should have completed the equivalent of an undergraduate major in philosophy, typically with an average of B or higher. Students with minors in philosophy are also encouraged to apply. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Minimum TOEFL Scores: Paper-based Test 550, Computer Based Test 213. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Philosophy of Religion | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program explores the reasons and rationalities embedded in a variety of religious traditions and the religious dimensions embedded in a variety of philosophical traditions. Graduate students in the philosophy of religion program are expected to become conversant with the methods of religious studies (including the history and phenomenology of religion), with traditional areas of philosophical study (metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and the history of ideas), and with the texts and normative discourses of the particular religious traditions relevant to their area of interest. Graduate students in the Division of Religious and Theological Studies (DRTS) have access to the faculties of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS), the Boston University School of Theology, and, through the Boston Theological Institute, other universities in the Boston area. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Physiology, Endocrinology, and Reproduction | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program includes faculty with specific interests in endocrinology and hormone action; neuroendocrinology; stress and metabolism; reproductive physiology, anatomy and biochemistry; developmental biology; regulation of gametogenesis; behavioral physiology; cell signaling and gene regulation. The associated Animal Models Research Center encourages development of unconventional models for research in biology and administers an NIH-funded Training Program in Reproductive Biology. Opportunities are available for research at the Boston University Marine Program at the Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratories, Maine. | All applicants for admission to this program are required to submit the results of the Graduate Record Examinations (General Test and Subject Test in Biology, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, or Chemistry). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 5 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2432 | This department is a broadly-based department with faculty interested in biological problems at the molecular, organism, and population levels. Thus this department have a rare strength in addressing questions at all organizational levels of Biology and in ways that combine knowledge in these areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program provides the flexibility to pursue a variety of areas in psychology, building on a common foundation of scientific methodologies. Exploration of the application of psychology to various behavioral, cognitive, and societal issues is a strength of the program. | Students should have a average scores of candidates that were admitted to the program for Fall, 02 were: Verbal 510; Quantitative 640; Analytical 590. For international students, TOEFL score is required. GRE subject test is not required. Students need not have an undergraduate major in psychology. However, it would be suggest/encourage that applicants to have taken some course work in the field. A research methods course is recommended. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston University, 64 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2580 | This department's faculty, more than 30 strong, continues to attract agency-funded research, publish extensively, and maintain a serious commitment to teaching B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. students. The department’s affiliated research centers, the Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders and the Center for Memory and Brain, provide opportunities for research experience, as do affiliated laboratory studies in topics including child cognition, neurophysiology, developmental behavior genetics, neuroscience, psycholinguistics, and vision sciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Religion and Literature | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is dictated by the competencies and academic goals of the student. A strong sense of self-direction is essential, given the range of specialized concentrations in religion and literature. Students may choose courses and mentors from a wide range of departments (e.g., Classics, English, Modern Foreign Languages, Philosophy, Religion, Theology, and University Professors) and are strongly encouraged to attend and to participate in the numerous special lectures, seminars, and symposia offered annually by the Luce Program in Scripture and Literary Arts on topics encompassed by religion and literature. This department currently not accepting applicants for Fall ’08. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Religion and Society | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program is an interdisciplinary program on the relation of religion and culture in modern or traditional societies. Applicants to this specialization should have a solid background in religious or theological disciplines or in one of the humanities or social sciences. It is assumed that the graduate student will take approximately one-third of the course work in religious and theological studies and two-thirds in a relevant cognate discipline OR one-third in a relevant cognate discipline and two-thirds in religious and theological studies. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Science, Philosophy, and Religion | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program provides an academic setting for advanced studies in the philosophy of religion and philosophy of science, as well as in mathematics and one or more of the natural sciences, with a view to developing professional competency in the interdisciplinary area defined by the relationship of philosophy, religion, and the sciences. Graduate students in this specialization have access to courses offered by the School of Theology, the Department of Philosophy, the Department of Mathematics and relevant departments in the sciences. In addition, there are unique opportunities offered by the Boston University Institute for Philosophy and Religion, the Boston Center for the Philosophy and History of Science, and surrounding Boston schools. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Sociology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The objective of this program is to prepare the student broadly in the basic skills used by a sociologist. The goal of this program is to provide training for work as an applied social scientist outside of academic life, as in government administrative jobs or research departments or community programs. There is also room for some specialization or areas of concentration. | Students should have a demonstrate proficiency at an advanced level in a foreign language. In Sociology, that is understood to be a language in which there is a significant sociological literature and/or in which the student’s research will be conducted. There is no fixed minimum in GRE. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Boston University, 96 cummington street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2591 | This department confront the relevant issue that societies and civilizations struggle with every day. Faculty in the Department of Sociology are research experts committed to directing students at all levels of study to a broad knowledge of human relations and social systems, examining such issues as race and ethic relations, law and crime, families, work and organizations, politics, gender, urban life, ethics, and science and technology. The discipline provides the tools for a variety of professional paths, including law, business, education, social work, and journalism. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Teaching in French | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program is minimum of 46 credits. Students at these levels are also eligible to enroll in many courses offered throughout Boston University, as described under the doctoral program. | Applicants should send an academic paper of not more than fifteen pages, written in Spanish, with the application. Applicants should hold a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent in Spanish language and literature; they must submit results of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test. The candidate should include a summary page of all courses and grades taken in the field of Hispanic Literature to accompany transcripts. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Teaching in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program is minimum of 46 credits. Students at these levels are also eligible to enroll in many courses offered throughout Boston University, as described under the doctoral program. | Applicants should send an academic paper of not more than fifteen pages, written in Spanish, with the application. Applicants should hold a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent in Spanish language and literature; they must submit results of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test. The candidate should include a summary page of all courses and grades taken in the field of Hispanic Literature to accompany transcripts. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, 718 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2642 | This department offers instruction in French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and linguistics. Major and minor concentrations are offered in French, Italian, and Spanish language and literature, as well as in linguistics. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees may be pursued in French language and literatures and Hispanic language and literatures. Students may also pursue the M.A.T. jointly with the School of Education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Arts in Theology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | This program brings students into the public discussion of theology in a world-wide context. Degree programs take account of motifs from the intellectual reflection of religions and religious philosophies from all over the world. Programs emphasize understanding these motifs and learning how to use them in constructive theological work. The program has two tracks. The single-tradition track emphasizes in-depth knowledge of and constructive skills in relation to theological reflection in the tradition of study, which is usually Christianity (other traditions may be employed as resources permit). The comparative track develops linguistic and theological competence in two traditions and maintains a focus on comparative questions. In both tracks, the training provided is designed for those whose theological interests are strongly academic, whether or not they are deeply involved with the life of a religious community. | An applicant should hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in an area related to the proposed field of concentration. GRE and TOEFL scores must be required. Both scores must be from a test taken during the last three years. students have a combined verbal/quantitative score of 1300 and a writing score of 5.5. Students should have a minimum score of 600 on the paper-based TOEFL and a 250 on the computer-based TOEFL. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion Division of Religious and Theological Studies, 145 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3060 | This department explores religion in its many manifestations, offering undergraduate students opportunities for broad-based study of religious traditions including Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and the religions of Africa, China, and Japan; related literatures; and theoretical and philosophical problems in the study of religion. The department’s Division of Religious and Theological Studies offers M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in twelve areas of specialization in three subject areas: Religious Texts and Traditions; Religion, Philosophy, and Ethics; and Religion, Culture, and Society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $36,540 a year | School of Management | This program will teach about Management science, its metrics, its value, its variables. The art of management, understanding people, teams, the interconnectivity between customers, suppliers, and employees, and the impact of decisions across the entire enterprise. The strategic implications and applications of technology . | Official Score of the TOEFL required. Student takes the paper-based TOEFL test they must score a 600 or higher. Student takes the old computer-based TOEFL test they must score more than 250. A student must score a minimum of a 7 across each band for an IELTS test. | MBA | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Management | School of Management, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 638 4805 | The School develops new ideas and insights for scholars and practitioners through its faculty research; and by fusing the art, science, and technology of business in teaching, impart knowledge of business disciplines with a unique cross-functional perspective to prepare ethical, innovative leaders for the good of society worldwide. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of City Planning | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program prepares students for a wide variety of professional roles in planning for urban and regional development. The professional regional city planner frequently functions as a member of a multidisciplinary team and may be involved in such tasks as the analysis of policy alternatives, formulation of public investment programs, forecasting and monitoring urban and regional systems performance, development of joint programs among various public and private sector institutions, and plan design and implementation. | Candidates for admission to the degree program are selected on the basis of academic transcripts, academic and personal references, and interviews or statements of intent. There are no fixed application deadlines. The program allows students to submit applications on a rolling basis. Admission decisions are announced promptly pending receipt of all application materials. Students can also register and take two courses prior to applying to the degree program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Criminal Justice | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program is for those who wish to enter or advance a criminal justice career, those considering advanced studies or administration and research in the area of criminal justice. The Master in Criminal Justice also prepares students to enter areas of management, government, and specialized units in law enforcement. The criminal justice master program combines a foundation in the liberal arts with disciplinary and interdisciplinary concentrations in the fields related to criminal justice. Degree candidates study research methods and complete a required core of courses on the history, philosophy, politics, and social consequences of the American criminal justice system. | Candidates for admission to the degree program are selected on the basis of transcripts of academic experience, academic and personal references, and interviews or statements of intent. There are no fixed application deadlines. The program allows for students to submit applications on a rolling basis. Admission decisions are announced promptly pending receipt of all application materials. Students can also register and take two courses prior to applying to the degree program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Criminal Justice | Distance / Online | Variable | Contact provider | Office of Admissions | This program is designed specifically for the working law enforcement professional who seeks to achieve distinction by blending practical experience with scholarly achievement. Taught by leading criminal justice faculty who have extensive experience as law enforcement officers, corrections experts, attorneys, and investigators, the online Master of Criminal Justice will provide them with the knowledge and skills they need to advance their career to lead the criminal justice community, analyze criminal justice issues using disciplined research methods, expand their professional competencies in criminal justice administration and practice, assess law enforcement policies, implement change within the criminal justice system and teach in the field of criminal justice. | Students applying for admission should have a bachelor's degree from a recognized college or university. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Program modules covered are: MET CJ 602 Criminology 4 cr, MET CJ 625 Victimology 4 cr, MET CJ 631 Youth Crime Problems 4 cr, MET CJ 632 White Collar Crime 4 cr, MET CJ 650 Terrorism 4 cr, MET CJ 701 Crime and Punishment 4 cr, MET CJ 702 Analytical Methods 4 cr, MET CJ 703 Research Methods 4 cr, MET CJ 725 Forensic Behavior Analysis 4 cr and MET CJ 831 Criminal Justice Administration 4 cr. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Divinity | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This program is designed to prepare candidates for various forms of pastoral ministry. ?Although not all students in the program intend to seek ordination, the program aims to prepare students to be candidates for ordination. It includes courses ranging from practical arts of ministry to academic studies in which students lacking pastoral interests are as welcome as ministerial candidates. However, all the courses are designed to cohere in the preparation for pastoral ministry. | Applicants for the Master of Divinity degree must have graduated with a minimum grade point average of 3.0 from an accredited college and are often candidates for the Christian ministry. Besides the ability to write and speak English with clarity, applicants should have a broad understanding of the humanities and social sciences, and have some competence in the natural sciences. Also helpful is general knowledge of theological subjects and foreign language experience. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Fine Arts in Film Production | Full Time | 4 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | This program enables each student to develop his or her unique vision as a filmmaker and to graduate with a short film capable of entering film festivals, as well as a feature-length screenplay. In addition to Directing, Thesis options include Editing, Cinematography, and Producing. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3483 | The Department is divided into two programs: Film and Television. Film and television have developed as individual media with their own histories of production techniques, artistic disciplines, content, and business operations. The Department of Film and Television responds to this situation by providing flexible programs of study. Although students are required to select an area of concentration in the second semester of the sophomore year - either the film or the television program - they also have options for tailoring a major that fits their interests and career goals. Students may vary the number of courses in hands-on production, critical studies, and management-related courses. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Fine Arts in Film Studies | Full Time | 4 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | This program is devoted to give students a solid, broad-based education in many aspects of film and media studies. Areas include: the appreciation and comparative study of film and video as art forms, the study of film and video's historical, political, and socio-cultural dimensions, the comparative study of theories for understanding moving-image media and their various contexts. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3483 | The Department is divided into two programs: Film and Television. Film and television have developed as individual media with their own histories of production techniques, artistic disciplines, content, and business operations. The Department of Film and Television responds to this situation by providing flexible programs of study. Although students are required to select an area of concentration in the second semester of the sophomore year - either the film or the television program - they also have options for tailoring a major that fits their interests and career goals. Students may vary the number of courses in hands-on production, critical studies, and management-related courses. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Fine Arts in Screenwriting | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | This program is small yet vigorous and nurturing. The motto is : writers write. By the time students leave the halls of the University, they will have completed three or four feature length screenplays, a television pilot, and several short screenplays. In addition, students will have a strong understanding of the film and television industry and what it takes to sell their work. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3483 | The Department is divided into two programs: Film and Television. Film and television have developed as individual media with their own histories of production techniques, artistic disciplines, content, and business operations. The Department of Film and Television responds to this situation by providing flexible programs of study. Although students are required to select an area of concentration in the second semester of the sophomore year - either the film or the television program - they also have options for tailoring a major that fits their interests and career goals. Students may vary the number of courses in hands-on production, critical studies, and management-related courses. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Liberal Arts in Gastronomy | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Gastronomy | This program encompasses the arts, the humanities, and the natural and social sciences. As the study of food, food science, and nutrition has grown, a consensus has developed that the study of food and wine, under the category of gastronomy, requires a multidisciplinary approach. Understanding of the role of food in historical and contemporary societies and its impact on world civilization is a serious and important pursuit, especially when undertaken within specific, well-defined fields of study such as culinary history, anthropology, archaeology, economics, and nutrition. Students are encouraged to take advantage of the resources and expertise of various Boston University faculty members and departments, as well as industry professionals. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree. Candidates for admission to the degree program are selected on the basis of academic transcripts, academic and personal references, and the required application essay. A maximum of two relevant graduate-level courses (eight credits) in the liberal arts may be transferred from accredited institutions for credit during the Gastronomy degree program with the approval of an advisor. A maximum of two courses (eight credits) taken at Metropolitan College prior to acceptance into the degree program may be applied toward the degree. An average grade of B- must be maintained to satisfy the degree requirements. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Gastronomy | Metropolitan College, Department of Gastronomy, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9852 | This college exemplifies Boston University’s commitment to adult learners. With its high caliber full-time and practitioner faculty, its cutting-edge undergraduate and graduate degree programs, and its focus on the educational needs of working professionals, MET provides access to the resources and reputation of a world-class university—conveniently and affordably. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Liberal Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies | This program recognizes that many adult learners have already achieved a significant level of personal and professional development. As such they may not wish to pursue graduate-level study in a specific major or traditional field of study and may prefer to study issues or themes that cross departmental boundaries. The interdisciplinary studies approach allows students to select and refine this theme then choose appropriate coursework in conjunction with a faculty member or the program director. The M.L.A. curriculum shaped by the student should have a clearly defined and organic focal point and not be simply a random selection of courses. | Applicants must have received a bachelor’s degree. Candidates for admission to the degree program are selected on the basis of academic transcripts, academic and personal references, and interviews. A maximum of two graduate courses (8 credits) in the liberal arts may be transferred from accredited institutions for credit toward the MLA degree. A maximum of three courses (12 credits) taken at Metropolitan College prior to acceptance into the degree program may be applied toward the degree. International students are expected to have TOEFL scores of at least 560 or the following scores on the TOEFL iBT: Reading:25, Listening: 21, Speaking: 23, Writing: 22. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies | Metropolitan College, Department of Liberal Studies, 808 Commonwealth Avenue Mezz, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 358 0005 | The Department of Liberal Studies at Metropolitan College seeks to guide students on an exploration of the significance of liberal learning in the twenty-first century. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Choral Conducting | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities | This program in Conducting must give two public recitals. The programs for the recitals can reflect the specific interest of the individual student, but the programs must include literature from a broad historical span. Orchestral conductors must present recitals that include literature from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. Choral conductors must present recitals that include literature from the time periods listed above, as well as from the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries; orchestral accompaniment must also be included. | Applicants program should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and solfége (20 credits); history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Composition | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | This program provides opportunities with ensembles and the Boston University Symphony Orchestra are combined with comprehensive training in theory, counterpoint, harmony, orchestration, and contemporary techniques. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). Candidates are required to audition for admission. Candidates for the Theory and Composition program must audition and present a portfolio. Each candidate must submit a preliminary video by December 15, before an audition can be scheduled. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Historical Performance | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance | This program includes Applied Music and Baroque Ensembles. Applied Music is an instrumental and vocal study with department faculty drawn from Boston Baroque, and members of the BU voice and opera departments. In Baroque Ensembles Students will have the opportunity to learn Baroque orchestral repertory, technique, and style, and absorb the Orchestra’s professional culture by rehearsing and performing side-by-side with BCO members as they are directed by Martin Pearlman. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, Historical Performance majors must complete the following: An audition. Applicants must demonstrate proficiency by performing works in different national styles from the 17th and 18th centuries. Applicants must audition in person unless their place of residence is over 300 miles from Boston. Taped audition material may also be accepted and must be received by January 15, two letters of recommendation, a complete repertory listing and Senior Recital Program (for voice applicants only). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music Artist-in-Residence, is the founding Music Director of Boston Baroque, America’s leading period-instrument orchestra and chorus, now serving as resident professional ensemble of the School’s Historical Performance Program. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Historical Performance - Harpsichord | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | This program prepare professional musicians in composition and performance for the concert stage and for nations professional musical organizations. This program strive to provide the means for societies most talented and creative musicians to realize their own potential. The mission of this program is to prepare students for music teaching in elementary and secondary schools, as well as in colleges and universities. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). Candidates are required to audition for admission. Candidates for the Theory and Composition program must audition and present a portfolio. Each candidate must submit a preliminary video by December 15, before an audition can be scheduled. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | Pianists and keyboard performing artists play a central role in the life of the School of Music. They are present as keyboardists in large ensembles, chamber groups, choral organizations, and individual lessons. They perform with fellow students in master classes and degree recitals. They study solo literature, duo sonata and chamber works, orchestral reductions, and song. No student in the School of Music graduates without some musical contact with a pianist. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | This program continues its leadership role in the development and exploration of new strategies for effective and creative instruction in music. The programs provide for growth as professional educators within a dynamic environment of research and musicianship. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, applicants for this program are required to submit a curriculum vitae, An audition in the applicant’s major area of performance. Applicants should schedule an audition or send an audition tape. Music Education Audition Requirements are the same as auditions for Performance applicants, Applicants to the Professional Track are not required to audition but must send a videotape of their teaching in the classroom and Two letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Music Education, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The Department of Music Education at Boston University’s School of Music has a long and distinguished tradition. In 1967, it was actively involved in the Tangle wood Symposium, one of the watershed events in the history of American music education. Today, the department continues its leadership role in the development and exploration of new strategies for effective and creative instruction in music. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Music Education (MusM) | Distance / Online | 17 - 20 months | $592 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program combines a time-honored curriculum with cutting-edge technology to make this valuable credential available to music educators around the world. The MusM curriculum focuses on music theory and musicology and techniques for applying them in the classroom. The Boston University Online Master of Music in Music Education is an exciting opportunity for music educators to achieve career advancement and academic enrichment without interrupting their existing professional lives learn from faculty members who are recognized authorities in music education, music theory, and musicology; experience the cultural diversity and rich academic environment of the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States; investigate the philosophy, history, sociology, and psychology of music education; discover innovative teaching methodologies; focus on music from a variety of cultural and historical approaches such as African music, American music, and jazz. | Applicants should have a a baccalaureate degree in Music or Music Education from a regionally accredited college or university. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Program modules covered are: CFA MU 400 Graduate Theory Review 2 cr, CFA MU 600 Analytical Techniques 4 cr, CFA MU 747 Research and Bibliography 4 cr, CFA MU 755 American Music 4 cr, CFA MU 757 Crossroads: Musical and Cultural Perspectives on the Blues 4 cr, CFA MU 765 Introduction to Music Education Research 4 cr, CFA MU 766 Jazz and Popular Arranging 4 cr, CFA MU 767 African Music and Culture: Creative Exploration 4 cr, CFA MU 768 Curriculum Project 4 cr, CFA MU 777 Foundations of Music Education I: Philosophy and History 4 cr, CFA MU 778 Foundations of Music Education II: Sociology and Psychology 4 cr and CFA MU 779 Orchestration 1. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | The Department of Music Education at Boston University’s School of Music has a long and distinguished tradition. In 1967, it was actively involved in the Tangle wood Symposium, one of the watershed events in the history of American music education. Today, the department continues its leadership role in the development and exploration of new strategies for effective and creative instruction in music. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Musicology | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | This program involved in research with specific strengths in the music and music theory of the Middle Ages; the music of J. S. Bach, Beethoven, and Mahler; the history of music criticism and aesthetics; the music of the Renaissance and Baroque; nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian music; and jazz studies. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, each applicant in musicology is required to submit: An example of a term paper in music history from undergraduate work or a special paper prepared on a musical topic, Two letters of recommendation from undergraduate teachers, one of whom must teach music history and Graduate Record Examination (GRE) verbal, quantitative, and analytical scores. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Musicology, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | This department faculty members are actively involved in research with specific strengths in the music and music theory of the Middle Ages; the music of J. S. Bach, Beethoven, and Mahler; the history of music criticism and aesthetics; the music of the Renaissance and Baroque; nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian music; and jazz studies. Faculty has produced books and monographs on their areas of interest and have received awards for their scholarship and teaching. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Orchestral Conducting | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities | This program includes Orchestral Conducting, Choral Conducting. Orchestral Emphasis tape should include 20–30 minutes of the candidate in rehearsal and/or performance with an orchestral ensemble. The audition will also include an individual interview that will examine skills in conducting, sight-singing (in all clefs), keyboard, dictation, musical terminology, score-reading, orchestration, and analysis. Each candidate will also be asked to perform on his or her principal instrument. Selected candidates will conduct an ensemble as the final part of the audition. Choral Emphasis tape should include 20–30 minutes of the candidate in rehearsal and/or performance with a choral ensemble. Each candidate will also be asked to sing an art song and play a solo keyboard composition at the level of a Bach two-part invention. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). Candidates are required to audition for admission. Candidates for the Theory and Composition program must audition and present a portfolio. Each candidate must submit a preliminary video by December 15, before an audition can be scheduled. Candidates should possess a Master of Music degree or a Master of Arts degree with a major in music and should have completed theory, harmony, and history of music (18 credits); and liberal arts courses distributed among the humanities and natural and social sciences (42 credits). Any deficiency must be made up without credit toward the fulfillment of the degree requirements. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Choral Activities, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Performance - Brass | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | This program emphasis is placed on chamber music, both as an end in itself and as a way to develop critical musical skills necessary in all settings, from solo to orchestral. There are ample opportunities for intensive coachings with master teachers and for public performance on and off campus. A wide variety of pedagogical ideas are presented by faculty members and artists and through guest master classes. The brass artist faculty includes those with experience at the highest echelons of orchestral, quintet, and solo performance, including the Boston Symphony and Pops; the Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras; the Empire, Atlantic, and New York Brass Quintets; and laureates of numerous international solo competitions. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, Historical Performance majors must complete the following: An audition. Applicants must demonstrate proficiency by performing works in different national styles from the 17th and 18th centuries. Applicants must audition in person unless their place of residence is over 300 miles from Boston. Taped audition material may also be accepted and must be received by January 15, two letters of recommendation, a complete repertory listing and Senior Recital Program (for voice applicants only). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Performance - Organ | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | This program prepare professional musicians in composition and performance for the concert stage and for nations professional musical organizations. This program strive to provide the means for societies most talented and creative musicians to realize their own potential. The mission of this program is to prepare students for music teaching in elementary and secondary schools, as well as in colleges and universities. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). Candidates are required to audition for admission. Candidates for the Theory and Composition program must audition and present a portfolio. Each candidate must submit a preliminary video by December 15, before an audition can be scheduled. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | Pianists and keyboard performing artists play a central role in the life of the School of Music. They are present as keyboardists in large ensembles, chamber groups, choral organizations, and individual lessons. They perform with fellow students in master classes and degree recitals. They study solo literature, duo sonata and chamber works, orchestral reductions, and song. No student in the School of Music graduates without some musical contact with a pianist. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Performance - Percussion | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | This program will give opportunities to students to perform with the Boston University Symphony Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra, Wind Ensemble, and Percussion Ensemble. Beyond the University, students are encouraged to perform in ensembles based in and traveling through Boston. Students are strongly encouraged to attend lectures and master classes given by many of the world-class artists based in the city. Prior to graduation, students will experience all avenues of the percussion world and feel confident in performing in genres ranging from classical to contemporary to world music. Past graduates have sustained successful careers as orchestral musicians; solo and new music performers; freelance musicians; musical directors; and educators at the elementary, secondary, and collegiate levels. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, Historical Performance majors must complete the following: An audition. Applicants must demonstrate proficiency by performing works in different national styles from the 17th and 18th centuries. Applicants must audition in person unless their place of residence is over 300 miles from Boston. Taped audition material may also be accepted and must be received by January 15, two letters of recommendation, a complete repertory listing and Senior Recital Program (for voice applicants only). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Performance - Piano | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | This program prepare professional musicians in composition and performance for the concert stage and for nations professional musical organizations. This program strive to provide the means for societies most talented and creative musicians to realize their own potential. The mission of this program is to prepare students for music teaching in elementary and secondary schools, as well as in colleges and universities. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). Candidates are required to audition for admission. Candidates for the Theory and Composition program must audition and present a portfolio. Each candidate must submit a preliminary video by December 15, before an audition can be scheduled. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Collaborative Piano, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | Pianists and keyboard performing artists play a central role in the life of the School of Music. They are present as keyboardists in large ensembles, chamber groups, choral organizations, and individual lessons. They perform with fellow students in master classes and degree recitals. They study solo literature, duo sonata and chamber works, orchestral reductions, and song. No student in the School of Music graduates without some musical contact with a pianist. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Performance - Strings and Harp | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Strings and Harp | This program includes prizewinners of major competitions, recital concerto soloists, professional chamber players, and members of major symphony orchestras. The faculty is devoted to the thorough musical development of each student. Performance opportunities with faculty feedback abound. Several string master classes with guest artists are offered each year, and students may participate in the annual concerto/aria competition and string solo competitions. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, Historical Performance majors must complete the following: An audition. Applicants must demonstrate proficiency by performing works in different national styles from the 17th and 18th centuries. Applicants must audition in person unless their place of residence is over 300 miles from Boston. Taped audition material may also be accepted and must be received by January 15, two letters of recommendation, a complete repertory listing and Senior Recital Program (for voice applicants only). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Strings and Harp | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Strings and Harp, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The world-renowned string faculty of Boston University’s School of Music includes prizewinners of major competitions, recital concerto soloists, professional chamber players, and members of major symphony orchestras. The faculty is devoted to the thorough musical development of each student. Performance opportunities with faculty feedback abound. Several string master classes with guest artists are offered each year, and students may participate in the annual concerto/aria competition and string solo competitions. In addition to BU’s highly regarded orchestral program, the esteemed Muir String Quartet presents a series of concerts on campus each year and leads a comprehensive program of chamber music coachings, master classes, and student performances. Many of BU’s string graduates now enjoy positions as orchestral, chamber music, and solo performers and as teachers throughout the world. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Performance - Voice | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice | This program commensurate with the demands of professional singing. At each level of study, students pursue the highest standards of training in the development of technique, repertoire, languages, and musicianship. The artist, believe, synthesizes all aspects of training with heart, mind, and body. Performance opportunities may include degree and nondegree recitals, auditioned roles in choral works, opera scenes, and productions (upper classmen and graduate students only), performance and diction courses, as well as contemporary chamber works. All students study with faculty members in a positive and collegial atmosphere. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, Historical Performance majors must complete the following: An audition. Applicants must demonstrate proficiency by performing works in different national styles from the 17th and 18th centuries. Applicants must audition in person unless their place of residence is over 300 miles from Boston. Taped audition material may also be accepted and must be received by January 15, two letters of recommendation, a complete repertory listing and Senior Recital Program (for voice applicants only). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Voice, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | The Voice faculty at Boston University is dedicated to a program of study commensurate with the demands of professional singing. At each level of study, students pursue the highest standards of training in the development of technique, repertoire, languages, and musicianship. The artist, we believe, synthesizes all aspects of training with heart, mind, and body. Performance opportunities may include degree and nondegree recitals, auditioned roles in choral works, opera scenes, and productions (upper classmen and graduate students only), performance and diction courses, as well as contemporary chamber works. All students study with faculty members in a positive and collegial atmosphere. The Voice department takes pride in its tradition of esprit de corps among its vocal performance majors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Performance - Woodwinds | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | This program will give students to teach in leading universities and perform in well-known chamber ensembles and major symphony orchestras, including the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, and Cleveland Orchestra. Many have demonstrated their excellence in competitions, winning appearances with major ensembles. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, Historical Performance majors must complete the following: An audition. Applicants must demonstrate proficiency by performing works in different national styles from the 17th and 18th centuries. Applicants must audition in person unless their place of residence is over 300 miles from Boston. Taped audition material may also be accepted and must be received by January 15, two letters of recommendation, a complete repertory listing and Senior Recital Program (for voice applicants only). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Performance Music | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance | This program requirements are Brass, Collaborative Piano, Harp, Organ, Percussion, Piano, Strings, Voice and Woodwinds. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). In addition, performance majors must complete the following: An audition. Applicants must audition in person unless their place of residence is over 300 miles from Boston. Candidates may arrange an audition online or complete the Audition Request Form and return it to the School of Music. Taped audition material may also be accepted and must be received by January 15. Faculty of the School also hear auditions in other cities. Please refer to the Audition Schedule for regional audition information. Two letters of recommendation, A complete repertory listing. Senior Recital Program (for voice applicants only). | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Historical Performance, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music Artist-in-Residence, is the founding Music Director of Boston Baroque, America’s leading period-instrument orchestra and chorus, now serving as resident professional ensemble of the School’s Historical Performance Program. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Music in Theory | Full Time | Variable | $18150 per year | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | This program gives opportunities with ensembles and the Boston University Symphony Orchestra are combined with comprehensive training in theory, counterpoint, harmony, orchestration, and contemporary techniques. | Candidates must have SAT and ACT scores. Two SAT Subject Tests (recommended). Students must be proficient in one modern language, preferably German, and must satisfactorily complete an examination in music theory. However, students must satisfy a basic keyboard proficiency requirement to receive the MusM degree in Theory. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory | College of Fine Arts, School of Music Department of Composition and Theory, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3341 | School of Music at Boston University, founded in 1872, is the oldest degree-granting music program in the United States. The character of the School is shaped by its position at the center of a major university situated in the heart of Boston, a city that takes learning and music seriously. The School is committed to integrating professional training and the study of the liberal arts for undergraduate students. At the graduate level, students participate in a rich intellectual and artistic environment, vital for professional development. Alumni and faculty are members of major symphony orchestras, opera companies, prestigious ensembles, and educational institutions throughout the world. Notable faculty members include opera singer Simon Estes, composer and conductor Theodore Antoniou, violinist Roman Totenberg, and musicologist/performer Joshua Rifkin. Distinguished alumni include Fred Bronstein, president of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; opera singers Sandra Piques Eddy and Morris Robinson; and Joseph Pereira, percussionist with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Sacred Music | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This program is at the forefront of professional training in sacred music. Students are prepared for leadership roles in communities of faith, and as performers, scholars, and teachers using the incomparable resources of the Boston University School of Music and School of Theology. degree consists of a series of required courses in three categories: theology, music, and the ministry of music. The successful completion of these courses and a final project is required for the degree. Proficiency in music theory, history, keyboard proficiency, and choral conducting is required. | Applicants must hold a BA or its equivalent, have a minimum grade point average of 3.0, and have a general academic background represented by at least 20 semester credits in the humanities and social sciences. In addition, applicants must have basic skills in music, including courses in theory, music history, and choral conducting or organ. The degree program may exceed two years (four semesters) if remedial work is required in any aspect of the program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Sacred Theology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This program is a second-level graduate professional degree for those who wish to pursue a year of more advanced coursework focusing on a particular discipline. The degree is not normally considered probationary for the doctorate. The program requires eight semester courses or 32 credits. A minimum of five semester courses are required in the major discipline. The remaining elective courses are selected under faculty advisement, to complement the major area of study. | Applicants must hold a first-level graduate professional degree and have a minimum grade point average of 3.0. This degree is a second-level graduate professional degree for those who wish to pursue a year of more advanced coursework focusing on a particular discipline. The degree is not normally considered probationary for the doctorate. STM candidates withdrawing from the STM program to enter a doctoral program may not transfer STM credit if they were deemed ineligible for admission to the doctoral program at the time of their initial STM application. Only 900-level courses will be considered for transfer. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in (Specialty) Management - Specialization in Banking and Financial Services Management | Distance / Online | 16 - 24 months | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program is designed to prepare students for success in the fast-paced, dynamic financial sector by combining a solid foundation in general management practices with expertise in corporate finance, global markets, and the financial services industry. Students will explore: investments, managing cash, capital raising strategies, merger and acquisition processes, securities markets, corporate operations, defense measures against hostile bids, buyout transactions, analyzing financial statements and electronic commerce practices and their importance in both national and international markets. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core courses include: MET AD 642 Project Management 4 cr, MET AD 648 Introduction to Electronic Commerce, Systems, and Web Design 4 cr, MET AD 655 International Business, Economics, and Cultures 4 cr, MET AD 715 Quantitative and Qualitative Decision-Making 4 cr, MET AD 731 Corporate Finance 4 cr and MET AD 741 The Innovation Process: Developing New Products and Services 4 cr. Specialization courses include: MET AD 630 Financial and Managerial Accounting 4 cr, MET AD 712 Financial Markets and Institutions 4 cr, MET AD 714 Mergers and Acquisitions 4 cr and MET AD 717 Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in (Specialty) Management - Specialization in Business Continuity, Security and Risk Management | Distance / Online | 16 - 24 months | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program is designed to provide the tools and concepts necessary to plan for, prevent, and when needed successfully respond to disruptions in business operations, this concentration provides a review of important issues relating to business continuity, security, information and materials management, as well as risk management from a planning, operations, and response perspective. Topics presented include incident response and disaster recovery, compliance issues, and systemwide risk analysis. Business continuity is viewed organizationally to include all company operations, and addresses information, computer systems, infrastructure, personnel, and supply chain, as well as emergencies emanating from man-made and natural disasters. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core courses include: MET AD 632 Financial Concepts 4 cr, MET AD 642 Project Management 4 cr, MET AD 648 Introduction to Electronic Commerce, Systems, and Web Design 4 cr, MET AD 655 International Business, Economics, and Cultures 4 cr, MET AD 715 Quantitative and Qualitative Decision-Making 4 cr, MET AD 741 The Innovation Process: Developing New Products and Services 4 cr. Specialization courses include: MET AD 610 Introduction to Business Continuity, Security, and Risk Management 4 cr, MET AD 613 System-Wide Risk Planning, Strategy, and Compliance 4 cr, MET AD 614 Incident Response and Disaster Recovery 4 cr. Plus one of the following course: MET AD 612 COO-Public Emergency Management 4 cr, MET AD 644 Project Risk and Cost Management 4 cr and MET CS 684 IT Security Policies and Procedures. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in (Specialty) Management - Specialization in Insurance Management | Distance / Online | 16 - 24 months | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program is designed specifically for professionals who have earned designation as a Chartered Property Casualty Underwriter (CPCU). The MS in Insurance Management is a unique opportunity for professionals who have acquired the CPCU credential to achieve further distinction by complementing their demonstrated expertise in insurance issues with a mastery of general management principles in accounting, finance, operations, and leadership. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core courses include: MET AD 632 Financial Concepts 4 cr, MET AD 642 Project Management 4 cr, MET AD 648 Introduction to Electronic Commerce, Systems, and Web Design 4 cr, MET AD 655 International Business, Economics, and Cultures 4 cr, MET AD 715 Quantitative and Qualitative Decision-Making 4 cr and MET AD 741 The Innovation Process: Developing New Products and Services 4 cr. Degree electives - students must choose two Administrative Sciences graduate level courses, with the advice of the Administrative Sciences Department coordinator. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in (Specialty) Management - Specialization in International Marketing Management | Distance / Online | 16 - 24 months | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program provides an exciting, value-added educational experience. Students benefit from a solid marketing core, along with options for online international collaboration with other university students and professionals in Europe, South America, and Asia. This curriculum combines state-of-the-art classes in e-commerce, web design, and database analysis with a broad understanding of the advertising, marketing research, and promotional skills needed to excel in the international marketing field. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core courses include: MET AD 632 Financial Concepts 4 cr, MET AD 642 Project Management 4 cr, MET AD 648 Introduction to Electronic Commerce, Systems, and Web Design 4 cr, MET AD 655 International Business, Economics, and Cultures 4 cr, MET AD 715 Quantitative and Qualitative Decision-Making 4 cr and MET AD 741 The Innovation Process: Developing New Products and Services 4 cr. Concentration courses include: MET AD 737 Innovative Marketing Techniques 4 cr and MET AD 856 Market and Economic Research and Analysis 4 cr. Specialization electives include: MET AD 773 International Business Simulation 4 cr, ITESM Integral Marketing Communications (online from Mexico) and ITESM Doing Business in Mexico and Latin America (online from Mexico). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in (Specialty) Management - Specialization in Project Management | Distance / Online | 16 - 24 months | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | The MS specialization in Project Management is a unique opportunity to combine a broad knowledge of business and management principles with a specific knowledge of successful project-based strategies. Students with a broad range of professional responsibilities from working on complex projects for global companies to designing IT infrastructure to completing consulting contracts will benefit from this detailed examination of a project’s conception, planning, budgeting, resource allocation, and implementation. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core courses include: MET AD 610 Introduction to Business Continuity, Security, and Risk Management 4 cr, MET AD 632 Financial Concepts 4 cr, MET AD 648 Introduction to Electronic Commerce, Systems, and Web Design 4 cr, MET AD 655 International Business, Economics, and Cultures 4 cr, MET AD 715 Quantitative and Qualitative Decision-Making 4 cr and MET AD 741 The Innovation Process: Developing New Products and Services 4 cr. Specialization courses include: MET AD 642 Project Management 4 cr, MET AD 643 Project Communications Management 4 cr, MET AD 644 Project Risk and Cost Management 4 cr and MET AD 646 Program Management 4 cr. Degree electives - students must choose two Administrative Sciences graduate level courses, with the advice of the Administrative Sciences Department coordinator. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Actuarial Science | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program gives the skills to become a successful actuary. Students will gain a solid academic foundation through specialized courses in actuarial science, statistics, finance, and related fields and will also benefit from practical exposure to business and economic principles. Finally, actuarial science degree program will prepare for the Society of Actuaries (SOA) and Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS) professional qualifying examinations, which are the points of entry for a successful actuarial career. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree, have completed two semesters of calculus equivalent to MET MA 123, 124, and 225, and one semester of multivariable calculus equivalent to MET MA 225. International students for whom English is not a first language must submit the results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). For current information on the TOEFL examination, please visit www.ets.org/toefl. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | All required courses are selected from the following lists of Core Courses and Core Elective Courses. Concentration in Insurance required 22 credits: MET AT 601 Laboratory for Actuarial and Financial Data Analysis I (2 credits) or MET AT 602 Laboratory for Actuarial and Financial Data Analysis II (3 credits), MET AT 721 Mathematics of Compound Interest, MET AT 722 Finance for Actuaries, MET AT 731 Actuarial Mathematics I, MET AT 741 Actuarial Statistics I, MET AT 743 Regression and Time Series or CAS MA 575 Applied Regression and Analysis of Variance I or CAS MA 684 Multivariate Analysis. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Actuarial Science - Insurance | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Actuarial Science | This program gives the skills to become a successful actuary. Students will gain a solid academic foundation through specialized courses in actuarial science, statistics, finance, and related fields and will also benefit from practical exposure to business and economic principles. Finally, actuarial science degree program will prepare for the Society of Actuaries (SOA) and Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS) professional qualifying examinations, which are the points of entry for a successful actuarial career. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree, have completed two semesters of calculus equivalent to MET MA 123, 124, and 225, and one semester of multivariable calculus equivalent to MET MA 225. International students for whom English is not a first language must submit the results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). For current information on the TOEFL examination, please visit www.ets.org/toefl. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MET AT 601 Laboratory for Actuarial and Financial Data Analysis I (2 credits) or MET AT 602 Laboratory for Actuarial and Financial Data Analysis II (3 credits), MET AT 721 Mathematics of Compound Interest, MET AT 722 Finance for Actuaries, MET AT 731 Actuarial Mathematics I, MET AT 741 Actuarial Statistics I, MET AT 743 Regression and Time Series or CAS MA 575 Applied Regression and Analysis of Variance I or CAS MA 684 Multivariate Analysis. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Actuarial Science | Metropolitan College, Department of Actuarial Science, 96 Cummington Street Suite 160, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 8758 | The Department of Actuarial Science will help to acquire the skills to become a successful actuary in todays competitive job market. Students will get a great academic foundation as well as practical exposure to real-world business environments. Boston is one of the nation financial and insurance centers, and MET offers the only major Actuarial program in the Boston metropolitan area. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Actuarial Science - Mathematical Finance | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Actuarial Science | This program gives the skills to become a successful actuary. Students will gain a solid academic foundation through specialized courses in actuarial science, statistics, finance, and related fields and will also benefit from practical exposure to business and economic principles. Finally, actuarial science degree program will prepare for the Society of Actuaries (SOA) and Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS) professional qualifying examinations, which are the points of entry for a successful actuarial career. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree, have completed two semesters of calculus equivalent to MET MA 123, 124, and 225, and one semester of multivariable calculus equivalent to MET MA 225. International students for whom English is not a first language must submit the results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). For current information on the TOEFL examination, please visit www.ets.org/toefl. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Courses are: MET AT 601 Laboratory for Actuarial and Financial Data Analysis I (2 credits) or MET AT 602 Laboratory for Actuarial and Financial Data Analysis II (3 credits), MET AT 721 Mathematics of Compound Interest, MET AT 722 Finance for Actuaries, MET AT 731 Actuarial Mathematics I, MET AT 741 Actuarial Statistics I, MET AT 743 Regression and Time Series or CAS MA 575 Applied Regression and Analysis of Variance I or CAS MA 684 Multivariate Analysis. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Actuarial Science | Metropolitan College, Department of Actuarial Science, 96 Cummington Street Suite 160, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 8758 | The Department of Actuarial Science will help to acquire the skills to become a successful actuary in todays competitive job market. Students will get a great academic foundation as well as practical exposure to real-world business environments. Boston is one of the nation financial and insurance centers, and MET offers the only major Actuarial program in the Boston metropolitan area. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Administrative Studies | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Administrative Sciences | This program helps to build a foundation for success in today’s business world through an in-depth, focused curriculum that draws from several disciplines. This program gives the skills to survive and prosper in the expanding global and electronic commerce industries, and the flexibility and skills to embrace the rapid change that is the hallmark of these fields. This program provides opportunity for in-depth study in the following concentration areas: Economic Development and Tourism Management, Electronic Commerce, Systems, and Technology, Financial Economics Innovation and Technology and Multinational Commerce. | Students should have prior academic background in relationship to their current professional standing to determine suitability. Candidates for admission to the degree program are selected on the basis of academic transcripts, academic and personal references, and often interviews. Students must demonstrate proficiency in the following areas: Mathematical skills for management, Computer applications including: database, spreadsheet, and word processing applications. International students for whom English is not a first language must submit the results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). For current information on the TOEFL examination, please visit www.ets.org/toefl. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Administrative Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Administrative Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 3016 | The Department of Administrative Studies can help to remain competitive and rise to the top ofthis field. With programs tailored to meet educational needs at any stage of career, MET will give the tools that need to achieve the career goal and the personal satisfaction.. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Advertising | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Advertising | This program was developed in consultation with top industry experts to create a fast-paced, imaginative environment that exposes to real-world dynamics and encourages teamwork. The students will master the essentials of advertising, and build on that foundation through a broad-based curriculum that includes courses in international marketing, electronic commerce, the marketing mix, mass communication, promotional strategy, advertising and society, and financial and managerial accounting. | Candidates must have a bachelor’s degree and are selected on the basis of undergraduate transcripts, academic and personal references, and work experience. Standardized admissions tests such as the GRE are not required; English language proficiency is. The advertising master program has a rolling admissions policy with no absolute deadlines. Students may complete up to eight credits in the program prior to admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core Courses required 16 credits: MET CM 702 Advertising and Society, MET CM 704 Contemporary Mass Communication, MET CM 707 Writing for Media Professionals, MET CM 708 Principles and Practices of Advertising. Electives are MET/COM CM Advertising Electives and MET Management Electives. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Advertising | Metropolitan College, Department of Advertising, 755 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2975 | This department developed in collaboration with BU’s College of Communication, students will master the essentials of advertising in an energetic, imaginative environment that will expose to real-world dynamics and build teamwork skills. This curriculum is rigorous and intensive, and designed for the motivated, working professional. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Advertising | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program prepares students to assess client needs and solve client problems using polls, surveys, focus groups, and other research strategies. The skills learned in this concentration prepare the student for a position as a research analyst or research manager in such fields as advertising/marketing, public relations, political campaigning, health communication, and international communication. It combines a command of applied research designs, techniques, and writing skills with a background in one or more major professional fields. This area of occupational specialization offers many lucrative entry-level opportunities and excellent opportunities for advancement. The concentration also provides a research and theory background for those preparing for more advanced study in communication. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for programs in the College of Business. Students who have studied at an NON-English speaking school must take the TOEFL and not the GRE. TOEFL test breakdown: Paper TOEFL (PBT) -- minimum score 600, Computer based TOEFL -- minimum score 250. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Courses are: COM CM 704 Contemporary Mass Media COM CM 707 Writing for Media Professionals Or COM CM 705 Writing for International Students, COM CM 710 Communication Theory, COM CM 722 Communication Research, COM CM 723 Advanced Communication Research (COM CM 722), COM CM 724 Sampling Design and Measurement Techniques (consent of instructor), COM CM 824 Technical Writing for Communication Research (COM CM 722 and CM 723 and CM 724). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Aerospace Engineering - Non Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | This program provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing sample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace engineering. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 2814 | The Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) at Boston University provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace and mechanical engineering. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Aerospace Engineering - Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | This program provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing sample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace engineering. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 2814 | The Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) at Boston University provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace and mechanical engineering. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Applied Anatomy and Physiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program provides a dynamic and flexible environment for students interested in pursuing careers in biomedical research. The degree typically leads to a research or clinical career in hospitals, pharmaceutical, or biotechnology settings. The program also provides a strong foundation for doctoral level studies in biology, physiology or neuroscience. | Applicants should have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules are SAR HS 550 Neural Systems, SAR HS 551 Human Nutrition SAR HP 565 Advanced Biomechanics (4), SAR HS 745 Advanced Regional Anatomy (var. cr), SAR HS 776 Nutrition Epidemiology (4), CAS BI 575 Techniques in Cellular and Molecular Biology, GRS BI 655 Developmental Neurobiology, GMS AN 808 Neuroanatomical Basis of Neurologic Disease. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Arts Administration | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Arts Administration | This program is designed for students who wish to pursue careers in visual arts, performing arts, and arts service organizations in the public, private, and non-profit sectors. The past two decades have witnessed a rapid expansion in arts audiences, practitioners, and institutions. Concomitantly, the increased cyclical economic uncertainty in both the public and private sectors has resulted in a growing need for highly skilled administrators who can work effectively with elected officials, business and community leaders, and fellow arts professionals. This program emphasizes excellence, creativity, economic problem solving, internationalism, and a commitment to the new technologies of the age. | Candidates must have a bachelor degree, and are selected on the basis of undergraduate transcripts, academic and personal references, and related work experiences. Standardized admission tests, such as the GRE (institution code: 3108) or GMAT, are required for international students and for those students who have received their baccalaureate degree within the past two year. Additionally, international students must also submit official iBT TOEFL scores. When submitting TOEFL scores please use the institution code: 3040. The department code is 99. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Concentration Core Group A required 16 credits: MET AR 690 The Art World, MET AR 750 Financial Management for Nonprofits or MET FI 631 Financial Analysis, MET AR 778 Legal Issues in Arts Administration, MET AR 802/803 Internship in Arts Administration I and II(two credits each). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Arts Administration | Metropolitan College, Department of Arts Administration, 808 Commonwealth Avenue Mezz, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4064 | Department of Arts Administration will give the skills and training necessary to help arts organizations survive and thrive in the 21st century. Students will study in small interactive classes with instructors who are successful arts administrators. Courses emphasize excellence, creativity, economic problem solving, internationalism and new technologies. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Bioinformatics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is to train physician-scientists who will be leaders in applying and stimulating the development of post-genomic technologies to clinical research and the practice of medicine. Students are expected to fulfill all of the core course requirements listed below: Protein and DNA Sequence Analysis (ENG BF 527 may substitute for this class), Application in Bioinformatics (ENG BE 561 may substitute for this class), Biological Database Systems, Computational Genomics I, Computational Genomics II, Bioinformatics Graduate Seminar, Molecular Biology I, Biotechnology Law and Ethics. | Applicants do not need to submit GRE scores and must also take the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language). Candidates must hold a bachelor degree from an accredited institution. Because of the broad focus of this program, there are no specific undergraduate concentration requirements except that the student must have completed some study in both the humanities and the social sciences. Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Tests are required of all applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | This program is a collaborative, interdisciplinary approach focuses on biotechnology, molecular bioengineering, neural engineering, biophotonics, nanotechnology, and sub cellular and systems biomechanics. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Students in the MS program must take at least seven structured courses: BE 505 (Molecular Bioengineering I) or BE 706 (Quantitative Physiology for Engineers), One graduate- level Math elective, Two graduate-level BME courses, Three technical electives (at least two at the graduate level). MS students must also take 8 credits of research, and successfully propose and defend an original MS thesis. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering, 44 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2805 | The department of biomedical engineering founded in 1966, was among the first to offer a bachelor’s degree in the discipline. Today, the department offers a full suite of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees, and is rated among the top 10 in the nation by US News and World Report. With 32 full-time faculty, the Biomedical Engineering Department at Boston University is among the largest in the country. Research and teaching primarily focus on applying engineering, computational, and analytical techniques to biological systems from the nanoscale level of DNA to the macroscopic level of organ systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Broadcast Journalism | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | This program designed to produce graduates trained to analyze and explain the complex events of times as well as raise journalistic standards in all media. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Department of Journalism, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3484 | The department of biomedical engineering founded in 1966, was among the first to offer a bachelor’s degree in the discipline. Today, the department offers a full suite of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees, and is rated among the top 10 in the nation by US News and World Report. With 32 full-time faculty, the Biomedical Engineering Department at Boston University is among the largest in the country. Research and teaching primarily focus on applying engineering, computational, and analytical techniques to biological systems from the nanoscale level of DNA to the macroscopic level of organ systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Military Programs | This program emphasizes the basic tools and disciplines common in all administrative and managerial contexts, providing students with solid academic training in the general skills of management. The program complements the specialized professional skills that students may have acquired through formal education or work experience. | Students must demonstrate proficiency in the basic areas of computer spreadsheet, database, and word processing applications. This may be evidenced by previous coursework or demonstrated in a waiver examination. Students who cannot demonstrate such computer proficiency will be required to take MET AD 500 Computers for Management. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core Courses are as follows: Financial and Managerial Accounting (MET AC 630), IT Strategy and Management (MET CS 782), Financial Management (MET FI 741), Economics for Management (MET ME 759), Marketing Management (MET MK 743), Human Behavior in Organizations (MET OB 734), Statistical Analysis (MET OM 735), Operations Management (MET OM 745). | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Military Programs | Metropolitan College, Department of Military Programs, 755 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 6000 | The department of biomedical engineering founded in 1966, was among the first to offer a bachelor’s degree in the discipline. Today, the department offers a full suite of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees, and is rated among the top 10 in the nation by US News and World Report. With 32 full-time faculty, the Biomedical Engineering Department at Boston University is among the largest in the country. Research and teaching primarily focus on applying engineering, computational, and analytical techniques to biological systems from the nanoscale level of DNA to the macroscopic level of organ systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Business and Economics Journalism | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | This program designed to produce graduates trained to analyze and explain the complex events of times as well as raise journalistic standards in all media. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Department of Journalism, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3484 | The department of biomedical engineering founded in 1966, was among the first to offer a bachelor’s degree in the discipline. Today, the department offers a full suite of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees, and is rated among the top 10 in the nation by US News and World Report. With 32 full-time faculty, the Biomedical Engineering Department at Boston University is among the largest in the country. Research and teaching primarily focus on applying engineering, computational, and analytical techniques to biological systems from the nanoscale level of DNA to the macroscopic level of organ systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science | This program is designed for students who wish to combine technical competence in information systems with knowledge of managerial and organizational issues. The program prepares students for careers as security analysts, system analysts, and information system leaders. Students may pursue a Concentration in Security, which provides in-depth knowledge of emerging security threats and solutions to prepare technical leaders to identify, develop, and implement highly secure networks that support organizational goals. | Students must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. In addition, applicants must complete the prerequisites listed below or demonstrate an equivalent level of proficiency through prior college-level courses or a waiver examination. Students are advised to discuss their background with the graduate student advisor in order to determine the best sequence of courses. Students without programming experience must complete: MET CS 201 Introduction to Computer Science with C++, MET CS 331 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming with C++, Students who have prior programming experience must complete: MET CS 231 Introduction to Computer Science Programmers with C++ or MET CS 232 Introduction to Computer Science with Java. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core Curriculum required 20 credits: MET CS 534 Quantitative Methods for Information Systems, MET CS 669 Database Systems for Business, MET CS 682 Information Systems Analysis and Design, MET CS 782 IT Strategy and Management, MET TC 625 Business Data Communications and Networks. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science, 808 Commonwealth Avenue Room 250, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2566 | This department give an immersion in both the latest technologies and the ideas that drive them. By combining theory and technical skills in education at MET, students will find can more easily stay on top of new technology and remain more competitive. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Database Management and Business Intelligence Concentration | Distance / Online | Variable | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program is designed for working professionals who seek to advance their careers in the IT field. The MSCIS offers a unique opportunity to gain expertise and career advancement in either of the concentrations they study. They will learn from expert faculty who are also industry leaders at work building networks, developing applications, and fighting cyber terrorism for the world’s top companies. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Program modules includes the following core courses - MET CS 534 Quantitative Methods for Information Systems, MET CS 625 Business Data Communication Networks, MET CS 669 Database Design and Implementation for Business, MET CS 682 Information Systems Analysis and Design, MET CS 782 IT Strategy and Management. Concentration courses: MET CS 674 Database Security, MET CS 699 Data Mining and Business Intelligence and MET CS 779 Advanced Database Management. Select one elective from the following: MET CS 601 Web Application Development, MET CS 632 IT Project Management, MET CS 684 IT Security Policies and Procedures, MET CS 693 Digital Forensics and Investigations and MET CS 695 Enterprise Information Security. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | This department give an immersion in both the latest technologies and the ideas that drive them. By combining theory and technical skills in education at MET, students will find can more easily stay on top of new technology and remain more competitive. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - IT Project Management Concentration | Distance / Online | Variable | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program is designed for working professionals who seek to advance their careers in the IT field. The MSCIS offers a unique opportunity to gain expertise and career advancement in either of the concentrations they study. They will learn from expert faculty who are also industry leaders at work building networks, developing applications, and fighting cyber terrorism for the world’s top companies. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | Boston University | Program modules covered are: Core courses - MET CS 534 Quantitative Methods for Information Systems, MET CS 625 Business Data Communication Networks, MET CS 669 Database Design and Implementation for Business, MET CS 682 Information Systems Analysis and Design, MET CS 782 IT Strategy and Management. Concentration courses: MET CS 632 IT Project Management, MET CS 633 Distributed Software Development and Management and MET CS 679 Architecture and Design of Multi-Tiered Systems. Select one elective from the following: MET CS 601 Web Application Development, MET CS 674 Database Security, MET CS 684 IT Security Policies and Procedures, MET CS 693 Digital Forensics and Investigations, MET CS 695 Enterprise Information Security, MET CS 699 Data Mining and Business Intelligence and MET CS 779 Advanced Database Management. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | This department give an immersion in both the latest technologies and the ideas that drive them. By combining theory and technical skills in education at MET, students will find can more easily stay on top of new technology and remain more competitive. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Security Concentration | Distance / Online | Variable | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This program is designed for working professionals who seek to advance their careers in the IT field. The MSCIS offers a unique opportunity to gain expertise and career advancement in either of the concentrations they study. They will learn from expert faculty who are also industry leaders at work building networks, developing applications, and fighting cyber terrorism for the world’s top companies. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Program modules include the following core courses - MET CS 534 Quantitative Methods for Information Systems, MET CS 625 Business Data Communication Networks, MET CS 669 Database Design and Implementation for Business, MET CS 682 Information Systems Analysis and Design, MET CS 782 IT Strategy and Management. Concentration courses: MET CS 684 IT Security Policies and Procedures and MET CS 695 Enterprise Information Security. Select one or two electives from the following: MET CS 674 Database Security, MET CS 693 Digital Forensics and Investigations, MET CS 601 Web Application Development, MET CS 632 IT Project Management, MET CS 633 Distributed Software Development and Management, MET CS 699 Data Mining and Business Intelligence and MET CS 779 Advanced Database Management. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | This department give an immersion in both the latest technologies and the ideas that drive them. By combining theory and technical skills in education at MET, students will find can more easily stay on top of new technology and remain more competitive. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science | This program is intended for computer professionals and students who wish to move into the computer field from other areas of study. The computer science master degree program prepares students for careers as information security specialists, software engineers, and software system leaders. Students may pursue a Concentration in Security, which provides in-depth knowledge of emerging security threats and solutions to prepare technical leaders to identify, develop, and implement highly secure networks that support organizational goals. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core Curriculum required 20 credits: MET TC 535 Data Communications and Computer Networks or MET CS 579 Database Management, MET CS 566 Analysis of Algorithms, MET CS 572 Computer Organization or MET CS 575 Operating Systems, MET CS 662 Computer Language Theory, MET CS 673 Software Engineering. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science, 808 Commonwealth Avenue Room 250, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2566 | This department give an immersion in both the latest technologies and the ideas that drive them. By combining theory and technical skills in education at MET, students will find can more easily stay on top of new technology and remain more competitive. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Computer Systems Engineering - Project | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program develops students understanding of the scientific and mathematical basis of critical technologies and prepare them for the application of sophisticated analysis and design methods to solve a broad range of problems. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Computer Systems Engineering - Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program develops students understanding of the scientific and mathematical basis of critical technologies and prepare them for the application of sophisticated analysis and design methods to solve a broad range of problems. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules contain ENG EK 501 Mathematical Methods I: Linear Algebra and Complex Analysis, ENG EK 502 Mathematical Methods II: Differential Equations and Numerical Algorithms, ENG EK 514 Computational Methods for Continuum Problems, ENG EK 521 Parallel Computation for Engineering, ENG EC 500 Special Topics in Electrical and Computer Engineering, ENG EC 501/AM 501 State Space Control, ENG EC 504 Advanced Data Structures, ENG EC 505 Stochastic Processes, ENG EC 541 Computer Communication Networks, ENG EC 544/MN 544 Networking the Physical World and ENG EC 551 Advanced Digital Design with Verilog and FPGA. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dental Public Health (for Dental Auxiliaries) | Full Time | 2 Semester(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | This program is designed for hygienists and dental assistants to develop and enhance the managerial and analytical skills essential to attain leadership roles in today's changing dental health care field. Career-oriented applications of knowledge, theory, and experience are an integral part of the courses in biostatistics and epidemiology, research methods, management, dental care issues, and health care management and finance. Because learning by experience teaches additional skills important in career settings, a project or practicum of the student's choice is a significant part of the program. Projects may include survey design and analysis; educational program development; community program planning, implementation, and/or evaluation; media development; and marketing/public relations. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. Applicants must hold a certificate in dental hygiene, dental assisting, or dental technology and should have either a bachelor degree or equivalent education and related experience. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Dental Public Health (for Dentists) | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | This program provides the student with broad knowledge and practical experience in epidemiology and biostatistics, health care delivery, social and cultural determinants of health behavior, preventive dentistry, and health education. Students have the opportunity to conduct research and are encouraged to publish papers in professional journals. The program prepares the dentist for a career in dental public health. It is designed to meet the educational requirements of the American Board of Dental Public Health. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Health Policy and Health Services Research, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Endodontics | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Endodontics | This program is designed to meet the formal educational standards of the American Dental Association Commission on Dental Accreditation and prepare the resident for successful completion of board certification by the American Board of Endodontics. This program is a three-year program in which a Master of Science in Dentistry degree is combined with a CAGS (Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study in Endodontics) in endodontics. During the first year of the program, the student partakes in a research project, while during the second and third years, the student participates in the CAGS program and completes his/her research project and master's thesis. Completion of the MSD is required for granting of the CAGS. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Endodontics | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Endodontics, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Operative Dentistry | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | This program offers advanced education in the conceptual, biological, and practical components of operative dentistry. Specifically intended for students pursuing teaching careers, the program includes training in basic sciences, biomaterials, lecture presentation, research methods, and the clinical aspects of restorative dentistry. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology | This program teaches oral pathology at every level, from hygienist, dental student, postdoctoral trainees, generalists, and specialists in medicine and dentistry who are seeking continuing education. This program is the specialty of dentistry and pathology that deals with the nature, identification, and management of diseases affecting the oral and maxillofacial regions. It is a science that investigates the causes, processes, and effects of these diseases. The practice of oral pathology includes research, diagnosis of diseases using clinical, radiographic, microscopic, biochemical or other examinations, and management of patients. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules includes GMS PA 500 Introduction to Pathology and Pathophysiology of Disease 4 cr, 2nd sem.SDM PA 803 Histology Review 4cr, 1st sem, SDM PA 811, 812 Microscopic Interpretation 4cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM OS 831 Head and Neck Anatomy 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM OB 763 Basic Processes in Oral Biology 4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PA 805, 806 Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology Literature Review 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PA 881, 882 Diagnostic Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology 6 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PH 803 Biostatistics 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PH 831 Presentation Skills 2 cr, 2nd sem. In Year 2 Students rotate through Mallory Institute of Pathology for General Surgical Pathology, Autopsy Pathology, Cytology and Clinical Pathology SDM PA 883, 884 Diagnostic Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology 6 cr, 1st and 2nd sem. In Year 3 GMS MM 703 Cancer Biology 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM OD 801 Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PA 813, 814 Microscopic Interpretation 4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PA 815, 816 Clinical/Radiographic/Microscopic Sessions 4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PA 885, 886 Diagnostic Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology 6 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PA 809, 810 Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology Literature Review 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PA 801 Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology 2 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PH 763 Bioethics and Law 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OB 761 Oral Microbiology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OB 767 Oral Immunology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PE 827 Applied Pharmacology 1 cr, 2nd sem. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | This program offers an integrated curriculum of clinical training, basic science study, and research, all within the hospital environment. The program is designed to provide the resident with sufficient didactic and clinical education to meet the requirements of the American Board of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and to become a proficient practitioner. All residents are extremely well prepared for careers in clinical practice, both in academic and private practice settings. Residents are encouraged to develop skills in teaching and clinical research in preparation for an academic career. This program requires a minimum of one year in addition to the time commitment for the Certificate in Advanced Graduate Study in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and entails a research project, thesis, and thesis defense. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | This program is to educate competent individuals to initially practice orthodontics and dentofacial orthopedics. The intent of the program is to educate students to become competent clinicians who can successfully analyze and treat dentofacial deformities. Emphasis is placed on craniofacial growth and development, cephalometrics, biomechanics, occlusion, and neuromuscular physiology. The program provides the formal educational requirements for the examinations of the American Board of Orthodontics. This program requires a minimum of one year in addition to the time commitment for the Certificate for Advanced Graduate Study in Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics and entails a research project, thesis, and thesis defense. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules includes in 1st year: SDM OR 803 Craniofacial Growth and Development 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.SDM OR 805 Orthodontic Seminar I overall 20 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, OR 805.1 Orthodontic Orientation (4 cr, 1st sem.) OR 805.2 Biomechanics (2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.) OR 805.3 Diagnosis and Treatment Planning (4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.) OR 805.4 Scope of Orthodontics (5 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.) OR 805.5 Literature Review (4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.) OR 805.6 Review ABO Reading List (1 cr, 2nd sem.) SDM OR 820 Orthodontic Documentation 1 cr, 1st and 4th sem, SDM OR 822 Surgical Orthodontics 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM OR 900 Histopathology of Tooth Movement 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM OR 911 Orthodontic Clinical Practice 15 cr, 1st and 2nd sem. Year 2: SDM OR 821 Orthodontic Seminar II overall 8 cr, 3rd and 4th sem OR 821.1 Case Review (4 cr, 3rd and 4th sem.) OR 821.2 Practice Alternatives After Graduation (1 cr, 3rd sem.) OR 821.3 Practice Management (1 cr, 4th sem.) OR 821.4 Non-Bracket Therapy (1 cr, 3rd and 4 the sem.) OR 821.5 Review ABO Reading List (1 cr, 4th sem.) SDM OR 912 Orthodontic Clinical Practice 17 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM OR 920 Literature Review 6 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM OR 990 Research: Orthodontics 2 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM OS 866 Orthographic Surgery 1 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PE 817 Seminar: Grand Rounds 2 cr, 3rd and 4th sem. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Pediatric Dentistry | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry | The objective of this program is to prepare dentists to become specialists who are proficient in providing both primary and comprehensive preventive and therapeutic oral health care to infants and children through adolescence, including children with special health care needs. In addition, the curriculum is designed to prepare students wishing to pursue a career in research or teaching in pediatric dentistry. This program requires a minimum of one year in addition to the time commitment for the CAGS(Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study in Pediatric Dentistry) in pediatric dentistry and entails a research project, thesis, and thesis defense. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules consists of Year 1: SDM OB 761 Oral Microbiology 1 cr, 2nd sem, SDM OB 830 Research Writing 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM OS 831 Head and Neck Anatomy 1 cr, 1st sem, SDM PH 763 Bioethics and the Law .5 cr, 2nd sem, SDM PH 803 Biostatistics 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PA 801 Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology 2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PD 802 Fundamentals of Pediatric Dentistry 3 cr, 1st sem, SDM PD 822 Advanced Seminar in Pediatric Dentistry 4 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PD 832 Growth and Development 1/2 cr, 1st sem, SDM PD 911 Clinical Pediatric Dentistry 10 cr, 1st and 2nd sem, SDM PD 918 Clinical Anesthesia 1 cr, 1st or 2nd sem, SDM PD 922 Clinical Oral Surgery 1 cr, 1st or 2nd sem, SDM PD 981 Research in Pediatric Dentistry 2 cr, 1st and 2nd sem. Year 2: SDM PD 808 Orthodontics for Pediatric Dentists 1 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 824 Advanced Case Presentations in Pediatric Dentistry 4 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 823 Advanced Seminar in Pediatric Dentistry 4 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 982 Research in Pediatric Dentistry 2 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 912 Clinical Pediatric Dentistry 10 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 916 Clinical Orthodontics 4 cr, 3rd and 4th sem, SDM PD 920 Clinical Pediatric Medicine 1 cr, 3rd or 4th semester. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Periodontology | Full Time | Variable | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | This program is primarily devoted to the pursuit of the research project of the Master's degree and emphasizes the sciences essential to understanding the principles of clinical periodontology. This program include the basic didactic courses. These include clinical medical sciences, microbiology/immunology, periodontology, principles of occlusion, orthodontics, oral medicine, oral pathology, and oral biology. In addition, there is a 50% time commitment to the clinical practice of periodontics. This program is designed to meet the formal educational requirements of the American Academy of Periodontology and the American Dental Association. This degree entails a research project and thesis and is an integral component of the 36-month program for qualified students. Depending on the time needed to complete the research component, additional time beyond the 36 months may be necessary for successful completion of the MSD degree. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Dentistry in Prosthodontics | Full Time | Variable | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | This program provides the candidate with clinical proficiency and comprehensive knowledge of the diagnosis, treatment planning, rehabilitation, and maintenance of oral function, comfort, appearance ,and health of patients with missing/damaged teeth and orofacial defects by using biocompatible artificial substitutes. Emphasis is placed on the periodontal integrity of the patient and the supportive therapy of all other disciplines in achieving total patient care. This integration is achieved through interdisciplinary seminars with the other specialties and through coordinated treatment planning. The intensive and systematized library reading assignments and literature review seminars are an important aspect of the curriculum. They are designed to acquaint the resident with the principal facets of the prosthodontic specialty, evidence-based health care, and methods of critically reviewing the dental literature. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Electrical Engineering - Project | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program develop students understanding of the scientific and mathematical basis of critical technologies and prepare them for the application of sophisticated analysis and design methods to solve a broad range of problems. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Electrical Engineering - Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program develop students understanding of the scientific and mathematical basis of critical technologies and prepare them for the application of sophisticated analysis and design methods to solve a broad range of problems. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules contain ENG EC 560 Introduction to Photonics, ENG EC 561 Error-Control Codes, ENG EC 563 Fiber-Optic Communication Systems, ENG EC 565 Electromagnetic Energy Transmission, ENG EC 566 The Atmosphere and Space Environment, ENG EC 568 Optical Fiber Sensors, ENG EC 569 Introduction to Subsurface Imaging, ENG EC 570 Lasers, ENG EC 571 VLSI Principles and Applications, ENG EC 572 VLSI Design Project, ENG EC 574 Physics of Semiconductor Materials, ENG EC 575 Semiconductor Devices, ENG EC 578 Fabrication Technology for Integrated Circuits, ENG EC 579/MN 579 Microelectronic Device Manufacturing, ENG EC 580 Modern Active Circuit Design and ENG EC 582 RF/Analog IC Design Fundamentals. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Health Communication | Distance / Online | 2 Year(s) | $721 per credit hour | Office of Admissions | This multi-disciplinary curriculum focuses on how to implement effective communication campaigns; analysis of health care issues in order to provide valuable information to the media, the public, and other critical stakeholders; understanding of biosystems and disease, nutrition and public health, the American health care system, and epidemiology; leadership skills in the emerging fields of health care marketing, public relations, health literacy, crisis management, and social marketing. | Applicants to the program must have a bachelor’s degree, and are required to submit official transcripts of previous academic work and three letters of recommendation. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Program modules covered are: MET CM 701 Contemporary Public Relations 4 cr, MET CM 719 Interactive Marketing Communications 4 cr, MET CM 734 Contemporary Health Care Marketing 4 cr, MET CM 743 Media Relations 4 cr, MET CM 750 The American Health Care System for Health Communicators 4 cr, MET CM 751 Introduction to Epidemiology for Health Communicators 4 cr, MET CM 752 The Biology of Disease 4 cr, MET CM 753 Nutrition and Health for Communicators 4 cr, MET CM 754 Ethical Issues in Medicine and Public Health Communication 4 cr and MET CM 781 Health Communication. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Management | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Brussels | This program prepares general managers to integrate diverse concepts in policy analysis and strategy development into the international business arena. Offered in a cosmopolitan environment, the Boston University M.S.M. provides a truly unique global perspective. | Students must demonstrate proficient mathematical skills for management. International students are also required to demonstrate fluent written and oral English skills. Prerequisites can only be satisfied by obtaining a C grade or better in the prerequisite course or by passing the waiver exams. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Core Courses 8 courses/32 required credits: MET AC 630B Financial and Managerial Accounting, MET AD 749B International Economics (M/F), MET AD 764B Multinational Tactics, Strategy, Positioning, MET TM 648B Introduction to Electronic Commerce Systems and web Design, MET FI 631B Financial Analysis, MET MK 743B Marketing Management, MET MG 742B Data Analysis and Operations Management, MET MG 743B Managing Employees, Professionals and Teams. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Brussels | Metropolitan College, Department of Brussels, Boulevard du Triomphe 174, B-1160 Brussels Belgium, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 322 640 7474 | This department provides the ideal international environment for exposure to world commerce and the complex global marketplace. Taught by quality industry experts, classes are small and interactive, and grounded in the American approach to education—featuring a hands-on, pragmatic, and interdisciplinary style of learning. At the center of it all is Brussels, a world-class city home to hundreds of multinational corporations and international organizations. As a student at Boston University in Brussels, students have all of Europe at doorstep—and top quality education in everyone pocket. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Manufacturing Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | This program provides in-depth knowledge for making manufacturing innovations in the areas of information processing, materials, devices, systems, process control and management science. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Manufacturing Engineering, 15 Saint Marys Street, Boston University, BROOKLINE, Massachusetts, 02446, +1 617 353 2842 | The Department of Manufacturing Engineering (MFG) at Boston University is a truly interdisciplinary enterprise. It was the first manufacturing engineering program in the United States and remains in the top tier of academic programs in this field. Teaching and research focus on engineering design, manufacturing processes and materials, and the management and control of man-made systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Mass Communication - Applied Communication Research Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program is designed for students who want to obtain a background in general communication skills while concentrating in one of two areas: applied communication research or communication studies. These concentrations prepare students either for a variety of positions in media-related professions or for further advanced study. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for programs in the College of Business. Students who have studied at an NON-English speaking school must take the TOEFL and not the GRE. TOEFL test breakdown: Paper TOEFL (PBT) -- minimum score 600, Computer based TOEFL -- minimum score 250. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Courses are: COM CM 508 Video Production for Advertising and Public Relations, COM CM 509 Principles of Persuasion, COM CM 511 Persuasive Public Speaking (COM CM 714), COM CM 514 New Communication Technologies, COM CM 523 Designing Interactive Communication (COM CM 716), COM CM 534 Communication Strategies in Negotiation and Conflict Resolution, COM CM 555 Advanced Promotional Writing (COM CM 707), COM CM 701 Principles and Practices of Public Relations, COM CM 706 Organizational Communication, COM CM 708 Principles and Practices of Advertising, COM CM 716 Computers in Communication, COM CM 719 Interactive Marketing Communication (COM CM 708 or CM 730), COM CM 730 Marketing Communication COM CM 809 Graduate Internship | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Mass Communication - Communication Studies Concentration | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program is recommended for those who wish to develop their command of general communication strategies and skills - written, oral, and computer-mediated - but who do not want to prepare specifically for the fields of advertising, public relations, or applied research. General communication strategies and skills are applicable to a variety of professional roles in a number of settings. Individuals who are proficient in these strategies and skills serve as managers in various kinds of organizations, such as nonprofit groups, government agencies, publishing houses, and other commercial, educational, or industrial settings. The concentration also provides a suitable background for those who wish to go on for a more advanced degree in communication. For those wishing a strong foundation in computer-mediated communication, selections from the last four courses listed below are especially recommended. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for programs in the College of Business. Students who have studied at an NON-English speaking school must take the TOEFL and not the GRE. TOEFL test breakdown: Paper TOEFL (PBT) -- minimum score 600, Computer based TOEFL -- minimum score 250. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering - Non Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | This program provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace engineering. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 2814 | The Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) at Boston University provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace and mechanical engineering. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering - Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | This program provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace engineering. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617353 2814 | The Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) at Boston University provides students with a strong grounding in fundamental aspects of the discipline while providing ample exposure to interdisciplinary frontiers in nanotechnology, mechatronic systems and intelligent machines, and biomedical applications involving ultrasonic imaging, lithotripsy (therapeutic use of high-energy sound waves), distraction osteogenesis (programmed bone growth), and robotic surgery. Students learn the foundations and the most advanced technologies in both aerospace and mechanical engineering. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Nutrition and Dietetic Internship | Full Time | 2 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | This program prepares students to critically evaluate and implement the results of current research, solve problems, and communicate effectively. Students study with faculty involved in research, education, administration, professional practice, communication, and consulting. As part of their program, students develop a research proposal in an area of their choice and complete an individually designed practicum. | Applicants are required to complete a baccalaureate degree with a minimum grade point average of 3.0. All applicants must complete the Graduate Record Exam General Test with a minimum score of 1000 on the combined verbal and quantitative sections (institutional code 3028). Prerequisite courses in nutrition and the biological and chemical sciences must be completed at a four year college or university. In general, credits from community colleges are not accepted. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Health Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Health Sciences at Boston University is committed to excellence in research and teaching. This department provide the solid training that leads to a competitive edge in careers in health professions and biomedical research. The department is located in Sargent College on the Charles River Campus of Boston University and offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels in 3 areas: Physiology, Nutrition and Health Science. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Occupational Theory | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | This program is designed for students who have earned a baccalaureate degree in another area of study and wish to become qualified as an occupational therapist. Students are prepared to be excellent practitioners and leaders who can apply occupational therapy knowledge and expertise to improve the health and well-being of others in a wide variety of settings. | Candidates must achieve a cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0. No grade below C is acceptable for credit. Students may not repeat more than 2 required courses in the professional program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling at Boston University Sargent College is dedicated to promoting the health, well-being, and quality of life of persons experiencing disabilities. Students in the occupational therapy and rehabilitation counseling programs receive outstanding preparation for roles in both traditional settings and newly emerging areas of need. Sargent College’s distinctive interdisciplinary, evidence-based approach combines challenging coursework, custom-tailored clinical placements, and the opportunity to collaborate with faculty who are leaders in their fields. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Occupational Therapy | Distance / Online | 22 Month(s) | Contact provider | Office of Admissions | This program allows students to earn their Master of Science degree without disrupting their careers or relocating their families. The mission of the post-professional Master of Science program is to increase practitioners' ability to use current theory, research, and knowledge of health and social service systems to guide clinical practice, and thus to prepare them to develop innovative and effective intervention and service programs. This program enables applicants to meet these objectives by building on the knowledge and skills acquired in their BS-level professional program and during clinical practice. Courses require students to use this foundation to develop more advanced critical thinking and problem-solving skills to support their role as effective practitioners. | This program is open to graduates from any ACOTE accredited entry-level occupational therapy program, or (for International applicants) graduates of a WFOT approved program. Graduates of US programs must have passed the NBCOT certification examination. International applicants must have met all requirements for practice in their own country and must have graduated from an accredited (or WFOT-approved) occupational therapy program. International applicants must provide documentation that they are eligible to practice as an occupational therapist in their home country. They should also have a 3.0 GPA in the master's level degree program with no grade below a C. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Program modules are: OT617: Contemporary Trends in Occupational Therapy Practice, OT618: Directed Study in EBP, HP720: Educational Theory and Practice, HP561: Evidence-based Practice, HP650: Healthcare Management, OT610: Health Promotion and Wellness, OT900: Scholarly Paper I, OT901: Scholarly Paper II, OT615: Practicum in Education, OT616: Practicum in Healthcare Management and OT905: Seminar on Practice Leadership. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | ||||||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Photonics Engineering - Project | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program focuses on Signal Processing and Communications; Systems and Control; Solid State Circuits, Devices, and Materials; Electromagnetic and Photonics; Software; Hardware and Architecture; and Computer Communications and Networks. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Photonics Engineering - Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program focuses on Signal Processing and Communications; Systems and Control; Solid State Circuits, Devices, and Materials; Electromagnetic and Photonics; Software; Hardware and Architecture; and Computer Communications and Networks. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for this program. A GRE score is valid for six years. Either an IELTS or TOEFL score is required of all applicants whose native language is not English unless they have been studying in an English-speaking country for a minimum of two years; An IELTS score of 6.0 or higher or a TOEFL score of 550 or higher on the written exam or 213 or higher on the computer-based exam is required to be considered for admission. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The modules contain ENG EC 560 Introduction to Photonics, ENG EC 561 Error-Control Codes, ENG EC 563 Fiber-Optic Communication Systems, ENG EC 565 Electromagnetic Energy Transmission, ENG EC 566 The Atmosphere and Space Environment, ENG EC 568 Optical Fib. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 48 Cummington Street Second Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Print Journalism | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | This program designed to produce graduates trained to analyze and explain the complex events of times as well as raise journalistic standards in all media. This program candidates will declare and register their intended concentration area, choosing from one of the following: general Assignment Reporting, Political Reporting nternational Reporting, Sports Reporting, Magazine Journalism. |
Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Department of Journalism, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3484 | The Department of Systems Engineering founded in 1970. The Department rapidly embraced the emerging field of computer engineering and became the Department of Systems and Computer Engineering (SC) in 1976. As its scope broadened further over the years, it became the Department of Electrical, Computers, and Systems Engineering (ECS) in 1981. Interest in the undergraduate Systems program subsequently declined, and the name of the Department was changed again in 1996 to the current name, ECE (A Ph.D. degree in systems is currently offered at the College level). The Department grew substantially in the mid 1980s under the leadership of Dean Louis Padulo, and as undergraduate enrollment soared, the size of the faculty doubled, from 16 to 32, in 5 years. This period also witnessed the creation of a popular corporate classroom program, which reached a peak enrollment of more than 700 and lasted for a decade. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | This program is developed to recognize that in today society, public relations professionals are employed in a wide variety of settings in business, government, and nonprofit organizations. The goal of the curriculum is to educate students for careers in communication-based activities in such organizations. Students are prepared not just for entry-level positions, but for advancement in their selected fields. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) are required for all students applying for programs in the College of Business. Students who have studied at an NON-English speaking school must take the TOEFL and not the GRE. TOEFL test breakdown: aper TOEFL (PBT) -- minimum score 600, Computer based TOEFL -- minimum score 250. |
Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations | College of Communication, Department of Mass Communication, Advertising and Public Relations, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3482 | The Department of Mass Communication, Advertising, and Public Relations offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Communication. Within that degree program, students can select a concentration in advertising, public relations, or communication studies. The curricula in advertising and in public relations prepare students for careers in those fields, and the communication studies option provides a foundation for roles as professional communicators in other fields or for further education at a more advanced level. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Rehabilitation Counseling | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | This program is dedicated to promoting the health, well-being, and quality of life of persons experiencing disabilities. Students in the occupational therapy and rehabilitation counseling programs receive outstanding preparation for roles in both traditional settings and newly emerging areas of need. Sargent College’s distinctive interdisciplinary, evidence-based approach combines challenging coursework, custom-tailored clinical placements, and the opportunity to collaborate with faculty who are leaders in their fields. This department currently not accepting students into the Master of Science in Rehabilitation Counseling program pending curricular revisions. | Candidates should have a baccalaureate degree or its equivalent is required for admission and scores from the aptitude test of the Graduate Record Examination . | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling at Boston University Sargent College is dedicated to promoting the health, well-being, and quality of life of persons experiencing disabilities. Students in the occupational therapy and rehabilitation counseling programs receive outstanding preparation for roles in both traditional settings and newly emerging areas of need. Sargent College’s distinctive interdisciplinary, evidence-based approach combines challenging coursework, custom-tailored clinical placements, and the opportunity to collaborate with faculty who are leaders in their fields. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Science Journalism | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | This program designed to produce graduates trained to analyze and explain the complex events of times as well as raise journalistic standards in all media. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Department of Journalism, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3484 | The Department of Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation Counseling at Boston University Sargent College is dedicated to promoting the health, well-being, and quality of life of persons experiencing disabilities. Students in the occupational therapy and rehabilitation counseling programs receive outstanding preparation for roles in both traditional settings and newly emerging areas of need. Sargent College’s distinctive interdisciplinary, evidence-based approach combines challenging coursework, custom-tailored clinical placements, and the opportunity to collaborate with faculty who are leaders in their fields. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Speech Language Pathology | Full Time | 4 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | This program will: Demonstrate knowledge in the basic sciences and normal processes related to communication, cognition, and swallowing, Demonstrate an understanding and appreciation of scientific inquiry, Uphold ethical standards while engaging in clinical and research activities, Demonstrate accurate and concise oral and written communication skills, Demonstrate critical thinking and self-evaluation skills, identify, diagnose, intervene, and counsel individuals with communication and swallowing difficulties across the life span and from different cultural and linguistic backgrounds, provide clinical services effectively in education, clinical and medical settings and demonstrate an understanding of contemporary professional issues. | Candidates should have a Bachelor Degree, Evidence of academic and clinical aptitude in the form of previous academic records, aptitude scores on the Graduate Record Examination (institution code 3028), and at least three letters of reference from individuals familiar with the applicant's academic ability. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3188 | At Boston University Sargent College, the study of human communication disorders combines an understanding and appreciation of scientific inquiry with a strong foundation in the basic sciences and the normal processes related to communication, swallowing, and cognition. The Boston University Conference on Language Development (BUCLD) was started in 1976 by students in the Applied Psycholinguistics Program. Last year the 32nd annual BUCLD took place on November 2-4, 2007. The Conference, which has become one of the best known conferences on language development in the world, is now run by students in the Program in Applied Linguistics, under the guidance of a faculty adviser. The Conference involves year-round planning and draws over 500 people from all over the U.S. and around the world. It includes presentations in such areas as theoretical approaches to language acquisition, cross-cultural language development, second language development, language disorders, and literacy development. Each year, close to 500 abstracts are submitted to the conference, from which about 87 papers and 66 posters are chosen for presentation. Internationally renowned researchers also give keynote and plenary addresses, as well as a lunch symposium on a topic of current interest. The Conference is funded largely by the money taken in each year at the Conference, including registration fees. In addition, the Conferences in 2007 through 2011 are supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. BCS 0548399 and the National Institutes of Health under Grant No. R13 HD42130-01. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Telecommunication | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science | This program integrates knowledge of the computer science, engineering, managerial, and legal aspects of telecommunication. The telecommunication degree program is designed to provide the knowledge and critical skills essential for success in this rapidly expanding field. M.S. in Telecommunication participants gain the following advantages: a solid knowledge of the basic technologies, systems, and services, the ability to compare telecommunication products and services, the ability to manage complex telecommunication projects. | Applicants should have evidence of proficiency in these areas must accompany the application to the program. If college-level credit courses are not in evidence, the department will determine what prerequisite courses must be completed in addition to the graduate degree requirements. Students claiming equivalent proficiency in the prerequisite courses from non-academic sources must take an examination to demonstrate such proficiency. A maximum of two graduate-level courses (eight credits) taken at Metropolitan College before acceptance into the program may be applied toward the degree. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Concentration Core required 20 credits: MET TC 535 Data Communications and Computer Networks, MET TC 550 Signals and Systems in Telecommunication, MET TC 635 Computer Networks: Design and Implementation, MET TC 670 Computer Science Concepts in Telecommunication, MET TC 680 Business Structure and Strategy in the Telecommunication Industry. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science | Metropolitan College, Department of Computer Science, 808 Commonwealth Avenue Room 250, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2566 | This department give an immersion in both the latest technologies and the ideas that drive them. By combining theory and technical skills in education at MET, students will find can more easily stay on top of new technology and remain more competitive. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Television | Full Time | 3 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | This program provides graduates with the knowledge and skills necessary to compete successfully in the ever-changing world of telecommunications. The television program recognizes that to enjoy productive and rewarding careers in this world, graduates must be able to meet the challenge of cultural, economic, and technological change. The curriculum is designed to give students the tools they need to seek professional careers in production, management, programming, marketing, teaching, and criticism. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3483 | The Department is divided into two programs: Film and Television. Film and television have developed as individual media with their own histories of production techniques, artistic disciplines, content, and business operations. The Department of Film and Television responds to this situation by providing flexible programs of study. Although students are required to select an area of concentration in the second semester of the sophomore year - either the film or the television program - they also have options for tailoring a major that fits their interests and career goals. Students may vary the number of courses in hands-on production, critical studies, and management-related courses. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Science in Television Management | Full Time | 3 Semester(s) | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | This program is designed for those with no previous television experience. Also, customize programs for those with prior education or employment in mass communication. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television | College of Communication, Department of Film and Television, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3483 | The Department is divided into two programs: Film and Television. Film and television have developed as individual media with their own histories of production techniques, artistic disciplines, content, and business operations. The Department of Film and Television responds to this situation by providing flexible programs of study. Although students are required to select an area of concentration in the second semester of the sophomore year - either the film or the television program - they also have options for tailoring a major that fits their interests and career goals. Students may vary the number of courses in hands-on production, critical studies, and management-related courses. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Theological Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Theology | This program is designed for those who wish to prepare themselves for diaconal ministry or other public religious leadership, for further graduate work, or for personal enrichment, but for whom the professional degree (Master of Divinity) is not entirely appropriate. The program is structured so that students attain a survey knowledge of and interdisciplinary perspective on the various theological disciplines and a focused knowledge of a specific field. | Applicants must have graduated with a minimum grade point average of 3.0 from an accredited college and have a broad liberal arts background with a general knowledge of theological subjects. They should speak and write English with clarity and have some proficiency in languages. Refer to page 20 for specific application information | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Theology | School of Theology, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3050 | School of Theology now stands at the heart of the Charles River Campus, surrounded by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Mugar Memorial Library, the George Sherman Union, and Marsh Chapel. Friends and members of the United Methodist Church provided the major funding for the School seven-story modified Gothic-style building, designed in 1948. Within this main facility are administrative offices, the Oxnam Room and Hartman Room, the Jefferson-Brown Room, the Muelder Chapel, and the School of Theology Library. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Master of Urban Affairs | Full Time | Variable | $18270 per semester (additional charge of $1,142 per credit in excess of 18 credits) | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | This program is designed for students seeking a broad background in urban public policy, community development and service delivery, and the administration of public and private agencies in urban settings. Graduates are prepared for careers in which they assemble and analyze information for policy-making, identify community needs and resources, and administer effective service delivery programs. These tasks are common to public, private, and voluntary organizations in a wide variety of urban functions, such as housing, health services, economic development, transportation, and environment control. Many students obtain the Master of Urban Affairs degree in preparation for further study. | Candidates for admission to the degree program are selected on the basis of academic transcripts, academic and personal references, and interviews or statements of intent. There are no fixed application deadlines. The program allows for students to submit applications on a rolling basis. Admission decisions are announced promptly pending receipt of all application materials. Students can also register and take two courses prior to applying to the degree program. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Urban Affairs Core required 24 credits: MET UA 515 History and Theory of Urban Planning, MET UA 701 Problems and Policy Process, MET UA 702 Analytical Methods, MET UA 703 Research Methods, MET UA 704 Economic Issues and Analysis, MET UA 805 Boston Urban Symposium. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences | Metropolitan College, Department of Applied Social Sciences, 808 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3025 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Mater of Science in Photo Journalism | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | This program designed to produce graduates trained to analyze and explain the complex events of times as well as raise journalistic standards in all media. | Applicants must possess a baccalaureate from an accredited college or university and must present evidence of their qualifications for advanced study. Admissions is based on GPA, G.M.A.T., essays, recommendations, and written application; TOEFL required for international applicants. | Masters | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Communication, Department of Journalism | College of Communication, Department of Journalism, 640 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3484 | Department of Applied Social Sciences will given the training and skills necessary to begin or advance career in these exciting areas. With a degree from world-renowned Boston, students will have the credentials and foundation necessary to become a leader in chosen field. This school one of the few select institutions across the country to offer graduate programs in these vital areas. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Ph.D in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program designed for those who are preparing themselves (1) for research and writing; (2) for college or university teaching in musicology; or (3) to be executives of music firms requiring concentrated knowledge and experience of music and music research, including editing and publishing music of all periods and styles. The curriculum for this degree is structured in breadth as well as in depth and is therefore of equal value to conductors, music school administrators, and performers and pedagogues at the very highest levels of scholarship and performance. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates in all fields of specialization must possess an undergraduate degree in music or its equivalent. Students accepted for the program may be required by the faculty to take prerequisite courses if their undergraduate degree was not taken with a concentration in the field of specialization chosen at the graduate level. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Boston University, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8789 | This department offers major and minor concentrations leading to the B.A. degree; programs leading to the M.A. in music with specializations in musicology, composition, or music education; and the Ph.D. in musicology or a double concentration in musicology and music theory. Courses are offered in all areas of historical and theoretical study and research in the Western art music tradition, as well as in music theory and composition. The musicology faculty is strong in medieval, Renaissance, eighteenth-century, romantic, world music, and early twentieth-century musical studies; in the history of music theory and criticism; and in research methodology. The department is closely allied with the School of Music at BU’s College of Fine arts, from where all its faculty are drawn. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Ph.D in Music Theory | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program designed for those who are preparing themselves (1) for research and writing; (2) for college or university teaching in musicology; or (3) to be executives of music firms requiring concentrated knowledge and experience of music and music research, including editing and publishing music of all periods and styles. The curriculum for this degree is structured in breadth as well as in depth and is therefore of equal value to conductors, music school administrators, and performers and pedagogues at the very highest levels of scholarship and performance. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates in musicology or ethnomusicology must possess a master’s degree usually with a concentration in musicology or its equivalent. Deficiencies must be made up without credit. Candidates in the double concentration must possess a master’s degree with a major in musicology, music theory, or composition. Additional prerequisites may be required if deemed necessary by the faculty. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Boston University, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8789 | This department offers major and minor concentrations leading to the B.A. degree; programs leading to the M.A. in music with specializations in musicology, composition, or music education; and the Ph.D. in musicology or a double concentration in musicology and music theory. Courses are offered in all areas of historical and theoretical study and research in the Western art music tradition, as well as in music theory and composition. The musicology faculty is strong in medieval, Renaissance, eighteenth-century, romantic, world music, and early twentieth-century musical studies; in the history of music theory and criticism; and in research methodology. The department is closely allied with the School of Music at BU’s College of Fine arts, from where all its faculty are drawn. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Ph.D in Musicology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program designed for those who are preparing themselves (1) for research and writing; (2) for college or university teaching in musicology; or (3) to be executives of music firms requiring concentrated knowledge and experience of music and music research, including editing and publishing music of all periods and styles. The curriculum for this degree is structured in breadth as well as in depth and is therefore of equal value to conductors, music school administrators, and performers and pedagogues at the very highest levels of scholarship and performance. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Candidates in all fields of specialization must possess an undergraduate degree in music or its equivalent. Students accepted for the program may be required by the faculty to take prerequisite courses if their undergraduate degree was not taken with a concentration in the field of specialization chosen at the graduate level. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Boston University, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8789 | This department offers major and minor concentrations leading to the B.A. degree; programs leading to the M.A. in music with specializations in musicology, composition, or music education; and the Ph.D. in musicology or a double concentration in musicology and music theory. Courses are offered in all areas of historical and theoretical study and research in the Western art music tradition, as well as in music theory and composition. The musicology faculty is strong in medieval, Renaissance, eighteenth-century, romantic, world music, and early twentieth-century musical studies; in the history of music theory and criticism; and in research methodology. The department is closely allied with the School of Music at BU’s College of Fine arts, from where all its faculty are drawn. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Ph.D. Program in Systems Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Engineering, Division of Systems Engineering | This program provides opportunities for research in automation, control and robotics, communication and networking, computational and systems biology, information sciences, and production, service systems and supply chain management. As a cross-disciplinary program, it leverages the expertise of Engineering, Computer Science, Mathematics, and Management faculty from the College of Engineering, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the School of Management. Graduate students are expected to complete a number of interdisciplinary courses and to fulfill the qualifying examination and dissertation defense requirements of the Program. | Admission normally requires a bachelor or master degree in engineering or its equivalent in a closely related field. Applicants may be admitted to either a post bachelor or post-master PhD program depending upon interest and qualifications. Applicants who hold a bachelor degree are eligible to apply to the post bachelor PhD program and applicants who hold a master degree are eligible to apply for a post-master PhD program. All applicants are required to submit a Graduate Application Form, concise statement of personal and research goals, official transcripts of previous study, official scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (use code 3105), and at least two letters of recommendation. The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or international English Language Testing System (IELTS) is required for all applicants whose native language is not English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Engineering, Division of Systems Engineering | College of Engineering, Division of Systems Engineering, 48 Cummington Street 2nd Floor, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9760 | The Division of Systems Engineering at Boston University is home to world-class award-winning faculty, high-achieving students, and research activities at the cutting edge of areas such as sensor networks, cooperative control, robotics, intelligent simulation, systems biology, and manufacturing systems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Ph.D. in English and American Literature | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in specialization in a particular area of study. | Candidates must hold a master degree from an accredited institution. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Boston University, 236 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2506 | This department offers B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. programs led by prominent literary scholars working in every period of English and American literature. The department’s Creative Writing Program, with a world-renowned faculty, has produced winners of all the major awards in poetry and fiction. The department publishes Studies in Romanticism, the leading journal on the Romantic movement, and AGNI, an important literary journal. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Anatomy and Neurobiology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology | This program is designed to produce well-rounded biomedical scientists who expect to include teaching and research in their career portfolio. This program includes courses in Anatomy and Neuroscience within the Medical School curriculum as well as a number of advanced courses within this department and related departments at the Medical School. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology | School of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, 715 Albany Street L-1004, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4200 | This school was formed in 1873 when Boston University merged with the New England Female Medical College, becoming the first coeducational medical school. The New England Female Medical College, founded in 1848, was the first institution to medically train women and graduated the first black woman physician. Throughout our history we have maintained a strong commitment to the study and practice of medicine in the context of a mission of service to society. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program is designed to provide a relatively broad background in the field with a primary emphasis on socio-cultural anthropology. Major foci are in history and anthropology, symbolic systems, economic anthropology, medical anthropology, complex societies and development. Geographic strengths are greatest in African, Middle Eastern, and Asian studies. | Applicants should have obtained the B.A. or M.A. degree in anthropology or show evidence of equivalent preparation in social science subjects. The Department also requires an official record of the results of the Graduate Record Examination General Test. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2195 | This department offers rigorous training in social and cultural theory and commitment to an anthropology capable of engaging the modern world. This departmentfocus on four interrelated topics: the culture, politics and economics of development; the anthropological study of history; the psycho cultural relationship between individual and society; and the comparative anthropology of the world religions, with special attention to Islam. The area strengths include the Middle East, Africa, and East Asia. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | This program provides appropriate education and training in the recovery, analysis, and interpretation of archaeological materials and contexts while simultaneously assuring that sufficient background is obtained in one or more traditional cognate fields such as classics, art history, anthropology, and history. In recognition of the importance of scientific techniques in the analysis, dating, and interpretation of archaeological finds, the program is also designed to include classroom and practical training in the biological and physical sciences and in quantitative methods, either within the framework of the archaeological curriculum itself or within that of other departments or programs [such as the Center for Remote Sensing]. | Applicants must have a BA or MA, preferably from a program in archaeology or one related to archaeology (such as anthropology or classical studies, with a concentration in archaeology). Students lacking sufficient preparation in archaeology will be required to take courses, as determined by the Graduate Studies Committee, to make up the deficiency. On occasion, these courses may be beyond the minimum specified by the Graduate School, especially in the post-MA program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Archaeology, 675 Commonwealth Avenue Suite 347, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 3415 | This department is the only distinct, fully constituted university department of archaeology in the United States. In the field, laboratory, and classroom, students pursue B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees with concentrations in Old and New World Prehistoric and Historical Archaeology, including Classical, Mesoamerican, Geoarchaeology, and Heritage management specializations. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Art History | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of Western, Asian, Meso-American, Islamic and African art. | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language(TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Applicants admitted to this program must later make an internal application to the PhD program upon completion of the MA degree requirements. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art History, 725 Commonwealth Ave Room 302, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2520 | The 20 members of the Department of Art History at Boston University comprise a group of professional art historians and teachers of art history who are dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge and the education of students. This department believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present but also enables them to acquire valuable skills that are applicable to many careers. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of Astrophysics, Space Physics, Observational Techniques, Radioactive Processes in Astrophysics, Astronomical Spectroscopy, Gravitational Astrophysics, Cosmic Gas Dynamics, Cosmic Plasma Physics, Galactic Astronomy and the Interstellar Medium. | Applicants to the graduate program should have the strong physics background implied by a Bachelor degree in either physics or astronomy. Undergraduate credits in physics should include courses in mechanics, electromagnetism, atomic and nuclear physics, optics, and thermodynamics/statistical mechanics. Mathematics through differential equations and a course in introductory astronomy and/or astrophysics are highly recommended. Applicants should have a cumulative GPA equivalent to B or higher. o be considered for admission it is necessary to submit the "Application for Graduate Admission" form (available from the Graduate School) and three letters of recommendation. All applicants are required to submit Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores, including the Advanced Test in Physics. Foreign applicants must have a TOEFL exam score or must demonstrate equivalent proficiency in the English language. |
Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Astronomy, 725 Commonwealth Avenue Room 514, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2625 | This department guides students at the undergraduate and graduate levels toward the advanced mathematical skills and physical insight they need to understand the nature of the universe from the modern scientific perspective. The department offers three undergraduate concentrations: astronomy, astronomy and physics, and planetary and space sciences. It offers an M.A. for students interested in careers in scientific applications, scientific computing, and related fields, and a Ph.D. for students interested in research and academic careers in astrophysics and space physics. The department has two outstanding affiliated research centers, the Center for Space Physics and the Institute for Astrophysical Research. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Behavioral Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Behavioral Neuroscience | This program focuses on Introductory Psychology, Experimental Psychology, Physiological Psychology or Neuropsychology; Abnormal Psychology and Statistics. The program is not, by itself, designed to meet requirements for certification as to clinical competence in Psychology nor in any discipline having a certification procedure. | Applicants must submit results of the GRE or similar tests such as the MCAT, taken in the previous four years. Applicants already enrolled in the Boston University School of Medicine may be eligible for admission to the Division of Graduate Medical Sciences for joint degrees, without submitting GRE scores, if progress to date has been judged satisfactory. Applicants from countries where English is not the language of instruction must submit TOEFL scores as well. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Behavioral Neuroscience | School of Medicine, Department of Behavioral Neuroscience, 715 Albany Street L-815, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4805 | The department is focus on the delineation and analysis of perceptual, cognitive, linguistic, affective, and behavioral disorders observed in neurologic disease, as these disorders contribute to an understanding of normal brain function and its modification by pathology. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry | This program focus of the biochemistry research in the department is on the fields of molecular and cellular biology. Specific research interests include extracellular matrix biochemistry and molecular biology, regulation of gene expression in eukaryotic cells, developmental biochemistry, vesicle trafficking and signal transduction, protein structure and function, mechanisms of catalysis, porphyrin biochemistry, protein membrane interactions, growth control and cell cycle, neurobiochemistry, mechanism of action of steroid hormones, and mechanisms of oncogenesis. Research activities are well supported by a variety of interdisciplinary research program project grants, graduate student training grants, and individual research grants. | Students who have completed an undergraduate degree usually with a major in biochemistry, biology, or chemistry and have taken courses in general biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, physical chemistry, and calculus may apply for this program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry | School of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry, 715 Albany Street K-225, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5090 | The department is located on four floors of the Silvio O. Conte building at the Boston University School of Medicine. The graduate program in the Department of Biochemistry accepts qualified applicants into M.A, Ph.D., and M.D./Ph.D. programs. The emphasis of the last two programs is on research training in the laboratory of a faculty member. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Biostatistics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | This program offers advanced training for students pursuing careers as a professional, academic, or industrial biostatistician. Providing specialized training for health professionals seeking deeper expertise in statistics and analysis, the program is also suitable for experienced statisticians who wish to specialize in statistical methods for biomedical or epidemiologic applications. | Students entering the program are expected to have at least the equivalent of the Bachelor of Arts degree. Their previous coursework must include at least one year of calculus including multivariate calculus and one formal course in linear algebra, and they must demonstrate competency in statistical computing and elementary statistical methods. Multivariate calculus is a prerequisite for several of the core courses and also recommend that students who have not formally completed a course in multivariate calculus at least audit such a course in preparation. Applicants who have not met the pre-requisites of the program will not have their applications reviewed for admission. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The core courses are: Core Courses: CAS MA 575 Applied Regression and Analysis of Variance I, CAS MA 581 or MET MA 581 Probability, CAS MA 582 or MET MA 582 Mathematical Statistics, GRS MA 781 Estimation Theory, GRS MA 782 Hypothesis Testing, SPH EP 712 Epidemiologic Methods, SPH BS 805 Intermediate Statistical Computing and Applied Regression Analysis, SPH BS 852 Statistical Methods for Epidemiology, SPH BS 853 Generalized Linear Models. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics | School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, 715 Albany Street Talbot Building, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617638 5207 | The school has grown tremendously in recent years with more than 4,000 alumni, 140 full-time faculty, and students from over 40 countries. In keeping with the School service-oriented philosophy, each department combines research and academics with a practicum requirement, resulting in a rigorous, well-rounded curriculum enhanced by work experience in a public health environment. Through longstanding collaborations with such institutions as the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Boston Public Health Commission, and the Veterans Affairs Administration; and international alliances with the Red Cross, the Peace Corps, and foreign governments, our students, faculty, and alumni draw on their own diverse backgrounds to carry out the School mission in a variety of settings. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine | This program focuses on basic scientific and clinical issues related to molecular and cellular biology. Areas of expertise include molecular mechanisms regulating gene expression and developmental programs, cell structure/function relationships, molecular characterization of receptors and signal transduction processes, structural analyses of macromolecules, and the impact of health and disease on all of these areas. | Students should have a bachelor degree with emphasis in the biochemical, biological, or chemical sciences. Post-master graduate students and MD/PhD students also qualify for admission. Students in the first year of a degree program in one of the academic departments at Boston University School of Medicine may also apply. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine | School of Medicine, 715 Albany Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5300 | Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) is a major research institution, providing an exceptional environment for students interested in basic science, clinical investigation, or public health and health services oriented research. BUSM has660 medical students, and a similar number of graduate students in the medical school actively engaged in the study of medicine and the biomedical sciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program offers research activities in the major areas of investigations of molecular science: Bioanalytical, Biological, Inorganic, Organic, Photochemistry and Photonics, Physical, and Theoretical. | Students are expected to have received a bachelor’s or master’s degree prior to matriculation, usually (but not necessarily) in chemistry. All applicants are requested to submit Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores, including the subject test in chemistry. Foreign applicants must have a TOEFL examination score of at least 550; applicants requesting support through teaching fellowships are required to have a score of at least 600. Requests for further information about admissions should be addressed to Graduate Admissions, Department of Chemistry, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Boston University Metcalf Center for Science and Engineering, 590 Commonwealth Avenue Room 299, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2500 | This department has long been recognized for excellence in research and training at the undergraduate and graduate levels. They are dedicated to providing fundamental education in the chemical sciences, which at the same time, exposes students to the outstanding current questions in chemical research. They are also committed to the careful mentorship of undergraduate majors, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows that will serve them well as they enter careers in chemical research, medicine, law, or education. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Classical Studies | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of Classical Civilization, Greek Language and Literature, Latin Language and Literature, Reading Courses in Latin and Ancient Greek, and Teaching Fellowships. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from a recognized college or university or with equivalent international education. Important factors in the department ranking of applicants are the breadth and quality of the undergraduate experience --particularly the language components, the quality of the essay and writing sample, the strength of the letters of recommendation, GRE scores, and the suitability of the department's programs to the particular applicant. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 414, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2427 | This department has 13 full-time faculty, 16 PhD students, 5 MAT students, 1 BA/MA student and over 100 undergraduate students pursuing major degree programs in Classics, Classical Civilization, Latin, and Ancient and Modern Greek. Students also benefit from classical course offerings and programs in the Departments of Archaeology, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Cognitive and Neural Systems | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | This program provides research experience for graduate students and qualified undergraduates interested in the neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of technological problems | Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems, 677 Beacon Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 9481 | This department provides advanced training and research experience for graduate students and qualified undergraduates interested in the neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of technological problems. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program focuses on theory of computation, information theory, complexity theory, analysis of algorithms, cryptography, programming language theory, fault-tolerant computing, image and video computing, real-time computing, parallel and distributed computing, large-scale networked information systems, distributed systems, networking, database systems, and performance evaluation. | Candidate must complete or have completed the requirements for a master’s degree in computer science or the equivalent. Unusually well-qualified candidates may be accepted as 16-course Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) candidates directly after earning the bachelor’s degree. Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test results are required. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Boston University, 111 Cummington Street Room 138, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 8919 | This department has a distinguished track record of academic excellence and major achievement in an increasingly vital field that is expanding at a rapid pace. Faculty research is published in the most prominent venues and recognized by significant citations and awards, both national and international. B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. students are recruited for internships and positions by such industry-leading firms as Motorola Labs, Google, and Microsoft and are recruited by some of the best computer science departments in the country as Ph.D. students, postdoctoral researchers, and tenure-track professors. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Earth Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | This program focuses on two thematic research areas: Climate - Surface Interactions (i.e. geomorphology, oceanography, surface geochemistry etc.), and Lithospheric - Tectonic Processes (i.e. petrology, geodynamics, seismology, platetectonics etc.). The study of the earth requires a careful integration of field based research, laboratory based experiments and analysis, and quantitative modeling and description. The program emphasis on such a multi-disciplinary approach provides for a stimulating research and teaching environment. | Applicants must have a bachelors or masters, preferably from a program in earth sciences. Students lacking sufficient preparation in archaeology will be required to take courses, as determined by the Graduate Studies Committee, to make up the deficiency. On occasion, these courses may be beyond the minimum specified by the Graduate School, especially in the post-Master of Arts program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, 675 Commonwealth Avenue STO Room 141, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2532 | This department has of 15 faculty and approximately 25 graduate and 85 undergraduate students. This department focus is in two broad thematic areas, Climate - Surface Interactions and Tectonic - Lithospheric Processes. They promote excellence in both teaching and research, in a collegial and collaborative academic setting. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in History | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of American, European, and African history. | Student need not have a Graduate Record Examination (GRE) score, since the admissions committee looks at many other factors, such as letters of recommendation and transcripts. It may be helpful, however, to know that the average verbal score of those entering the program in September 2007 was 616 (which translated to an average percentile of 85%). Students must take the Test of English as a Foreign Language. The minimum score requirement is 213 (for the computer-based test), 550 (paper-based test), or 84 (internet-based test). The TOEFL requirement is waived only if an applicant has received, or expects to receive, an undergraduate or graduate degree from a college or university in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, or New Zealand. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 226 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2551 | This department has a national and international reputation in the field of historical scholarship, but its faculty is equally committed to teaching and addressing the academic concerns of students. Faculty believe that the study of the past not only prepares students for understanding the present, but provides valuable life and career skills, including the ability the criticize, organize, and synthesize information and to write with clarity and precision. Undergraduates pursue a range of topics, including American, European, African, Far Eastern, Middle Eastern, and Latin American history. The graduate program is particularly strong in American, European, and African history. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Immunology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology | This program is an interdepartmental teaching and research program involving 18 faculty participants from multiple disciplines within the Boston University School of Medicine. The program of study includes a literature-based curriculum, prominent guest speakers, and spirited journal clubs as well as extensive hands-on laboratory training. Small class size and extensive interaction with the faculty provide students with the opportunity to customize their training according to their specific scientific interests. | Students must have received a baccalaureate degree from an accredited university with a strong background in biological and physical sciences. The applicant academic record, references, GRE test results and related work experience are considered in the admissions process. Both the GRE General Test and the Subject Test are required. Recommended sciences for the Subject Test are biochemistry, cell and molecular biology, and biology. International students must demonstrate competence in English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology, 715 Albany Street L-504, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4284 | The department focuses on the molecular mechanisms underlying microbial infection and the host immune response. This department faculty investigate a number of areas integral to these topics that can be loosely grouped under the research themes of bacterial genetics, virus molecular biology, parasitology, host-pathogen interactions and immunology. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Mathematics, Including Statistics and Probability | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of mathematics, the natural sciences, engineering, and mathematics education, as well as to advanced undergraduates in mathematics. | Candidates with a bachelor’s degree and students with a master’s degree in mathematics, statistics, or the equivalent may be admitted directly into this program. GRE results (including the Mathematics Subject Test) are required. Students are expected to have a total score of at least 100 in the internet-based TOEFL, with sub-scores of at least 25 in listening, reading, speaking and writing, OR, a total score of at least 250 in the computer-based TOEFL, OR, a total score of at least 600 in the paper-based TOEFL. Applicants whose TOEFL scores are lower, but are otherwise qualified, may still file an application, but they may be asked to re-take TOEFL before a decision for admission can be made. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 111 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2560 | This department offers a wide range of courses in pure and applied mathematics and statistics at the undergraduate and graduate level. The department has particularly strong groups in dynamical systems and applications, geometry/topology, mathematical physics, number theory, and probability and statistics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Medical Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine | This program the focus of graduate education in the biomedical sciences at Boston University Medical Center - are provided with the opportunity of undertaking study and research in the well-equipped laboratory facilities of the preclinical departments that make up the Division. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | This degree is available in is available in Anatomy and Neurobiology, Behavioral Neuroscience, Biochemistry, Biomedical Neuroscience, Biophysics, Cell and Molecular Biology, Genetics and Genomics, Immunology, Medical Nutrition Sciences, Microbiology, Molecular Medicine, Oral Biology, Pathology, Pharmacology and Physiology. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine | School of Medicine, 715 Albany Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 5300 | Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) is a major research institution, providing an exceptional environment for students interested in basic science, clinical investigation, or public health and health services oriented research. BUSM has660 medical students, and a similar number of graduate students in the medical school actively engaged in the study of medicine and the biomedical sciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Medicine | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Medicine | This program is dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in patient care, teaching, and research. This program involves in the sections of Cardiovascular Medicine, Clinical Epidemiology, Endocrinology, Diabetes, Nutrition Gastroenterology, General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics Hematology and Medical Oncology Hypertension, Infectious Diseases, Molecular Medicine, Nephrology, Preventive Medicine, Pulmonary and Rheumatology. | Applicants are expected to receive a masters degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Medicine | School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, 715 Albany Street E-113, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 414 1519 | The Department of Medicine is based at the School of Medicine and at two principal teaching hospitals, Boston Medical Center and the Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Microbiology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology | This program participates in two interdepartmental graduate training programs: the Immunology Training Program and the Host-Pathogen Interactions Training Program. The goal is to provide rigorous training to exceptional students in a supportive and collaborative environment and to prepare them for a career in research science. Students in these graduate programs participate in formal coursework, seminars and journal clubs, and directed research in the broad fields of microbiology and immunology, including focuses in host-pathogen interactions, immune regulation, molecular virology, and prokaryotic molecular biology. | Students must have received a baccalaureate degree from an accredited university with a strong background in biological and physical sciences. The applicant academic record, references, GRE test results and related work experience are considered in the admissions process. Both the GRE General Test and the Subject Test are required. Recommended sciences for the Subject Test are biochemistry, cell and molecular biology, and biology. International students must demonstrate competence in English. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology | School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology, 715 Albany Street L-504, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4284 | The department focuses on the molecular mechanisms underlying microbial infection and the host immune response. This department faculty investigate a number of areas integral to these topics that can be loosely grouped under the research themes of bacterial genetics, virus molecular biology, parasitology, host-pathogen interactions and immunology. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of molecular biology, enzymology, protein and nucleic acid structure, bio-organic chemistry, membrane biochemistry, developmental and cell biology, molecular genetics and gene regulation, the molecular basis of mutagenesis and carcinogenesis, retro virology, molecular neurobiology and endocrinology, biomolecular engineering, and biotechnology. | Students are expected to have strong undergraduate backgrounds in biology and chemistry (general and organic). College-level courses in physics, calculus, and statistics are also expected to have been completed. Any deficiencies in these areas may have to be made up after matriculation into the program, but without graduate course credit. Applicants are required to submit scores for both the General and Subject Graduate Record Examination. Normally, the Subject test should be taken in Biology, Chemistry, or Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Applicants whose native language is not English are also required to submit results of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Admission is limited to September enrollment. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2401 | The College of Arts and Sciences and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences together form Boston University’s largest and most central teaching and research enterprise, providing instruction in the liberal arts for all BU students. Arts and Sciences is home to 25 academic departments (24 of which offer major concentrations) and 33 research centers and institutes. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Oral Biology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $49794 per year | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | This program programs focusing on oral medicine-related problems may be conducted in conjunction with other departments within Boston University Medical Center or affiliated institutions. Every effort is made to provide training in research that will enable students completing this program to continue as independent investigators. In conjunction with their basic research studies, students receive advanced training and experience in biomedical specialties. | Applicants must be proficient in the English language. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit a recent TOEFL score (the TOEFL score must be no more than two years old). The TOEFL score should be sent to PASS. TOEFL score requirements: 85 or above on the internet-based TOEFL (iBT), 213 or above on the computer TOEFL, 550 or above on the written TOEFL examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology | Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Department of Periodontology and Oral Biology, Office of Admissions and Student Services, 100 East Newton Street G-305, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4787 | The school can trace its origins to 1958 when the Boston University Medical School started a Department of Stomatology (medical study of the physiology and pathology of the mouth) to provide postdoctoral education in dentistry. At that time, the institution was the only one in the country devoted solely to specialty education in dentistry. In 1963 it became a free standing School of Dentistry under Dean Henry M. Goldman. In 1972, it instituted a predoctoral program. In 1996 the school had outgrown its designation as a school of graduate dentistry and accordingly was renamed the Boston University School of Dental Medicine. Dean Spencer N. Frankl has served in that position since 1977. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine | This program comprises study in lecture- and discussion-based courses and laboratory experience extending over one to two years, followed by a comprehensive written and oral qualifying examination. A proposal for dissertation research is then prepared and presented to the student's individual dissertation committee; the research is performed under the guidance of the major advisor with the help and advice of the committee over the ensuing two or more years. Ultimately, the student writes and defends a dissertation based upon the research performed. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine | School of Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, 715 Albany Street L-804, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4500 | This department focuses particularly on the biology, genetics, and immunology of cancer, and on neurologic disorders. It offers multiple research and training opportunities in experimental and applied pathology, and has a diverse faculty composed of core and joint members. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Pharmacology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | This program focus of research training is in areas of molecular, cellular, and behavioral neurosciences. Newly renovated and expanded research facilities provide students with state-of-the-art opportunities for training in molecular genetics, molecular modeling, electrophysiology, biophysical methods, psychophysical methods and other tools for elucidating the interaction of drugs with biological targets. Current research projects include: Functional and Structural Mapping of Receptors, Regulation of Receptor Gene Expression, Theoretical Analysis of Ligand Binding, Computer-Based Structure Analysis, Transcriptional Regulation of Gene Expression in Development and Aging, Peptides in Neuroendocrine and Inflammatory Processes, Excitotoxicity in Aging and Disease, Neural Substrates of Drug Abuse, Analgesia, Learning, and Memory, Mechanisms of Learning and Memory and Translational Epilepsy. | Applicants are expected to receive a bachelor degree from an accredited college of arts and sciences or engineering. Occasionally a candidate of unusual ability is accepted after attendance for three academic years in an undergraduate school | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | School of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 715 Albany Street L-603, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4300 | This department was formally established in the fall of 1918. At that time, the School was reorganized and the association with homeopathy, which had been established in 1873, was terminated. A pharmacology curriculum of lectures, recitations, and laboratory exercises was established and taught by faculty from other institutions. The first appointment of a BUSM professor of pharmacology occurred with the arrival of Dr. Walter L. Mendenhall in 1921. He was succeeded in 1946 by Dr. George L. Maison. By the early 1950s medical students were exposed to a 190-hour course in pharmacology that emphasized the experimental aspect of the science. Research and training of graduate students were in areas of high altitude physiology, cardiac pharmacology, and the pharmacology of veratrum alkaloids. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of History of Philosophy; the History and Philosophy of Science, Mathematics, and Logic; and the Philosophy of Religion. While all major periods and thinkers are represented, focus is especially in Ancient, Early Modern, the Scottish Enlightenment, German Idealism, Phenomenology, Continental Philosophy, Analytic Philosophy, American Philosophy, and the Philosophy of Logic and Mathematics. | Applicants should have completed the equivalent of an undergraduate major in philosophy, typically with an average of B or higher. Students with minors in philosophy are also encouraged to apply. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. Minimum TOEFL Scores: Paper-based Test 550, Computer Based Test 213. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 745 Commonwealth Avenue Room 516, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2571 | This department has always bucked the trend in academic philosophy, resisting moves toward narrow specialization, overly technical approaches, mere historical investigations, or broad-sweeping speculation about the human condition. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the experimental particle physics, particle astrophysics, theoretical particle physics and cosmology, molecular biophysics, experimental biophysics, experimental condensed matter physics, theoretical quantum condensed matter physics statistical physics, polymer physics, and computational physics. | Students must complete Completion of the Boston University Master Degree requirements or admission to the Post-Master's Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D) program. Official scores for the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) are required for all students applying for this program. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Boston University, 590 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2600 | This department look to open a window on the universe. An understanding of physics can elucidate everything from how a ball falls to the ground to what the early universe looked like, can shed light on the forces guiding the cosmos and the forces guiding the behavior of subatomic particles. A degree in physics provides the intellectual foundation for applications in engineering, technology, and industry, as well as in training the next generation of scientists, at both the high school and university levels. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Physiology and Biophysics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $36540 per year | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics | This program includes researches in the areas of Cellular Physiology and Biophysics, with strong concentrations in Structural Biology, Vision Research and the Biology and Physical Chemistry of Lipids. | GRE General Test and a Subject Test in an area related to biophysics are required. For applicants from foreign countries, TOEFL is also required. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics | School of Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, 715 Albany Street W-302, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02118, +1 617 638 4001 | The Department of Physiology and Biophysics is a research oriented department, located at the Boston University School of Medicine. This research encompasses many facets of Cell Biology, Molecular and Cellular Physiology, Structural Biology, and Molecular Biophysics. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program provides opportunities for disciplinary and interdisciplinary study in the fields of American Politics, Comparative Politics, Public Policy, International Relations and Foreign Policy and Political Theory. | Applicants are expected to hold a BA, preferably in political science or in a related discipline such as economics, philosophy, sociology, international relations or history. Depending on their qualifications, applicants from other disciplines will also be considered. Non-native English speakers with GRE verbal scores below the 25th percentile, math scores below the 30th percentile, or analytical scores below 1.9 have little chance of admission in the absence of compelling compensating factors. The departmental minimum requirement for the TOEFL is 250 (computer-based test), 600 (paper-based test) or 100 (internet score). | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 232 Bay State Road, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2540 | This department studies how communities attempt to reconcile the claims of justice, power, liberty, and authority. Drawing on history, law, economics, psychology, sociology, and philosophy, political science is a broadly based social science that shares the traditional aims of a liberal arts education while attempting to grapple with the major issues of our time. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $36540 per year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program offer its Graduate Program in Brain, Behavior, and Cognition (BBC). The BBC graduate training program is designed rigorously prepare students for research and teaching careers in the following areas: Brain - Neurophysiology and molecular biology of learning and memory. Animal models of neural dysfunction, developmental and adult neuropsychology. Behavior - Animal learning. Operant and respondent conditioning. Animal learning from an ethological perspective. Animal psychophysics. Behavioral pharmacology. Cognition - Experimental work on visual perception and memory, psycholinguistics and cognitive development, as well as computational and mathematical modeling of cognitive abilities. | Students should have a average scores of candidates that were admitted to the program for Fall, 02 were: Verbal 510; Quantitative 640; Analytical 590. For international students, TOEFL score is required. GRE subject test is not required. Students need not have an undergraduate major in psychology. However, it would be suggest/encourage that applicants to have taken some course work in the field. A research methods course is recommended. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Boston University, 64 Cummington Street, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2580 | This department's faculty, more than 30 strong, continues to attract agency-funded research, publish extensively, and maintain a serious commitment to teaching B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. students. The department’s affiliated research centers, the Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders and the Center for Memory and Brain, provide opportunities for research experience, as do affiliated laboratory studies in topics including child cognition, neurophysiology, developmental behavior genetics, neuroscience, psycholinguistics, and vision sciences. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms (though not necessarily a "living room"). Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students' schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | PhD in Sociology and Social Work | Full Time | Variable | $20972 per year | School of Social Work | This program offers a unique education leading to an interdisciplinary doctorate in sociology and social work. The primary purpose of the program is to prepare researchers and scholars of social work who will assume leadership positions in universities, government, and social welfare agencies. Doctoral students choose specializations in social work and sociology to organize their advanced training. Social work specializations focus on either social policy research or clinical research, and may address the wide range of social work areas of inquiry, such as poverty, child welfare, health services, and aging. Social science specializations include, for example, urban studies, family sociology, race and ethnic studies, and sociology of religion. | Applicants are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) for proof of English proficiency. A minimum score of 550 is required on the written test and a minimum score of 213 is required on the computer-based test. In addition, applicants are required to take the GRE, or the MAT. (Test scores for standardized tests are valid for five years.) An applicant currently living in the United States and whose first language is not English must also take the TOEFL in addition to the GRE or the MAT. For further information on the TOEFL, call 609-771-7760; the GRE, 800-GRE-CALL or 609-921-9000; and the MAT, 800-228-0752 or 210-299-1061. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | The curriculum includes seven required courses in the core curriculum and five elective courses for the student specialization. Core courses include: WP901 Perspectives on Social Welfare Policy, WP903 Sociology of the Social Work Profession, SO701 Advanced Sociological Theory, SO708 Contemporary Sociological Theory, SO702 Proseminar in Research Methods R906 Qualitative Data Analysis, MA682 Multivariate Statistics. Elective courses are selected from offerings in the School of Social Work, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and other Schools at Boston University (e.g., School of Public Health, School of Education). |
Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | School of Social Work | School of Social Work, One Sherborn Street, Boston University, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 4636 | The Boston University School of Social Work (BUSSW) is committed to education which furthers social and economic justice in the urban environment and strives to incorporate this commitment into its programs and activities. The School is especially concerned with empowerment of all oppressed groups. BUSSW recognizes the ever-changing demands on the profession and strives to meet them through the highest quality of teaching, scholarship, research, practice, and political action. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |
| 164988 | Boston University | Six-year Accelerated Combined Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training/Doctor of Physical Therapy | Full Time | 6 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training | This program takes advantage of the overlap between the athletic training and physical therapy professions and gives motivated students the opportunity to acquire a Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training and a Doctor of Physical Therapy degree in six years rather than the usual seven. Students enter into the program as freshmen and follow a specific course of study, which includes early participation in supervised clinical experience and real patient care in Boston University's varsity or club sports athletic training rooms or at one of over 15 affiliated sites in the Boston area. | Applicants should have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university is required for admission and scores on the Graduate Record Examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department strives to develop critically thinking, innovative, and evidence-based professionals who engage in life-long learning and leadership in the areas of clinical practice, research and community service. The mission of the Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training is to advance, disseminate, and apply knowledge in the fields of physical therapy and athletic training. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Six-year Accelerated Combined Bachelor of Science in Health Studies/Doctor of Physical Therapy | Full Time | 6 Year(s) | $36540 per year | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training | The program educates graduates to become generalists dedicated to the promotion of health and the rehabilitation of people disabled by injury or disease. The program provides students with: a strong foundation in the basic sciences, a synthesis of a body of applied scientific knowledge, the ability to communicate effectively, solve problems creatively, and to administer and evaluate treatment effectively and efficiently, a commitment to professional values and ethical practice. | Applicants should have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university is required for admission and scores on the Graduate Record Examination. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training | Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training, 635 Commonwealth Avenue, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2713 | The Department strives to develop critically thinking, innovative, and evidence-based professionals who engage in life-long learning and leadership in the areas of clinical practice, research and community service. The mission of the Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training is to advance, disseminate, and apply knowledge in the fields of physical therapy and athletic training. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | ||
| 164988 | Boston University | Transitional Doctor of Physical Therapy | Distance / Online | 18 Month(s) | Contact provider | Office of Admissions | This program prepares graduates to function as independent practitioners and critical thinkers in a changing society and healthcare environment. The transitional DPT curriculum is an individualized learning plan designed to augment an applicant's current knowledge (gained through professional and continuing education, as well as experiential learning) to a level consistent with the current entry-level DPT academic standards. | All applicants must submit a transcripts showing evidence of completion of an entry-level degree in physical therapy, unless they are a graduate from Boston University College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences. | Doctoral | BOSTON UNIVERSITY | HP561: Evidence Based Practice; HP720: Educational Theory and Practice; HP650: Healthcare Management I; HP770: Healthcare Management II; PT610: Health Promotion and Wellness; PT634: Diagnostic Procedures for Rehabilitation Professionals; PT773: Comprehensive Case Management III; PT780: Academic Practicum. | Boston University | 13053 | One Silber Way, BOSTON, Massachusetts, 02215, +1 617 353 2300 | The Department strives to develop critically thinking, innovative, and evidence-based professionals who engage in life-long learning and leadership in the areas of clinical practice, research and community service. The mission of the Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training is to advance, disseminate, and apply knowledge in the fields of physical therapy and athletic training. | Yes | Boston University residence community provides a clean, safe, and quiet environment where civility and respect for others are the norms. All freshmen are required to live on campus, and all students who receive University-funded scholarships equal to or greater than tuition are required to live on campus. Students who are under 16 years of age as of October 1 of their entering year are not eligible to live on campus. Residences are available in Dormitory-style and Apartment-style. The cost of Dormitory-style stats with $10,950 per year and the cost of Apartment-style starts with $9,450. There are ten dormitory-style residences, each accommodating a large number of students. These range from Danielsen Hall with 280 students, to the West Campus area with over 1,800 students. Apartment occupancy varies from one to six residents, while size and floor plans vary considerably. All apartments are furnished and equipped with kitchen facilities and bathrooms. Students must provide their own kitchen utensils, cleaning items, and bathroom. Boston University offers a choice of six dining plans designed to match a variety of students schedules. Each plan is unique, offering a specific number of meals per week or per semester and dining points that supplement meals and can be used for additional food purchases. | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | B.A. in German | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages | This program emphasizes studies of race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and the historical processes of slavery, colonial conquest, immigration and globalization, among other subject areas. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Eng 632 Writers' Workshop, Eng 630/631 Techniques Course, Eng 782 Advanced Writer's Workshop, Eng 633 Editing the Mid-American Review, Eng 699 Thesis Research Hours. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages, Shatzel Hall 103, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2268 | This department include language and culture; literature, cinema, drama, and related fields. Students and faculty collaborate on student organizations, research, off-campus projects, and education abroad around the world. Most summer and AY 08-09 programs, including in Austria, China, and Russia, are still taking applications. See department News for this year's special activities. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | B.A. in German | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages | This program emphasizes studies of race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and the historical processes of slavery, colonial conquest, immigration and globalization, among other subject areas. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Eng 632 Writers' Workshop, Eng 630/631 Techniques Course, Eng 782 Advanced Writer's Workshop, Eng 633 Editing the Mid-American Review, Eng 699 Thesis Research Hours. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages, Shatzel Hall 103, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2268 | This department include language and culture; literature, cinema, drama, and related fields. Students and faculty collaborate on student organizations, research, off-campus projects, and education abroad around the world. Most summer and AY 08-09 programs, including in Austria, China, and Russia, are still taking applications. See department News for this year's special activities. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | B.A. in German | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages | This program emphasizes studies of race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and the historical processes of slavery, colonial conquest, immigration and globalization, among other subject areas. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Eng 632 Writers' Workshop, Eng 630/631 Techniques Course, Eng 782 Advanced Writer's Workshop, Eng 633 Editing the Mid-American Review, Eng 699 Thesis Research Hours. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages, Shatzel Hall 103, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2268 | This department include language and culture; literature, cinema, drama, and related fields. Students and faculty collaborate on student organizations, research, off-campus projects, and education abroad around the world. Most summer and AY 08-09 programs, including in Austria, China, and Russia, are still taking applications. See department News for this year's special activities. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BA in Art | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program is a broad based liberal arts program designed to support the development of professionals with careers in art-related fields. The curriculum allows students to gain hands-on experience in a broad spectrum of studio art without the need to specialize in any specific area of studio art. As such the availability of upper-level studio classes is limited. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BA in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program prepares individuals for a variety of careers in the arts and humanities, including continued study in art historical masters and doctoral programs. Art History graduate students and alumni have secured teaching and curatorial positions in a variety of two- and four-year colleges and art museums. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Western Art I, Western Art II, Modern Architecture (3), American Art to the Civil War (3), American Art Since the Civil War (3), Histories of Photography: Theory and Criticism from Invention to WWI, Histories of Photography: Theory and Criticism from WWI to Present, Preclassical Art, Greek Art, Art of Etruria and Rome (3), Early Christian and Byzantine Art (3), Medieval Art (3), Art of the Italian Renaissance, Northern Renaissance Art , Baroque and Rococo Art, Art of the 19th Century, Art of the Early 20th Century , Art of India and S.E. Asia, rt of China and Japan, the Visual Arts, Art of Western Africa , Art and Power in Africa, Women and Art in Africa, Pre-Columbian Art, Oceanic Art , Independent Studies in Art History, Special Topics in Art History. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BA in Interpersonal Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | This program provides a liberal arts foundation to the study of communication. It is distinguished by its academic rigor and attention to the development of exemplary oral and written communication skills. Students take communication courses emphasizing communication information, theories, and criticism. They also enhance their education with the study of a foreign language, complementing communication study and providing students with a competitive advantage as they pursue careers in global corporations, government agencies, and international organizations. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Speech Communication, Intercollegiate Forensic Activities, Human Communication, Small Group Communication , Presentational Speaking in Organizations, Interpersonal Communication I , Interpersonal Communication and Interviewing, Interpersonal Communication in International Contexts, Persuasive Communication, Leadership in Communication, Interpersonal Communication, Organizational Communication , Argumentation, Communication and Criticism, Virtual Teams, Workshop on Current Topics , Intercollegiate Forensic Activities, Political Campaign Communication, Communication and Conflict, Computers Mediating Cultures and Organizations, Topics in Communication Studies, interpersonal Communication II, Intercultural Communication, International Communication, Perspectives on Freedom of Expression, performing Digitally Mediated Identities and Communication, Communication and Gender, Communication Ethics, Communication, Race, and Power, Technology for World Communication, Health Communication, Communication Internship, Readings in Interpersonal Communication. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication, 302 West Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | This department is a global center for teaching and research in communication and media. Departments of Interpersonal Communication, Journalism, and Telecommunications teach doctor of philosophy, master’s and bachelor’s degrees, and run collaborative programs with cognate disciplines, including American Cultural Studies, and Theatre and Film. The School works closely with print, broadcast and online student media, including the daily newspaper BG News, BG-24 television, radio stations WBGU-FM and WFAL-AM, and enjoys a long association with WBGU-TV27 public broadcasting. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Art Education | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program ntegrates art making, art history, art criticism, philosophy of art, and social-cultural influences. Also addressed in the curriculum are the ways interdisciplinary aspects of art education can affect societal beliefs, values, and behaviors. A selection of required courses in the College of Education and Human Development contribute to the breadth of academic experiences necessary for quality preparation of future art educators. Their studio expertise will also be more evident when seeking employment upon graduation. When making graduate school decisions, BFA graduates in art education have more options as they consider entering Master of Fine Arts programs with a studio art concentration or a Master of Arts in art education program that offers studio concentration alternatives. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Art for Early Childhood Education, Art for Middle Childhood Education, Foundations of Art Education, Digital Technology in Art Education, Expression and Response in Art Education, Art for Special Needs Learners, Visual Arts Teaching Practicum, Advanced Methods in Art Education, Independent Studies in Art Education, Teaching Internship, pecial Topics in Art Education, Teaching Internship (7). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Digital Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program focuses on creative expression using digital technology. Students are encouraged to investigate aesthetic and perceptual possibilities as they engage in alternative art discourses. Digital Arts courses investigate theoretical, aesthetic, and technical information while providing hands-on-experience with state-of-the-art equipment. The courses merge the technical and aesthetic aspects of Digital Arts. The Digital Arts program, with over 175 majors, at BGSU has become one of the leading programs in the nation for studying Digital Arts and animation. Digital Arts is an exciting area with dynamic, ambitious, self-motivated students who push themselves and their artwork to the edge. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Introduction to Digital Arts, Intermediate 3-D Modeling, Intermediate 3-D Digital Animation, Intermediate Digital Imaging Art, Intermediate Interactive Art, Special Topics in Digital Arts, Professional Practices and Presentation in Digital Arts, Digital Character Animation I, Digital Character Animation II, Senior Studio in Digital Arts (3), Advanced Digital Imaging Art Studio (3), Alternative Digital Print (3), Advanced Interactive Art Studio, Collaborative Multimedia Development, Art and Virtual Environments, Artistic Animation Effects, Digital Video Art, Independent Study in Digital Arts, Computer Art Practicum, Workshop in Digital Arts. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Graphic Design | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program has the broad visual and technical skills valued by corporations, product manufacturers, advertising agencies, design firms and industries needing individuals who work fluently with multimedia and emerging technologies. The graphic designer is equal parts artist, communicator and marketer, someone who understands different audiences and who has the varied skills to communicate over multiple mediums. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Principles of Graphic Design, Principles of Typography, Intermediate Graphic Design, History of Graphic Design, Three Dimensional Graphic Design, Graphic Design Processes and Procedures, Graphic Design Theory, Identity Design, Interactive Graphic Design, Graphic Design Practicum, Senior Studio in Graphic Design, Independent Studies in Design, Graphic Design Internship (3-6), Special Topics in Design (1-3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Three-Dimensional Studies - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program introduces students to a wide range of techniques and processes with an emphasis on creative thinking and individual artistic growth. Students are exposed to the rich history of ceramic art and are expected to achieve excellence in aesthetics, concept, craftsmanship, and professionalism while developing their unique artistic visions. The studio experience emphasizes community and the ability to work in a group, offering many opportunities for individual leadership. Students participate in every facet of a functioning studio from mixing their own clays and glazes through firing their own work. Study of sculpture, pottery, and the vessel is encouraged. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Three-Dimensional Studies - Fibers | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program is structured to expose students to a variety of fiber and fabric techniques leading to a personal vision and understanding of their position in the world of fiber art. The structure of the program allows the serious student an opportunity to experience the many faceted world of fiber arts. Areas of study in this program may include loom weaving, crochet, direct application, silkscreen printing, discharge, shibori, and felt making. In consultation with an adviser, fiber student plans an individual degree program that provides a thorough background in a wide range of fiber media with additional advanced level study in a particular area of interest. Students are also encouraged to broaden their knowledge of other 3-D media. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Three-Dimensional Studies - Glass | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program focuses on the technical aspects necessary to succeed in glass as a career as well as developing a personal aesthetic in glass. The glass program features an extensive visiting artist program. Throughout the academic year nationally and internationally recognized glass artists come and give intensive workshops and demonstrations focusing on their expertise. Many such special experiences are available to students. Glass industry, historical glass collections, independent glass studios, public glass studios, and glass programs are abundant in the immediate area. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Three-Dimensional Studies - Jewelry and Metals | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program offers a wide variety of traditional and non-traditional approaches aimed at promoting a broad spectrum in the technical and conceptual development of visual language. We are dedicated to providing education that meets high standards of excellence, emphasizing the importance of keeping abreast of current methodologies available to visual artists and of providing students with fresh insights which add greater value and substance to the university environment. Our program integrates the various areas of human experience and expression, combined with aesthetic exploration, material and technique, historic references and personal experiences as specific points of departure to address the relevant themes in our lives and arts today. The focus of the curriculum is on problem solving, creative thinking, and the development of skills which relate to the different approaches artists and designers have toward their disciplines. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Three-Dimensional Studies - Sculpture | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program of study in bronze, aluminum, and iron casting, utilizing investment, shell and bonded sand processes, stonecarving in alabaster, granite, marble and limestone, in addition to gas, ARC, M.I.G., T.I.G., and spot welding, students may specialize in one area or in a combination of several areas. Process, technique, and craft are stressed as students are encouraged to explore and develop their own artistic style and unique approach to problem solving. Curriculum and course work are designed to facilitate a strong, broad-based foundation for the undergraduate while conceptual development is the emphasis at the graduate level. Classes are scheduled in three hour time blocks and meet two days each week. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Two-Dimensional Studies - Drawing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program leads to a dynamic and innovative approach to the study of studio art. The program continues to be based on respect for tradition and the mastery of craft yet is enriched by openness to new media and inventive studio practice. The Drawing Area serves a dual function within the School of Art. Both traditionally and in contemporary practice, drawing has served artists as a medium in which forms and ideas find their initial and most direct expression. A common language unifying artists across studio and design disciplines, students from a wide variety of majors enroll in drawing courses. However, in the contemporary art world drawing is increasingly viewed as an independent mode of expression and many students choose to focus on drawing as their primary medium. The drawing curriculum begins with intensive work in life drawing. As students gain control of formal visual elements and progress to the intermediate level, a wider range of subject matter and concepts are introduced. No longer limited to perceptual drawing, students are encouraged to explore less familiar narrative and abstract modes and to experiment with media, formats, paper, and alternative supports. At the advanced level, class work is almost exclusively self-directed, supplemented with weekly discussions, readings, and assignments preparing students for the BFA Thesis Exhibition. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Two-Dimensional Studies - Painting | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program offers students an approach to making art that venerates the craft of painting while emphasizing a working knowledge of materials, technique and the use of color. The understanding and application of these elements in the developing a visual vocabulary and the ability to express oneself in an intelligible and expressive manner are given a high priority. As students progress, critical thinking and creative problem solving take precedence. Following the structure of beginning and intermediate courses, students are afforded a great deal of freedom to explore ideas and interests in the directed research of advanced classes. Although the rich traditions of painting are promoted throughout the curriculum, students are fully exposed to contemporary artists and issues. Students can expect to be challenged in the areas of drawing, photo, prints and digital imaging, not only enriching their experience with 2-D media but also presenting the opportunity for an interdisciplinary approach to painting. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Two-Dimensional Studies - Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program challenges students to consider the photographic medium as one of invention over documentary or journalistic intent. Students discover that the camera is as much a vehicle of personal expression as a brush on canvas; it is as flexible and as physical as its operator. At the introductory level, students become proficient in 35mm black and white photography and printing fundamentals. They develop the foundation for understanding the language of fine art photography with weekly production of images for class critiques. Additionally, beginning students are exposed to photographic history through regular slide lectures. At the intermediate level students are introduced to color photography. They explore color as a means of personal expression. Weekly critiques and slide lectures serve to push students towards the development of their particular vision. Students at the advanced level are introduced to large format work, advanced technical skills and alternative processes. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BFA in Two-Dimensional Studies - Printmaking | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program ntroduces students to a wide range of techniques and processes with an emphasis on the development of critical thinking and an individual artistic vision. The program offers courses in relief and monoprinting, intaglio, and lithography, all of which include traditional as well as contemporary practices. Special Topics courses, such as Screenprinting, Bookmaking, and Digital printmaking supplement the regular curriculum. In consultation with an adviser, print students plan an individualized degree program that provides a thorough grounding in a range of print media, with additional advanced level studies in a specialized area of interest. In addition to print courses, students are encouraged to take courses in other studio areas in order to broaden their art-making experience. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Drawing, Introduction to Painting, Introduction to Printmaking, Introduction to Photography, Fibers, Glass, Ceramics, Introduction to Enameling on Metal, Jewelry and Metals , Modeling and Moldmaking,Special Topics 2-D, Special Topics 3-D , Drawing: Landscape and Space, Drawing: Narrative and Sequence,Painting, Printmaking, Photography, Photography, Fibers: Weaving, Glass II, Stained Glass I, Ceramics II, Enameling on Metal ,Jewelry and Metals II , Introduction to Carving. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BM in Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program provides undergraduate preparation for a professional career and a background for graduate study. The curriculum for each bachelor of music program stresses not only technical and musical skills but also a broad understanding of the social and cultural environment in which the art of music is practiced. See the sections immediately following as well as the course descriptions for specific details of each of these majors. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BM in Jazz Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program is for music students who wish to concentrate on the performance and history of jazz. The degree is supported by numerous ensembles including a lab band, vocal jazz ensemble and small combos. International artists perform on campus throughout the year and especially during the annual Jazz Week in spring semester. Jazz faculty are members of the College of Musical Arts performance department and include Chris Buzzelli, guitar; Jeff Halsey, bass; Russell Schmidt, piano; Gunnar Mossblad, jazz saxophone; and Roger Schupp, percussion. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BM in Music Education - Choral | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education | This program is designed to prepare students to become licensed to teach music in the pre-K through secondary levels. This option is for those who wish to teach choral music at the elementary, junior and senior high school levels. The options are Vocal or Keyboard Emphasis. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8578 | This department aspires to prepare talented individuals to meet the challenges of teaching choral, instrumental and general music in the 21st Century, and encourages growth in its students in the areas of teaching, musicianship and critical thinking. Widely recognized for its long-standing commitment to a quality music teacher education program, the department employs 12 full-time faculty with expertise in all phases of contemporary music education and research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BM in Music Education - General Music | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education | This program is designed to prepare students to become licensed to teach music in the pre-K through secondary levels. This option is for those interested in teaching elementary and junior high school general music. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8578 | This department aspires to prepare talented individuals to meet the challenges of teaching choral, instrumental and general music in the 21st Century, and encourages growth in its students in the areas of teaching, musicianship and critical thinking. Widely recognized for its long-standing commitment to a quality music teacher education program, the department employs 12 full-time faculty with expertise in all phases of contemporary music education and research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BM in Music Education - Instrumental | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education | This program is designed to prepare students to become licensed to teach music in the pre-K through secondary levels. This option is for those who wish to teach instrumental music at the elementary, junior and senior high school levels. The Instrumental Optionhas the Brass, Woodwind, String, Guitar, Percussion or Keyboard Emphasis | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Education, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8578 | This department aspires to prepare talented individuals to meet the challenges of teaching choral, instrumental and general music in the 21st Century, and encourages growth in its students in the areas of teaching, musicianship and critical thinking. Widely recognized for its long-standing commitment to a quality music teacher education program, the department employs 12 full-time faculty with expertise in all phases of contemporary music education and research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BM in Music History | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program is intended for students who are interested in the academic study of music and who wish to prepare themselves for graduate work. Qualified students may pursue a double major in music history and music education, composition or performance. The degree combines a general view of music history, including jazz, popular music and world music, with more detailed study of cultures, styles and genres. Music history students can also participate in the departmental ensembles, collectively known as the Collegium Musicum. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | BM in World Music | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program is a new degree that combines world music and Western art music, and provides training in the fundamentals of research and performance in the fields of ethnomusicology and musicology. Students enroll in performance courses such as Balinese gamelan and Afro-Caribbean ensemble, and may take other music history and jazz courses, popular culture and anthropology courses, and participate in music workshops to Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, Africa. The World Music degree offers a broad education in musics of the world and prepares students for graduate and/or professional study. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Applied Health Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | This program is designed to prepare graduates for work in a health related field and for further education and training at the post-baccalaureate level. The AHS degree consists of six separate specializations which have common BG Perspective, core, and supportive requirements but differing specialization courses. The diversified curriculum provides a strong background in the basic sciences and emphasizes the development of critical thinking and problem-solving skills. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2478 | The Department of Public and Allied Health has four major programs. The Applied Health Science program also offers three specializations including: Health Science, Allied Health, and Applied Microbiology. This is a fairly new department with exciting educational possibilities. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Applied Health Science - Allied Health | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | This program is open to any student who has completed an accredited associate degree program in an allied health field. Those courses which comprise the technical or clinical practice component of the associate degree may be used to satisfy the specialization requirements of the baccalaureate degree. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2478 | The Department of Public and Allied Health has four major programs. The Applied Health Science program also offers three specializations including: Health Science, Allied Health, and Applied Microbiology. This is a fairly new department with exciting educational possibilities. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Applied Health Science - Applied Microbiology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | This program is designed to prepare students for work in public health agencies, infection control, food production and research, medical microbiology, and the biotechnology industry. Additionally, the specialization will prepare students for entry into graduate programs of microbiology and public health. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2478 | The Department of Public and Allied Health has four major programs. The Applied Health Science program also offers three specializations including: Health Science, Allied Health, and Applied Microbiology. This is a fairly new department with exciting educational possibilities. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Applied Health Science - Community Health | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | This program prepares students to work in schools, community agencies, industries, and organizations that promote wellness through programs that reduce disease by behavioral interventions. The courses focus on key public health problems such as drug abuse and sexually transmitted diseases and factors that contribute to conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, and cancer. Students are taught how to develop and evaluate risk. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2478 | The Department of Public and Allied Health has four major programs. The Applied Health Science program also offers three specializations including: Health Science, Allied Health, and Applied Microbiology. This is a fairly new department with exciting educational possibilities. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Applied Health Science - Health Care Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | This program is designed to prepare students to work in management and administration in hospitals, clinics, and other organizations providing health care services. Their roles include aspects of finance, budgeting, billing, human resources management, facilities management, marketing, and quality measurement and improvement. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2478 | The Department of Public and Allied Health has four major programs. The Applied Health Science program also offers three specializations including: Health Science, Allied Health, and Applied Microbiology. This is a fairly new department with exciting educational possibilities. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Applied Health Science - Health Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | This program is designed to prepare students for entry into a post baccalaureate professional training program in a health related field. The curriculum is centered around essential physical, biological, and social sciences that are fundamental to the allied health professions. This curriculum was developed to meet the needs and academic admission requirements for masters degree programs in Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Public Health, Occupational Health, and Physician Assistant. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2478 | The Department of Public and Allied Health has four major programs. The Applied Health Science program also offers three specializations including: Health Science, Allied Health, and Applied Microbiology. This is a fairly new department with exciting educational possibilities. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Applied Health Science - Respiratory Care | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | This program is designed to prepare students for advanced practice in respiratory care. Advanced respiratory care practitioners work in a wide variety of clinical settings to evaluate, treat, and manage patients of all ages with respiratory illnesses and other cardiopulmonary disorders. Graduates are eligible to take credentialing examinations to become a Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT) and Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT). The program is available at the Firelands campus only, and is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP), 1361 Park Street, Clearwater, FL 33756. Advanced respiratory care practitioners perform diagnostic procedures to assess breathing function and treatments for airway and lung diseases, evaluate the effectiveness of treatments and medications for breathing problems, and provide patient education. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Public and Allied Health, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2478 | The Department of Public and Allied Health has four major programs. The Applied Health Science program also offers three specializations including: Health Science, Allied Health, and Applied Microbiology. This is a fairly new department with exciting educational possibilities. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Africana Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Africana Studies | This program is designed for students to pursue an interdisciplinary approach to study by taking courses in a variety of disciplines. It provides studies of the historical, cultural, literary, and artistic aspects of people of African descent worldwide. The arts and humanities focus of this major and minor will help prepare students to effectively negotiate in a world that increasingly requires the crossing of racial, cultural, and disciplinary boundaries in knowledge and vocational pursuits. Various career and graduate studies opportunities are available for students completing this major and minor; these include social sciences, humanities, law, education, ethnic and women's studies, government, policy studies, international relations, diplomatic service, non-profit organizations, and public agencies. Students who plan for a dual degree expand their career and graduate studies opportunities. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:AFRS 200 (3) Introduction to Africana Studies, AFRS 300 (3) Special Topics in Africana Studies, AFRS 400 (3) Africana Studies, ACS 230 African Religions in the United States (3), ARTH 461 Art of Western Africa (3), ARTH 462 Art and Power in Africa (3), ARTH 463 Women and Art in Africa (3), ARTH 495 Special Topics in Art History (1-3), ENG 211 African-American Lit, ETHN 120 Introduction to Black Studies (3), ETHN 220 African Literature (3), ETHN 300 African American Music and Social Change (3), ETHN 302 Women of Color in US, ETHN 320 Literature of Black Nationalism (3), ETHN 340 Afro-American Cinematic Experience (3), ETHN 402 Colonial Africa, ETHN 430 Comparative Perspectives on Race and Ethnicity (3), FREN 476 Women In African Society, GEOG 347 Africa (3), GREA 250 Swahili, HDFS 107 Black Families in America, HIST 314 Black Religion and Culture (3), HIST 315 Slavery in the Americas (3), HIST 317 African Cultures and Societies (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Africana Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Africana Studies, 132 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7814 | This department at Bowling Green State University is an interdisciplinary program devoted to the exploration and advancement of new frontiers of scholarship on the artistic, historical, cultural, political and theoretical expressions of the various cultures of Africa and the African Diaspora worldwide. Students are imparted with comprehensive knowledge of Africana peoples through classroom instruction, archival research and study abroad experience. Drawing on various disciplinary fields represented in many colleges and departments across the University to strengthen students' liberal arts backgrounds, Africana studies prepares students to cope with a world of racial and cultural diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information Email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in American Culture Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies | This program offers students an individually tailored program that focuses on the American experience. Courses help students to develop the skills appropriate for the study and appreciation of American culture in all of its diversity. The program enables students to integrate the substance of other disciplines into coherent patterns reflecting the complexity of American life and our national heritage. The goal of BGSU’s American Culture Studies Program is to help students understand and appreciate the interrelationship of all aspects of American culture. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Introduction to American Culture Studies, Issues in American Civilization, Cultural Pluralism in the United States, Indigenous Cultures of North America, Interpretations of American Culture, American Environmental History, The Literature of American Culture Studies, Qualitative Research Methods, Capstone Tutorial in American Culture Studies The Literature of American Studies, Workshop in American Culture Studies, Workshop in American Culture Studies. |
Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies, 101 East Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8886 | This department offers at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. These range from computer art and neuroscience to telecommunications and popular culture, from biology and Japanese to computer science and women’s studies and beyond. In fact, the College offers almost 100 majors, over 100 minors, 22 masters programs, and 11 doctoral programs designed to introduce you to a fascinating world of ideas. They will also help you develop skills necessary to succeed in hundreds of satisfying careers, prepare you for such professions as law, medicine, and journalism, provide you with a firm foundation for graduate work, spark your imagination, and expand your horizons. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Asian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies | This program offers an interdisciplinary curriculum of studies on Asia. Students complete a minimum of 36 credit hours from the list of the core courses and the elective courses. Students gain a broad knowledge of the culture and societies of East Asia, South Asia and Southeast Asia; an in-depth knowledge of one of the East Asian countries and the basic conversational and reading skills of an Asian language. The core courses are designed to introduce students to the social sciences and humanities, and to provide them with a global outlook of the world and Asia. The elective courses provide students with in-depth knowledge of Asia, and analytical and practical skills of selected disciplines, such as history, business and political science. In addition, Asian Studies majors must complete two years of Japanese or Chinese. Upon completion of the program, students have a broad interdisciplinary, international and comparative understanding of Asia and the United States, and a functional ability in an Asian language that will enrich their professional and personal lives. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies, 101 East Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8886 | This department offers at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. These range from computer art and neuroscience to telecommunications and popular culture, from biology and Japanese to computer science and women’s studies and beyond. In fact, the College offers almost 100 majors, over 100 minors, 22 masters programs, and 11 doctoral programs designed to introduce you to a fascinating world of ideas. They will also help you develop skills necessary to succeed in hundreds of satisfying careers, prepare you for such professions as law, medicine, and journalism, provide you with a firm foundation for graduate work, spark your imagination, and expand your horizons. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Classical Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program is designed to acquaint students with classical antiquity and the cultural foundations of the Western world. It does not require intensive language training of the Latin major or minor. This major or minor is designed to help prepare students for careers in areas as diverse as archeology, business, government service, law, ministry, museum curatorship, public relations, writing, and others. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Great Greek Minds, Great Roman Minds,Word Power from Greek and Latin Roots, Classical Mythology, Roman Life, Ancient Drama, Topics in Classical Civilization, Greek Civilization , Roman Civilization, Apprentice Teaching. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | This program emphasizes coursework, developing competencies in specific professional areas. BAC students complement their major coursework by identifying a career focus. The career focus requires 24 hours of credit in areas including, but not limited to, Communication Research, Organizational Communication, Performance Studies, Promotions and Advertising, Sales Communication, and Social Services. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Speech Communication, Intercollegiate Forensic Activities, Human Communication, Small Group Communication , Presentational Speaking in Organizations, Interpersonal Communication I , Interpersonal Communication and Interviewing, Interpersonal Communication in International Contexts, Persuasive Communication, Leadership in Communication, Interpersonal Communication, Organizational Communication , Argumentation, Communication and Criticism, Virtual Teams, Workshop on Current Topics , Intercollegiate Forensic Activities, Political Campaign Communication, Communication and Conflict, Computers Mediating Cultures and Organizations, Topics in Communication Studies, interpersonal Communication II, Intercultural Communication, International Communication, Perspectives on Freedom of Expression, performing Digitally Mediated Identities and Communication, Communication and Gender, Communication Ethics, Communication, Race, and Power, Technology for World Communication, Health Communication, Communication Internship, Readings in Interpersonal Communication. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication, 302 West Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | This department is a global center for teaching and research in communication and media. Departments of Interpersonal Communication, Journalism, and Telecommunications teach doctor of philosophy, master’s and bachelor’s degrees, and run collaborative programs with cognate disciplines, including American Cultural Studies, and Theatre and Film. The School works closely with print, broadcast and online student media, including the daily newspaper BG News, BG-24 television, radio stations WBGU-FM and WFAL-AM, and enjoys a long association with WBGU-TV27 public broadcasting. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication - Acting/Directing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program allows the student whose primary interests are in acting and directing the opportunity to be more fully immersed in these areas and to really hone their abilities and skills through advanced study. This degree includes 70 hours of coursework outside of the department, as well as a core theatre curriculum and a specialized course of study. Instead of a minor, each BAC major must fulfill a support field requirement. This support field requirement can be met by courses chosen by the student and approved by that student's theatre department advisor. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Production Participation, Major Event Participation, Script Analysis, Theatre History and Literature: Origins-1700s, Theatre History and Literature: 1700s-Present, Period, Style and Form, Acting: Principals, Acting: Topics in Voice and Movement, Directing, Scenery Construction, Costume Construction, Lighting and Sound, Drafting and Drawing, Advanced Directing, Acting: Character and Range, Acting: Topics and Application, Musical Theatre, Workshop in Theatre, Stage Management, Advanced Production Practicum. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication - Design/Technical Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program includes a thorough foundation in all areas of theatre technology, plus design and practical application through continuing participation in our production program. This degree includes 70 hours of coursework outside of the department, as well as a core theatre curriculum and a specialized course of study. Instead of a minor, each BAC major must fulfill a support field requirement. This support field requirement can be met by courses chosen by the student and approved by that student's theatre department advisor. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Production Participation, Major Event Participation, Script Analysis, Theatre History and Literature: Origins-1700s, Theatre History and Literature: 1700s-Present, Period, Style and Form, Scenery Construction, Costume Construction, Lighting and Sound, Drafting and Drawing, Directing, Lighting Design, Scene Design, Costume Design, Advanced Production Practicum, Stage Management, Scene Painting, Arts Management, any THFM Puppetry course, any ART 2-D or 3-D Foundation course. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication - Musical Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program is a rigorous training program that combines coursework in theatre, dance and music to provide the strongest foundation possible for musical theatre performers. This degree includes 70 hours of coursework outside of the department, as well as a core theatre curriculum and a specialized course of study. Instead of a minor, each BAC major must fulfill a support field requirement. For the Musical Theatre Specialization, this support field requirement will be met by prescribed coursework in Music and Dance. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Production Participation, Major Event Participation, Script Analysis, Theatre History and Literature: Origins-1700s, Theatre History and Literature: 1700s-Present, Period, Style and Form, Acting: Principals, Musical Theatre, Acting: Songs and Arias, Aural Skills I, Aural Skills II, Music Theory I, Music Theory II, 7 hours of Applied Voice, Ballroom Dancing I, Jazz Technique and Theory I, Tap Dance I, Modern Dance Technique and Theory I and II, Ballet Technique and Theory I and II, Dance Topics. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication - Performance Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program focuses on a contemporary shift among scholars to consider performance as something more than only acting or singing on a stage. Coursework will focus on how performance occurs in everyday life, as well as in film. This degree includes 70 hours of coursework outside of the department, as well as a core theatre curriculum and a specialized course of study. Instead of a minor, each BAC major must fulfill a support field requirement. This support field requirement can be met by courses chosen by the student and approved by that student's theatre department advisor. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Production Participation, Major Event Participation, Script Analysis, Theatre History and Literature: Origins-1700s, Theatre History and Literature: 1700s-Present, Period, Style and Form, Acting: Principals,Creative Dramatics, Directing, Performance Studies II, Introduction to Folklore and Folklife, Scenery Construction, Costume Construction, Lighting and Sound, Drafting and Drawing,Studies in Literature and Film, Philosophy of Film, Introduction to Film. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication - Telecommunications | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Telecommunications | This program produces well rounded graduates to be future decision makers in the electronic media and allied professions. Graduates obtain such positions as television producer, radio or television programmer, script writer, radio announcer, audio and video editor, web page designer, and media researcher. Career opportunities are available in public and commercial radio and television, cable television, telephony, multimedia, advertising, and education. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Media and the Information Society, Radio and Television Production for Non-TCOM Majors, Writing for Electronic Media, Radio Announcing and Production, Video I: Production Fundamentals, Interactive Communication Technologies I, Internet Applications for the Telecommunications Industry, Topics in Minorities and Film/Video, Scriptwriting, Global Telecommunication Systems, Media Research, Video II, Broadcasting History, Media Effects, Radio Workshop, Workshop on Current Topics, Topics in Documentary Studies, Online Communities and Social Environments , Media Sales and Promotion, Telecommunications Management, Telecommunication Policy and Regulation, Audience Research, Radio Programming and Audiences, Telecommunications Programming, Interactive Communication Technologies II, Television and Film Criticism, Gender, Media and Culture, Video III: Advanced Production, Practicum in Video Production, Electronic Surveillance and Privacy, Media Industry and Events, Internship in Telecommunications, Problems in Telecommunications. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Telecommunications | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Telecommunications, 302 West Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | The Department of Telecommunications is home to more than 220 majors with more than 1,700 alumni working in various fields, many of whom are now top executives in major media companies such as Time Warner Cable, Sony Pictures Entertainment, Fox Sports Network, and Clear Channel. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Communication - Youth Theatre/Puppetry | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program provides a strong foundation in a specialized area of theatre. This degree includes 70 hours of coursework outside of the department, as well as a core theatre curriculum and a specialized course of study. Instead of a minor, each BAC major must fulfill a support field requirement. This support field requirement can be met by courses chosen by the student and approved by that student's theatre department advisor. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Production Participation, Major Event Participation, Script Analysis, Theatre History and Literature: Origins-1700s, Theatre History and Literature: 1700s-Present, Period, Style and Form, Scenery Construction, Costume Construction, Lighting and Sound, Drafting and Drawing, Directing, Lighting Design, Scene Design, Costume Design, Advanced Production Practicum, Stage Management, Scene Painting, Arts Management, any THFM Puppetry course, any ART 2-D or 3-D Foundation course. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program applies the basic principles of computing and the latest technological advancements to solve problems in business, education, and government. Graduates may work as systems analysts who design solutions to specific problems, applications programmers who translate these solutions into software, or technical support professionals who resolve a wide range of problems related to computer applications and use. Other career possibilities are system administrators, computer network administrators, or systems programmers. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Computer Basics (3), Introduction to Programming (3), Introductory Topics (1-3), Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming (3), Objects and Data Abstraction (3),Computer Organization (3), Intermediate Topics (1-3), Co-op Preparation (1), Professional and Societal Issues in Computing (3), Information Management Technologies (3), Web Application Development (3), Windows Application Development (3), Usability Engineering (3), Operating Systems and Networks, Data Structures and Algorithms (3), COBOL Programming (3), Introduction to Unix (1), Unix System Administration (2), Special Topics in Computer Science (1-3), Practicum in Computer Science (1-6), Advanced Operating Systems (3), Language Design and Implementation (3), Formal Language Theory (3),Introduction to Parallel Computing (3), Artificial Intelligence Methods (3), Computer Graphics (3), Data Communication and Networks (3), Optimization Techniques, Techniques of Simulation (3), Numerical Analysis, Database Management Systems, Software Development, Seminar in Computer Applications. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2337 | This department offer both the Bachelor's and Master's level. Our department strives to: provide a current, comprehensive and client-centered environment for the teaching and learning of computer science and related professional values prepare students for professional careers or advanced studies in computer science have a positive effect upon students, the university, the community and the computer science profession promote the discovery, dissemination and application of knowledge involving computing foster personal and professional growth for all students, faculty and staff. In significant ways, economic, social, and technological changes influence educational demands and processes. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in English | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program students will learn to use writing effectively including current modes and evolving technologies to explore subject matter and to communicate. They will develop understanding of subject matter in relation to larger historical and/or cultural contexts, including multicultural contexts. Make connections between theory and practice, applying that theory not only to understanding texts, but also to solving. problems and teaching effectively. Generalize from experiences with texts, communication situations and teaching situations and develop skills of creative and/or critical thinking. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in English - Special studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program has a maximum of two non literature courses may be substituted for literature electives. These must be approved by the English advisor and require a course substitution form. An exception must be recorded in DARS. These courses will typically fall in the Other row/column. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Ethnic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Ethnic Studies | This program emphasizes studies of race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and the historical processes of slavery, colonial conquest, immigration and globalization, among other subject areas. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Eng 632 Writers' Workshop, Eng 630/631 Techniques Course, Eng 782 Advanced Writer's Workshop, Eng 633 Editing the Mid-American Review, Eng 699 Thesis Research Hours. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Ethnic Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Ethnic Studies, 228 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7117 | The department of Ethnic Studies offers an interdisciplinary curriculum designed to foster an understanding of the histories and cultures of racial and ethnic groups in their local, national and global contexts. The program emphasizes studies of race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and the historical processes of slavery, colonial conquest, immigration and globalization, among other subject areas. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Ethnic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Ethnic Studies | This program is designed to provide students with a wide range of courses that will prepare students for careers in a variety of fields. Students have the opportunity to develop their speaking, reading, writing and listening skills in German in a series of language, culture, literature and film courses. Bowling Green German majors have pursued careers in international business and politics, literature, journalism, art, education, law, history, medicine, the sciences, music and film. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Ethnic Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Ethnic Studies, 228 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7117 | The department of Ethnic Studies offers an interdisciplinary curriculum designed to foster an understanding of the histories and cultures of racial and ethnic groups in their local, national and global contexts. The program emphasizes studies of race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and the historical processes of slavery, colonial conquest, immigration and globalization, among other subject areas. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Film - Film Production | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program gives students a foundation in film history, aesthetics, production, and methods of analysis that illuminate global and cultural perspectives. Students who select the specialization in film production gain experience in all aspects of production and are prepared to begin careers as writers, producers, and directors. BGSU graduates have been accepted into prestigious MFA film programs and highly competitive professional programs such as those sponsored by the Director's Guild of America. Students who choose the specialization in film studies develop expertise in electronic publishing and in analyzing the film industry and individual films. They are prepared to begin careers in journalism, festival organization, film acquisition and distribution, and, with professional training, entertainment law. Film studies students have been accepted into graduate film studies programs and have launched successful electronic publications on film, media, and culture. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Film, Script Analysis, History of Film, Film Production: From Concept to Distribution, Practicum in Theatre or Film, Practicum in Theatre or Film, Basic Scenery Construction, Props, and Scene Painting, Basic Costume Construction, Literature and Film, Writing About Films, Studies in Literature-Film, Topics in Film Theory, The Native American in Film, Afro-American Cinematic Experience, Third World Cinema , French Film, The German Film, The Italian Cinema, Philosophy of Film, Introduction to Popular Film, Advanced Studies in Popular Film, European and Latin American Cinema , Russian Film , Topics in Minorities and Film/Video, Television and Film Criticism, Digital Tech for Film Production, Performance Studies II, Theatre History and Literature 1700-Present, Milestones in Black Theatre, Musical Theatre, Workshop on Current Topics, Screenwriting, Contemporary Issues in Theatre, Period, Style, and Form, Animated Films,Topics in Film, Theatre and Performance Studies, Problems in Theatre or Film, Visual Communication Technology, Concepts of Visual Communication, Introduction to Print Media. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Film - Film Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program gives students a foundation in film history, aesthetics, production, and methods of analysis that illuminate global and cultural perspectives. Students who select the specialization in film production gain experience in all aspects of production and are prepared to begin careers as writers, producers, and directors. BGSU graduates have been accepted into prestigious MFA film programs and highly competitive professional programs such as those sponsored by the Director's Guild of America. Students who choose the specialization in film studies develop expertise in electronic publishing and in analyzing the film industry and individual films. They are prepared to begin careers in journalism, festival organization, film acquisition and distribution, and, with professional training, entertainment law. Film studies students have been accepted into graduate film studies programs and have launched successful electronic publications on film, media, and culture. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Film, Script Analysis, History of Film, Film Production: From Concept to Distribution, Practicum in Theatre or Film | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in French | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program includes courses in composition, conversation, phonetics, civilization, literature, film, and business French. Students opting to go abroad may take courses in French art history, geography, history, philosophy, political science and popular culture. Students who want to teach French in elementary or secondary schools should pursue the bachelor of science in education program with a major or minor in French. This program requires a series of professional education courses, field and clinical experiences and supervised student teaching, leading to certification from kindergarten through twelfth grade. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: English Composition (3-8), Intermediate French (6), Principles of Speech Communication (3), Science and Mathematics courses (12), French Composition and Conversation (3-6), French Phonetics (3-6), Geography of Western Europe (3), History of France (3), French Art (3-6), French Politics (3), Introduction to French Literature I (3), Applied French Linguistics (3), Contemporary Touraine (3), French Civilization II (3), Introduction to French Literature II (3), French Literature: Advanced Studies (8), Career French (3), Elementary Statistical Methods (3), Introduction to Management Information , Principles of Economics (6), Introduction to Accounting (3), Business Finance (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology | This program emphasize both laboratory and field experience. In addition to a required five-week summer field course held in New Mexico and Colorado, the department periodically offers trips to the Appalachian Mountains; the upper peninsula of Michigan; Mammoth Cave, Kentucky; and the Ohio-Indiana area. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology, 190 Overman Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2886 | This department is to provide highest quality undergraduate and graduate education, to advance research and scholarship in the geological sciences, and to provide service to the profession, university, and community. The department recognizes the need to enhance its ability to adapt to changes in society and the profession, to develop collective as well as individual capabilities, and to use self-evaluation to continually improve in the areas of teaching, research, and service. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program offers a flexible major that prepares students for a variety of careers as well as for graduate and law school. History majors take three introductory courses (chosen from world civilization, U.S. history, and Asian civilizations); complete at least one course in each of these three areas: Europe, the U.S., and other regions, including Asia, Latin America, Africa, and Canada; conduct intensive research in a small seminar designed for majors; and select at least four other history courses from among a wide array of choices. This approach allows students to choose to focus on a specific area or period or to select a broad distribution of courses. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Bowling Green State University, Williams 128, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2030 | This department is the investigation of change and continuity in human societies. Historical study aims to understand the past in order to understand the present more fully. Studying history creates a trained habit of thinking in the long-term, and integrating political, social, economic, artistic, intellectual and cultural factors into both the long-term and short-term aspects of society. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in International Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, International Studies Program | This program provides an interdisciplinary approach to international and global connections. The major acquaints students with approaches from the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. The student's individual program may focus on a world region, a particular issue or discipline, or a future career goal such as government, business, or foreign service. All IS majors continue foreign language at least through the third-year college level. We encourage all majors to spend a year or a semester abroad; shorter programs are also available. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to International Studies, World Civilization or The Modern World, Introduction to Comparative Government or Introduction to International Relations, World Geography: Eurasia and Africa, or Americas and Pacific, Interpersonal Communication in International Context , Introduction to Economics, or Principles of Microeconomics and Macroeconomics, Senior Seminar in International Studies. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, International Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, International Studies Program, 103 Shatzel Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7814 | International Studies provides an interdisciplinary approach to international and global connections. The major acquaints students with approaches from the humanities (history, communication), social sciences (economics, political science), and natural sciences (geography). The student’s individual program may focus on a world region (Africa, Europe), a particular issue or discipline (environment, sociology), or a future career goal (government, business administration). | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program in mathematics begins with a core of three semesters of Calculus and a course in Linear Algebra. These are some of the most useful courses the department offers because they introduce fundamental tools for describing and understanding the world, especially science and business, and in that they lay the theoretical foundations for most later courses in mathematics. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program serves the interests of a wide range of students seeking the skills and understanding appropriate to a philosophical perspective on issues of concern to them. These issues range from specific topics in biomedical ethics to highly abstract issues about knowledge, reality, religion, and morality. The major requires work in the various areas of philosophic study: logic, history of philosophy, normative philosophy, and metaphysics and epistemology. Because of its emphasis on careful reading, conceptual thinking, and well-reasoned writing, the major provides excellent training for a variety of careers, including law and business as well as teaching. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Logic and methodology, History of philosophy,Normative philosophy, Metaphysics and epistemology. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 305 Shatzel Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2117 | The Department of Philosophy is an internationally recognized community of scholars and students, known widely for its specialization in, and contributions to, moral philosophy, broadly construed, which includes metaethics, normative ethics, applied ethics, political philosophy and aesthetics.Undergraduate students may earn a B.A. in philosophy, and graduate students may earn a Masters or Ph.D. in the Department's applied philosophy program.The Department is committed to providing the highest quality of education for students as well as to increasing the body of philosophical knowledge. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program prepares students to be critical observers of politics and society, active citizens, and for careers in a variety of fields. Our courses provide a deeper understanding of domestic and international politics. They train you to think critically, write well, and speak with confidence. Our alumni work in settings such as federal, state, and local governments; international organizations; interest groups; educational institutions; law enforcement agencies; and businesses. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 124 Williams Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2921 | The Department of Political Science is strongly committed to undergraduate and graduate education in government and politics that supports the scholarship of discovery, teaching, integration and application. The department provides students with the intellectual foundation for many career pursuits, including work in the public, private, and non-profit sectors; law, education, and global and local politics. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Popular Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Popular Culture | This program includes the study of television, popular music, popular literature such as magazines and best sellers, sports, amusement parks, and movies. Students examine how and why people select their entertainment, what such things as television programs and movies mean to those who watch them, how popular products such as records and compact discs are marketed, and how all aspects of daily lives influence the basic beliefs and values. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:POPC 165 Popular Culture and Media, POPC 170 Black Popular Culture, POPC 220 Introduction to Folklore and Folklife, POPC 231 Studies in Popular Culture (1-3), POPC 250 Introduction to Popular Film, POPC 260 Popular Culture Research, POPC 270 Introduction to Contemporary Popular Literature, POPC 280 Introduction to Popular Music, POPC 290 Television as Popular Culture, POPC 300 Topics in International/Global Popular Culture, POPC 320 Folktale and Legend, POPC 321 Folklife and Material Culture, POPC 325 The Folk Group/Folk Region,POPC 350 Advanced Studies in Popular Culture, POPC 365 Youth and Popular Culture, POPC 370 History of Popular Literature, POPC 380 Contexts of Popular Music, POPC 395 Workshop on Current Topics, POPC 424 Folklore Genres, POPC 426 Popular Entertainments, POPC 460 Popular Culture Advanced Studies, POPC 470 Studies in Popular Literature, POPC 480 Senior Seminar in Popular Culture, POPC 485 Fieldwork in Folklore Studies, POPC 490 Problems in Popular Culture. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Popular Culture | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Popular Culture, 108 Popular Culture Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2981 | The Department of Popular Culture is an academic department within the College of Arts and Sciences and its graduate program is within the Graduate College. The standard curricula each year include courses in theory and methods, folklore, literature, music, television, and film as well as courses developed by faculty in specialized areas such as Asian studies, international popular culture, black popular culture, and youth culture. The Department also houses the Center for Popular Culture Studies which has information contained in this web site. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Popular Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Popular Culture | This program includes the study of television, popular music, popular literature such as magazines and best sellers, sports, amusement parks, and movies. Students examine how and why people select their entertainment, what such things as television programs and movies mean to those who watch them, how popular products such as records and compact discs are marketed, and how all aspects of daily lives influence the basic beliefs and values. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:POPC 165 Popular Culture and Media, POPC 170 Black Popular Culture, POPC 220 Introduction to Folklore and Folklife, POPC 231 Studies in Popular Culture (1-3), POPC 250 Introduction to Popular Film, POPC 260 Popular Culture Research, POPC 270 Introduction to Contemporary Popular Literature, POPC 280 Introduction to Popular Music, POPC 290 Television as Popular Culture, POPC 300 Topics in International/Global Popular Culture, POPC 320 Folktale and Legend, POPC 321 Folklife and Material Culture, POPC 325 The Folk Group/Folk Region,POPC 350 Advanced Studies in Popular Culture, POPC 365 Youth and Popular Culture, POPC 370 History of Popular Literature, POPC 380 Contexts of Popular Music, POPC 395 Workshop on Current Topics, POPC 424 Folklore Genres, POPC 426 Popular Entertainments, POPC 460 Popular Culture Advanced Studies, POPC 470 Studies in Popular Literature, POPC 480 Senior Seminar in Popular Culture, POPC 485 Fieldwork in Folklore Studies, POPC 490 Problems in Popular Culture. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Popular Culture | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Popular Culture, 108 Popular Culture Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2981 | The Department of Popular Culture is an academic department within the College of Arts and Sciences and its graduate program is within the Graduate College. The standard curricula each year include courses in theory and methods, folklore, literature, music, television, and film as well as courses developed by faculty in specialized areas such as Asian studies, international popular culture, black popular culture, and youth culture. The Department also houses the Center for Popular Culture Studies which has information contained in this web site. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program focuses on the study of both human and animal behavior and related mental and physiological processes. As a scholarly discipline, psychology represents a major field of study in academic settings, with emphasis on the communication and explanation of principles and theories of behavior. As a science, it is a focus of research through which investigators collect, quantify, analyze, and interpret data describing human and animal behavior, thus shedding light on the causes and dynamics of behavior patterns. As a profession, psychology involves the practical application of knowledge, skills, and techniques for the solution or prevention of individual or social problems; the professional role also provides an opportunity for the psychologist to develop further his/her understanding of human behavior and thus to contribute to the science of psychology. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Suite 62, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is truly an exciting time to study psychology. New things are being learned everyday about how people behave, how the mind and brain work, and how that knowledge can be used to help people, organizations, and society. As you explore our web site, we hope that you see that the Psychology Department at BGSU is deeply committed to advancing that knowledge by doing our own research, teaching it to our students, and helping those whom we hope can benefit from it. This program speciality areas in clinical, developmental, industrial -organizational, and the neural and cognitive sciences. All faculty teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The Psychology Building includes two of five floors (over 20,000 square feet) dedicated to human and animal research. Four computing facilities are housed in the Psychology Building for undergraduate and graduate student use. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Scientific and Technical Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program is offered by the Scientific and Technical Communication Programs at BGSU. Receiving either degree involves completing the general education courses required of all BGSU students, as well as specific College of Arts and Sciences courses in math and natural sciences, foreign languages, social sciences, and arts and humanities. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:English Composition, Foreign Language, Science and Math, Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology - Criminology/Corrections | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program studies the nature of criminal law, the causes and consequences of criminal behavior and the ways in which society deals with criminal offenders. Criminology is excellent preparation for careers in both the adult and juvenile justice systems, including police departments, court systems, and the probation and corrections networks within each. Electives include, but are not limited to: Sociology 316, 319, 340, 341, 441, 442, 443, 461. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | SOC 101 Principles of Sociology, SOC 202 Social Problems , SOC 210 Sociology of Religion, SOC 231 Cultural Anthropology, SOC 300 Topics in Sociology, SOC 301 Social Psychology, SOC 302 Introduction to Sociological Theory, SOC 312 Population and Society, SOC 313 Fertility and Family Planning, SOC 316 Minority Groups, SOC 317 Social Stratification and Poverty, SOC 319 Alcohol and Public Policy, SOC 340 Deviance and Social Control, SOC 341 Juvenile Delinquency, SOC 361 The Family ,SOC 368 Introductory methodology, SOC 369 Introductory Statistics ,SOC 371 Applied Survey Research, SOC 404. Social Gerontology, SOC 414. Society and the Environment, SOC 417 Sociology of Sport, SOC 419 Populations and Development , SOC 420. Introduction to Demographic Techniques, SOC 427 Introduction to Applied Demography, SOC 441 Criminology, SOC 442 Corrections, SOC 443 White Collar and Organized Crime, SOC 445 Soc Perspectives ,Interpersonal Violence, SOC 460 Sociology of Gender ,SOC 461 Sociology of Family Violence, SOC 470 Readings, Research and Internship, SOC 471 Applied Sociology Experience ,SOC 480 Senior Seminar ,SOC 489 Internship, SOC 495 Workshop on Current Topics. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology - Family and Social Services | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program prepares students for careers in agencies responsible for the planning, delivery and administration of services and resources for the well-being of individuals and families. Coursework provides a framework for understanding family dynamics produced from social and individual variables including gender, age, race and class and the interactions of those dynamics with social institutions generally and human service programs in particular. Electives include, but are not limited to: Sociology 313, 316, 317, 319, 341, 361, 404, 417, 460, and 461. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | SOC 101 Principles of Sociology, SOC 202 Social Problems , SOC 210 Sociology of Religion, SOC 231 Cultural Anthropology, SOC 300 Topics in Sociology, SOC 301 Social Psychology, SOC 302 Introduction to Sociological Theory, SOC 312 Population and Society, SOC 313 Fertility and Family Planning, SOC 316 Minority Groups, SOC 317 Social Stratification and Poverty, SOC 319 Alcohol and Public Policy, SOC 340 Deviance and Social Control, SOC 341 Juvenile Delinquency, SOC 361 The Family ,SOC 368 Introductory methodology, SOC 369 Introductory Statistics ,SOC 371 Applied Survey Research, SOC 404. Social Gerontology, SOC 414. Society and the Environment, SOC 417 Sociology of Sport, SOC 419 Populations and Development , SOC 420. Introduction to Demographic Techniques, SOC 427 Introduction to Applied Demography, SOC 441 Criminology, SOC 442 Corrections, SOC 443 White Collar and Organized Crime, SOC 445 Soc Perspectives ,Interpersonal Violence, SOC 460 Sociology of Gender ,SOC 461 Sociology of Family Violence, SOC 470 Readings, Research and Internship, SOC 471 Applied Sociology Experience ,SOC 480 Senior Seminar ,SOC 489 Internship, SOC 495 Workshop on Current Topics. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology - Population Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program examines the composition of human populations, communities and organizations as they adapt to their environments. The curriculum provides a breadth of training for careers in business planning, labor-force analysis and economic development. Population analysts are employed in all levels of government and private business. Electives include, but are not limited to Sociology 312, 313, 316, 361, 404, 414, 419. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | SOC 101 Principles of Sociology, SOC 202 Social Problems , SOC 210 Sociology of Religion, SOC 231 Cultural Anthropology, SOC 300 Topics in Sociology, SOC 301 Social Psychology, SOC 302 Introduction to Sociological Theory, SOC 312 Population and Society, SOC 313 Fertility and Family Planning, SOC 316 Minority Groups, SOC 317 Social Stratification and Poverty, SOC 319 Alcohol and Public Policy, SOC 340 Deviance and Social Control, SOC 341 Juvenile Delinquency, SOC 361 The Family ,SOC 368 Introductory methodology, SOC 369 Introductory Statistics ,SOC 371 Applied Survey Research, SOC 404. Social Gerontology, SOC 414. Society and the Environment, SOC 417 Sociology of Sport, SOC 419 Populations and Development , SOC 420. Introduction to Demographic Techniques, SOC 427 Introduction to Applied Demography, SOC 441 Criminology, SOC 442 Corrections, SOC 443 White Collar and Organized Crime, SOC 445 Soc Perspectives ,Interpersonal Violence, SOC 460 Sociology of Gender ,SOC 461 Sociology of Family Violence, SOC 470 Readings, Research and Internship, SOC 471 Applied Sociology Experience ,SOC 480 Senior Seminar ,SOC 489 Internship, SOC 495 Workshop on Current Topics. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program boasts of being one of the oldest U.S. study abroad programs in Spain and, because of our extensive commitments and contacts, it is also one of the least expensive. The Spanish program also offers a short-term study abroad opportunity to Mexico. Students benefit both linguistically and culturally from these experiences, and Spanish majors are strongly encouraged to study abroad. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: English Composition (3-8), Intermediate Spanish (6), Principles of Speech Communication (3), Science and Mathematics courses (12), Spanish Composition and Conversation (3-6), French Phonetics (3-6), Civilization of Mexico and the Caribbean (3), Civilization of South America (3), Introduction to Psychology (3), Philosophy (3), Social Sciences (3), Minor or second major (15), Spanish Composition and Conversation (3-6), Civilization of Spain (3), Art of Spain (3), Geography of Spain (3), Introduction to Spanish Peninsular Literature (3), Introduction to Spanish American Literature (3), Spanish Advanced Grammar and Composition (3), Folk Culture of Spain (3), Contemporary Spanish Literature (3), Career Spanish (3), Spanish Applied Linguistics (3), Spanish elective (3), Teaching English as a Foreign Language (3), Minor or second major (15). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Telecommunications | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Telecommunications | This program produces well rounded graduates to be future decision makers in the electronic media and allied professions. Graduates obtain such positions as television producer, radio or television programmer, script writer, radio announcer, audio and video editor, web page designer, and media researcher. Career opportunities are available in public and commercial radio and television, cable television, telephony, multimedia, advertising, and education. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Media and the Information Society, Radio and Television Production for Non-TCOM Majors, Writing for Electronic Media, Radio Announcing and Production, Video I: Production Fundamentals, Interactive Communication Technologies I, Internet Applications for the Telecommunications Industry, Topics in Minorities and Film/Video, Scriptwriting, Global Telecommunication Systems, Media Research, Video II, Broadcasting History, Media Effects, Radio Workshop, Workshop on Current Topics, Topics in Documentary Studies, Online Communities and Social Environments , Media Sales and Promotion, Telecommunications Management, Telecommunication Policy and Regulation, Audience Research, Radio Programming and Audiences, Telecommunications Programming, Interactive Communication Technologies II, Television and Film Criticism, Gender, Media and Culture, Video III: Advanced Production, Practicum in Video Production, Electronic Surveillance and Privacy, Media Industry and Events, Internship in Telecommunications, Problems in Telecommunications. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Telecommunications | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Telecommunications, 302 West Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | The Department of Telecommunications is home to more than 220 majors with more than 1,700 alumni working in various fields, many of whom are now top executives in major media companies such as Time Warner Cable, Sony Pictures Entertainment, Fox Sports Network, and Clear Channel. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program allows students to take 11 hours of upper-level electives in theatre. Students interested in specific areas of study (such as acting, design, or theatre history) have the flexibility in this degree program to incorporate more specialized upper-level theatre courses directly into their degree requirements through these elective courses. Students are required to take a minor in a different area of study at BGSU. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Choose two from:Scenery Construction, Costume Construction, Lighting and Sound, Lighting Design, Scene Design, Costume Design, Drafting and Drawing, Script Analysis, Performance Studies I, Acting: Principles, Directing, Theatre History & Literature: Origins-1700s, Theatre History & Literature: 1700s-Present. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Arts in Women's Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Women's Studies Program | The program offering critical historical, sociological, philosophical, psychological, and literary examinations of the lives of women. Courses examine the ways in which gender, sexuality, ethnicity, and class were constructed in specific historical periods or cultures and trace the impact of these social categories on people's lives, concepts, and values today. They offer women and men of all backgrounds and viewpoints the opportunity to work together to develop and test ways of envisioning human life and community. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Women of Color in US, Global Feminisms, Women in Africa, Practicum, Women’s Sexualities, Repro health and politics, Women in Am. History, Sport and Gender, Gender, Art and Culture. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Women's Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Women's Studies Program, Bowling Green State University, 226 East Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7133 | Women's Studies is a challenging and flexible interdisciplinary major that includes an internship requirement to provide practical experience. Students get a chance to become involved in many activities and areas of inquiry. We have a dedicated faculty and small classes that promote self-awareness and active learning. Students will enjoy extra-curricular programming throughout the year including films, lectures, performances, and special events during Women's History Month. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Fine Arts in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program offers comprehensive and rigorous training in the art of writing, and develops students' skills in preparation for numerous post-graduate careers. To provide rich cultural and historical contexts for students' original work in the BFA program, students take studio-oriented fiction and poetry writing workshops; foundational courses in modern and contemporary American and English literature and world literature from ancient times to the present; and a course in linguistics and the history of languages. Students complete general education courses in foreign languages, the natural and social sciences, and the humanities to obtain a well-rounded education. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Liberal Studies | Distance / Online | Variable | $3300 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | The Bachelor of Liberal Studies degree program is best for students who are returning to college seeking degree completion, motivated to design their own course of study and seeking flexibility in a degree completion program. | Students should have completed no fewer than 30 semester hours; a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.0; at least 30 semester hours of coursework remaining to be completed before graduation; submitted a personal essay of two to three pages which articulates a specific relationship between the student's long and short-term goals and objectives and the proposed course of study; students enrolled in other colleges at BGSU must meet with a college advisor before an application is made. Students applying for BLS on-line must first contact an Arts and Sciences advisor by email. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Church Music | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Guitar | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Harpsichord | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Instrumental | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Keyboard Accompanying | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Organ | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Piano Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Piano Pedagogy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Vocal Pedagogy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Voice | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Voice/Musical Theater | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | This program provides the potential professional performer (musician) and/or teacher with the finest instrumental/vocal training within the context of a comprehensive undergraduate curriculum. Individual study with artist-teachers enables each student to achieve a high level of proficiency on the major instrument (strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion, guitar, keyboard, voice), and a high level of participation in ensembles provides performance experience and a broad knowledge of the literature. Specialized coursework develops the expertise in reading, writing, analysis, musical styles, and performance practices which marks the professional performer/teacher (musician). The department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Woodwind Specialist | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | Thisprogram is a limited enrollment program. Acceptance is based on an audition which is to be scheduled at the end of the student’s first semester. Successful completion of the option requires high performance standards in the major woodwind instrument and a proficiency level in two other woodwind instruments equivalent to that of entering freshmen with these instruments as their major performing medium. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies | College of Musical Arts, Department of Music Performance Studies, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2181 | This department provides applied instruction and coursework in performance for music majors and minors, as well as for all qualified students of the University. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Visual Communication Technology - Photography | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | This program offers a broad based introduction to photography with an emphasis on using digital photographic images to communicate specific messages to targeted audiences. All majors receive instructions in basic photography principles including lighting, retouching and manipulation and special techniques. Students who choose more in-depth study in photography include coursework in digital imaging, commercial and studio photography. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2437 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. Our focus is a hands-on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Apparel Merchandising and Product Development | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program prepares students for entry-level careers in the global, multi-faceted fashion industry. The curriculum focuses on modern merchandising concepts that operate in a consumer-driven textile/apparel/retail complex. Courses include market knowledge, textile product knowledge, evaluation techniques, price control methods, computer applications, product development strategies, sourcing and the global issues that influence textiles and apparel industries. Required courses in the College of Business provide a strong background in retail practices and management. Elective courses allow the student to choose areas for in-depth study or to explore additional fields. BGSU students also gain a diverse background through general education courses such as math, natural science, social science, arts and cultural diversity. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences - Ecology and Conservation Biology Specialization | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | This program is the scientific study of the interactions that determine the distribution and abundance of organisms. Ecology serves as a foundation for Conservation Biology, which is the application of biological knowledge and techniques to the conservation and restoration of natural biodiversity. Students completing a Bachelor of Science specialization in Ecology and Conservation Biology (ECB) will gain a solid foundation in ecology, evolution, and organismal biology while developing the quantitative, analytical, and technical skills essential to qualify for professional positions or advanced study in this area. ECB graduates will be highly competitive for employment with businesses, government, or consulting agencies performing conservation assessment and ecological research, restoration or management of habitat or populations of rare, economically important, or invasive species, or for subsequent graduate training in ecology or conservation biology. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, 217 Life Sciences Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2332 | This department is a diverse group of faculty and students focused on the study of living organisms across a wide variety of scales from the cellular and molecular to the landscape scales. In addition, students and faculty regularly collaborate with colleagues in other departments and institutions to foster truly interdisciplinary approaches both in the classroom and in the research setting. Research strengths of the department include: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Ecology and Conservation Biology, and Neuroscience and Behavior. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences - Marine and Aquatic Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | This program is the study of marine and freshwater organisms, their behaviors, and their interactions with the environment. Marine and Aquatic Biology is a subdiscipline of both oceanography and limnology. To best understand aquatic organisms, students are encouraged to acquire an appreciation for the allied disciplines of chemical, physical, and geological oceanography and limnology. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, 217 Life Sciences Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2332 | This department is a diverse group of faculty and students focused on the study of living organisms across a wide variety of scales from the cellular and molecular to the landscape scales. In addition, students and faculty regularly collaborate with colleagues in other departments and institutions to foster truly interdisciplinary approaches both in the classroom and in the research setting. Research strengths of the department include: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Ecology and Conservation Biology, and Neuroscience and Behavior. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Information Systems Auditing and Control | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems | This program provides graduates with the knowledge and skills to assess the internal control environment of complex computer-based systems and perform sophisticated auditing techniques of those systems. As the breadth of information technology and an organization’s reliance on that technology continues to grow, the importance of protecting that organization’s information and its technology resources from internal and external threats grows at an even more rapid pace. This growth provides a high demand for qualified individuals with a background in ISAC. While certification as a Certified Information Systems Auditor requires work experience, graduates from this program are expected to do well on the certifying examination. ISAC is popular as a double specialization among students specializing in accounting or management information systems (MIS). The ISAC curriculum makes MIS students more marketable in today’s environment by providing them with a background in financial accounting, accounting information systems, and information technology controls. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Programming, Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming, Advanced Programming Concepts, Intermediate Financial Accounting I, Accounting Information Systems, Auditing I, Information Systems Auditing and Control, Database Management, Business Data Communication and Distributed Processing, Systems Analysis and Design. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems, 332 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2767 | The Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems (AMIS) at Bowling Green State University focuses on new information technology and the increasingly global business environment. The department’s goal is to develop accounting and information system leaders for the 21st century who will not only acquire the skills and knowledge necessary for their next job but also the tools for building a life-long successful career. BGSU is one of only 171 colleges worldwide to have earned AACSB accreditation in both business and accounting and our outstanding faculty includes a University Master Teacher and a Fulbright Scholar. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems | This program provides information that promotes optimal allocation and use of limited resources. Each student is expected to become familiar with the theory, principles and practices of the major branches of accounting: auditing, financial accounting, cost and managerial accounting, accounting information systems and taxation | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Intermediate Financial Accounting 1, Cost Accounting, Individual Income Taxation, Corporate Income Taxation, Accounting Information Systems, Auditing 1. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems, 332 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2767 | The Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems (AMIS) at Bowling Green State University focuses on new information technology and the increasingly global business environment. The department’s goal is to develop accounting and information system leaders for the 21st century who will not only acquire the skills and knowledge necessary for their next job but also the tools for building a life-long successful career. BGSU is one of only 171 colleges worldwide to have earned AACSB accreditation in both business and accounting and our outstanding faculty includes a University Master Teacher and a Fulbright Scholar. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Business Pre-Law | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Legal Studies | This program provides the student with solid foundation in business and law with a pecialization designed to enhance communication kills, critical thinking abilities, and familiarity with egal concepts and terminology. Emphasis on riting, research, and a legal approach to problem olving provide the framework of the specialization. More than 1/4 of the courses are BG Perspective ourses and electives which allows students to take ourses in a variety of areas as preparation for law chool or other career goals. Some students in the rogram complete a minor or a second specialization n another area of business. |
Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Intermediate Writing, Great Ideas, Constitutional Law: Powers and Relationships, International Business Transactions, Legal Research and Drafting Seminar. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Legal Studies | College of Business Administration, Department of Legal Studies, 264 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8236 | The Department of Legal Studies has a faculty with strong academic and professional qualifications that successfully prepare students for a law career.Our faculty are highly recognized for their research efforts, publishing dozens of law articles and several notable textbooks. We have a Distinguished Teaching Professor as well as a past president of the Academy of Legal Studies in Business, a national organization. Several of our faculty also serve the College of Business Administration in administrative roles. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Finance | This program is designed to provide students with the means to gain exposure to 5 major areas in the field of finance. These areas include corporate finance, financial institutions, investments, insurance, and personal financial planning. This program is a discipline dealing with the allocation of funds within an organization and with the acquisition of funds to meet current and future needs. In addition to BSBA core courses, finance students take courses in investment Analysis, Financial Markets, and Corporate Finance. They also select 4 finance electives from appropriate Finance and Accounting courses. It is designed to provide students with the means to gain exposure to 5 major areas in the field of finance. These areas include corporate finance, financial institutions, investments, insurance, and personal financial planning. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Financial Markets, Corporate Finance, Investment Analysis and Management, International Financial Management, Financial and Retirement Planning, Insurance and Employee Benefit Planning, Management of Financial Institutions, Financial Modeling, Intermediate Financial Accounting I, Individual Income Taxation, Intermediate Financial Accounting II, Estate Planning. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Finance | College of Business Administration, Department of Finance, 201 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, + 1 419 372 8963 | The Department of Finance offers undergraduate studies leading to a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with a specialization in finance. The department has active, ongoing research.The exceptional faculty publish papers in top-tier refereed journals and present their valuable research at professional meetings throughout the United States and abroad. The faculty in the department have earned distinguished research awards for their work. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - International business | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | This program is a relatively new academic area that cuts across a broad range of academic areas. The goal of the program is to provide a basic education in business with special emphasis on international business. Students select special areas of study, such as foreign language, economics, or culture of specific geographic regions. Internationalists in business must be generally familiar with politics, economics, law, culture, religion, value systems, geography, history, and language. Job options relate to the individual curriculum selected. Few students studying International business are initially employed in an international division of a company or an international organization. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Regional Issues in International Business, International Trade and Finance, International Financial Management, International Business Transactions, International Marketing. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | College of Business Administration, Department of Management, 3018 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2946 | The Department of Management is proud to have one of the nation’s top supply chain management programs according to U.S. News and World Report. Along with the supply chain specialization, the department also offers an international business specialization and an international business minor so students are adequately prepared for the global economy. At the graduate level, the department offers full-time and executive programs in organization development. Students can also earn a Certificate of Organizational Change. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Management Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems | This program provides technological solutions to a business firm. Armed with the knowledge of business and information technology, they develop and implement business information systems to increase the firm’s competitive advantage, solve the firm’s business problems, and support its business operations efficiently. MIS graduates have excellent employment opportunities in all types of organizations. Although many MIS graduates begin their career as programmer/analysts, they develop their career path as business systems analyst, systems manager, project manager, information system director, and chief information officer. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Introduction to Systems Concepts, Business Data Communication and Distributed Processing, Database Management, Systems Analysis and Design. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems, 332 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2767 | The Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems (AMIS) at Bowling Green State University focuses on new information technology and the increasingly global business environment. The department’s goal is to develop accounting and information system leaders for the 21st century who will not only acquire the skills and knowledge necessary for their next job but also the tools for building a life-long successful career. BGSU is one of only 171 colleges worldwide to have earned AACSB accreditation in both business and accounting and our outstanding faculty includes a University Master Teacher and a Fulbright Scholar. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing | This program exposes students to the main fields of marketing. Students are required to take some fundamental courses, such as principles of marketing, marketing research, and consumer behavior. In addition, there are numerous marketing electives from which students can choose to fit their own learning interests and career planning, such as promotion, retail management, services marketing, professional selling, sales management, advertising management, international marketing, etc. Finally, students are also required to take a capstone course, Marketing Management, to integrate various functional areas of marketing. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Consumer Behavior, Marketing Research, Marketing Management, Business-to-Business Marketing, Topics in Marketing, Services Marketing, Marketing Communication and Promotion, Advertising Management, Managing the Service Experience, Servicescape Design, Advanced Marketing Research, Creativity in Marketing, Retail Management, Marketing on the Internet, Professional Selling, Sales Management, Product Planning, International Marketing. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing | College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing, 234 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2041 | The marketing department's number one priority is student success through quality education. Marketing students develop skills in identifying market opportunities and developing and implementing marketing programs. They learn the boundary spanning marketing activities for product, service, and business-to-business markets in a global economy. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Supply Chain Management | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | This program prepares students to handle broad managerial responsibilities that impact the success of the company and the competitiveness of the entire supply chain. Supply chain management is primarily concerned with the planning, acquisition, conversion, flow, and distribution of goods from raw materials to finished goods. The purchasing department in a typical organization is responsible for securing all necessary raw materials, supplies, capital goods, and services at the best value possible. The supply chain management function coordinates the major activities contributing to materials costs and availability including purchasing, production control, warehousing, and distribution. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Supply Management I, Quality Management and Lean Tools, Logistics Management for Supply Chains, Operations Planning and Control, Supply Management II, Advanced Supply Chain Planning, Supply Chain Strategy. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | College of Business Administration, Department of Management, 3018 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2946 | The Department of Management is proud to have one of the nation’s top supply chain management programs according to U.S. News and World Report. Along with the supply chain specialization, the department also offers an international business specialization and an international business minor so students are adequately prepared for the global economy. At the graduate level, the department offers full-time and executive programs in organization development. Students can also earn a Certificate of Organizational Change. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics | This program is the study of relationships and issues involving the economy as a whole, such as inflation, employment, and monetary and fiscal policy. Economics graduates work in a variety of fields. While most students with a bachelor’s degree will not work as economists, they have skills and training that will be useful in other careers, such as business, education, and government. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Intermediate Microeconomic Theory, Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory, Mathematical Economics, Econometrics. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics, 3002 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2646 | The Department of Economics at Bowling Green State University offers several choices of programs. Students can earn a bachelor of science in economics, an undergraduate business degree with a specialization in economics, or they can minor in economics. A bachelor of arts degree with a major in economics is also available in BGSU’s College of Arts and Sciences. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Communication Disorders | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | This program is designed to provide instruction in the basic components of the discipline and to prepare the student for entrance into a graduate program. The undergraduate student will study the basic speech and hearing sciences and the normal human communication process, as well as the theoretical and practical aspects of therapy. Clinical observations are required; a supervised clinical practicum in which direct treatment is provided to a communicatively disordered client is an elective senior experience. Although the school practicum experience occurs at the graduate level, it is strongly recommended that students take the necessary coursework for school licensure at the undergraduate level. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:CDIS 123 Introduction to Communication Disorders, CDIS 224 Phonetics, CDIS 225 Speech and Language Acquisition and Development, CDIS 301 Anatomy and Physiology of the Speech Mechanism, CDIS 302 Acoustics for Speech and Hearing, CDIS 311 Phonological Assessment and Intervention, CDIS 351 Language Assessment and Intervention, CDIS 361 Diagnostic Audiology, CDIS 401 Clinical Methods in Communication Disorders,CDIS 421 Practicum in Communication Disorders, CDIS 461 Fundamentals of Diagnostic Audiology, CDIS 480 General Seminar. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders, 200 Health Center Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2515 | The Department's facilities in the University Health Center house the Bowling Green State University Speech and Hearing Clinic. Special features of the Clinic include a complete hearing aid dispensing facility, and clinical treatment rooms which can be monitored by faculty/staff supervisors from their offices. Other features of the facility include classrooms with closed-circuit TV capability, speech and hearing science laboratories, complete auditory testing facilities, seminar and study rooms, and offices for faculty, staff, and graduate students. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science - Business Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program applies the basic principles of computing and the latest technological advancements to solve problems in business, education, and government. Graduates may work as systems analysts who design solutions to specific problems, applications programmers who translate these solutions into software, or technical support professionals who resolve a wide range of problems related to computer applications and use. Other career possibilities are system administrators, computer network administrators, or systems programmers. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Computer Basics (3), Introduction to Programming (3), Introductory Topics (1-3), Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming (3), Objects and Data Abstraction (3),Computer Organization (3), Intermediate Topics (1-3), Co-op Preparation (1), Professional and Societal Issues in Computing (3), Information Management Technologies (3), Web Application Development (3), Windows Application Development (3), Usability Engineering (3), Operating Systems and Networks, Data Structures and Algorithms (3), COBOL Programming (3), Introduction to Unix (1), Unix System Administration (2), Special Topics in Computer Science (1-3), Practicum in Computer Science (1-6), Advanced Operating Systems (3), Language Design and Implementation (3), Formal Language Theory (3),Introduction to Parallel Computing (3), Artificial Intelligence Methods (3), Computer Graphics (3), Data Communication and Networks (3), Optimization Techniques, Techniques of Simulation (3), Numerical Analysis, Database Management Systems, Software Development, Seminar in Computer Applications. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2337 | This department offer both the Bachelor's and Master's level. Our department strives to: provide a current, comprehensive and client-centered environment for the teaching and learning of computer science and related professional values prepare students for professional careers or advanced studies in computer science have a positive effect upon students, the university, the community and the computer science profession promote the discovery, dissemination and application of knowledge involving computing foster personal and professional growth for all students, faculty and staff. In significant ways, economic, social, and technological changes influence educational demands and processes. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science - Geographic Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program applies the basic principles of computing and the latest technological advancements to solve problems in business, education, and government. Graduates may work as systems analysts who design solutions to specific problems, applications programmers who translate these solutions into software, or technical support professionals who resolve a wide range of problems related to computer applications and use. Other career possibilities are system administrators, computer network administrators, or systems programmers. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Computer Basics (3), Introduction to Programming (3), Introductory Topics (1-3), Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming (3), Objects and Data Abstraction (3),Computer Organization (3), Intermediate Topics (1-3), Co-op Preparation (1), Professional and Societal Issues in Computing (3), Information Management Technologies (3), Web Application Development (3), Windows Application Development (3), Usability Engineering (3), Operating Systems and Networks, Data Structures and Algorithms (3), COBOL Programming (3), Introduction to Unix (1), Unix System Administration (2), Special Topics in Computer Science (1-3), Practicum in Computer Science (1-6), Advanced Operating Systems (3), Language Design and Implementation (3), Formal Language Theory (3),Introduction to Parallel Computing (3), Artificial Intelligence Methods (3), Computer Graphics (3), Data Communication and Networks (3), Optimization Techniques, Techniques of Simulation (3), Numerical Analysis, Database Management Systems, Software Development, Seminar in Computer Applications. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2337 | This department offer both the Bachelor's and Master's level. Our department strives to: provide a current, comprehensive and client-centered environment for the teaching and learning of computer science and related professional values prepare students for professional careers or advanced studies in computer science have a positive effect upon students, the university, the community and the computer science profession promote the discovery, dissemination and application of knowledge involving computing foster personal and professional growth for all students, faculty and staff. In significant ways, economic, social, and technological changes influence educational demands and processes. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Dietetics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program meets the knowledge, skills, and competencies for entry-level dietitian education programs and will result in a Bachelor's of Science Degree in Dietetics. Upon completion of an internship, after graduation, and the successful completion of the national registration examination, you will be a registered dietitian, eligible for licensure in most states. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics | This program is flexible with minimal requirements. Economics graduates work in a variety of fields. While most students with a bachelor’s degree will not work as economists, they have skills and training that will be useful in other careers, such as business, education, and government. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Mathematics and Statistics, Natural Sciences, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Humanities and Arts, Oral and Written Communications. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics, 3002 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2646 | The Department of Economics at Bowling Green State University offers several choices of programs. Students can earn a bachelor of science in economics, an undergraduate business degree with a specialization in economics, or they can minor in economics. A bachelor of arts degree with a major in economics is also available in BGSU’s College of Arts and Sciences. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Adolescent/Young Adult/Secondary Education - Dual Field Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program prepare graduates to teach these subjects in grades 7-12, and to obtain an Adolescent / Young Adult teaching license in the chosen area of study. Each program provides students with a wide variety of experiences that will enable them to become effective teachers. Students in the program complete extensive coursework pertaining to their chosen field of study. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Adolescent/Young Adult/Secondary Education - Single Field Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program prepare graduates to teach these subjects in grades 7-12, and to obtain an Adolescent / Young Adult teaching license in the chosen area of study. Each program provides students with a wide variety of experiences that will enable them to become effective teachers. Students in the program complete extensive coursework pertaining to their chosen field of study. The single fields are Earth Sciences, Life Sciences, Physical Sciences-Chemistry, Physical Sciences-Physics. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Adolescent/Young Adult/Secondary Education - Integrated Language Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program prepare graduates to teach these subjects in grades 7-12, and to obtain an Adolescent / Young Adult teaching license in the chosen area of study. Each program provides students with a wide variety of experiences that will enable them to become effective teachers. Students in the program complete extensive coursework pertaining to their chosen field of study. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Adolescent/Young Adult/Secondary Education - Integrated Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program prepare graduates to teach these subjects in grades 7-12, and to obtain an Adolescent / Young Adult teaching license in the chosen area of study. Each program provides students with a wide variety of experiences that will enable them to become effective teachers. Students in the program complete extensive coursework pertaining to their chosen field of study. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Adolescent/Young Adult/Secondary Education - Integrated Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program prepare graduates to teach these subjects in grades 7-12, and to obtain an Adolescent / Young Adult teaching license in the chosen area of study. Each program provides students with a wide variety of experiences that will enable them to become effective teachers. Students in the program complete extensive coursework pertaining to their chosen field of study. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Business Education | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program requires approximately 60 semester hours of business content course credit, 48-54 hours of professional education course credit, 6-8 hours of college requirement credit, and 30-37 hours of university general education requirement credit. A student who completes the business education major at Bowling Green State University receives a Bachelor of Science in Education degree and is eligible for a Integrated Business teaching license in grades 4 and beyond, providing that he or she has a 2.5 accumulative grade point average and has successfully completed the required Praxis examinations, a background check, and any other state requirements. The business education degree program is designed to be completed in 4 years. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Dance | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program focuses on intellectual, creative, and technical dance endeavors, while offering interdisciplinary experiences in theatre, music and kinesiology. The program emphasizes both modern dance and classical ballet as well as a lesser focus, jazz dance. Program options are designed to expand each student's dance competencies and can be tailored to meet a student's specific dance interests and talents. Dance faculty are committed to individualized experiences and promoting professional excellence for our students. Admission to the program presently does not require an audition. All prospective students are encouraged to contact Associate Professor Deborah Tell, Dance program coordinator (see Kinesiology faculty biography). An interview, tour of the remodeled dance facilities, and individual discussions with the Dance faculty and students can be arranged at an applicant's convenience. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Early Childhood Education | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program is a highly competitive program because of student interest in this major, the program’s strong reputation, and its commitment to the highest quality learning experiences for students, both on and off campus. Program admission requirements include a grade point average of 3.2. Thus, students who enter this program are academically strong and prepared for the demands of a challenging program of preparation. The program enrollment consists of over 1000 students across the Bowling Green and Firelands campus. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Exercise Science | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program focuses on intellectual, creative, and technical dance endeavors, while offering interdisciplinary experiences in theatre, music and kinesiology. The program emphasizes both modern dance and classical ballet as well as a lesser focus, jazz dance. Program options are designed to expand each student's dance competencies and can be tailored to meet a student's specific dance interests and talents. Dance faculty are committed to individualized experiences and promoting professional excellence for our students. Admission to the program presently does not require an audition. All prospective students are encouraged to contact Associate Professor Deborah Tell, Dance program coordinator (see Kinesiology faculty biography). An interview, tour of the remodeled dance facilities, and individual discussions with the Dance faculty and students can be arranged at an applicant's convenience. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Integrated Language Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program provides students with a wide variety of experiences that will enable them to become effective teachers. Students in the program complete extensive coursework in specialization areas they plan to teach. This program Leads to a teaching license for English, speech and journalism in grades 7-12. The majority of content coursework is taken in the departments of English, journalism, theatre, and interpersonal communication (speech). Students are positioned to pursue non-teaching minors in English, interpersonal communication, journalism and theatre from the College of Arts and Sciences. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Integrated Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program provides students with a wide variety of experiences that will enable them to become effective teachers. Students in the program complete extensive coursework in specialization areas they plan to teach. This program Leads to a teaching license for English, speech and journalism in grades 7-12. The majority of content coursework is taken in the departments of English, journalism, theatre, and interpersonal communication (speech). Students are positioned to pursue non-teaching minors in English, interpersonal communication, journalism and theatre from the College of Arts and Sciences. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Integrated Social Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program provides students with a wide variety of experiences that will enable them to become effective teachers. Students in the program complete extensive coursework in specialization areas they plan to teach. This program Leads to a teaching license for English, speech and journalism in grades 7-12. The majority of content coursework is taken in the departments of English, journalism, theatre, and interpersonal communication (speech). Students are positioned to pursue non-teaching minors in English, interpersonal communication, journalism and theatre from the College of Arts and Sciences. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Marketing Education | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program requires 53-54 semester hours of business content course credit, 46-52 hours of professional education course credit, 6-8 hours of college requirement credit, and 30-37 hours of university general education requirement credit. A student who completes the marketing education major at Bowling Green State University receives a Bachelor of Science in Education degree and is eligible for a Marketing Education license in grades 4 and beyond providing that he or she has a 2.5 accumulative grade point average and has successfully completed the required Praxis examinations, a background check, and any other state requirements. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Middle Childhood Education | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program is a highly competitive program because of student interest in this major, the program’s strong reputation, and its commitment to the highest quality learning experiences for students, both on and off campus. Program admission requirements include a grade point average of 2.8. Thus, students who enter this program are academically strong and prepared for the demands of a challenging program of preparation. The program enrollment consists of over 500 students across the Bowling Green and Firelands campus. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Physical Education Teacher | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program prepares students to become highly effective and reflective teachers of human movement. An effective physical education teacher is one who is able to develop physically educated individuals defined as versatile, skillful movers who are healthy and fit, knowledgeable about human movement, and for whom movement has personal meaning and enjoyment. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Technology Education | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | This program offers a Bachelor of Science in Education for students interested in teaching in public schools, at the community college level, or in business and industry. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2437 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. Our focus is a hands-on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology | This program emphasize both laboratory and field experience. In addition to a required five-week summer field course held in New Mexico and Colorado, the department periodically offers trips to the Appalachian Mountains; the upper peninsula of Michigan; Mammoth Cave, Kentucky; and the Ohio-Indiana area. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology, 190 Overman Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2886 | This department is to provide highest quality undergraduate and graduate education, to advance research and scholarship in the geological sciences, and to provide service to the profession, university, and community. The department recognizes the need to enhance its ability to adapt to changes in society and the profession, to develop collective as well as individual capabilities, and to use self-evaluation to continually improve in the areas of teaching, research, and service. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Geology - Paleobiology | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology | This program emphasize both laboratory and field experience. In addition to a required five-week summer field course held in New Mexico and Colorado, the department periodically offers trips to the Appalachian Mountains; the upper peninsula of Michigan; Mammoth Cave, Kentucky; and the Ohio-Indiana area. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology, 190 Overman Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2886 | This department is to provide highest quality undergraduate and graduate education, to advance research and scholarship in the geological sciences, and to provide service to the profession, university, and community. The department recognizes the need to enhance its ability to adapt to changes in society and the profession, to develop collective as well as individual capabilities, and to use self-evaluation to continually improve in the areas of teaching, research, and service. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Health Promotion | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is a concentrated pre-professional experience that provides an opportunity for health promotion majors to apply the theories, knowledge and experiences gained from their undergraduate coursework to real life situations. The internship is the culminating event of a student’s university experience. Thus, it is critical for the internship to be carefully planned and implemented. The Internship Manual contains a comprehensive set of guidelines to help insure that the internship is a valuable and positive experience. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:. Health Enhancement (3), Introduction to Community and Worksite Health Promotion (3), Planning and Evaluating Health Promotion Programs (3), Health Promotion and the Health Care System (3), Concepts of Human Sexuality (3), Drug Use and Abuse, Health Communication Strategies, Practicum in Health Promotion, Ergonomics, Organization and Administration of Health Promotion Programs, Health Behavior Instructor, Internship in Health Promotion, Human Anatomy and Physiology II, Computer Basics, Introduction to Management information Systems, Nutrition, Health, Nutrition, Health, Exercise Physiology (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Human Development and Family Studies | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program provides students with an in-depth understanding of developmental processes of individuals and families across the life-span, the dynamics of relationships, environmental contexts affecting children and families, and community services that meet child and family needs. In addition to a core group of courses that provide a foundational survey of human development and family studies content areas, specialized courses are also offered that focus on issues of diversity in families. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:child advocacy, child-care programs and preschools, youth programming, community outreach services, family and community development and service delivery, public and private agencies, older adult organizations, family life education. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Interior Design | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program provides a unique opportunity for students to engage in coursework in collaboration with The School of Art, College of Technology, College of Education and Human Development, and an interior design core curriculum of studio and lecture courses. Opportunities for study abroad through the university are encouraged with programs in London and Florence. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Journalism - Broadcast Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism | This program consists of liberal arts core classes, journalism classes and a minor concentration area. Together, these classes along with electives must total at least 122 hours. At least 40 of these hours must be at the 300 and 400 level. Students must have an overall Grade Point Average (GPA) of 2.5 to become a journalism major, but higher GPAs are required to achieve entry into JOUR 200 Beyond these general education requirements, the Bachelor of Science in Journalism Degree requires additional liberal arts classes designed to prepare students to become journalists. These courses include economics, foreign language, math, U.S. history, political science and speaking and listening. Fulfilling the liberal arts core requirements usually requires 48 to 66 hours of coursework. The broadcast journalism sequence aims at competence in the electronic media of radio and television. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Mass Communication (3), Introduction to Journalistic Writing (3), Journalism Techniques for Nonmajors (3), Reporting (3), Specialized Journalism Basic Skills (1-3), Introduction to Visual Journalism (3), Visual Editing (3), Feature Writing (3), Copy Editing (3),Broadcast News (3), Principles of Public Relations (3), Principles of Public Relations for Nonmajors (3), Public Relations Writing (3), Media Publication and Design (3), Journalism in the Movies (3), Intermediate Specialized Journalism Skills (1-3), Field Experience (1-3), Advanced Visual Journalism (3), Supervision of High School Publications (3), Public Affairs Reporting (3), Advanced Broadcast News, Public Relations Campaigns, Journalism Law and Ethics, Diversity Issues in the Media, Online Journalism, American Journalism History, Perspectives on International Media, Special Problems in Journalism, Media and Society, Specialized Journalism Skills, Specialized Journalism Issues. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism, West Hall 302, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | Bowling Green State University's Department of Journalism is one of only two schools in the country selected to host a workshop on "The New Newsroom" sponsored by the American Press Institute. The majority of undergraduate courses are taught by full-time faculty who are as devoted to teaching as they are to mass communication research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Journalism - Print Journalism | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism | This program consists of liberal arts core classes, journalism classes and a minor concentration area. Together, these classes along with electives must total at least 122 hours. At least 40 of these hours must be at the 300 and 400 level. Students must have an overall Grade Point Average (GPA) of 2.5 to become a journalism major, but higher GPAs are required to achieve entry into JOUR 200 Beyond these general education requirements, the Bachelor of Science in Journalism Degree requires additional liberal arts classes designed to prepare students to become journalists. These courses include economics, foreign language, math, U.S. history, political science and speaking and listening. Fulfilling the liberal arts core requirements usually requires 48 to 66 hours of coursework. The broadcast journalism sequence aims at competence in the electronic media of radio and television. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Mass Communication (3), Introduction to Journalistic Writing (3), Journalism Techniques for Nonmajors (3), Reporting (3), Specialized Journalism Basic Skills (1-3), Introduction to Visual Journalism (3), Visual Editing (3), Feature Writing (3), Copy Editing (3),Broadcast News (3), Principles of Public Relations (3), Principles of Public Relations for Nonmajors (3), Public Relations Writing (3), Media Publication and Design (3), Journalism in the Movies (3), Intermediate Specialized Journalism Skills (1-3), Field Experience (1-3), Advanced Visual Journalism (3), Supervision of High School Publications (3), Public Affairs Reporting (3), Advanced Broadcast News, Public Relations Campaigns, Journalism Law and Ethics, Diversity Issues in the Media, Online Journalism, American Journalism History, Perspectives on International Media, Special Problems in Journalism, Media and Society, Specialized Journalism Skills, Specialized Journalism Issues. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism, West Hall 302, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | Bowling Green State University's Department of Journalism is one of only two schools in the country selected to host a workshop on "The New Newsroom" sponsored by the American Press Institute. The majority of undergraduate courses are taught by full-time faculty who are as devoted to teaching as they are to mass communication research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Journalism - Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism | This program consists of liberal arts core classes, journalism classes and a minor concentration area. Together, these classes along with electives must total at least 122 hours. At least 40 of these hours must be at the 300 and 400 level. Students must have an overall Grade Point Average (GPA) of 2.5 to become a journalism major, but higher GPAs are required to achieve entry into JOUR 200 Beyond these general education requirements, the Bachelor of Science in Journalism Degree requires additional liberal arts classes designed to prepare students to become journalists. These courses include economics, foreign language, math, U.S. history, political science and speaking and listening. Fulfilling the liberal arts core requirements usually requires 48 to 66 hours of coursework. The broadcast journalism sequence aims at competence in the electronic media of radio and television. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Mass Communication (3), Introduction to Journalistic Writing (3), Journalism Techniques for Nonmajors (3), Reporting (3), Specialized Journalism Basic Skills (1-3), Introduction to Visual Journalism (3), Visual Editing (3), Feature Writing (3), Copy Editing (3),Broadcast News (3), Principles of Public Relations (3), Principles of Public Relations for Nonmajors (3), Public Relations Writing (3), Media Publication and Design (3), Journalism in the Movies (3), Intermediate Specialized Journalism Skills (1-3), Field Experience (1-3), Advanced Visual Journalism (3), Supervision of High School Publications (3), Public Affairs Reporting (3), Advanced Broadcast News, Public Relations Campaigns, Journalism Law and Ethics, Diversity Issues in the Media, Online Journalism, American Journalism History, Perspectives on International Media, Special Problems in Journalism, Media and Society, Specialized Journalism Skills, Specialized Journalism Issues. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Journalism, West Hall 302, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | Bowling Green State University's Department of Journalism is one of only two schools in the country selected to host a workshop on "The New Newsroom" sponsored by the American Press Institute. The majority of undergraduate courses are taught by full-time faculty who are as devoted to teaching as they are to mass communication research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program in mathematics begins with a core of three semesters of Calculus and a course in Linear Algebra. These are some of the most useful courses the department offers because they introduce fundamental tools for describing and understanding the world, especially science and business, and in that they lay the theoretical foundations for most later courses in mathematics. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics - Actuarial science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program in mathematics begins with a core of three semesters of Calculus and a course in Linear Algebra. These are some of the most useful courses the department offers because they introduce fundamental tools for describing and understanding the world, especially science and business, and in that they lay the theoretical foundations for most later courses in mathematics. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics -Applied mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program in mathematics begins with a core of three semesters of Calculus and a course in Linear Algebra. These are some of the most useful courses the department offers because they introduce fundamental tools for describing and understanding the world, especially science and business, and in that they lay the theoretical foundations for most later courses in mathematics. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is a prototypical interdisciplinary program consisting principally of biology and psychology courses. Courses that contribute to meeting the requirements of this major are all listed in biology and psychology departmental listings. In addition to structured coursework, majors are strongly urged to take independent research courses with neuroscience faculty (NEUR 470, BIOL 401, and/or PSYC 490). The neuroscience major is especially suited for students interested in careers in medicine or research. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Suite 62, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is truly an exciting time to study psychology. New things are being learned everyday about how people behave, how the mind and brain work, and how that knowledge can be used to help people, organizations, and society. As you explore our web site, we hope that you see that the Psychology Department at BGSU is deeply committed to advancing that knowledge by doing our own research, teaching it to our students, and helping those whom we hope can benefit from it. This program speciality areas in clinical, developmental, industrial -organizational, and the neural and cognitive sciences. All faculty teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The Psychology Building includes two of five floors (over 20,000 square feet) dedicated to human and animal research. Four computing facilities are housed in the Psychology Building for undergraduate and graduate student use. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing | Distance / Online | Variable | $3300 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | The College of Nursing offers an opportunity for graduates of associate degree and diploma nursing programs to earn a baccalaureate degree in nursing. The RN student achieves the same terminal objectives as the basic student. However, this alternate track for the RN provides for flexibility and an individualized curriculum approach for the nurse in practice. | Applicants should have a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.5 overall including all transfer work, graduation from an accredited associate degree or diploma nursing program - diploma candidates must submit a portfolio, current license to practice as a registered nurse in the state of Ohio and completion of the following prerequisite courses with a minimum grade of C - General Biology, Microbiology, Anatomy and Physiology I and II, Elementary Chemistry w/lab, Composition II, Statistics, General Psychology, Lifespan Development, Nutrition, Computer Basics and Ethics. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is truly an exciting time to study psychology. New things are being learned everyday about how people behave, how the mind and brain work, and how that knowledge can be used to help people, organizations, and society. As you explore our web site, we hope that you see that the Psychology Department at BGSU is deeply committed to advancing that knowledge by doing our own research, teaching it to our students, and helping those whom we hope can benefit from it. This program speciality areas in clinical, developmental, industrial -organizational, and the neural and cognitive sciences. All faculty teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The Psychology Building includes two of five floors (over 20,000 square feet) dedicated to human and animal research. Four computing facilities are housed in the Psychology Building for undergraduate and graduate student use. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Nutrition Sciences | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is excellent preparation for admission to professional schools, such as medicine or dentistry. With this degree you may enter laboratory research careers in the food, nutrition, and pharmaceutical industries, e.g. research and development, quality assurance, sales, and marketing. Students in Nutrition Sciences have many opportunities to gain experience with laboratory instrumentation and to develop research skills in a variety of laboratory settings. These experiences are invaluable when Nutrition Science majors apply for post-graduate education and their first professional jobs. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program is designed to prepare students for further postgraduate study. There are also specializations available in microcomputer systems and in applied physics for students who want to enter the job market immediately upon graduation, and an astronomy minor for students who wish to pursue study in that field. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Physics of Natural World, Basic Physics, Selected Topics in Physics, College Physics I, College Physics II, University Physics I, University Physics II, Independent Study, Modern Physics, Thermal Physics and Optics, Electronics, Mechanics and Wave Motion, Atomic and Nuclear Physics, Modern Physics Laboratory , Thermal Physics and Optics Laboratory, Wave Laboratory, Recent Progress in Astronomy, Musical Acoustics, Environmental Physics, Workshop on Current Topics , Methods of Mathematical and Computational Physics I, Methods of Mathematical and Computational Physics II, Stellar Structure and Evolution, Solid State Physics, Classical Mechanics (3), Quantum Mechanics, Electricity and Magnetism, Selected Topics in Microelectronics, Philosophy and Physics of Space and Time, Special Problems in Physics, Methods of Mathematical and Computational Physics I, Methods of Mathematical and Computational Physics II, Stellar Structure and Evolution , Solid State Physics , Quantum Mechanics, Electricity and Magnetism, Philosophy and Physics of Space and Time, Techniques in Experimental Physics, Advanced Classical Mechanics, Advanced Electrodynamics, Statistical Mechanics , dvanced Quantum Mechanics. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, 104 Overman Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2421 | This department offering a graduate program, the Department has awarded over 160 graduate degrees. External research support averages over $1.5 million per year. Faculty have published over 30 refereed journal articles and papers in the past 3 years. Teaching excellence in the Department is evidenced by nominations of two faculty members for the Outstanding Teacher Award several years running. Operations of the BGSU Planetarium and Observatory extend the Department's and the University's outreach in science education - an average of 3,500 general public and 4,000 school children visit these facilities each year. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Recreation | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program prepares students to work in the tourism industry. Increased leisure time, a focus on quality living, the realization of tourism’s impact on the economy, and advanced technologies have all contributed to the continued growth of the tourism industry. The School’s major in tourism prepares professionals for numerous roles in this expanding area. Students learn about destination administration, planning and development of destinations and facilities, special event and program planning, marketing and promotion strategies, service management and leadership skills, personnel management, cultures and diversity, evaluation and legal liability. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Scientific and Technical Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program is offered by the Scientific and Technical Communication Programs at BGSU. Receiving either degree involves completing the general education courses required of all BGSU students, as well as specific College of Arts and Sciences courses in math and natural sciences, foreign languages, social sciences, and arts and humanities. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:English Composition, Foreign Language, Science and Math, Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Electronics and Computer Technology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program is a comprehensive study of diverse areas such as: Computer Hardware and Interfacing, Computer-Based Instrumentation and Process Control, Digital Communication and Networking, and Electric Motors and Controls. When studing they will have hands-on opportunities to learn the working of real world data communication and control systems. Students can even participate in activities related to the Electric Vehicle Institute which is involved in designing and testing of electric motors, electronic controllers and instrumentation systems. Students can also be involved in the student section of The Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society (ISA). | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Computer Technology and Networking, Computer Based Instrumentation and Process Control, Cooperative Work Experience, Electric Vehicle Institute, Scholarships from ISA and EMCWA, Professional Associations. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Advanced Technological Education | Distance / Online | Variable | $3300 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | This online degree completion program combines Bowling Green State University and College of Technology education requirements with a core curriculum that includes the applied classes from any applied associate's degree from an accredited institution. In the ATE program, students will learn: theory and communication skills, training program development, new technology systems and technology systems management. The degree has nine required courses that are designed to supplement the student’s work experience and technological expertise with educational experiences in the following study skill sets: computer-mediated communication, technology systems in organizations, transformational learning, understanding adult learning, project and program evaluation systems and organization and presentation of technical information. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Tech 3020 Technology Systems in Societies (3), Tech 3100 Computer Mediated Communications in Training and Education (3), Tech 3200 Adult Learning in Technological Settings (3), Tech 4380 Supervisory Skills, Styles, Practices (3), Tech 4480 Transformational Learning and Technology (3), Tech 3030 Instructional Design and Delivery (3), Tech 4030 Evaluation and Assessment with Technology (3), Tech 4150 Instructional Materials Development (3), Tech 4280 Development of Training Programs (3), Tech 4210 Technological Forecasting (3), Tech 4220 Information Policy Analysis (3), Tech 4230 Digital Rights Management (3), and Tech 4240 Media Usability Studies (3). College of Technology Requirements - Academic Writing (GSW 1120), Computer Science Course (CS 1000, 1010 or MIS 2000), Algebra or Statistics (MATH 1120 or 1150), Public Speaking (IPC 1020, 2010, 2050, 2070, or 3060), General Psychology (PSYC 1010), Minority Groups (cultural diversity general education course), Technical Writing (ENG 3880 or BA 2030), and two free elective courses. General Education Requirements - 2 natural science courses, 2 social or behavioral science courses, 2 humanities and arts courses, 1 cultural diversity course and 1 general education elective course. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Architecture/Environmental Design Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | This program is a pre-professional program for students with an interest in architecture or a related field, such as urban design, computer-aided design and/or historic preservation. The program is an affiliate member of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture. The graduates earn the bachelor of science in technology degree and must subsequently obtain a master of architecture degree from an accredited institution to become a licensed professional architect. This graduate-level study is not yet available at BGSU and generally takes two to three years to complete. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2437 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. Our focus is a hands-on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Construction Management and Technology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program prepares students to work for: Construction Contractors, Engineering/Architectural Firms, Public Agencies and Trade Associations. This is the accrediting agency for four year baccalaureate degree programs in construction, construction science, construction management, and construction technology. The course work includes: General Education, Natural Sciences, Mathematics, Business, Technology, Design and Construction. The graduate of the Construction Management and Technology program receives a Bachelor of Science in Technology Degree and can look forward to several career choices such as: Project Manager, Estimator, Scheduler, Project Inspector, Superintendent and Material Representative. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Advanced Technology Education, Arch./Env. Design Studies/Cons Mgmt., Architecture and Environmental Design, Aviation Management and Operations, Aviation Technical Management, Construction Management, Electro-mechanical Systems Technology, Electronics and Computer Technology, Engineering Technology, Aviation Flight Technology and Operations, Mechanical Design Technology, Technology Education, Visual Communication Technology. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Electro Mechanical Systems Technology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program prepares students for careers that require advanced knowledge of electronics and electricity, product design and manufacturing. Practical applications of these technologies are evident in sophisticated motion control and hand-held electronic/photographic devices, materials handling equipment, micro-electro mechanical systems (MEMS), vehicles and vehicle subsystems. Graduates of the electro-mechanical systems technology major are skilled technologists, prepared to fill positions in areas directly related to manufacturing, process control, mechatronics, testing, and sales. They may be involved in analysis, design, and setting up of manufacturing processes and systems, laboratory testing, product sales and service or applications engineering. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Introduction to Manufacturing Processes and Systems, Electric al Machinery and Controls, Electronic Circuits, Digital Electronic Components and Systems, Computer-aided Design, Design and Engineering Graphics, Statics and Strength of Materials, Data-based Quality Improvement, Fluid Power, Thermodynamics. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Engineering Technology - Mechanical Design | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program provides graduates with the skills for career success in designing and building mechanical systems and products in the wide range of industrial settings. Technical areas of work encompass hands on use of CAD/CAM, analysis, design, fabrication, engineering process control and consultation. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Computer aided design, solid modelling, statics and strength of materials, fluid power transmission, metallic materials and processes, descriptive geometry and product engineering, Metrology, six sigma systems, foundation of lean. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Engineering Technology - Mechanical Design | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program provides graduates with the skills for career success in designing and building mechanical systems and products in the wide range of industrial settings. Technical areas of work encompass hands on use of CAD/CAM, analysis, design, fabrication, engineering process control and consultation. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Computer aided design, solid modelling, statics and strength of materials, fluid power transmission, metallic materials and processes, descriptive geometry and product engineering, Metrology, six sigma systems, foundation of lean. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Engineering Technology - Quality Systems | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program prepares students for a dynamic career in today’s industrial society. Engineering Technology graduates are often called technologists to distinguish them from graduates of engineering programs. Graduates who choose the quality systems specializations are key people in the process that takes the design engineers concept and specialization and help translate them into actual production of manufactured goods. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Computer aided design, solid modelling, statics and strength of materials, fluid power transmission, metallic materials and processes, descriptive geometry and product engineering, Metrology, six sigma systems, foundation of lean. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology - Quality Systems | Distance / Online | Variable | $3300 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | This degree features the following advantages to prospective students: Graduates will be qualified for high demand high paying positions in major industries such as health care, scientific design, leading edge new industries. Having a science based four year degree will allow for advancement either in their current positions or in new organizations. The QS 2+2 degree provides certification in Lean Systems and Six Sigma which is recognized and sought after by most high tech organizations. It follows the ASQ guidelines for quality programs and the degree follows industry panel recommendations for the needs of employers. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | This program covers the following modules: QS 3600 Six sigma systems (3), QS 3650 Foundations of lean (3), QS 3700 Quality change services (3), QS 3800 Lean six sigma (3), QS 4600 Synchronous quality planning (3), QS 4650 Leadership for lean six sigma (3) and QS 4700 Kaizen project (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology in Aviation Studies - Aviation Management and Operations | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program focuses on the day-to-day and long-term business aspects of the aviation industry. Courses provide an introduction to the air transportation industry, including history, safety, law, and air traffic control regulations. Other required classes include computer-aided design, construction scheduling, airport planning and design, written and oral communication, public relations, accounting and economics. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Advanced Technology Education, Arch./Env. Design Studies/Cons Mgmt., Architecture and Environmental Design, Aviation Management and Operations, Aviation Technical Management, Construction Management, Electro-mechanical Systems Technology, Electronics and Computer Technology, Engineering Technology, Aviation Flight Technology and Operations, Mechanical Design Technology, Technology Education, Visual Communication Technology. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology in Aviation Studies - Aviation Technical Management | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program combines courses in aircraft systems, electronics and electricity, design and engineering graphics, statics and strength of materials, and manufacturing with classes in physics and mathematics. AMO students also complete coursework in airport operations, as well as in aviation safety, law and management. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Advanced Technology Education, Arch./Env. Design Studies/Cons Mgmt., Architecture and Environmental Design, Aviation Management and Operations, Aviation Technical Management, Construction Management, Electro-mechanical Systems Technology, Electronics and Computer Technology, Engineering Technology, Aviation Flight Technology and Operations, Mechanical Design Technology, Technology Education, Visual Communication Technology. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Technology in Aviation Studies - Flight Technology and Operations | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program prepares students to become professional pilots. Students earn ratings and certificates for single and multi-engine aircraft: private, commercial, multi-engine, instrument and flight instructor ratings. Students can begin flying as early as first semester of their freshman year if flight slots are available and if they have made arrangements to fund the laboratory fees. Students who choose to pursue the FTO specialization can expect to spend as much as $35,000 in addition to regular University tuition and fees. Loans, grants and scholarships are available to help meet the cost of flight training. Despite the additional cost, FTO majors say the program is “worth every penny,” based on the challenges and personal rewards they experience in the FTO program. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Advanced Technology Education, Arch./Env. Design Studies/Cons Mgmt., Architecture and Environmental Design, Aviation Management and Operations, Aviation Technical Management, Construction Management, Electro-mechanical Systems Technology, Electronics and Computer Technology, Engineering Technology, Aviation Flight Technology and Operations, Mechanical Design Technology, Technology Education, Visual Communication Technology. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Tourism | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program prepares students to work in the tourism industry. Increased leisure time, a focus on quality living, the realization of tourism’s impact on the economy, and advanced technologies have all contributed to the continued growth of the tourism industry. The School’s major in tourism prepares professionals for numerous roles in this expanding area. Students learn about destination administration, planning and development of destinations and facilities, special event and program planning, marketing and promotion strategies, service management and leadership skills, personnel management, cultures and diversity, evaluation and legal liability. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Visual Communication Technology - Interactive Media | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | This program offers study in interactive multimedia, a rapidly evolving field that includes all aspects of digital media for electronic delivery, including web CD/DVD and kiosk. All students are introduced to web and internet technologies, centering both usability and accessibility for a variety of audiences. Additional course work is available in more advanced concepts and applications of multimedia production as well as animation and exhibitory display. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2437 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. Our focus is a hands-on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Visual Communication Technology - Print | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | This program provides an introduction to the print media and printing processes including screen printing, print workflows, graphic design and color theory. Students who choose to specialize in this area may enroll in additional courses in display and exhibit technology, electronic image preparation, graphic image transfer, and digital color applications. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2437 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. Our focus is a hands-on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelor of Science in Visual Communication Technology - Video | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | This program offers a comprehensive video production program that focuses on using video for education and creative problem solving. Students complete introductory course work in camera techniques, digital editing, sound recording and lighting. Additional course work for students can choose a specialization in video may include video production, techniques, non linear video production and audio recording techniques. | Students must have a major in music composition by audition before the appropriate area faculty. They must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education | College of Technology, Department of Visual Communication and Technology Education, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2437 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. Our focus is a hands-on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelors of Science in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program meets the needs for students who plan professional careers in chemistry or plan to attend medical or other professional schools. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:General Chemistry I or Honors General Chemistry I, General Chemistry II or Honors General Chemistry II,General Chemistry Lab or Honors General Chemistry Lab (1), Quantitative Chemical Analysis (3), Organic Chemistry I (5), Organic Chemistry II (3), Organic Chemistry Laboratory (2), Physical Chemistry (4), Integrated Analytical and Physical Laboratory (2), Chemistry Electives (6), Instrumental Methods of Analysis (3), Organic Reaction Mechanisms (3), General Biochemistry (3), General Biochemistry (3), Biochemistry Laboratory (1), Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (3), Spectroscopic Methods of Organic Chemistry (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2031 | This department begins with a dedicated faculty providing a wide range of courses, including sequences in biochemistry, analytical, organic, physical, inorganic chemistry, and opportunities in materials science. Courses are supported with excellent laboratory facilities and state of the art instrumentation. Chemistry has been central to the development of an interdisciplinary program in materials science and is an important part of BGSU's program in scientific computing. offers a M.S. degree in Chemistry and a Ph.D. in Photochemical Sciences. The Center for Photochemical Sciences and the Department of Chemistry have developed a uniquely focused Ph.D. program in the photochemical sciences, designed for students with backgrounds in physics, biological sciences or chemistry. The coursework prepares students in the area of photochemistry and photophysics, and examines applications in fundamental areas of chemistry, materials science, biological sciences, physics, and spectroscopy and/or photopolymer science. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelors of Science in Chemistry - ACS Certification | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program is recommended for students planning to attend graduate school in chemistry or for those who want a comprehensive background in chemistry. It satisfies all requirements for certification by the American Chemical Society. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:General Chemistry I or Honors General Chemistry I, General Chemistry II or Honors General Chemistry II,General Chemistry Lab or Honors General Chemistry Lab (1), Quantitative Chemical Analysis (3), Organic Chemistry I (5), Organic Chemistry II (3), Organic Chemistry Laboratory (2), Physical Chemistry (4), Integrated Analytical and Physical Laboratory (2), Chemistry Electives (6), Instrumental Methods of Analysis (3), Organic Reaction Mechanisms (3), General Biochemistry (3), General Biochemistry (3), Biochemistry Laboratory (1), Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (3), Spectroscopic Methods of Organic Chemistry (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2031 | This department begins with a dedicated faculty providing a wide range of courses, including sequences in biochemistry, analytical, organic, physical, inorganic chemistry, and opportunities in materials science. Courses are supported with excellent laboratory facilities and state of the art instrumentation. Chemistry has been central to the development of an interdisciplinary program in materials science and is an important part of BGSU's program in scientific computing. offers a M.S. degree in Chemistry and a Ph.D. in Photochemical Sciences. The Center for Photochemical Sciences and the Department of Chemistry have developed a uniquely focused Ph.D. program in the photochemical sciences, designed for students with backgrounds in physics, biological sciences or chemistry. The coursework prepares students in the area of photochemistry and photophysics, and examines applications in fundamental areas of chemistry, materials science, biological sciences, physics, and spectroscopy and/or photopolymer science. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Bachelors of Science in Chemistry - Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program is designed for students interested in the chemistry/biology interface and provides preparation for chemistry and biochemistry graduate school and medical school. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:General Chemistry I or Honors General Chemistry I, General Chemistry II or Honors General Chemistry II,General Chemistry Lab or Honors General Chemistry Lab (1), Quantitative Chemical Analysis (3), Organic Chemistry I (5), Organic Chemistry II (3), Organic Chemistry Laboratory (2), Physical Chemistry (4), Integrated Analytical and Physical Laboratory (2), Chemistry Electives (6), Instrumental Methods of Analysis (3), Organic Reaction Mechanisms (3), General Biochemistry (3), General Biochemistry (3), Biochemistry Laboratory (1), Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (3), Spectroscopic Methods of Organic Chemistry (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2031 | This department begins with a dedicated faculty providing a wide range of courses, including sequences in biochemistry, analytical, organic, physical, inorganic chemistry, and opportunities in materials science. Courses are supported with excellent laboratory facilities and state of the art instrumentation. Chemistry has been central to the development of an interdisciplinary program in materials science and is an important part of BGSU's program in scientific computing. offers a M.S. degree in Chemistry and a Ph.D. in Photochemical Sciences. The Center for Photochemical Sciences and the Department of Chemistry have developed a uniquely focused Ph.D. program in the photochemical sciences, designed for students with backgrounds in physics, biological sciences or chemistry. The coursework prepares students in the area of photochemistry and photophysics, and examines applications in fundamental areas of chemistry, materials science, biological sciences, physics, and spectroscopy and/or photopolymer science. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Basic BSN Nursing Program | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Health and Human Services | This program is a partnership between BGSU and the College of Nursing at the University of Toledo Health Science Campus (UTHSC). During the first two years of study, students complete required pre-requisite courses on the BGSU campus. Those students who are offered admission to the nursing program will complete required nursing classes and clinical training on the UTHSC campus and at hospitals and health agencies throughout the greater Toledo area. Even though students are taking classes in Toledo during their junior and senior years, they remain official BGSU students - the degree is awarded by BGSU. This partnership has existed for over 30 years and the program is highly regarded throughout the state and region. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Bachelor degree | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services | College of Health and Human Services, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8242 | The nursing program is nationally accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education and has full approval of the Ohio Board of Nursing. The nursing courses and clinical experiences are provided by the College of Nursing at the University of Toledo Health Science Campus in Toledo. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Combined Master of Dietetic Internship and Food and Nutrition | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is to prepare entry-level dietitians by providing a route to dietetic registration. The University is committed to providing a Program which fosters creativity, critical thinking, problem-solving skills; and a recognition of the need for lifelong learning and on-going professional development through post-baccalaureate coursework. | Students should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Family and Community Nutrition F and N 607 (3), Micronutrients Through the Life Span F and N 609 (3), Macronutrients for Human Nutrition F and N 610 (3), Clinical Nutrition F and N 611 (3), Other F and N graduate courses (3), Research Methods FCS 626 or other selection (3), Statistics EDFI 641 or other selection (3), Thesis FCS 699 | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Cooperative Ph.D. in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | Students should have two official copies of student transcripts from all colleges and universities student have attended (except BGSU); and GRE scores: The University requires the GRE for admission to all graduate programs. The scores are good for five years, so if student took the test within the last five years, student do not need to take the test again. If student wish to submit the application before taking the GRE, specify on the application the date by which student will have taken the GRE. Student must have taken the GRE test before the end of student first semester after being accepted into the graduate program. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, 104 Overman Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2421 | This department offering a graduate program, the Department has awarded over 160 graduate degrees. External research support averages over $1.5 million per year. Faculty have published over 30 refereed journal articles and papers in the past 3 years. Teaching excellence in the Department is evidenced by nominations of two faculty members for the Outstanding Teacher Award several years running. Operations of the BGSU Planetarium and Observatory extend the Department's and the University's outreach in science education - an average of 3,500 general public and 4,000 school children visit these facilities each year. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Doctor of Musical Arts in Contemporary Music | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program specializations in composition or performance (conducting, instrumental or vocal). We define contemporary music as art music created after 1945, although chronological flexibility may be permitted according to individual interests. is grounded in applied study in composition or performance, but goes beyond traditional boundaries by integrating these practices in multidisciplinary seminars and discovering new contexts through studies in culture, digital media and music cognition. It provides the creative and academic environment necessary to give students opportunities for critical analysis, creative examination, cultivation of enhanced musical thinking, pedagogical training and experience, flexible curricular programming and traditional as well as nontraditional performing experiences | Applicants for the DMA must have an earned master’s degree by August 2008 with a minimum GPA of 3.2. Students without a master’s degree may apply to the master’s program at Bowling Green State University. When the degree is completed, they may apply to the doctoral program. Students must also meet the admission requirements of the Graduate College and the College of Musical Arts. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Specialization: Private study in composition or performance, Cognate in one of three minor areas of study, Multidisciplinary music seminars focusing on the collaborative process in the development and creation of new works and the examination of common issues in culture, digital media and music cognition, Off-campus internship designed to develop nonacademic career options, Electives in and outside of music, Culminating experiences, | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Doctor of Philosophy with Emphasis in Communication and Culture | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | This program from critical/interpretative scholarship to grounded theory building in intercultural and media centered investigations of social process, our program allows for diverse approaches to communication and culture from a variety of perspectives. Faculty from each department (Interpersonal Communication, Journalism, and Telecommunications) make up this diverse and innovative collection of engaged communication and culture scholars. | Admission Without Funding. To be eligible for regular admission without funding, a doctoral applicant must be a graduate of an accredited master's program with a 3.2 GPA. GRE scores must indicate potential for success in the program. International students must have a TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 250 (computer-based). TOEFL scores are not required of applicants whose first language is English, applicants who have been a U.S. citizen, refugee, or permanent resident for at least five years, and applicants who hold a four-year bachelor's or a master's degree from a U.S. institution. In addition, the faculty pay special attention to evidence that indicates that candidates can meet the challenge of a rigorous research degree program. Regular Admission With Funding. Applicants who fulfill the prerequisites for regular admission and who receive a funding recommendation from the SCS faculty may receive regular admission with an assistantship. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication, 302 West Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | This department is a global center for teaching and research in communication and media. Departments of Interpersonal Communication, Journalism, and Telecommunications teach doctor of philosophy, master’s and bachelor’s degrees, and run collaborative programs with cognate disciplines, including American Cultural Studies, and Theatre and Film. The School works closely with print, broadcast and online student media, including the daily newspaper BG News, BG-24 television, radio stations WBGU-FM and WFAL-AM, and enjoys a long association with WBGU-TV27 public broadcasting. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Doctor of Philosophy with Emphasis in Mass Media Studies | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | This program from critical/cultural perspectives on media, globalization, and political economy to social scientific approaches to mass media effects, audience, and mass media theory. Our program features researchers interested in television and culture, mass media and international development, international/global media, computer mediated communication, as well as journalism law, history, and innovative technologies-these scholars make up the interdisciplinary and unique perspective that only BGSU can provide. Faculty from each department (Interpersonal Communication, Journalism, and Telecommunications) make up this diverse and innovative collection of engaged media scholars. | Admission Without Funding. To be eligible for regular admission without funding, a doctoral applicant must be a graduate of an accredited master's program with a 3.2 GPA. GRE scores must indicate potential for success in the program. International students must have a TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 250 (computer-based). TOEFL scores are not required of applicants whose first language is English, applicants who have been a U.S. citizen, refugee, or permanent resident for at least five years, and applicants who hold a four-year bachelor's or a master's degree from a U.S. institution. In addition, the faculty pay special attention to evidence that indicates that candidates can meet the challenge of a rigorous research degree program. Regular Admission With Funding. Applicants who fulfill the prerequisites for regular admission and who receive a funding recommendation from the SCS faculty may receive regular admission with an assistantship. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication, 302 West Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | This department is a global center for teaching and research in communication and media. Departments of Interpersonal Communication, Journalism, and Telecommunications teach doctor of philosophy, master’s and bachelor’s degrees, and run collaborative programs with cognate disciplines, including American Cultural Studies, and Theatre and Film. The School works closely with print, broadcast and online student media, including the daily newspaper BG News, BG-24 television, radio stations WBGU-FM and WFAL-AM, and enjoys a long association with WBGU-TV27 public broadcasting. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Doctoral Program in Leadership Studies | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies | This program of student in the Leadership Studies program enroll in cohorts, on either a three-year full-time basis or a four-year part-time basis. This doctoral program is a post-masters program designed to engage professional individuals in a rigorous process of inquiry, practice, and reflection. Individuals entering this program are typically individuals who hold masters’ degrees in academic disciplines, have several years of successful professional/leadership experience, and are interested in preparing themselves for leadership roles in school settings, faculty positions in colleges or universities, or leadership positions in businesses, human resource institutions and other organizations. The primary aim of the Doctoral Program in Leadership Studies is to prepare individuals to exercise leadership that will transform the quality of schools and other human resource institutions and thereby enable these organizations to attain specific goals and objectives as well as maintain their legitimacy within society. Students in the program come from a wide variety of professional fields, including lementary and secondary education, higher education, business, law, law enforcement, overnment, medicine, nursing, healthcare, psychology, and social work. Additionally, although not leading specifically to administrative licensure, coursework included in the Ed. D. program may also be used to qualify individuals for Ohio school administrative licensure. |
Students may be fully admitted if the program graduate faculty deem that: a. The applicant has at least a 3.0 GPA in work completed in the master's program; b. The applicant's career goals and professional interests are consistent with -the purposes and intended outcomes of the doctoral program; and c. The applicant's aptitude, commitment, and prior academic and professional performance are deemed sufficient to enable the applicant to successfully complete all program requirements. Students enroll in cohort groups and begin their program during the Fall semester. Enrollment in coursework must commence at the identified date for each cohort. Reapplication for readmission is required for all students failing to enroll with the cohort during the identified enrollment period. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is to prepare educators to assume leadership roles in formulating and implementing administrative policy and improving practice at all levels of education and in agencies outside of formal educational settings. A variety of graduate and advanced graduate preparation programs is offered to meet the needs of different professionals in a wide range of settings for individuals wishing to enter the professional fields as well as those continuing their education within them. In addition to the formal program areas of the School of Leadership and Policy Studies, service curriculum is provided to support the development of educational leadership through curricula in research methodology and assessment, history and philosophy of education, comparative education, and educational psychology. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Doctorate in Mathematics (concentration in Statistics) | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program is a research degree. The program gives the student broad coursework in the mathematical sciences and prepares student for dissertation work. | Students should have two official transcripts to be sent from each institution attended (except Bowling Green State University----only one is needed from this institution). These transcripts are to be sent directly from the institution(s). In those cases where temporary transcripts are submitted initially, formal admission to the Graduate College is granted upon receipt of official transcripts showing the degree earned and the date it was completed. Submit official test scores for the Graduate Record Examination Aptitude Test. Student are encouraged to submit test scores for the G.R.E. Advanced Test in Mathematics, but are not required to do so. If student native language is not English, student must submit test scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the Official Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB). | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Dual Master of Arts in German and History | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program helps to students must either successfully write and defend a thesis on a topic related to both fields (Plan I), or complete comprehensive examinations drawn from the two fields and an area of specialization examination in German (Plan II). The thesis will be supervised by a faculty committee of four members drawn equally from the two departments. The Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages additionally requires of both Plan 1 and Plan 2 students an examination on an area related to the topic of the thesis or area of specialization, and proficiency examinations in composition, German-English translation, English-German translation, and oral communication. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | HIST 151. World Civilizations (3), HIST 152. The Modern World (3), HIST 180. Asian Civilizations (3), HIST 191. Special Studies in History (2-3), HIST 205. Early America (3), HIST 206. Modern America (3), HIST 291. Special Studies in History (2-3), HIST 301. American Military History (3), HIST 303. World War II (3), HIST 304. The Bible as History: The New Testament (3), HIST 305. The Bible as History: The Old Testament (3), HIST 306. History of Ohio (3), HIST 309. Latin America Before Independence (3), HIST 310. Modern Latin America (3), HIST 311. United States-Latin American Relations, 1810-Present (3), HIST 314. Black Religion and Culture (3), HIST 315. Slavery in the Americas (3), HIST 317. African Cultures and Societies (3) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Bowling Green State University, Williams 128, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2030 | This department is the investigation of change and continuity in human societies. Historical study aims to understand the past in order to understand the present more fully. Studying history creates a trained habit of thinking in the long-term, and integrating political, social, economic, artistic, intellectual and cultural factors into both the long-term and short-term aspects of society. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Dual Master of Arts in History and French | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program of studies in either French or Spanish. Both the French and Spanish programs combine the cultural benefits of study abroad with the guidance and academic support of the graduate faculty on campus. Students have the opportunity to begin their studies with a year abroad in France or Quebec, Spain or Mexico. Students return to the home campus for their second year of study. Those who prefer not to spend a year abroad may take their full course work at the University. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Dual Master of Arts in History and Spanish | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program of studies in either French or Spanish. Both the French and Spanish programs combine the cultural benefits of study abroad with the guidance and academic support of the graduate faculty on campus. Students have the opportunity to begin their studies with a year abroad in France or Quebec, Spain or Mexico. Students return to the home campus for their second year of study. Those who prefer not to spend a year abroad may take their full course work at the University. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Dual Master's Degree in Computer Science and Geology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program of study is incorporating computer science and another graduate discipline, leading to the simultaneous award of two master's degrees. This option requires simultaneous admission into the two programs, and is not open to students already pursuing a graduate degree at BGSU. This program requires that all dual degree students complete a thesis. No CS specializations are available to the student in a dual degree program. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2337 | This department offer both the Bachelor's and Master's level. Our department strives to: provide a current, comprehensive and client-centered environment for the teaching and learning of computer science and related professional values prepare students for professional careers or advanced studies in computer science have a positive effect upon students, the university, the community and the computer science profession promote the discovery, dissemination and application of knowledge involving computing foster personal and professional growth for all students, faculty and staff. In significant ways, economic, social, and technological changes influence educational demands and processes. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Dual Master's Degree in Computer Science and Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program of study is incorporating computer science and another graduate discipline, leading to the simultaneous award of two master's degrees. This option requires simultaneous admission into the two programs, and is not open to students already pursuing a graduate degree at BGSU. This program requires that all dual degree students complete a thesis. No CS specializations are available to the student in a dual degree program. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2337 | This department offer both the Bachelor's and Master's level. Our department strives to: provide a current, comprehensive and client-centered environment for the teaching and learning of computer science and related professional values prepare students for professional careers or advanced studies in computer science have a positive effect upon students, the university, the community and the computer science profession promote the discovery, dissemination and application of knowledge involving computing foster personal and professional growth for all students, faculty and staff. In significant ways, economic, social, and technological changes influence educational demands and processes. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Dual Master's Degree in Computer Science and Psychology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program of study is incorporating computer science and another graduate discipline, leading to the simultaneous award of two master's degrees. This option requires simultaneous admission into the two programs, and is not open to students already pursuing a graduate degree at BGSU. This program requires that all dual degree students complete a thesis. No CS specializations are available to the student in a dual degree program. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2337 | This department offer both the Bachelor's and Master's level. Our department strives to: provide a current, comprehensive and client-centered environment for the teaching and learning of computer science and related professional values prepare students for professional careers or advanced studies in computer science have a positive effect upon students, the university, the community and the computer science profession promote the discovery, dissemination and application of knowledge involving computing foster personal and professional growth for all students, faculty and staff. In significant ways, economic, social, and technological changes influence educational demands and processes. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | English as a Second Language Program | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program provides undergraduate and graduate international students with English language support. This support is provided in the form of English language proficiency testing, placement into supplementary English language courses, supervision of those courses, and informational services provided to students and faculty. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | No qualification | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Executive Master of Organization Development | Full Time | 18 Month(s) | $4080 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | College of Business Administration | This program provides graduates with a solid foundation in a variety of areas which provides them with the tools to improve the performance of individuals and organizations. These competencies include: Change Leadership; Organizational Structure and Design; Human Resource Management; Leadership Development; Group Processes and Communication; Team Building; Conflict Management; Emotional Intelligence; Strategic Planning and Goal Setting; Organizational Restructuring. | Students must possess the following minimum qualifications for admission: bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution; a minimum of 3 years of full-time management or professional experience; diverse educational backgrounds and career patterns are sought for this program. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | This program covers the following modules: ORGD 601. Introducing Organizational Change (3); ORGD 602. Enhancing Individual and Group Effectiveness (3); ORGD 603. Building a Strategic Organization (3); ORGD 604. Diagnosing Organizational Issues (3); ORGD 605. Data Collection and Feedback Processes (3); ORGD 606. Engaging Whole Systems for Change (3); ORGD 607. Mastering Change (3); ORGD 608. Leading for Organizational Success (3); ORGD 609. Implementing Process and Quality Improvement Methods (3); ORGD 632. Managing Strategic Human Resources (3); ORGD 686. Independent Study in Organization Development (1-3); ORGD 687. Independent Study in Organization Development (1-3); ORGD 689. Organization Development Internship (1-3); ORGD 691. Organization Development Research Project (3); ORGD 699. Thesis Research (1-12). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration | College of Business Administration, Bowling Green State University, Room BA 369, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2488 | Bowling Green State University is part of the public university system of the State of Ohio and is a fully accredited university. BGSU’s main campus is comprised of nearly 20,000 students, including 2700 graduate students, and is located in the safe and friendly town of Bowling Green, Ohio. Nearly 30,000 residents call this community their permanent home. Bowling Green State University, established in 1910, is situated on a 1,338-acre campus, which includes more than 100 buildings. The campus is physically compact so you can walk or bike anywhere in 10-15 minutes. At the center of the University's academic community are the 785 full-time faculty who are actively engaged in teaching, research and creative activities, as well as service to the campus community, the nation and their profession. In support of the students and faculty, BGSU employs a non-teaching, full-time and part-time staff of more than 1,600 people. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in American Culture Studies | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies | This program is designed around he concept of culture, which serves to unify study of the many discrete aspects of our historical, social, intellectual, and artistic heritage. The program invites students to explore particular themes, issues, and periods rom an interdisciplinary perspective. This program offers a foundation in the study f American culture for students with a variety of interests or goals. Primarily, we seek to communicate a sense of the omplexity and diversity of our national culture based upon a systematic analysis of its elements. This approach is relevant equally to students who might pursue a career in ducation in some aspect of American culture; those who might engage in such professions s journalism, public relations, advertising, government, marketing, etc., where a nowledge of American culture is important; or those seeking enrichment of their understanding of American culture. While he American Culture Studies component of the curriculum assures a common experience n culture study, the remainder of the courses are selected from traditional disciplines to allow an individualized educational experience. |
Student should have two official transcripts from each college or university student have attended; scores for the General Test of the Graduate Record Examination. Foreign students are required to pass the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) examination or its equivalent. The following materials must be submitted to the American Culture Studies program office in support of student application: (a) three letters of recommendation from current or former instructors or other persons qualified to evaluate probable success in the M.A. program; (b) evidence of ability to conduct academic research in an interdisciplinary setting, such as copies of undergraduate research papers; (c) a two-four page statement of purpose delineating the applicant Student should have two official transcripts from each college or university student have attended; scores for the General Test of the Graduate Record Examination. Foreign students are required to pass the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) examination or its equivalent. The following materials must be submitted to the American Culture Studies program office in support of student application: (a) three letters of recommendation from current or former instructors or other persons qualified to evaluate probable success in the M.A. program; (b) evidence of ability to conduct academic research in an interdisciplinary setting, such as copies of undergraduate research papers; (c) a two-four page statement of purpose delineating the applicant ’s purpose for taking the M.A. as well as an outline of career goals, both short- and long-range; (d) a current one-two page resume or c.v. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ACS 602. Teaching American Culture Studies, ACS 603. Supervised Assistantship, ACS 605. Lecture Series, ACS 605. Lecture Series, ACS 630. Methods and Theories, ACS 673. Seminar in American Culture Studies, ACS 674. Seminar in American Culture Studies, ACS 675. Seminar in American Culture Studies, ACS 676. Seminar in American Culture Studies, ACS 677. Seminar in American Culture Studies, ACS 678. Seminar in American Culture Studies, ACS 679. Seminar in American Culture Studies, ACS 682. Topics in American Culture Studies, ACS 685. Readings in American Culture Studies, ACS 687. Independent Study in American Culture Studies, ACS 689. Internship, ACS 691. Directed Research in American Culture Studiesm, ACS 698. Readings for Comprehensive Examination, ACS 720. History of American Studies, ACS 730. Seminar in Theories of American Culture Studies, ACS 740. Genealogy of American Culture, ACS 745. Publication and Professional Development, ACS 750. Key Debates in Cultural Studies, ACS 755. Field Work in American Culture, ACS 760. Critical Approaches in Film Studies, ACS 780. Seminar in American Culture Studies, ACS 782. Topics in American Culture Studies, ACS 785. Directed Readings in American Culture Studies, ACS 787. Independent Study in American Culture Studies, ACS 789. Internship in American Culture Studies, ACS 791. Directed Research in American Culture Studies, ACS 797. Practicum in American Culture, ACS 798. Readings for Core/Preliminary Examination, ACS 799 - Dissertation Research | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies, 101 East Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8886 | This department offers at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. These range from computer art and neuroscience to telecommunications and popular culture, from biology and Japanese to computer science and women’s studies and beyond. In fact, the College offers almost 100 majors, over 100 minors, 22 masters programs, and 11 doctoral programs designed to introduce you to a fascinating world of ideas. They will also help you develop skills necessary to succeed in hundreds of satisfying careers, prepare you for such professions as law, medicine, and journalism, provide you with a firm foundation for graduate work, spark your imagination, and expand your horizons. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in Applied Demography | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program is a specialized degree intended to prepare students for employment in a variety of service, government, or business settings, and it is generally intended to be a terminal degree. Students who intend to continue their education through the doctoral degree are advised to consider the M.A. program in general sociology with a concentration in demography. The requirements for the M.A.program in Applied Demography are different from those of the general master's program in Sociology as outlined above (and covered more fully in the Graduate Student Handbook); and they are specified in detail in a separate program announcement describing the graduate program in Applied Demography. Students interested in this more specialized program should consult this separate program announcement. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in Applied Demography with Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program has a growing number of administrative, planning, and statistical agencies at all levels of government, public policy research organizations, and private industries are showing an interest in employing persons whose primary training and expertise is in the use and analysis of population statistics. In addition, an increasing number of students have shown an interest in acquiring specialized training in techniques of demographic analysis at an earlier stage in their graduate education than is common in more traditional graduate programs. Designed in response to these trends, the Graduate Program in Applied Demography prepares graduates for employment in a variety of service, government, or business settings upon the completion of the master's degree. Students who intend to continue their education through the doctoral degree should also consider the Graduate Program in demography within the Department of Sociology. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Sociology 520 Techniques of Demographic Analysis I, Sociology 611 Intermediate Methodology, Sociology 612 Intermediate Statistics, Sociology 621 Population and Society, Sociology 723 Population and Development, ociology 726 Migration, Sociology 727 Morbidity and Mortality, Sociology 728 Human Fertility and Family Planning, Sociology 656 Family Demography, Sociology 680 Sociology of Aging, Sociology 627 Data Analysis, Sociology 720 Techniques of Demographic Analysis II, Sociology 719 Advanced Statistics, Geography 524 Geographic Information Systems |
Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in Applied Demography without Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program has a growing number of administrative, planning, and statistical agencies at all levels of government, public policy research organizations, and private industries are showing an interest in employing persons whose primary training and expertise is in the use and analysis of population statistics. In addition, an increasing number of students have shown an interest in acquiring specialized training in techniques of demographic analysis at an earlier stage in their graduate education than is common in more traditional graduate programs. Designed in response to these trends, the Graduate Program in Applied Demography prepares graduates for employment in a variety of service, government, or business settings upon the completion of the master's degree. Students who intend to continue their education through the doctoral degree should also consider the Graduate Program in demography within the Department of Sociology. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Sociology 520 Techniques of Demographic Analysis I, Sociology 611 Intermediate Methodology, Sociology 612 Intermediate Statistics, Sociology 621 Population and Society, Sociology 723 Population and Development, ociology 726 Migration, Sociology 727 Morbidity and Mortality, Sociology 728 Human Fertility and Family Planning, Sociology 656 Family Demography, Sociology 680 Sociology of Aging, Sociology 627 Data Analysis, Sociology 720 Techniques of Demographic Analysis II, Sociology 719 Advanced Statistics, Geography 524 Geographic Information Systems |
Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in Applied Mathematics and Scientific Computation | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program is Mathematical modeling and numerical analysis are increasingly important in many areas of science and technology. The dramatic improvement in algorithms and hardware in recent decades has facilitated the treatment of applied mathematical models which were considered intractable only a few years ago. This has led to the emergence of Scientific Computing as a "third scientific methodology", as distinct from theory and experimentation. Exploiting this new approach requires (a) sound mathematical training, (b) expertise in the practical aspects of computing and algorithm development, and (c) an interdisciplinary, scientific viewpoint which transcends traditional disciplinary boundaries. The student will also find opportunities for the interdisciplinary application of mathematics in a number of diverse areas. These include Geophysics, Materials Science, Mathematical Biology, Physics, and Chemistry. | Students should have two official transcripts to be sent from each institution attended (except Bowling Green State University----only one is needed from this institution). These transcripts are to be sent directly from the institution(s). In those cases where temporary transcripts are submitted initially, formal admission to the Graduate College is granted upon receipt of official transcripts showing the degree earned and the date it was completed. Submit official test scores for the Graduate Record Examination Aptitude Test. Students are encouraged to submit test scores for the G.R.E. Advanced Test in Mathematics, but are not required to do so. If student native language is not English, student must submit test scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the Official Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in Criminology and Deviance with Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program is to prepare students for professional employment in universities or agencies at the local, state, or federal levels of government. Reaching this goal requires a program with both breadth and depth, and one that emphasizes productive scholarship. This last requirement is facilitated by a maximum degree of student involvement in the research activities of the faculty members responsible for this program. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Sociology 644 – Deviant Behavior; and Sociology 646 – Theories of Criminality and one of the following: Sociology 645 – Juvenile Delinquency, Sociology 647 -- Sociology of Mental Illness, Sociology 680 -- Topics in Sociology (on a topic related to criminology and deviance), Sociology 741 – Corrections, Sociology 743 -- Sociology of Violence, Sociology 745 – Sociology of Law | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in Criminology and Deviance without Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program is to prepare students for professional employment in universities or agencies at the local, state, or federal levels of government. Reaching this goal requires a program with both breadth and depth, and one that emphasizes productive scholarship. This last requirement is facilitated by a maximum degree of student involvement in the research activities of the faculty members responsible for this program. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Sociology 644 – Deviant Behavior; and Sociology 646 – Theories of Criminality and one of the following: Sociology 645 – Juvenile Delinquency, Sociology 647 -- Sociology of Mental Illness, Sociology 680 -- Topics in Sociology (on a topic related to criminology and deviance), Sociology 741 – Corrections, Sociology 743 -- Sociology of Violence, Sociology 745 – Sociology of Law | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in Family Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program is to prepare students for careers in teaching, research, and/or governmental or community service focusing on families and family relations. The program gives students insights into the complexities of contemporary families, the historical development of family systems, and the social psychological and demographic processes that influence and are influenced by family phenomena. Family studies may be selected as the major concentration by M.A. students, and as either the major or minor area of study by Ph.D. students. All graduate students in family studies are encouraged to develop a professional orientation toward teaching, research, and publication through direct involvement in the activities of the faculty. Students who major in family studies at the doctoral level will choose one of two specializations within the field: (1) demography of the family; or (2) social psychology of the family. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | SOC 550: Gender in Families, SOC 551: Sociology of Family Violence, SOC 653: Social Psychology of the Intimate Dyad, SOC 654: Family Theory and Research, SOC 656: Family Demography, SOC 680: Adolescence*, SOC 680: Sociology of Aging*, SOC 728: Human Fertility and Family Planning, SOC 753: Socialization | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in German | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages | This program offers you three different possibilities for pursuing your research interests. Literary and Cultural Studies Track: You can pursue a wide variety of literary and cultural topics in German. Comparative approaches and the development of specialized research interests are encouraged. This track can serve as an ideal preparation for further studies (Ph.D. programs) in the humanities, for a wide variety of professions and government positions that demand cultural expertise, or as preparation for teaching German at the college and high-school level. Language and Teaching Track: You will focus on linguistic and pedagogical topics, and acquire teaching experience and assist professors with their work. This track is ideal for perfecting your language skills; it will prepare you for the teaching profession or for work with businesses that have strong ties to German-speaking countries. Dual Degree Track: You can pursue a dual M.A. degree in German and Political Science, History, Music History, or another field (such as a second language, English, art, etc.). This track is an ideal preparation for further studies in both fields, for business and government positions that demand cultural, historical, and/or political expertise, and also for teaching more than one subject at the college or high-school level. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages, Shatzel Hall 103, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2268 | This department include language and culture; literature, cinema, drama, and related fields. Students and faculty collaborate on student organizations, research, off-campus projects, and education abroad around the world. Most summer and AY 08-09 programs, including in Austria, China, and Russia, are still taking applications. See department News for this year's special activities. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. in Sociology - Demography | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program is designed to provide students with a basic background in general sociological theories and research methods, as well as provide a more in-depth course of study in a specialized area of the student's own choosing. The general requirements for the master's degree and the options open to students (e.g., thesis and nonthesis options) are described more fully in the Graduate Student Handbook of the Department of Sociology, and all students should make themselves thoroughly familiar with the contents of this document. In addition to meeting all the general requirements outlined in the Graduate Student Handbook, students wishing to pursue a master's degree in Sociology with a concentration in demography must, as a minimum, complete the following courses or their equivalent. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Sociology 520 Techniques of Demographic Analysis I, Sociology 621 Population and Society, Sociology 723 Population and Development, Sociology 726 Migration, Sociology 727 Morbidity and Mortality, Sociology 728 Human Fertility and Family Planning, Sociology 656 Family Demography, Sociology 680 Sociology of Aging, Sociology 627 Data Analysis, Sociology 720 Techniques of Demographic Analysis II, Sociology 719 Advanced Statistics, Geography 524 Geographic Information Systems | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.A. majoring in Social Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program offers both an M.A. program in social psychology and a Ph.D. program with social psychology as either a minor or major area. The social psychology program, emphasizes flexibility and coursework tailored to meet the needs and interests of our students. Nevertheless, all students are encouraged to select additional courses from the core curriculum in social psychology as is consistent with their own professional goals and development. In short, each student must accept responsibility for designing a course of study that will best serve his or her professional goals. The Department of Sociology's faculty in Social Psychology will make every reasonable effort to insure that students will meet all degree requirements and emerge as well-qualified professionals. The Social Psychology faculty believes that this program is a challenging opportunity for able, motivated students. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | SOC 647: Sociology of Mental Illness, SOC 650: Proseminar in Social Psychology, SOC 653: Social Psychology of the Marital Dyad, SOC 680: Selected Topics* (i.e., Adolescence), SOC 738: Race and Ethnic Relations, SOC 750: Advanced Social Psychology (Theory), SOC 753: Socialization | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.Ed. in Career and Technology Education - Technology/Technical Education Professional | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program is designed for individuals who desire to become leaders in the area of technology/technical education. Course work includes curriculum development, evaluation, instructional media, presentation graphics, and research in the field. The program also allows for technical upgrading related to the subject being taught. Within each area of concentration it is possible to develop an emphasis in one or more of the following: Master Teacher / Trainer, Researcher / Evaluator, Curriculum Developer, and Administrator / Supervisor. | Student should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | C and TE 601 - Principles of Career and Technology Education, C and TE 679 - Research in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 680 - Seminar in Career and Technology Education, TECH 603 - Data Analysis and Decision Making in Technology, C and TE 650 - Instruction of Career and Technology Subjects, C and TE 653 - Theory of Technology Education, C and TE 654 - Curriculum in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 656 - Curriculum in Technology Education, C and TE 657 - Facilities Planning in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 658 - Technology in America, C and TE 659 - Training in Industry and Business, C and TE 660 - Evaluation in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 661 - Curriculum Development in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 666 - Theories of Vocational Behavior, C and TE 675 - Administration and Supervision in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 682/683 - Topics in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 688/689 - Internship in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 694/695 - Workshop in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 697 - Supervised Practicum in Career and Technology Education | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.Ed. in Career and Technology Education - Training and Development Professional | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program is designed for individuals interested in acquiring professional qualifications in the field of training and development. Course work follows the American Society for Training and Development (ASTD) competencies for professional practice in human resource development (HRD). Each course of study is prepared based on the students' background, interests and needs. Courses in the College of Technology emphasizes skills in needs analysis, instructional design, instructional strategies, presentation graphics, evaluation, cost benefits analysis, adult learning, and motivation. These are blended with course selection from other BGSU program offerings such as technical communication, industrial psychology, human resource management, education, and organizational development. Many courses involve projects in a business or industry setting. | Student should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | C and TE 601 - Principles of Career and Technology Education, C and TE 679 - Research in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 680 - Seminar in Career and Technology Education, TECH 603 - Data Analysis and Decision Making in Technology, C and TE 650 - Instruction of Career and Technology Subjects, C and TE 653 - Theory of Technology Education, C and TE 654 - Curriculum in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 656 - Curriculum in Technology Education, C and TE 657 - Facilities Planning in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 658 - Technology in America, C and TE 659 - Training in Industry and Business, C and TE 660 - Evaluation in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 661 - Curriculum Development in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 666 - Theories of Vocational Behavior, C and TE 675 - Administration and Supervision in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 682/683 - Topics in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 688/689 - Internship in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 694/695 - Workshop in Career and Technology Education, C and TE 697 - Supervised Practicum in Career and Technology Education | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.S. in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Students should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2031 | This department begins with a dedicated faculty providing a wide range of courses, including sequences in biochemistry, analytical, organic, physical, inorganic chemistry, and opportunities in materials science. Courses are supported with excellent laboratory facilities and state of the art instrumentation. Chemistry has been central to the development of an interdisciplinary program in materials science and is an important part of BGSU's program in scientific computing. offers a M.S. degree in Chemistry and a Ph.D. in Photochemical Sciences. The Center for Photochemical Sciences and the Department of Chemistry have developed a uniquely focused Ph.D. program in the photochemical sciences, designed for students with backgrounds in physics, biological sciences or chemistry. The coursework prepares students in the area of photochemistry and photophysics, and examines applications in fundamental areas of chemistry, materials science, biological sciences, physics, and spectroscopy and/or photopolymer science. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.S. in Computer Science - Operations Research | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research | This program is offered jointly by the Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research and the Department of Computer Science. Upon completion of the program of study, the student will earn the M.S. degree in computer science with a concentration in operations research. Study Areas: Dynamic Programming, Integer Programming, Linear Programming, Network Analysis, Nonlinear Programming, Simulation Stochastic Models, In each area, the student studies theory, applications, and computer implementations. Students may complement these areas with other courses from computer science, statistics, operations research, or mathematics. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | STAT 502 Regression Analysis, STAT 506 Sample Design, STAT 508 Experimental Design, STAT 512 Applied Nonparametric Statistics, STAT 514 Quality Control, STAT 516 Time Series, STAT 601 Statistics for Managerial Decisions, STAT 620 Experimental Design II, STAT 630 Applied Multivariate Analysis, STAT 634 Applied Discrete Data Analysis, STAT 675 Research Methods in Statistics, STAT 680/681 Seminar in Statistics, STAT 686/687 Independent Study in Statistics, OR 572 Computer Simulation of Management Systems, OR 661 Linear and Integer Programming, OR 662 Probability Models for Decision Making, OR/CS 647 Network Analysis, OR/CS 649 Applied Linear and Dynamic Programming, OR 651 Mathematical Programming and Applications, OR 655 Stochastic Models and Applications, OR 669 Case Studies in Management Science, OR 686/687 Independent Study in Operations Research, OR 691 Directed Research in Operations Research | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research, 344 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2363 | The Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research (ASOR) at Bowling Green State University is one of seven academic departments in the College of Business Administration. It offers graduate studies leading to a Master of Science in Applied Statistics and a Master of Science in Computer Science with a concentration in Operations Research. At the undergraduate level, students can minor in applied statistics. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.S. in Computer Science with Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program will have produced an independent research project or written a master's thesis. will have critically examined a body of current, published research in computer science. will have demonstrated proficiency in the presentation of technical information, both oral and written. will have developed a perspective that reflects both theory and application. ill be prepared to (a) gain admission to Ph.D. programs, (b) work as professionals within the computing industry, or (c) teach computer science courses. will have assimilated values and standards important to the profession. A specialization is not required for the degree, but the following are available for interested students: Parallel and Distributed Computing, Software Engineering, Operations Research. |
Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | CS 508: Operating Systems, CS 509: Language Design and Implementation, CS 510: Formal Language Theory, CS 517: Introduction to Parallel Computing, CS 520: Artificial Intelligence Methods, CS 525: Computer Graphics, CS 529: Data Communication and Networks, CS 540: Optimization Techniques, CS 542: Techniques of Simulation, CS 551: Numerical Analysis, CS 552: Numerical Analysis, CS 562: Database Management Systems, CS 564: Software Development, CS 566: Professional Issues in Software Development, CS 607: Architecture of Computers, CS 609: Advanced Compiler Design, CS 611: Automata and Computability Theory, CS 612: Analysis of Algorithms, CS 615: Reliable Computing, CS 620: Advanced Topics in Artificial Intelligence, CS 621: Computer Systems Security, CS 625: Advanced Computer Graphics, CS 629: Networks and Distributed Processing, CS 664: Software Engineering, CS 665: Human Issues in Computing | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2337 | This department offer both the Bachelor's and Master's level. Our department strives to: provide a current, comprehensive and client-centered environment for the teaching and learning of computer science and related professional values prepare students for professional careers or advanced studies in computer science have a positive effect upon students, the university, the community and the computer science profession promote the discovery, dissemination and application of knowledge involving computing foster personal and professional growth for all students, faculty and staff. In significant ways, economic, social, and technological changes influence educational demands and processes. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.S. in Computer Science without Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program will have produced an independent research project or written a master's thesis. will have critically examined a body of current, published research in computer science. will have demonstrated proficiency in the presentation of technical information, both oral and written. will have developed a perspective that reflects both theory and application. Student will be prepared to (a) gain admission to Ph.D. programs, (b) work as professionals within the computing industry, or (c) teach computer science courses. Student will have assimilated values and standards important to the profession. A specialization is not required for the degree, but the following are available for interested students: Parallel and Distributed Computing, Software Engineering, Operations Research. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | CS 508: Operating Systems, CS 509: Language Design and Implementation, CS 510: Formal Language Theory, CS 517: Introduction to Parallel Computing, CS 520: Artificial Intelligence Methods, CS 525: Computer Graphics, CS 529: Data Communication and Networks, CS 540: Optimization Techniques, CS 542: Techniques of Simulation, CS 551: Numerical Analysis, CS 552: Numerical Analysis, CS 562: Database Management Systems, CS 564: Software Development, CS 566: Professional Issues in Software Development, CS 607: Architecture of Computers, CS 609: Advanced Compiler Design, CS 611: Automata and Computability Theory, CS 612: Analysis of Algorithms, CS 615: Reliable Computing, CS 620: Advanced Topics in Artificial Intelligence, CS 621: Computer Systems Security, CS 625: Advanced Computer Graphics, CS 629: Networks and Distributed Processing, CS 664: Software Engineering, CS 665: Human Issues in Computing | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2337 | This department offer both the Bachelor's and Master's level. Our department strives to: provide a current, comprehensive and client-centered environment for the teaching and learning of computer science and related professional values prepare students for professional careers or advanced studies in computer science have a positive effect upon students, the university, the community and the computer science profession promote the discovery, dissemination and application of knowledge involving computing foster personal and professional growth for all students, faculty and staff. In significant ways, economic, social, and technological changes influence educational demands and processes. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | M.S.-Ph.D. in Speech-Language Pathology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | This program is tailor-made to the student and does not compromise the requirements for either the master’s or the doctoral degree. The student may elect to obtain a non-clinical master’s degree with this program, and the master’s portion of this program is with thesis. The typical interval to complete both the master’s and doctoral programs is five years, and it is funded for 5 years if the student continues to qualify. If the student desires to become clinically certified during this program, the duration of the program may be longer. The first year of studies is similar to the other master’s students’ courses. In the fall semester of the second year of the master’s program, the student is assigned a masters/doctoral TDP committee and begins to participate in doctoral courses and activities as well as continue with the master’s programming. This program is advantageous to the bachelor’s degree student aspiring to the doctoral degree. | Students should have graduation from an accredited undergraduate college or university. A minimum overall grade point average (GPA) of 3.00, and a minimum GPA of 3.20 in the major. Three letters of recommendation, GRE scores, and a personal letter of application. Successful completion of the following courses, or their equivalents (30 semester hours or 45 quarter hours). Students seeking public school certification may need additional course work at the graduate level. Descriptions of these courses can be found in the University's Undergraduate Catalog. CDIS 123 Introduction to Communication Disorders, CDIS 224 Phonetics, CDIS 225 Language Acquisition and Development, CDIS 301 Anat. and Phys. of the Speech Mechanism, CDIS 302 Intro. to Hearing Science and Acoustics, CDIS 311 Articulation Development and Disorders, CDIS 351 Language Assessment and Remediation, CDIS 361 Introduction to Diagnostic Audiology, CDIS 401 Clinical Methods in Communication Disorders | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders, 200 Health Center Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2515 | The Department's facilities in the University Health Center house the Bowling Green State University Speech and Hearing Clinic. Special features of the Clinic include a complete hearing aid dispensing facility, and clinical treatment rooms which can be monitored by faculty/staff supervisors from their offices. Other features of the facility include classrooms with closed-circuit TV capability, speech and hearing science laboratories, complete auditory testing facilities, seminar and study rooms, and offices for faculty, staff, and graduate students. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | MA in Literary and Textual Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program enables graduate students to both understand and theorize the social functions of texts in a variety of cultural and intellectual contexts and to undertake critical literary analysis through a broad range of methods. It offers tools for textual and cultural analysis both within and outside the academy. The Master’s Program prepares students for advanced graduate work in numerous fields of study in the humanities, social sciences and arts. The program affords students every opportunity to develop their own research projects and write significant scholarly MA theses based on their own unique interests. It also prepares students to participate in key scholarly discussions in a variety of settings. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Seminar in British or American Literature, Research Methods, Theory and Methods of Literary Criticism, Teaching of Literature, Seminar in American Culture Studies, Seminar in English Studies, Topics in English Studies, Directed Research in English Studies, Thesis Research, Bibliography and Research Methods, Advanced Theory Seminar, Advanced Theory Topics, Studies in Ethnic American Literature, Seminar in English Studies. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | MBA - Executive Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 18 Month(s) | $3250 per course for Spring 2010. | College of Business Administration | This program is designed specifically for busy professionals who want to: acquire a more formal grounding in business principles; gain a broader management perspective through exposure to the functional business disciplines; improve their ability to think strategically and manage globally; enhance their ability to structure and solve problems with sound business and ethical principles; apply the techniques and tools learned in classes to problems and situations faced on the job every day; develop an ability to manage change and recognize opportunity from a top management perspective; learn and share 'Best Practices' with peers from the region's top companies and organizations. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | This program covers the following modules: MBA 6520X Business Information Technologies (1 credit hour); MBA 6070X Business Ethics, Law, And Communication (3 credit hours); MBA 6510X Business Analytical Tools For Managerial Decisions (3 credit hours); MBA 6620X Managing Strategic Human Resources (3 credit hours); ECON 6000X Behavior Of The Firm In A Global Environment (3 credit hours); MBA 6200X Accounting For Executives (3 credit hours); MBA 6580X Organizational Leadership and The Global Business Environment (3 credit hours); MBA 6060X Financial Management in a Global Environment (3 credit hours); MBA 6540X Global Supply Chain Management (3 credit hours); MBA 6050X Marketing Management And Strategy (3 credit hours); MBA 6590X Competing Strategically in the Global Environment (3 credit hours). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration | College of Business Administration, Bowling Green State University, Room BA 369, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2488 | Bowling Green State University is part of the public university system of the State of Ohio and is a fully accredited university. BGSU’s main campus is comprised of nearly 20,000 students, including 2700 graduate students, and is located in the safe and friendly town of Bowling Green, Ohio. Nearly 30,000 residents call this community their permanent home. Bowling Green State University, established in 1910, is situated on a 1,338-acre campus, which includes more than 100 buildings. The campus is physically compact so you can walk or bike anywhere in 10-15 minutes. At the center of the University's academic community are the 785 full-time faculty who are actively engaged in teaching, research and creative activities, as well as service to the campus community, the nation and their profession. In support of the students and faculty, BGSU employs a non-teaching, full-time and part-time staff of more than 1,600 people. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | MS in Applied Statistics with Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research | This program is to provide an education in statistics to the student who wishes to become a professional statistician in business, industry, or government. Moreover, this program provides excellent preparation for the student who subsequently wishes to pursue the Ph.D. The student may select from a wide variety of offerings in both applied statistics and mathematical statistics. In addition, the student is required to supplement study in statistics with a minimum of 6 semester hours in a cognate area. Examples of cognate areas chosen by recent graduates include operations research, computer science, biology, economics, and actuarial science. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | STAT 502 Regression Analysis, STAT 506 Sample Design, STAT 508 Experimental Design, MATH 641 Probability Theory I, MATH 642 Mathematical Statistics II, STAT 675 Research Methods in Statistics, STAT 512 Applied Non-Parametric Statistics, MATH 646 Nonparametric Statistical Inference, STAT 514 Statistical Quality Control, MATH 647 Sequential Statistical Inference, STAT 516 Time Series Analysis, MATH 671 Survival Analysis, STAT 620 Experimental Design II, MATH 740 Multidimensional Statistics, STAT 630 Applied Multivariate Analysis, MATH 741 Advanced Probability Theory I, STAT 632 Linear Models, MATH 742 Advanced Probability Theory II, STAT 634 Discrete Data Analysis, MATH 743 Topics in Probability, MATH 545 Applied Probability, MATH 744 Seminar in Probability, MATH 547 Exploratory Data Analysis, MATH 745 Advanced Mathematical Statistics, MATH 643 Probability Theory III, MATH 746 Advanced Mathematical Statistics, MATH 644 Stochastic Processes, MATH 747 Seminar in Statistics, MATH 645 Statistical Distribution Theory, MATH 748 Topics in Statistics | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research, 344 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2363 | The Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research (ASOR) at Bowling Green State University is one of seven academic departments in the College of Business Administration. It offers graduate studies leading to a Master of Science in Applied Statistics and a Master of Science in Computer Science with a concentration in Operations Research. At the undergraduate level, students can minor in applied statistics. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | MS in Applied Statistics without Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research | This program is to provide an education in statistics to the student who wishes to become a professional statistician in business, industry, or government. Moreover, this program provides excellent preparation for the student who subsequently wishes to pursue the Ph.D. The student may select from a wide variety of offerings in both applied statistics and mathematical statistics. In addition, the student is required to supplement study in statistics with a minimum of 6 semester hours in a cognate area. Examples of cognate areas chosen by recent graduates include operations research, computer science, biology, economics, and actuarial science. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | STAT 502 Regression Analysis, STAT 506 Sample Design, STAT 508 Experimental Design, MATH 641 Probability Theory I, MATH 642 Mathematical Statistics II, STAT 675 Research Methods in Statistics, STAT 512 Applied Non-Parametric Statistics, MATH 646 Nonparametric Statistical Inference, STAT 514 Statistical Quality Control, MATH 647 Sequential Statistical Inference, STAT 516 Time Series Analysis, MATH 671 Survival Analysis, STAT 620 Experimental Design II, MATH 740 Multidimensional Statistics, STAT 630 Applied Multivariate Analysis, MATH 741 Advanced Probability Theory I, STAT 632 Linear Models, MATH 742 Advanced Probability Theory II, STAT 634 Discrete Data Analysis, MATH 743 Topics in Probability, MATH 545 Applied Probability, MATH 744 Seminar in Probability, MATH 547 Exploratory Data Analysis, MATH 745 Advanced Mathematical Statistics, MATH 643 Probability Theory III, MATH 746 Advanced Mathematical Statistics, MATH 644 Stochastic Processes, MATH 747 Seminar in Statistics, MATH 645 Statistical Distribution Theory, MATH 748 Topics in Statistics | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research | College of Business Administration, Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research, 344 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2363 | The Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research (ASOR) at Bowling Green State University is one of seven academic departments in the College of Business Administration. It offers graduate studies leading to a Master of Science in Applied Statistics and a Master of Science in Computer Science with a concentration in Operations Research. At the undergraduate level, students can minor in applied statistics. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Athletic Training/Clinic Management | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program prepares students to enter the athletic training profession. AT/CM students in this undergraduate major are educated in all aspects of the professional practice of a certified athletic trainer (ATC). Through a combination of extensive classroom and clinical experiences in athletic training, this undergraduate major provides students the necessary competencies to challenge the Board of Certification Examination. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Environmental Health | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability | This program concentrates on the relationship between environmental quality and public health. Course requirements prepare students for outstanding career opportunities. Pre-medical and other pre-professional programs fit in well with the Environmental Health major, providing graduates with the opportunity to immediate enter the professional workforce with a valuable bachelor’s degree or to pursue additional education. The national accreditation provides unusual opportunities with the U.S. Public Health Service and many benefits for graduates in achieving professional registration. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability, 246 Shatzel Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8207 | The Department of the Environment and Sustainability brings together three disciplines, each preparing students to make meaningful contributions to the quality of their world. Graduates are well-equipped to assume important jobs, to move on to professional schools, and to pursue advanced degrees. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Environmental Policy and Analysis | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability | This program is available for students with a commitment to environmental quality and an interest in the administrative, legislative and organizational problems that result from human impact on the natural and the constructed world. Each student selects an area of emphasis keyed to individual career goals in environmental planning, sustainable management, outdoor recreation, environmental education and interpretation, environmental law, or other appropriate fields. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability, 246 Shatzel Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8207 | The Department of the Environment and Sustainability brings together three disciplines, each preparing students to make meaningful contributions to the quality of their world. Graduates are well-equipped to assume important jobs, to move on to professional schools, and to pursue advanced degrees. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Environmental Science | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability | This program is the study of the biological and physical world as it is affected by natural and man-made processes. It is a field that has become increasingly important as people recognize the responsibilities for pollution, resource depletion, and land abuse. Students develop the skills needed to investigate, document, and solve environmental problems. Each student selects an area of emphasis and selects from a series of advanced courses in such fields as restoration ecology, watershed management, geospatial analysis, and sustainable management. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of the Environment and Sustainability, 246 Shatzel Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8207 | The Department of the Environment and Sustainability brings together three disciplines, each preparing students to make meaningful contributions to the quality of their world. Graduates are well-equipped to assume important jobs, to move on to professional schools, and to pursue advanced degrees. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Integrated mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program in mathematics begins with a core of three semesters of Calculus and a course in Linear Algebra. These are some of the most useful courses the department offers because they introduce fundamental tools for describing and understanding the world, especially science and business, and in that they lay the theoretical foundations for most later courses in mathematics. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Special Education - Developmental Disabilities and Habilitation | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program prepares students to work with persons with disabilities in a wide range of environments outside of school settings (e.g., business, residential settings, public and private agencies). | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Special Education - Hearing Impaired Intervention Specialist | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program students study the structure, acquisition, and development of language; speech and hearing mechanisms; methods of teaching speech and speech reading; curriculum development; educational guidance of students with hearing disabilities; and communication systems, current trends, issues, and research. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Special Education - Mild/Moderate Intervention Specialist | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program is designed to provide specialized training in theoretical foundations and in practical technical skills for individuals planning to teach children and adolescents (grades K-12) who have mild disabilities (learning disabilities) to moderate disability (developmentally delayed). Students enrolled in this specialization become knowledgeable in assessment/evaluation of disabilities, development of service options, curriculum alternatives and modifications, behavior management, transitioning, computer and technical applications, collaborating with parents and other professionals, current trends and issues, and research. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Special Education - Moderate/Intensive Intervention Specialist | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program specializes training in characteristics, assessment, and identification of students with moderate (emotional and behavioral disorders) to intensive (multiple disorders) disabilities. They will learn academic and behavior management methods, adapted curriculum alternatives and modifications, physical and medical management options, transitioning, computer and technical applications, collaborating with parents and other professionals, and current trends and issues. Students will become knowledgeable and competent in prevocational and vocational skill development, community instruction, provision of adult services, and development of career options. Individuals licensed in this area will be qualified to teach children and adolescents (grades K-12) who have moderate to intensive disabilities in a variety of environments where these children with disabilities are served. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Sport Management - Sport Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program involves a rigorous interdisciplinary curriculum that critically examines the sport business and culture. The commitment is to make positive changes in the way sport is managed. Students who select the sport communication specialization are preparing for careers such as sport journalists, sport information directors in intercollegiate athletics programs or athletic conference offices, or work in public/community or media relations with professional teams. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Sport Management, Introduction to Research in Sport Management, History and Philosophy of Sport, Sport and Event Promotion, Sport and Event Management, Sport and Public Assembly Facilities, Legal Aspects of Sport and Recreation, Managing Revenues & Expenditures in Sport Enterprise, Practicum. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Sport Management - Sport Enterprise | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program involves a rigorous interdisciplinary curriculum that critically examines the sport business and culture. The commitment is to make positive changes in the way sport is managed. Students who select the sport marketing specialization are preparing for careers such as account executives for professional teams, sales representatives for sporting goods companies, or marketing directors in intercollegiate athletics programs, conference offices, governing bodies, or in professional sport. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Sport Management, Introduction to Research in Sport Management, History and Philosophy of Sport, Sport and Event Promotion, Sport and Event Management, Sport and Public Assembly Facilities, Legal Aspects of Sport and Recreation, Managing Revenues & Expenditures in Sport Enterprise, Practicum. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Sport Management - Sport Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | This program involves a rigorous interdisciplinary curriculum that critically examines the sport business and culture. The commitment is to make positive changes in the way sport is managed. Students who select the sport enterprise specialization are preparing for careers such as professional sport administrator, corporate administrator of sporting events, tournament director, college/university athletics director, business manager, fundraising administrator, or sport facility manager. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Sport Management, Introduction to Research in Sport Management, History and Philosophy of Sport, Sport and Event Promotion, Sport and Event Management, Sport and Public Assembly Facilities, Legal Aspects of Sport and Recreation, Managing Revenues & Expenditures in Sport Enterprise, Practicum. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Human Movement, Sport and Leisure Studies, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of HMSLS shares the BGSU vision of being the premier learning community in Ohio and one of the best in the nation. In concert with the College of Education and Human Development, it fosters a dynamic community of lifelong learners and leaders. Students are committed to the creation, enhancement, and dissemination of knowledge in the fields of human movement, sport, and leisure. As agents of change, they strive to fulfill this commitment through exemplary scholarship, creative endeavors, teaching, and service. The School of HMSLS encourages academic excellence, the integration of academic disciplines, and a quest for social justice that is based on a knowledge and appreciation of human diversity. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Major in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program in mathematics begins with a core of three semesters of Calculus and a course in Linear Algebra. These are some of the most useful courses the department offers because they introduce fundamental tools for describing and understanding the world, especially science and business, and in that they lay the theoretical foundations for most later courses in mathematics. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Major | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master Teacher in Business Education | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program of students enhance their professional competence in teaching business courses at the secondary, business college, technical/community college, and adult education levels. | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BUSE 601 Foundations of Business Education, BUSE 602 Curriculum Development in Business Education, BUSE 603 Research in Business Education, BUSE 586 Technology in Business Education, EDFI 641 Statistics in Education, BUSE 563 Teaching and Learning Strategies for Adults | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master Teacher in Marketing Education | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program of students enhance their professional competence in teaching marketing, management, or entrepreneurship at the secondary, business college, technical/community college, and adult education levels. | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BUSE 601 Foundations of Business Education, BUSE 602 Curriculum Development in Business Education, BUSE 603 Research in Business Education, BUSE 586 Technology in Business Education, EDFI 641 Statistics in Education, BUSE 563 Teaching and Learning Strategies for Adults | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Accountancy | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems | This program has been designed with a focus on the new information technology oriented and increasingly global business environment. It is part of the AACSB accredited College of Business Administration and Accounting programs at Bowling Green State University. Most business backgrounds similar to that found at business colleges accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) are acceptable. The program is designed to build upon an existing accounting foundation; it is not designed to teach accounting to students who have not completed the equivalent of an undergraduate degree in accounting. | Students should have overall undergraduate GPA, the GPA computed from only accounting courses, GMAT score, prior work experience, recommendations, and, for international students, TOEFL score. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ACCT 621 Advanced Financial Reporting, ACCT 675 Professional Practice Seminar, ACCT 673 Professional and Ethical Responsibilities of the Accountant, ACCT 624 Financial Reporting for Multinationals, GBA 672 Global Environment of Business, MBA 610 International Business and Management, ACCT 525 Accounting for Governmental and Not-for-profit Entities, ACCT 532 Intermediate Managerial Accounting, ACCT 542 Corporate Taxation, ACCT 560 Accounting Information Systems, ACCT 641 Individual Income Taxation, ACCT 657 Fraud Examination, ACCT 680 Financial Statement Analysis, MBA 505 Electronic Commerce, MBA 558 Personal Financial Planning, MBA 642 Services Marketing Management | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems | College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems, 332 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2767 | The Department of Accounting and Management Information Systems (AMIS) at Bowling Green State University focuses on new information technology and the increasingly global business environment. The department’s goal is to develop accounting and information system leaders for the 21st century who will not only acquire the skills and knowledge necessary for their next job but also the tools for building a life-long successful career. BGSU is one of only 171 colleges worldwide to have earned AACSB accreditation in both business and accounting and our outstanding faculty includes a University Master Teacher and a Fulbright Scholar. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Art in Art Education | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program is designed to address the needs of teachers who are interested in extending their professional practice as artists, teachers and researchers by offering them the opportunity to acquire a master's degree that concentrates on both studio and art education practice. Students will have the opportunity to critically explore the cultural, aesthetic, technical, and social aspects in art and art education within a liberal arts context. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTE 596 Student Teaching Practicum (3), ARTE 697 Exhibition Research (3), ARTE 699 Thesis Research | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Art in Art History | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program of art within its diverse cultural, socio-political, economic, religious, theoretical, and thematic contexts. We approach this study through the lenses of current theory and criticism as well as traditional object-oriented connoisseurship. The M.A. is a two-year program, although it is open to part-time students who have six years to finish their degrees. The research specializations of the faculty include the history and theory of: Classical art and archaeology, Renaissance art and visual culture, contemporary art and photography, and the arts and cultures of Africa. With faculty in both Western and non-Western fields, students are offered a revolving curriculum of advanced courses representing every continent with chronological and thematic breadth, and are encouraged toward interdisciplinary study (please see catalog for a compete list of courses available). Students can also take advantage of the close proximity to the Toledo Museum of Art, and to numerous other museums in Detroit, Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, and Chicago. In addition, our graduate students have full access to library collections (including the Popular Culture Library) and image resources such as ARTstor, OhioLINK, and vast repositories of literature online via Jerome Library's website. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTH 540 Modern Architecture (3), ARTH 541 American Art to Civil War (3), ARTH 542 Preclassical Art, ARTH 543 Histories of Photography: Theory and Criticsim from Invention to WWI (3), ARTH 544 Histories of Photography: Theory and Criticsim from WWI to Present (3), ARTH 545 Preclassical Art (3), ARTH 546 Greek Art (3), ARTH 551Art of the Italian Renaissance (3), ARTH 553 Northern Renaissance Art (3), ARTH 554 Baroque and Rococo Art (3), ARTH 555 Art of the 19th Century (3), ARTH 556 Art of the Early 20th Century (3), ARTH 557 Art of the Later 20th Century (3), ARTH 558 Art of India and S.E. Asia (3), ARTH 559 Art of China and Japan (3), ARTH 560 Women and the Visual Arts (3), ARTH 561 Art of Western Africa (3), ARTH 562 Art and Power in Africa (3), ARTH 563 Women and Art in Africa (3), ARTH 566 Pre-Columbian Art (3), ARTH 568 Oceanic Art (3), ARTH 582 Special Topics in Art History (1-3), ARTH 601 American Art Seminar (3), ARTH 602 Seminar in Art History (3), ARTH 603 Seminar in American Culture Studies (3), ARTH 604 Seminar in Ancient Art (3), ARTH 606 Contemporary Art Theory and Criticism (3), ARTH 682 Art History Problems (1-3) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts In Cross - Cultural And International Education | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies | This program is to prepare professional educators to be effective leaders in the internationalization of schools and communities and to be positive facilitators of cross-cultural understanding. The focus of this degree program is to prepare a global educator who is able to: serve as a leader in internationalizing curriculum, foster international educational partnerships, infuse education policy and practices with cross-cultural awareness. For the purposes of this program, the term cross-cultural and international education is defined as the examination of education from diverse perspectives in an international context. The issues that students address in this program transcend national boundaries. This differs from multicultural education which specifically examines issues within a single nation. The program connects issues of cultural and international understanding with educational theory and practice through a unique combination of courses from several disciplines on the BGSU campus. | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | EDFI 603. Cultural Studies in Education , EDFI 601. Comparative Education, EDFI 675. Cross-Cultural Human Development and Learning, EDFI 641. Statistics in Education, EDFI 754. Qualitative Research Methods, EDFI 689. Internship in Cross-Cultural Education, WS 614: Gender and the State in Modern Europe, WS 620: Feminist Theory, WS 770: Seminar in Women’s Culture, ETHN 640: Women and Globalization, ETHN 650: Sexuality, Race, and Nation, WS 780: Women of Color and Feminism, ECON 540: Women, the Economy, and Society, SOC 550: Gender in Families, POLS 560: Politics and Issues of World Development, SOC 723: Population and Third World Development, SOC 726: Migration, ETHN 620: Comparative Perspectives on Race and Ethnicity, ETHN 640: Women and Globalization, FCS 586: Understanding Latino Children and their Family, School, and Community, POLS 560: Politics and Issues of World Development, POLS 575: International Organization, POLS 576: Politics of International Economic Relations, POLS 579: Conflict Resolution, POLS 580: Human Rights, POLS 671: Seminar in International Relations, ENG 610: Theories in TESL, ENG 615: Modern English Linguistics, ENG 616: Language Variation, ENG 612: Methods in TESL, ENG 517 (old 717): Applied Syntax, ENG 518 (old 718): Applied Phonology, SPAN 680: Second Language Acquisition (taught in English and Spanish), SPAN 680: Seminar in Spanish Linguistics ociolinguistics/Psycholinguistics Options (e.g.: FREN 530, GERM 520, SPAN 655, or other socio- or psycholinguistic course), PUBH 5XX (502/503): International Health Issues*, PUBH 522: Applied International Public Health, PUBH 551: Social, Economic, and Political Implications of Infectious Diseases (3)*, PUBH 604: Public Health Administration, PUBH 605: Concepts and Issues in Environmental Health, BIOL 549: Epidemiology(3), COMS 656: Health Communication, F and N 609: Micronutrients Through the Life Span and N 610: Macronutrients for Human Nutrition (3), POLS 620: Public Administration and Public Policy (3), SOC 727: Morbidity and Mortality (3), SOC 728: Human Fertility and Family Planning (3) |
Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is to prepare educators to assume leadership roles in formulating and implementing administrative policy and improving practice at all levels of education and in agencies outside of formal educational settings. A variety of graduate and advanced graduate preparation programs is offered to meet the needs of different professionals in a wide range of settings for individuals wishing to enter the professional fields as well as those continuing their education within them. In addition to the formal program areas of the School of Leadership and Policy Studies, service curriculum is provided to support the development of educational leadership through curricula in research methodology and assessment, history and philosophy of education, comparative education, and educational psychology. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts Plan I - Scientific and Technical Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program works better for students who aspire to pursue the doctoral degree. Technical communication clearly and accurately conveys scientific and technical information. Technical communicators interpret specialized information for their readers' practical use. A technical communicator may be expected to create brochures, prepare research reports, manuals, instructions, news stories, scripts, and speeches. Although technical communicators are not expected to be scientists or engineers, they are expected to have a good background in at least one technical, scientific, or business area. Technical communication is a rapidly growing profession needed in all industries, and technical communicators are in world-wide demand. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Visual Communications for Business and Industry, Technical Writing, Resources and Research in Technical Writing, Technical Editing, One course in Computer Science, Internship in Technical Writing. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts Plan II - Scientific and Technical Communication | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program works better for students who aspire to pursue the doctoral degree. Technical communication clearly and accurately conveys scientific and technical information. Technical communicators interpret specialized information for their readers' practical use. A technical communicator may be expected to create brochures, prepare research reports, manuals, instructions, news stories, scripts, and speeches. Although technical communicators are not expected to be scientists or engineers, they are expected to have a good background in at least one technical, scientific, or business area. Technical communication is a rapidly growing profession needed in all industries, and technical communicators are in world-wide demand. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Visual Communications for Business and Industry, Technical Writing, Resources and Research in Technical Writing, Technical Editing, One course in Computer Science, Internship in Technical Writing, Technical Writing Practicum. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in English Plan II | Distance / Online | 33 Credit-hour(s) | $4080 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | This program is geared to meet the needs of non-resident populations and offers breadth of training in English studies for professional advancement in the public schools or community colleges. It address both theory and practice and presume that students are interested in the teaching of English studies as a career. Elective offerings in Scientific and Technical Communication also allow students to develop competencies appropriate for employment in business and industry. Flexibility of electives provides opportunities for customization and interdisciplinary emphases. Portfolio capstone showcases experience and documents professional growth. Emphasizes teacher-training in both literary and composition studies. | Students must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university and coursework. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | The modules covered are: ENG 6040 Graduate Writing (3), ENG 6070 Theories of Literary Criticism (3), ENG 6090 The Teaching of Literature (3), ENG 6150 Modern English Linguistics (3), ENG 6200 The Teaching of Writing (3), ENG 6910 Portfolio Capstone (3), ENG 6400 Technical Writing (3), ENG 6420 Technical Editing (3), ENG 6430 Ethics in Technical Communication (3), ENG 6800 Topics in English (3), ENG 6840/6850 Directed Readings (3) and ENG 7800 Topics in Rhetoric and Writing (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in French | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program is typically spend their first year abroad in Tours, France or Quebec City, Canada, then complete their degree requirements with a second year on campus in Bowling Green, Ohio. In exceptional cases, some students do complete the entire degree on campus. | Students should have an undergraduate major or minor in French (at least 20 semester hours of credit beyond the intermediate level). Applicants with less background may be accepted, provided they are willing to make up the prerequisite deficiencies specified by the graduate coordinator. The department looks for a minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.0 both overall and in French. The MAT program is available only to licensed teachers with at least one year of teaching experience. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | FREN 101. Elementary French I (4), FREN 102. Elementary French II (4), FREN 201. Intermediate French I (3), FREN 202. Intermediate French II (3), FREN 212. Reading French (3), FREN 220. Language and Culture through Community Living (2), FREN 222. French Culture (3), FREN 284. French Canadian Life Through Literature (3), FREN 300. Preparation for Study in France and Burkina Faso (1), FREN 350. Problems in Translation (3), FREN 353. French Diction (3), FREN 355. French Linguistics (3), FREN 356. Skills for Oral Proficiency (3), FREN 357. Skills for Effective Writing (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in History with Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program is one of two plans. PLAN I, which is recommended for students who hope to continue graduate study beyond the master’s degree. In this plan, students must pass an oral examination on the thesis and the field of history in which the thesis lies. PLAN I permits great latitude in the selection of a thesis topic. Master’s candidates may choose a topic related to policy history, the Department’s focus, or explore social and cultural history. The Department of History encourages M.A. students to pursue inter-disciplinary work, and to use faculty in related departments as thesis committee members. In PLAN II, In addition, the student must pass a final comprehensive examination in two fields of history. Students in both PLAN I and PLAN II must satisfy a research tool requirement by demonstrating a reading proficiency in one foreign language or completing a sequence of computer science or statistics courses. | Official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | HIST 151. World Civilizations (3), HIST 152. The Modern World (3), HIST 180. Asian Civilizations (3), HIST 191. Special Studies in History (2-3), HIST 205. Early America (3), HIST 206. Modern America (3), HIST 291. Special Studies in History (2-3), HIST 301. American Military History (3), HIST 303. World War II (3), HIST 304. The Bible as History: The New Testament (3), HIST 305. The Bible as History: The Old Testament (3), HIST 306. History of Ohio (3), HIST 309. Latin America Before Independence (3), HIST 310. Modern Latin America (3), HIST 311. United States-Latin American Relations, 1810-Present (3), HIST 314. Black Religion and Culture (3), HIST 315. Slavery in the Americas (3), HIST 317. African Cultures and Societies (3) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Bowling Green State University, Williams 128, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2030 | This department is the investigation of change and continuity in human societies. Historical study aims to understand the past in order to understand the present more fully. Studying history creates a trained habit of thinking in the long-term, and integrating political, social, economic, artistic, intellectual and cultural factors into both the long-term and short-term aspects of society. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in History without thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program is one of two plans. PLAN I, which is recommended for students who hope to continue graduate study beyond the master’s degree. In this plan, students must pass an oral examination on the thesis and the field of history in which the thesis lies. PLAN I permits great latitude in the selection of a thesis topic. Master’s candidates may choose a topic related to policy history, the Department’s focus, or explore social and cultural history. The Department of History encourages M.A. students to pursue inter-disciplinary work, and to use faculty in related departments as thesis committee members. In PLAN II, In addition, the student must pass a final comprehensive examination in two fields of history. Students in both PLAN I and PLAN II must satisfy a research tool requirement by demonstrating a reading proficiency in one foreign language or completing a sequence of computer science or statistics courses. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | HIST 151. World Civilizations (3), HIST 152. The Modern World (3), HIST 180. Asian Civilizations (3), HIST 191. Special Studies in History (2-3), HIST 205. Early America (3), HIST 206. Modern America (3), HIST 291. Special Studies in History (2-3), HIST 301. American Military History (3), HIST 303. World War II (3), HIST 304. The Bible as History: The New Testament (3), HIST 305. The Bible as History: The Old Testament (3), HIST 306. History of Ohio (3), HIST 309. Latin America Before Independence (3), HIST 310. Modern Latin America (3), HIST 311. United States-Latin American Relations, 1810-Present (3), HIST 314. Black Religion and Culture (3), HIST 315. Slavery in the Americas (3), HIST 317. African Cultures and Societies (3) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Bowling Green State University, Williams 128, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2030 | This department is the investigation of change and continuity in human societies. Historical study aims to understand the past in order to understand the present more fully. Studying history creates a trained habit of thinking in the long-term, and integrating political, social, economic, artistic, intellectual and cultural factors into both the long-term and short-term aspects of society. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Mental Health Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program offers requisite awareness, knowledge and skills to assist BGSU graduate students in becoming culturally competent and ethical mental health or school counselors. This program prepares individuals in the requisite knowledge and skills to assist themselves and others in personal development and in making decisions which lead to self-fulfillment in the personal, cultural, social, academic, and career areas of life. This program is designed for students wishing to work in community agencies and desiring to meet the requirements for counselor licensure by the State of Ohio. | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | COUN 664: Crisis Counseling (3 credits), COUN 665: Consulting Functions and Practices (3 credits), COUN 674: Career and Life Planning Approaches (3 credits), COUN 675: Theories and Techniques of Counseling (3 credits), COUN 676: Counseling the Culturally Diverse (3 credits), COUN 678: Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling (3 credits), COUN 679: Group Model and Procedures (3 credits), COUN 689: Internship in Counseling (9 credits), COUN 776: Counseling Practicum (4 credits), EDFI 641: Statistics in Education (3 credits), EDFI 642: Research in Education (3 credits), EDIS 678: Assessment and Testing in the Mental Health Setting (3 Credits), EDFI 671: Human Growth and Development (for licensure) (3 credits), EDFI 673: Adolescence (3 credits), COUN 701: Mental Disorders (A-1) (3 credits), COUN 702: Advanced Assessment (A-2) (3 credits), COUN 704: Play Therapy (A-4) (2 credits), COUN 705: Treatment Planning (A-5) (3 credits), REHB 675: Alcohol and Substance Abuse Counseling (A-4) (3 credits), REHB 677: DSM-IV (A-3) (3 credits), REHB 684: Brief Therapy (3 credits) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program encourages graduate students to undertake cross-disciplinary studies whenever courses in other departments and programs bear on their research. The Department has curricular ties of one kind or another to several departments and cross-disciplinary programs. A variety of topics in applied ethics can better be understood if the theoretical approaches and empirical results of other disciplines are taken into account. Students working in environmental ethics might benefit from studying related issues in courses in environmental policy, for example. Students in medical ethics might want to take courses in public health. Courses in Women's Studies are relevant to work in many areas of moral philosophy. | Students must have the results of Graduate Record Exam Aptitude Test (scores over 5 years old not acceptable) and results of Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Masters | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:History of Ancient Philosophy, Wittgenstein and His Influence, Fundamentals of Medical Ethics, Philosophy of Language, Philosophy of Law, Political Legitimacy, Vindicating Explanatory Reductions, Free Will and Moral Responsibility, Desert and Distributive Justice, Control and Self Control, Decision Theory: Foundations and Applications, Rational Choice Theory, Theory of Knowledge. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 305 Shatzel Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2117 | The Department of Philosophy is an internationally recognized community of scholars and students, known widely for its specialization in, and contributions to, moral philosophy, broadly construed, which includes metaethics, normative ethics, applied ethics, political philosophy and aesthetics.Undergraduate students may earn a B.A. in philosophy, and graduate students may earn a Masters or Ph.D. in the Department's applied philosophy program.The Department is committed to providing the highest quality of education for students as well as to increasing the body of philosophical knowledge. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Spanish with Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program of studies in either French or Spanish. Both the French and Spanish programs combine the cultural benefits of study abroad with the guidance and academic support of the graduate faculty on campus. Students have the opportunity to begin their studies with a year abroad in France or Quebec, Spain or Mexico. Students return to the home campus for their second year of study. Those who prefer not to spend a year abroad may take their full course work at the University. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Spanish without Thesis | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program of studies in either French or Spanish. Both the French and Spanish programs combine the cultural benefits of study abroad with the guidance and academic support of the graduate faculty on campus. Students have the opportunity to begin their studies with a year abroad in France or Quebec, Spain or Mexico. Students return to the home campus for their second year of study. Those who prefer not to spend a year abroad may take their full course work at the University. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Bowling Green State University, Williams 128, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2030 | This department is the investigation of change and continuity in human societies. Historical study aims to understand the past in order to understand the present more fully. Studying history creates a trained habit of thinking in the long-term, and integrating political, social, economic, artistic, intellectual and cultural factors into both the long-term and short-term aspects of society. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BIOL 101. Environment of Life (3), BIOL 104. Introduction to Biology (4), BIOL 108. Life in the Sea (3), BIOL 109. Life in Extreme Environments (3), BIOL 200. Biology Today (1), BIOL 204. Concepts in Biology I (5), BIOL 205. Concepts in Biology II (5), BIOL 301. Field Biology of the Vertebrates (3), BIOL 310. Biology of Aging (3), BIOL 313. Microbiology (4), BIOL 314. Microbiology for Health Professionals (3), BIOL 315. Microbiology Laboratory for Health Professionals (1), BIOL 330. Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience (3), BIOL 331. Human Anatomy and Physiology I (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 343. General Botany (4), BIOL 350. General Genetics (4) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, 217 Life Sciences Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2332 | This department is a diverse group of faculty and students focused on the study of living organisms across a wide variety of scales from the cellular and molecular to the landscape scales. In addition, students and faculty regularly collaborate with colleagues in other departments and institutions to foster truly interdisciplinary approaches both in the classroom and in the research setting. Research strengths of the department include: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Ecology and Conservation Biology, and Neuroscience and Behavior. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | This program of studies in either French or Spanish. Both the French and Spanish programs combine the cultural benefits of study abroad with the guidance and academic support of the graduate faculty on campus. Students have the opportunity to begin their studies with a year abroad in France or Quebec, Spain or Mexico. Students return to the home campus for their second year of study. Those who prefer not to spend a year abroad may take their full course work at the University. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | Students should have an undergraduate major or minor in French (at least 20 semester hours of credit beyond the intermediate level). Applicants with less background may be accepted, provided they are willing to make up the prerequisite deficiencies specified by the graduate coordinator. The department looks for a minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.0 both overall and in French. The MAT program is available only to licensed teachers with at least one year of teaching experience. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance and Classical Studies, Bowling Green State University, 203 Shatzel Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2667 | This department is to offer cultural, language and literature courses in French, Italian, Spanish and Classics, thereby allowing students to contextualize their reality and develop intercultural consciousness and skills to be used in various professional settings. To this end, the department is committed to: 1) the major-level programs in Classics, French and Spanish, as well as the programs for minors in Classics, French, Spanish and Italian; 2) teacher preparation in Latin, French, and Spanish; and 3) study abroad programs in three continents. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | This program is designed for teachers, with content directly relevant to the high school science classroom. This is modeled on state and national science education standards. This program has courses offered during the summer and in the evening. This program has courses which may be taken for graduate credit outside the formal degree program. It is designed for physics and physical science teachers who want to deepen their understanding of physics and astronomy and to learn ways to improve their students' learning in the classroom. The program provides physics and astronomy content that is relevant for teaching junior high or high school physics and/or physical science. For example, the content is tied to National and Ohio standards for science education. In addition, the program provides content-specific pedagogical tools for use in the secondary classroom. | Students should have two official copies of student transcripts from all colleges and universities student have attended (except BGSU); and GRE scores: The University requires the GRE for admission to all graduate programs. The scores are good for five years, so if student took the test within the last five years, student do not need to take the test again. If student wish to submit the application before taking the GRE, specify on the application the date by which student will have taken the GRE. Student must have taken the GRE test before the end of student first semester after being accepted into the graduate program. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | PHYS 651. Mechanics (3), PHYS 652. Electromagnetism (3), PHYS 653. Waves and Light (3), PHYS 654. Structure of Matter and Thermodynamics (3), PHYS 655. Astronomy and Astrophysics (3), PHYS 661. Labs and Demonstrations in Physics (1), EDTL 645. Problems in Teaching High School Science (3). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, 104 Overman Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2421 | This department offering a graduate program, the Department has awarded over 160 graduate degrees. External research support averages over $1.5 million per year. Faculty have published over 30 refereed journal articles and papers in the past 3 years. Teaching excellence in the Department is evidenced by nominations of two faculty members for the Outstanding Teacher Award several years running. Operations of the BGSU Planetarium and Observatory extend the Department's and the University's outreach in science education - an average of 3,500 general public and 4,000 school children visit these facilities each year. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Teaching Biology - Specialization in Interdisciplinary Science | Distance / Online | Variable | $4080 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | This program provides math and science knowledge in teachers who have otherwise limited background in these areas; increases the math and science process knowledge; increases the math and science pedagogical content knowledge and enhances the concept of science and mathematics as problem solving tools through an interdisciplinary approach with a particular focus on environmental sustainability and the nature of science. | Students should have taken the Praxis II content specialization exam, a valid teaching certificate or licensure (from any state with the United States) and one year teaching experience. The completed application along with the application fee, official transcripts from all institutions attended and 3 letters of recommendation have to be submitted. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | Modules covered are: Teaching and Learning Biology Fundamentals (BIOL 625) (3 credits); Foundations in Earth Science for Teaching and Learning (GEOL) (3 credits); Foundations in Environmental Science for Teaching and Learning (ENVS)(3 credits); Teaching Evolution and the Nature of Science (BIOL550) (3 credits); Bio-documentation (BIOL 601) (1 credit); Bio-documentation Seminar (1 credit) (BIOL 602); Math 586 Mathematics Lesson Study I Problem Solving (MATH586); Earth Science Curriculum Topic Study (GEOL); Life Science Curriculum Topic Study (BIOL); Environmental Curriculum Topic Study (ENVH). Interdisciplinary electives include: Earth as a System GLOBE (ENVS 695) (3 credits); Environmental Odysseys (ENVH) (3 credits). Educational core units include: EDFI 677 Contemporary Theory and Research in Classroom Teaching (3 credits); an education practicum designed to meet NCATE key assessments [Practicum assessment of effective practice] (2-3 credits). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department offering a graduate program, the Department has awarded over 160 graduate degrees. External research support averages over $1.5 million per year. Faculty have published over 30 refereed journal articles and papers in the past 3 years. Teaching excellence in the Department is evidenced by nominations of two faculty members for the Outstanding Teacher Award several years running. Operations of the BGSU Planetarium and Observatory extend the Department's and the University's outreach in science education - an average of 3,500 general public and 4,000 school children visit these facilities each year. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program is designed to provide the student with those fundamentals essential for the development of independent thought and expression, ingredients necessary for truly creative scholarship and artistry in the theater. In this program, students are afforded a basic understanding of theatre history, theory, criticism, and research methods and their application to teaching and practical work in theatre. While most students with degrees from BGSU have sought careers in education, many have found employment in community and professional theatre, and others have used their training for careers having only a minimal relationship to the theatre. The M.A. degree is considered an excellent preparation for more advanced or specialized study at the M.F.A. or Ph.D. level. Two semesters and a summer of course work are normally required for the completion of the Portfolio Track M.A. degree. Students accepted into the Thesis Track program normally complete M.A. course work in one year, and in the summer and second year that follow, complete the M.A. Thesis and take doctoral courses. | Student should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | THFM 659: Research Methods in Theatre (3), THFM 660: Theatre and Performance in Cultural Contexts I (4), THFM 661: Theatre and Performance in Cultural Contexts II (4), THFM 665: Period, Style and Form (3), THFM 695: Workshop on Current Topics in Theatre (Graduate Seminar) (1 per term) *, THFM 697: Practicum in Theatre Pedagogy (1 per term) **, THFM 668: Performance Studies (3), THFM 699: Thesis Research (6)*, Twelve hours of approved electives from graduate level (i.e., 500+ level) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts with Emphasis in Communication Research | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | This program is designed to relate theory and practice in order to equip the graduate to go on to doctoral studies or to pursue a career in the communication field. Students must complete the degree within six years from the end of the semester of the first course and maintain continuous enrollment. | Admission Without Funding. To be eligible for regular admission without funding, a master's applicant must be a graduate of an accredited undergraduate college with a 3.0 GPA. GRE scores must indicate potential for success in the program. International students must have a TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based) or 213 (computer-based). TOEFL scores are not required of applicants whose first language is English, applicants who have been a U.S. citizen, refugee, or permanent resident for at least five years, and applicants who hold a four-year bachelor's or a master's degree from a U.S. institution. Regular Admission With Funding. Applicants who fulfill the prerequisites for regular admission and who receive a funding recommendation from the SCS faculty may receive regular admission with an assistantship. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication, 302 West Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | This department is a global center for teaching and research in communication and media. Departments of Interpersonal Communication, Journalism, and Telecommunications teach doctor of philosophy, master’s and bachelor’s degrees, and run collaborative programs with cognate disciplines, including American Cultural Studies, and Theatre and Film. The School works closely with print, broadcast and online student media, including the daily newspaper BG News, BG-24 television, radio stations WBGU-FM and WFAL-AM, and enjoys a long association with WBGU-TV27 public broadcasting. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Arts with Emphasis in Organizational Communication/Public Relations | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | Admission Without Funding. To be eligible for regular admission without funding, a master's applicant must be a graduate of an accredited undergraduate college with a 3.0 GPA. GRE scores must indicate potential for success in the program. International students must have a TOEFL score of 550 (paper-based) or 213 (computer-based). TOEFL scores are not required of applicants whose first language is English, applicants who have been a U.S. citizen, refugee, or permanent resident for at least five years, and applicants who hold a four-year bachelor's or a master's degree from a U.S. institution. Regular Admission With Funding. Applicants who fulfill the prerequisites for regular admission and who receive a funding recommendation from the SCS faculty may receive regular admission with an assistantship. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication Studies, Department of Interpersonal Communication, 302 West Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8349 | This department is a global center for teaching and research in communication and media. Departments of Interpersonal Communication, Journalism, and Telecommunications teach doctor of philosophy, master’s and bachelor’s degrees, and run collaborative programs with cognate disciplines, including American Cultural Studies, and Theatre and Film. The School works closely with print, broadcast and online student media, including the daily newspaper BG News, BG-24 television, radio stations WBGU-FM and WFAL-AM, and enjoys a long association with WBGU-TV27 public broadcasting. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 1.2 Year(s) | US $892 per credit / unit | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | This program offers a broad curriculum that provides graduates an understanding of the major business disciplines as well as the opportunity to pursue a formal area of specialization. Some of the more popular features our students enjoy include: 14 required courses regardless of undergraduate major. Core curriculum begins in July and concludes the following August, just 14 months later. Intensive professional development seminars that prepare students for successful professional careers. Tuition assistance through graduate assistantships (typically 90% of students receive significant financial assistance). Specializations (available in Accounting, Finance and Organizational Change) provide students the opportunity to focus their studies. Small class sizes, typically 40 students or less, allows for greater interaction with faculty. Cohort approach encourages networking and team building among students. A diverse student body that brings the world to the classroom (typically 12-14 countries represented). | Students should have bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution, A minimum of 3 years of full-time management or professional experience, Diverse educational backgrounds and career patterns are sought for this program. | MBA | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | College of Business Administration, Department of Management, 3018 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2946 | The Department of Management is proud to have one of the nation’s top supply chain management programs according to U.S. News and World Report. Along with the supply chain specialization, the department also offers an international business specialization and an international business minor so students are adequately prepared for the global economy. At the graduate level, the department offers full-time and executive programs in organization development. Students can also earn a Certificate of Organizational Change. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education - Developmental Kinesiology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is flexible in order to accommodate a variety of interests and needs. Students may also take advantage of the program’s flexibility to create a more eclectic program that samples systematically from the rich variety of courses available for graduate study. All students in Developmental Kinesiology complete either a project or a thesis. The courses in the program are planned on a two year rotation for two years of study; however it is possible to graduate within three semesters of study. Within Developmental Kinesiology, emphases based on graduate faculty’s research interests include biomechanics, exercise physiology, exercise psychology, motor development, motor learning/control, physical education teacher education, and sport psychology. This specialization is planned for two years of study. | Students should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | HMSL 606 - Teaching Movement Across the Lifespan (3), HMSL 612 - Motor Learning and Control (3), HMSL 613 - Motor Development (3), HMSL 617 - Biomechanics (3), HMSL 618 - Physiology of Exercise (3), HMSL 635 - Sport and Society (3), Either HMSL 636 - Social Psychology of Sport (3) or HMSL 639 - Exercise Psychology: Research and Practice (3), HMSL 608 - Analysis of Teaching in Physical Education (3), HMSL 609 - Contemporary Philosophy in Physical Education (3), MSL 610 - Curriculum Theory and Design in Physical Education (3), HMSL 611 - Measurement and Evaluation in Kinesiology (3), HMSL 614 - Programming in Physical Education for Special Populations (3), HMSL 615 - Electrocardiography in Health and Exercise (1), HMSL 616 - Laboratory Techniques in Exercise Physiology (3), HMSL 619 - Sport Conditioning (2), HMSL 638 - Applied Sport Psychology | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education - Leisure and Tourism Studies | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program along with the skills of leadership and administrative facilitation, result in the study of Leisure and Tourism in a variety of contexts. The professional core courses, along with the research methods and interpretation of research courses, provide the necessary skills to read, interpret, critique, and conduct creative and scholarly activities for either a thesis or a project. Students work with an advisor in developing a specified course sequence relevant to their needs and interests beyond the required professional core and within a two-year cycle of course offerings. Faculty interests in Leisure and Tourism Studies include environmental issues, outdoor recreation, public and community recreation administration, and tourism studies. | Students should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | HMSL 620 - Therapeutic Recreation Systems (2), HMSL 621 - Admin. Management in Rec. and Leisure Services (3), HMSL 622 - Foundations of Recreation and Leisure Experience (3), HMSL 624 - Pro. of Design and Strat. Of Rec. and Leis. Ser. (3), HMSL 628 - Planning Leisure Lifestyles (3), HMSL 655 - Foundations of Travel and Tourism (3), HMSL 656 - Strategic Planning for Travel and Tourism (3), HMSL 657 - Policy Development for Travel and Tourism Agencies (3) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education - Sport Administration | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program students work with their advisors to complete a series of courses in the sport administration program and in a variety of other disciplines related to the academic interests of the graduate faculty and this includes: business administration, marketing, mass communication, higher education administration, interpersonal communication, psychosocial foundations of sport. All students in sport administration complete either a thesis or a project. The program can be planned over three semester or two continuous years of study and adheres to the curriculum standards established by the National Association for Sport and Physical Education/North American Society for Sport Management. | Students should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | HMSL 629 The Law and HMSLS Services (3), HMSL 630 Admin. of Interscholastic Ath. (3), HMSL 631 Athletic. and Rec. Fac. Plan. and Management (3), HMSL 634 Issues in HMSL (3), Either HMSLS 632 Budg. and Plan. for Sport and/or Leis. Enter. (3), or HMSLS 633 Mark. Strat. in Sport and Leis. Serv. (3), Either HMSLS 635 Sport and Society (3), or HMSLS 636 Psych. Aspects of Phys. Act. (3) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Business Education - Marketing Education | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BUSE 601 Foundations of Business Education (same as under Professional Education), BUSE 602 Curriculum Development in Business Education, BUSE 603 Research in Business Education, BUSE 586 Technology in Business Education (same as under Content), EDFI 641 Statistics in Education, MKT 302 Consumer Behavior, MKT 408 or 410 Marketing Communication and Promotion, MKT 430 Retail Management or MKT 440 Professional Selling or KT 442 Sales Management, BUSE 315 Internship in Marketing or BUSE 316 Internship in Business and Marketing, BUSE 564 Teaching and Learning in Marketing Education, BUSE 500 Basic Business in Secondary Schools, BUSE 563 Teaching and Learning Strategies for Adults, BUSE 565 Development and Trends in Workforce Education, BUSE 569 School and Work-based Teaching and Learning, BUSE 601 Foundations of Business Education (also applies to core), BUSE 696 Business and Marketing Education Practicum, BUSE 697 Internship (student teaching 10 to 16 weeks), EDAS 621 Introduction to Organizational Leadership and Change, EDFI 677 Contemporary Theory and Research in Classroom Learning, EDFI 502 Assessment and Evaluation in Education, EDIS 531 Teaching Students with Special Needs, EDTL 620 Adolescent/Young Adult Literacy |
Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Business Education - Teacher Licensure in Integrated Business | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BUSE 601 Foundations of Business Education (same as under Professional Education), BUSE 602 Curriculum Development in Business Education, BUSE 603 Research in Business Education, BUSE 586 Technology in Business Education (same as under Content), EDFI 641 Statistics in Education, BUSE 262 Word/Information Processing Applications, BUSE 265 Intermediate Spreadsheet Applications, BUSE 269 Intermediate Database Applications, BUSE 528 Interrelatedness of Business and Technology in Business Education, CS 101 Introduction to Programming, MGMT 361 Human Resource Management, BUSE 314 Internship in Business or BUSE 316 Internship in Business and Marketing, BUSE 567 Teaching and Learning in Business Education, BUSE 500 Basic Business in Secondary Schools, BUSE 563 Teaching and Learning Strategies for Adults, BUSE 565 Development and Trends in Workforce Education, BUSE 569 School and Work-based Teaching and Learning, BUSE 601 Foundations of Business Education (also applies to core), BUSE 696 Business and Marketing Education Practicum, BUSE 697 Internship (student teaching 10 to 16 weeks), EDAS 621 Introduction to Organizational Leadership and Change, EDFI 677 Contemporary Theory and Research in Classroom Learning, EDFI 502 Assessment and Evaluation in Education, EDIS 531 Teaching Students with Special Needs, EDTL 620 Adolescent/Young Adult Literacy | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Classroom Technology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program is intended to educate leaders in the area of classroom technology. These individuals will be capable of working within their local Community of Practice and within the regional, state and local areas of which they are a part to support and develop the integration of technology into the learning experiences available through schools and the community at large. While this program develops specific technical skills, the theme of the program is the continual development of the integration of technology into the school setting from a curriculum and instruction perspective. The relationship between choices made about how technology is used in learning settings and the effect of those choices on what is learned (and how it is learned) is seen as one of the major themes of the program. Two other major themes are: 1) the educator as change agent; and 2) the exploration and application of concepts and practices that will allow the teacher to use technology with students in active (as opposed to passive) learning settings. | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | EDTL 630 - Media Literacy Across the Curriculum (3), EDTL 631 - Survey of Computers in Education (3), EDTL 632 - Technology Planning in the Schools (3), EDTL 633 - Hypermedia for Educators I (3), EDTL 634 - Hypermedia for Educators II (3), EDTL 635 - Classroom Technology, Problem Solving and the Curriculum (3), EDTL 636 - Networks for Learning (3), EDTL 638 - Seminar on Classroom Technology and Learning (3), EDTL 611 - The Curriculum (3), EDFI 641 - Statistics in Education (3), EDFI 642 - Research in Education (3) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Classroom Technology | Distance / Online | 34 Credit-hour(s) | $4080 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | This program is an opportunity for teachers who want to earn a Master's degree and learn to use technology to enhance their students’ learning. The program is focused on skills and content related to 21st century teaching and learning. In addition, graduates will be prepared to demonstrate leadership capabilities for local, state or national educational technology initiatives. Students may apply for the Computer Technology Endorsement from the Ohio Department of Education after completing the 16 hours of coursework identified for this credential. In addition, it offers additional coursework in dynamic media, online teaching and learning, and media and information literacy. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | The course covers the following modules: EDTL 6310 (3) Technology in the 21st Century Classroom; EDTL 6320 (3) Technology Leadership and Professional Development; EDTL 6330 (3) Dynamic Media I; EDTL 6350 (3) Real World School Tech; EDTL 6360 (3) Internet in the Educational Community; EDTL 6390 (1) Special Topics in Classroom Technology (diverse field experience); EDTL 6150 (3), Information Literacy for Teaching and Learning; EDTL 6340 (3) Dynamic Media II; EDFI 6450 (3) Using Assessment and Research to Improve Practice (or EDFI 6410, Educational Statistics); EDFI 6420 (3) Research in Education; EDTL 6180 (3) Technology Tools for E-Learning; EDTL 6380 (3) Seminar in Classroom Technology. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Curriculum and Teaching | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program is individuals with a teaching certificate engage in course work and experiences designed to refine their abilities as early childhood through secondary school classroom teachers and to develop and expand their leadership abilities to improve teaching and learning at classroom, building and district levels. | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | EDTL 611 The Curriculum*, EDTL 616 Curriculum and Instruction in Early Childhood Education, EDTL 710 Curriculum and Instructional Design*, EDFI 641 Statistics in Education*, EDFI 642 Research in Education, EDTL 653 Qualitative Approaches to Classroom Inquiry*, EDFI 627 Development of the Elementary School Child, EDFI 671 Human Growth and Development*, EDFI 673 Adolescence, EDFI 677 Contemporary Theory and Research in Classroom Learning, EDFI 600 Philosophy of Education, EDFI 601 Comparative Education*, EDFI 602 History of Education, EDFI 603 Cultural Studies in Education, EDIS 623 Curriculum and Instruction for the Young Child with Special Needs, EDIS 654 Behavior and Classroom Management, EDIS 649 Seminar Practices and Issues in Special Education, EDTL 639 Technology for Teachers, EDTL 610 Advanced Language Arts, EDTL 620 Content Literacy*, EDTL 640 Methods of Teaching Writing, K-6, EDTL 641 Advanced Methods in Elementary School Mathematics, EDTL 642 Advanced Methods in Elementary School Science, EDTL 643 Advanced Methods in Elementary School Social Studies, EDTL 645 Problems in Teaching Secondary School Science, EDTL 646 Seminar in Teaching Secondary School Mathematics, EDTL 647 Inquiry in Secondary School Social Studies, EDTL 670 Readings in Curriculum and Instruction | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Curriculum and Teaching | Distance / Online | 33 Credit-hour(s) | $4080 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | The Master of Education in Curriculum and Teaching Program reflects teaching and learning in the 21st Century and is based on the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. The program is designed to enhance curricular innovation and teaching practices necessary for master teachers. For those who are pursuing a Masters in Education without prior teaching experience, this program includes coursework and experiences designed to develop and extend their abilities to facilitate learning for students and to become current with the research in educational best practices. | Students must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | This program covers the following modules: EDTL 6110 Curriculum Inquiry (4) with field experience, EDTL 7100 Curriculum and Instructional Design (4) with field experience, EDTL 6770 Curriculum Issues and Trends (4) with field experience, EDTL 6120 Classroom Technology for Teachers (3), EDTL 6500 Advanced Pedagogy and Best Practices (3), EDFI 6270 Development of the Elementary School Child (3), EDFI 6710 Human Growth and Development (3), EDFI 6730 Adolescent Development within Social Context (3), EDFI 6770 Contemporary Theory and Research in Classroom Learning (3), EDTL 6530 Qualitative Approaches to Classroom Inquiry (3), EDFI 6410 Statistics (3), EDFI 6450 Using Assessment and Research to Improve Practice (3), EDCI 6910 Master's Project in Curriculum and Teaching (3), EDTL 6990 Thesis Research (3), EDFI 6000 Philosophy of Education (3), EDFI 6010 Comparative Education (3), EDFI 6020 History of Education (3), EDFI 6030 Cultural Studies in Education (3), EDTL 6200 Content Literacy P-12 (3), EDTL 6800 Graduate seminar in Curriculum and Instruction (1-3) and EDTL 6950 Workshop in Curriculum and Instruction (1-4). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Educational Administration and Supervision | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies | This program is offered by the School of Leadership and Policy Studies, is a two-year, cohort-based graduate program designed for educators interested in pursuing a career in school administration. Take one evening course each academic semester and three courses during the summer term. Courses are offered on-site in fall and spring and at BGSU in summer. At the end of the program, students receive a master’s degree in education; with four additional classes they can apply for licensure as a building principal or administrative assistant. | Student should have an official transcripts of all undergraduate and graduate work. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) scores taken within the past five years; preferred minimum composite score of 800. Applicants must have one year of teaching experience in a school setting. Prospective students without teaching experience may be considered; however, a rationale will need to be provided by the student as to why we should consider their application, and the faculty committee will also interview the prospective student. Applicants must also possess a Masters degree. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is to prepare educators to assume leadership roles in formulating and implementing administrative policy and improving practice at all levels of education and in agencies outside of formal educational settings. A variety of graduate and advanced graduate preparation programs is offered to meet the needs of different professionals in a wide range of settings for individuals wishing to enter the professional fields as well as those continuing their education within them. In addition to the formal program areas of the School of Leadership and Policy Studies, service curriculum is provided to support the development of educational leadership through curricula in research methodology and assessment, history and philosophy of education, comparative education, and educational psychology. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Reading | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | This program is to prepare teachers to provide specialized reading and writing instruction, to assess and diagnose literacy behavior, and to serve as resource persons in P-12 settings. | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning | College of Education and Human Development, School of Teaching and Learning, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The school has nearly 40 full time faculty and nearly fifty full time graduate assistants. There are approximately 2600 undergraduate students and over 550 graduate students enrolled in the programs. The school has the largest teacher education program in Ohio, and is also proud of the reputation for preparing outstanding early, middle and secondary level teachers as well as providing high quality graduate programs both on campus and at approximately 20 different sites across northwest Ohio. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in School Counseling | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program offers requisite awareness, knowledge and skills to assist BGSU graduate students in becoming culturally competent and ethical mental health or school counselors. This program prepares individuals in the requisite knowledge and skills to assist themselves and others in personal development and in making decisions which lead to self-fulfillment in the personal, cultural, social, academic, and career areas of life. This program is designed for students wishing to work in a school setting. School Counseling students may take additional courses if they desire licensure by the state of Ohio. | Students should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of student application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | COUN 664: Crisis Counseling (3 credits), COUN 665: Consulting Functions and Practices (3 credits), COUN 669: Introduction to Guidance and Counseling (3 credits), COUN 674: Career and Life Planning Approaches (3 credits), COUN 675: Theories and Techniques of Counseling (3 credits), COUN 676: Counseling the Culturally Diverse (3 credits), COUN 678: Legal and Ethical Issues in Counseling (3 credits), COUN 679: Group Model and Procedures (3 credits), COUN 689: Internship in Counseling (9 credits), COUN 776: Counseling Practicum (4 credits), EDFI 641: Statistics in Education (3 credits), EDFI 642: Research in Education (3 credits), EDIS 678: Assessment and Testing in the Mental Health Setting (3 credits), EDTL 710: Curriculum OR EDTL 611 (3 credits), EDFI 627: Development of the Elementary School Child (3 credits), EDFI 671: Human Growth and Development (for licensure) (3 credits), EDFI 673: Adolescence (3 credits), DIS 684: Special Topics in School Counseling (3 credits), COUN 701: Mental Disorders (A-1) (3 credits), COUN 702: Advanced Assessment (A-2) (3 credits), COUN 704: Play Therapy (A-4) (2 credits), COUN 705: Treatment Planning (A-5) (3 credits), REHB 675: Alcohol and Substance Abuse Counseling (A-4) (3 credits), REHB 677: DSM-IV (A-3) (3 credits), REHB 684: Brief Therapy (3 credits) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program specializations/emphasis areas are: Mild-Moderate Intervention Specialist, Moderate-Intensive Intervention Specialist, Hearing Impairment Intervention Specialist, Gifted Education Intervention Specialist, Early Childhood Intervention Specialist and Assistive Technology. The mild-moderate program is designed to provide specialized training in theoretical foundations and in practical technical skills for individuals planning to teach children and adolescents (grades K-12) who have mild disabilities (learning disabilities) to moderate disability (developmentally delayed). Students enrolled in this specialization become knowledgeable in assessment/evaluation of disabilities, development of service options, curriculum alternatives and modifications, behavior management, transitioning, computer and technical applications, collaborating with parents and other professionals, current trends and issues, and research. | Students should have a Bachelor's Degree from an accredited college or university, Had two copies of all Undergraduate and Graduate Transcripts sent to Graduate School for review (except for BGSU transcripts), Minimum cumulative GPA of 2.7 for regular admission to Graduate College, Sent results/scores of Graduate Record Examination (GRE) general test to Graduate School, Completed a licensure form with a statement of "good moral character", Submitted two (2) letters of reference, Submitted a position paper (see guidelines, copy may be submitted with assistantship application), Interviewed with program coordinator and/or other program faculty. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Education in Special Education - Assistive Technology Specialization | Distance / Online | 33 Credit-hour(s) | $4080 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | The Assistive Technology Program is designed to prepare teachers and other professionals to support students by using assistive technology. Each candidate will take a series of courses developed to obtain the necessary hours required for a degree. Along with the degree, candidates will receive the skills needed to supervise individuals with special needs, their parents, teachers, professionals, and school districts seeking to introduce assistive technologies into multiple environments. This program is suitable for anyone supervising individuals with special needs, their parents, teachers, professionals, and school districts seeking to introduce assistive technologies into multiple environments and anyone interested in learning more about assistive technology. | Students should have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | The modules covered are: EDIS 6490 Seminar: Issues and Practices in Special Education (3), EDFI 6410 Statistics in Education (3), EDFI 6420 Research in Education (3) or REHB 6780 Research in Rehabilitation (3), EDIS 6400 Introduction to Assistive Technology (3), EDIS 6410 Assessment Processes for Assistive Technology (3), EDIS 6420 Implementation Strategies for Assistive Technology (3), EDIS 6430 Integrating and Managing Assistive Technology in the Classroom (3), EDIS 6470 Computer and Technical Applications for Intervention Specialists (3), EDIS 6840/50 Special Topics in Special Education (graded/ungraded) (1-4), EDTL 6120 Classroom Technology for Teachers (3), EDTL 6140 Collaborating and Teaching with Internet Resources (3), EDTL 6370 Distance Learning and Education (3), EDTL 6820 Topics in Educational Teaching and Learning (3), EDIS 6980 Review for Comprehensive Exam (1), EDIS 6910 Master's Project (1-3) and EDIS 6990 Master's Thesis (1-6). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Family and Consumer Sciences - Food and Nutrition | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is distinguished by: Flexibility that enables you to pursue an option that supports your professional goals; The opportunity to work closely with talented faculty members who are noted for both professional and scholarly expertise; Coursework and field experience that foster creativity, critical thinking, and problem-solving skills; A focus on lifelong learning and ongoing professional development. The graduate studies in Food and Nutrition requires completion of a master's thesis and graduate coursework in nutrition, research and a minor (cognate). The nutrition core includes study in nutrition science, community nutrition and medical nutrition therapy. The research core includes study in statistics, research methods, and thesis. The minor, or cognate, is a focused area of coursework that supports your career goals. Our students select cognates in many different areas, including biology, counseling, human development and public health. | Students should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Family and Community Nutrition F and N 607 (3), Micronutrients Through the Life Span F and N 609 (3), Macronutrients for Human Nutrition F and N 610 (3), Clinical Nutrition F and N 611 (3), Other F and N graduate courses (3), Research Methods FCS 626 or other selection (3), Statistics EDFI 641 or other selection (3), Thesis FCS 699 | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Human Development, School of Family and Consumer Sciences, 444 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7372 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Family and Consumer Sciences - Food and Nutrition Specialization | Distance / Online | 2 Year(s) | $4080 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | The graduate studies in Food and Nutrition requires completion of a master's thesis or master's project and graduate coursework in nutrition, research and a minor (cognate). The nutrition core includes study in nutrition science, community nutrition and medical nutrition therapy. The research core includes study in statistics, research methods, and thesis. The minor, or cognate, is a focused area of coursework that supports their career goals. The students select cognates in many different areas, including biology, counseling, human development and public health. | Students applying for admission must have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university and coursework in chemistry, biology and nutrition. Students are selected based on academic performance, relevant work experience, letters of recommendation, civic and/or college activities, and a letter of application. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | This program covers the following modules: FCS 205 Resource Management (3), FCS 389 Supervised Field Experience (1-5); FCS 395 Workshop on Current Topics (1-3); FCS 405 Family and Consumer Economics (3); FCS 470 Independent Study (1-3); FCS 480 Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 489 Internship (5-12); FCS 580 Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 581 Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences (3); FCS 582 Problems in Family and Consumer Sciences (3); FCS 584 Directed Readings in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 585 Directed Readings in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 586 Workshop in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-4); FCS 587 Workshop in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-4); FCS 626 Research Methods in Family and Consumer Sciences (3); FCS 680 Professional Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 681 Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences (3); FCS 682 Problems in Family and Consumer Sciences (3); FCS 684 Directed Readings in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 685 Directed Readings in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 686 Workshop in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 687 Independent Study (1-3); FCS 689 Internship (3-6); FCS 690 Directed Research in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 691 Directed Research in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 692 Research Group in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 693 Research Group in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-3); FCS 694 Workshop in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-4); FCS 695 Workshop in Family and Consumer Sciences (1-4); FCS 696 Supervised Practicum in Family and Consumer Sciences (3-6); FCS 697 Supervised Practicum in Family and Consumer Sciences (3-6); FCS 698 Readings for Comprehensive Examination (1-12); FCS 699 Thesis Research (1-12). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Three-Dimensional Studies - Jewelry and Metalsmithing | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program offers a wide variety of traditional and non-traditional approaches aimed at promoting a broad spectrum in the technical and conceptual development of visual language. We are dedicated to providing education that meets high standards of excellence, emphasizing the importance of keeping abreast of current methodologies available to visual artists and of providing students with fresh insights which add greater value and substance to the university environment. Additional educational opportunities are provided through workshops, lectures, visiting artists, and field trips to museums, artist studios, museums, and exhibitions. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTS 581. Jewelry Design, Enameling, and Metalsmithing (3-12), ARTS 682. Advanced Study in Jewelry, Enameling, and Metalsmithing (3-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Two-Dimensional Studies-Drawing | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program students accepted to the program are provided with their own studio space and have full use of all facilities in the drawing area, access to computer equipment, and the use of a well equipped printshop and woodshop. The graduate course of study is a program consisting of intensive independent work with a faculty committee and headed by the faculty member responsible for the student's particular discipline. Students are asked to compliment work within their discipline with course work from additional studio areas, as well as art history and other academic classes. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTS 511 Drawing (3-12), ARTS 612 Advanced Study in Drawing (3-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Two-Dimensional Studies-Painting | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program promotes the idea of a synergistic relationship between self-expression and the craft of painting. Within this context the flexibility necessary for students to conduct research and develop their unique visual language is given priority. Faculty members align themselves with the student's direction and serve to guide them to achieve their stated goals. Students are encouraged to broaden their artistic scope with accompanying courses from related areas. Moreover, self-motivation and a commitment to the studio are desired core traits, considered necessary for a student's development and ultimate success. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTS 521. Painting (3-12), ARTS 622. Advanced Study in Painting (3-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Two-Dimensional Studies-Printmaking | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program is designed to prepare students to become professional artists and/or to teach at the university level. Graduate students are typically awarded a technical assistantship in the first year and a teaching assistantship in the second year. The assistantship also includes a tuition waiver and stipend. One to two graduate students can be accepted into the print program each year. Students are given a semi-private studio space in proximity to other 2D graduate students, creating an environment of close contact and potential collaboration among the students. Printmaking students are also given 24-hour access to the print facilities. In consultation with their major professor, graduate students plan a course of study to provide a thorough grounding in a range of print media with specialization in one or more areas. Both traditional and alternative approaches to printmaking are welcomed and supported. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTS 531. Printmaking (3-12), ARTS 632. Advanced Study in Printmaking (3-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program gives a comprehensive and rigorous education in the professional writing, editing, and marketing of poetry and fiction. Artistic development, craft knowledge, and professional presentation are guiding principles. The program is a composite of a total of 40 hours, consisting primarily of writing workshops, including a minimum of one course in techniques, one in literary editing, and the remainder in recommended courses or electives. Writers complete a thesis and comprehensive examination. See the link below for detailed guidelines. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Masters | Bowling Green State University | The courses are: Eng 632 Writers' Workshop, Eng 630/631 Techniques Course, Eng 782 Advanced Writer's Workshop, Eng 633 Editing the Mid-American Review, Eng 699 Thesis Research Hours. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts in Digital Arts | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program focuses on advanced study in creative expression using digital technology. Students work with digital imaging, interactive multimedia, digital video, 3D modeling and animation, 2D computer animation, and/or virtual reality. Graduate students can choose from one of our three areas of focus or work cross-disciplinary with various techniques and styles. This program is artistic expression using 3D animation techniques as a vehicle to communicate ideas. Therefore, as a graduate student, the emphasis is on content development, narrative and non-narrative structures, timing, effective motion, storytelling, and creative expression. Beyond mastering the technical aspects of 3D animation, graduate students are expected to push the creative envelope and produce thought-provoking work that can be shown in animation festivals, art shows, and public screenings. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTC 503 Digital Art Development (3-6), ARTC 513 Digital Animation Studio (3-9), ARTC 523 Digital Imaging Studio (3-9), ARTC 533 Interactive Art Studio (3-9), ARTC 582 Special Topics in Digital Arts (3-6), ARTC 586 Workshop in Digital Art (3-6), ARTC 613 Advanced Study in Digital Animation (3-9), ARTC 623 Advanced Study in Digital Imaging Art (3-9), ARTC 633 Advanced Study in Interactive Art (3-9), ARTC 686 Independent Study in Digital Arts (1-9). | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts in Three-Dimensional Studies - Ceramics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program is an intensive professional studio degree which prepares students to become professional artists or to teach at the university level. Graduate students in Ceramics study full-time, working independently to develop a body of work which culminates in their M.F.A. thesis exhibition. A personal studio is provided. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTS 571 Ceramics (3-12), ARTS 672 Advanced Study in Ceramics (3-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts in Three-Dimensional Studies - Fiber Arts | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program focuses on the exploration of specific issues and concerns related to fiber and fabric in pursue of a personal vision. Both traditional and conceptual approaches to the media are acceptable directions of study. The student works closely with their major professor in planning a program of courses to provide a strong background in fiber/fabric processes and concepts leading to a career in the world of fiber arts. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTS 551 Fibers/Fabrics (3-12), ARTS 652. Advanced Study in Fibers/Fabrics (3-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts in Three-Dimensional Studies - Glass | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program is highly encouraged to combine glass with other media and to utilize interests and skills acquired in other areas to broaden their overall aesthetic development. Interdisciplinary involvement is supported. A unique studio experience is provided in the glass program. Students will be directly involved with the building, running, and maintenance of the glass shop and equipment. This hands-on involvement gives the student direct experience in running a glass shop. The program's course content focuses on the technical aspects of building a glass facility and related equipment necessary to succeed in glass as a career as well as developing a personal aesthetic in glass. The glass program features an extensive visiting program supported by the student glass club. Many such special experiences are available to students. Glass industry, historical glass collections, independent glass studios, public glass studios, and other glass programs are abundant in the immediate area. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTS 561. Glassworking (3-12), ARTS 662. Advanced Study in Glassworking (3-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts in Three-Dimensional Studies - Sculpture | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program students work side-by-side in a high-energy atmosphere that is both competitive and nurturing. A cross-disciplinary approach is encouraged and fostered by faculty within the 3-D division. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ARTS 591. Sculpture (3-12), ARTS 692. Advanced Study in Sculpture (3-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Fine Arts in a Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | This program students will find a broad range of studio and academic disciplines housed in outstanding facilities. These various disciplines are united by a deep commitment to craft, technical development and scholarship sustained by rigorous examination of contextual and conceptual issues informing students' work. In the graduate programs at BGSU, we strive to create a productive community of diverse artists and scholars unified by our commitment to excellence. Students come to BGSU from all over the United States and the world. Graduates of our programs continue to achieve an uncommon level of professional recognition, both in terms of exhibition and publication success and in obtaining college and university teaching positions. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English. Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Art, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This school is nature of our courses varies to include studio experience, art historical investigation, theoretical inquiry, and practical experience. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Industrial Technology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program hold a bachelor's degree in Engineering, Industrial Technology, Engineering Technology, and Applied Sciences. However, the program has welcomed students, from many different areas, that have the desire to advance to professional work through relevant advanced study and applied research in technology. The MIT program includes men and women from different parts of the world, part-time and full-time students, residents and commuters. | Student should have anoOfficial transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | TECH 644 - Management Models for Technical Operations, TECH 679 - Research and Development in Technology, TECH 633 - Visual Communication for Business and Industry, ENG 640 - Technical Writing, COMS 653 - Interpersonal Communication, COMS 655 - Organizational Communication, TECH 554 - Energy Conversion and Power Transmission, TECH 586/587 - Workshop in Technology, TECH 602 - Instrumentation and Control, TECH 603 - Data Analysis and Decision Making in Technology, TECH 604 - Technology of Concurrent Engineering, TECH 626 - Quality and Reliability Testing, TECH 627 - Industrial Productivity Analysis, TECH 628 - Computer Automated Manufacturing, TECH 641 - Construction Contract Management, TECH 642 - Construction Program Management, TECH 643 - Cost Control Through Management of Pre-Construction Activities, TECH 662 - Analysis, Design, and Development in Training,TECH 663 - Implementing Training Systems, TECH 665 - Computer Courseware Design | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Industrial Technology in Construction Management | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program is to provide graduates with appropriate technological competencies and a quality general education. Since its beginning, the College of Technology has provided students with the competence to be adaptable and flexible – successful traits for future careers. These students are secure with a broad knowledge of technology and are able to translate that in a rapidly changing profession. In today’s age of high technology and specialization, College of Technology graduates serve as technical managers, teachers, researchers, and practitioners in business, industry, government, and education. | Student should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | TECH 644 - Management Models for Technical Operations, TECH 679 - Research and Development in Technology, TECH 633 - Visual Communication for Business and Industry, ENG 640 - Technical Writing, COMS 653 - Interpersonal Communication, COMS 655 - Organizational Communication, TECH 554 - Energy Conversion and Power Transmission, TECH 586/587 - Workshop in Technology, TECH 602 - Instrumentation and Control, TECH 603 - Data Analysis and Decision Making in Technology, TECH 604 - Technology of Concurrent Engineering, TECH 626 - Quality and Reliability Testing, TECH 627 - Industrial Productivity Analysis, TECH 628 - Computer Automated Manufacturing, TECH 641 - Construction Contract Management, TECH 642 - Construction Program Management, TECH 643 - Cost Control Through Management of Pre-Construction Activities, TECH 662 - Analysis, Design, and Development in Training,TECH 663 - Implementing Training Systems, TECH 665 - Computer Courseware Design | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Music in Composition | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program offers Aural Skills, Music History, MidAmerican Center for Contemporary Music, Music Library, Music Technology, Music Theory, Nonmajor Offerings, Instrumental and Choral Arranging and World Music. | Students must earn the following on the TOEFL, Test of English as a Foreign Language: 550 on the paper-based version, 213 on the computer-based version or 80 on the internet-based version (iBT). Scores must be sent directly to the Graduate College from the testing company. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Music in Ethnomusicology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program of music history and disciplines related to the field such as popular culture, ethnic studies and women’s studies. Students study history and literature of ethnomusicology and the music cultures of Indonesia and/or the African diaspora, as well as receive training in field methodology and special topics. The degree offers performance opportunities in Balinese Gamelan and Afro-Caribbean Ensembles, as well as music workshop options in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The program culminates in a thesis and prepares students for further work in ethnomusicology. | Students must earn the following on the TOEFL, Test of English as a Foreign Language: 550 on the paper-based version, 213 on the computer-based version or 80 on the internet-based version (iBT). Scores must be sent directly to the Graduate College from the testing company. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Music in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program offers Class Piano, Cooperative School Band Assistant, Cooperative School General Music Assistant, Curriculum Lab, General Music Methods, High Brass Methods, Music Plus and University Band Activities | Students must earn the following on the TOEFL, Test of English as a Foreign Language: 550 on the paper-based version, 213 on the computer-based version or 80 on the internet-based version (iBT). Scores must be sent directly to the Graduate College from the testing company. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Music in Music History | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program allows students to pursue detailed work in music history and prepares them for further work in musicology. The program includes courses in performance practice, notation and genres, as well as specially designed topical seminars. These experiences are reinforced by participation in the departmental ensembles: the Afro-Caribbean Ensemble, the Balinese Gamelan, the Early Music Ensemble and the New Music Ensemble. | Students must earn the following on the TOEFL, Test of English as a Foreign Language: 550 on the paper-based version, 213 on the computer-based version or 80 on the internet-based version (iBT). Scores must be sent directly to the Graduate College from the testing company. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Music in Music Performance | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program majors may select from the following: choral conducting, collaborative piano, instrumental and instrumental specialization, jazz studies, orchestral conducting, piano, piano pedagogy and voice. The instrumental specialization option consists of a concentration in a major instrument and at least two minor instruments within the brass, strings and woodwind areas. Considerable flexibility is permitted within an individual program to meet the special needs of students. | Students must earn the following on the TOEFL, Test of English as a Foreign Language: 550 on the paper-based version, 213 on the computer-based version or 80 on the internet-based version (iBT). Scores must be sent directly to the Graduate College from the testing company. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Music in Music Theory | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | This program allows students to pursue detailed work in music history and prepares them for further work in musicology. The program includes courses in performance practice, notation and genres, as well as specially designed topical seminars. These experiences are reinforced by participation in the departmental ensembles: the Afro-Caribbean Ensemble, the Balinese Gamelan, the Early Music Ensemble and the New Music Ensemble. | Students must earn the following on the TOEFL, Test of English as a Foreign Language: 550 on the paper-based version, 213 on the computer-based version or 80 on the internet-based version (iBT). Scores must be sent directly to the Graduate College from the testing company. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory | College of Musical Arts, Department of Musicology, Composition, and Theory, 1031 Moore Musical Arts Center, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2182. | This department boasts of the state-of-the-art music technology studios, a computer-assisted instruction lab, a broad range of medieval and Renaissance instruments, African percussion instruments and a Balinese Gamelan. Summer courses abroad have been held in Bali, Indonesia, and Ghana, West Africa. The department's full-time faculty of 13 includes award-winning composers as well as musicologists, theorists and ethnomusicologists whose research is published regularly. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Organization Development | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | This program is focused on change leadership in order to increase the effectiveness of both individuals and organizations. By studying organization development, students develop skills in a variety of areas vital to success in today's global economy. These include: Change leadership, Strategic planning and goal setting, Designing and restructuring organizations, Leadership development and team building, Managing human resources. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution, A minimum of 3 years of full-time management or professional experience, Diverse educational backgrounds and career patterns are sought for this program | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ORGD 601: Introducing Organizational Change, ORGD 632: Managing Strategic Human Resources, ORGD 608: Leading for Organizational Success, ORGD 603: Building a Strategic Organization, ORGD 604: Diagnosing Organizational Issues, STAT 605: Applying Statistics for Organizational Change, ORGD 602: Enhancing Individual and Group Effectiveness, ORGD 609: Implementing Improvements in Operations and the Supply Chain, ORGD 606: Engaging Whole Systems for Change, ORGD 607: Mastering Change (Capstone Course) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | College of Business Administration, Department of Management, 3018 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2946 | The Department of Management is proud to have one of the nation’s top supply chain management programs according to U.S. News and World Report. Along with the supply chain specialization, the department also offers an international business specialization and an international business minor so students are adequately prepared for the global economy. At the graduate level, the department offers full-time and executive programs in organization development. Students can also earn a Certificate of Organizational Change. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Organization Development Graduate Certificate in Organizational Change | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | Students should have a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution, A minimum of 3 years of full-time management or professional experience, Diverse educational backgrounds and career patterns are sought for this program. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ORGD 601 Introducing Organizational Change, ORGD 602 Enhancing Individual and Group Effectiveness, ORGD 604 Diagnosing Organizational Issues, ORGD 606 Engaging Whole Systems for Change, ORGD 603 Building a Strategic Organization, ORGD 632 Managing Strategic Human Resources, ORGD 608 Leading for Organizational Success | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Management | College of Business Administration, Department of Management, 3018 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2946 | The Department of Management is proud to have one of the nation’s top supply chain management programs according to U.S. News and World Report. Along with the supply chain specialization, the department also offers an international business specialization and an international business minor so students are adequately prepared for the global economy. At the graduate level, the department offers full-time and executive programs in organization development. Students can also earn a Certificate of Organizational Change. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Science in Applied Biology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BIOL 101. Environment of Life (3), BIOL 104. Introduction to Biology (4), BIOL 108. Life in the Sea (3), BIOL 109. Life in Extreme Environments (3), BIOL 200. Biology Today (1), BIOL 204. Concepts in Biology I (5), BIOL 205. Concepts in Biology II (5), BIOL 301. Field Biology of the Vertebrates (3), BIOL 310. Biology of Aging (3), BIOL 313. Microbiology (4), BIOL 314. Microbiology for Health Professionals (3), BIOL 315. Microbiology Laboratory for Health Professionals (1), BIOL 330. Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience (3), BIOL 331. Human Anatomy and Physiology I (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 343. General Botany (4), BIOL 350. General Genetics (4) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, 217 Life Sciences Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2332 | This department is a diverse group of faculty and students focused on the study of living organisms across a wide variety of scales from the cellular and molecular to the landscape scales. In addition, students and faculty regularly collaborate with colleagues in other departments and institutions to foster truly interdisciplinary approaches both in the classroom and in the research setting. Research strengths of the department include: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Ecology and Conservation Biology, and Neuroscience and Behavior. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Science in Biological Sciences with thesis | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BIOL 101. Environment of Life (3), BIOL 104. Introduction to Biology (4), BIOL 108. Life in the Sea (3), BIOL 109. Life in Extreme Environments (3), BIOL 200. Biology Today (1), BIOL 204. Concepts in Biology I (5), BIOL 205. Concepts in Biology II (5), BIOL 301. Field Biology of the Vertebrates (3), BIOL 310. Biology of Aging (3), BIOL 313. Microbiology (4), BIOL 314. Microbiology for Health Professionals (3), BIOL 315. Microbiology Laboratory for Health Professionals (1), BIOL 330. Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience (3), BIOL 331. Human Anatomy and Physiology I (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 343. General Botany (4), BIOL 350. General Genetics (4) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, 217 Life Sciences Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2332 | This department is a diverse group of faculty and students focused on the study of living organisms across a wide variety of scales from the cellular and molecular to the landscape scales. In addition, students and faculty regularly collaborate with colleagues in other departments and institutions to foster truly interdisciplinary approaches both in the classroom and in the research setting. Research strengths of the department include: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Ecology and Conservation Biology, and Neuroscience and Behavior. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Science in Biological Sciences without thesis | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BIOL 101. Environment of Life (3), BIOL 104. Introduction to Biology (4), BIOL 108. Life in the Sea (3), BIOL 109. Life in Extreme Environments (3), BIOL 200. Biology Today (1), BIOL 204. Concepts in Biology I (5), BIOL 205. Concepts in Biology II (5), BIOL 301. Field Biology of the Vertebrates (3), BIOL 310. Biology of Aging (3), BIOL 313. Microbiology (4), BIOL 314. Microbiology for Health Professionals (3), BIOL 315. Microbiology Laboratory for Health Professionals (1), BIOL 330. Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience (3), BIOL 331. Human Anatomy and Physiology I (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 343. General Botany (4), BIOL 350. General Genetics (4) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, 217 Life Sciences Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2332 | This department is a diverse group of faculty and students focused on the study of living organisms across a wide variety of scales from the cellular and molecular to the landscape scales. In addition, students and faculty regularly collaborate with colleagues in other departments and institutions to foster truly interdisciplinary approaches both in the classroom and in the research setting. Research strengths of the department include: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Ecology and Conservation Biology, and Neuroscience and Behavior. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Science in Geology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology | This program has earned a national reputation for applying the modern tools of geospatial technology to geological and environmental problems. These tools, which are applicable to any discipline in geology, from environmental geology to mineralogy to paleontology, give our graduates an edge in today's job market. Within this broad framework, individual programs are tailored to each student's interests and background. Most ongoing student research involves an integration of field and lab work with computer applications. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | GEOL 100. Introduction to Geology (3), GEOL 101. Earth Systems Science (3), GEOL 104. Earth Environments (4), GEOL 105. Life Through Time (4), GEOL 199. Independent Study (1-3), GEOL 205. Geologic History of Man (3), GEOL 215. Geologic History of Dinosaurs (3), GEOL 250. Field-based Physical Geology (5), GEOL 251. Field-based Historical Geology (5), GEOL 302. Earth Materials I (4), GEOL 303. Earth Materials II (4), GEOL 304. Geology of the National Parks (4), GEOL 306. Rocks and Minerals (4), GEOL 309. Earth Structures and Tectonics (4) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Earth, Environment and Society, Department of Geology, 190 Overman Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2886 | This department is to provide highest quality undergraduate and graduate education, to advance research and scholarship in the geological sciences, and to provide service to the profession, university, and community. The department recognizes the need to enhance its ability to adapt to changes in society and the profession, to develop collective as well as individual capabilities, and to use self-evaluation to continually improve in the areas of teaching, research, and service. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Science in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | Students should have two official copies of student transcripts from all colleges and universities they have attended (except BGSU); and GRE scores: The University requires the GRE for admission to all graduate programs. The scores are good for five years, so if student took the test within the last five years, student do not need to take the test again. If they wish to submit the application before taking the GRE, specify on the application the date by which student will have taken the GRE. Student must have taken the GRE test before the end of they first semester after being accepted into the graduate program. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | PHYS 601. Techniques in Experimental Physics (3), PHYS 602. Advanced Classical Mechanics (3), PHYS 603. Advanced Electrodynamics (3), PHYS 604. Statistical Mechanics (3), PHYS 605. Advanced Quantum Mechanics (3), PHYS 606. Techniques of Computational Physics (3), PHYS 610. Advanced Solid State Physics (3), PHYS 650. Physics for In-Service Teachers (3-5), PHYS 651. Mechanics (3), PHYS 654. Structure of Matter and Thermodynamics (3), PHYS 661. Labs and Demonstrations in Physics (1), PHYS 681. Seminar in Physics (2), PHYS 682. Special Topics in Physics (3), PHYS 684. Readings in Physics (1-3), PHYS 689. Co-operative Education in Physics (1-6), PHYS 691. Directed Research in Physics (1-6), PHYS 694. Workshop in Physics (1-4), PHYS 695. Workshop in Physics (1-4), | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, 104 Overman Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2421 | This department offering a graduate program, the Department has awarded over 160 graduate degrees. External research support averages over $1.5 million per year. Faculty have published over 30 refereed journal articles and papers in the past 3 years. Teaching excellence in the Department is evidenced by nominations of two faculty members for the Outstanding Teacher Award several years running. Operations of the BGSU Planetarium and Observatory extend the Department's and the University's outreach in science education - an average of 3,500 general public and 4,000 school children visit these facilities each year. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Science in Speech-Language Pathology with Thesis | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | This program is Council of Academic Accreditation (CAA) accredited program meets the academic requirements of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association's Certificate of Clinical Competence as well as the requirements for Licensure from the State of Ohio. | Graduation from an accredited undergraduate college or university. A minimum overall grade point average (GPA) of 3.00, and a minimum GPA of 3.20 in the major. Three letters of recommendation, GRE scores, and a personal letter of application. Successful completion of the following courses, or their equivalents (30 semester hours or 45 quarter hours). Students seeking public school certification may need additional course work at the graduate level. Descriptions of these courses can be found in the University's Undergraduate Catalog. CDIS 123 Introduction to Communication Disorders, CDIS 224 Phonetics, CDIS 225 Language Acquisition and Development, CDIS 301 Anat. and Phys. of the Speech Mechanism, CDIS 302 Intro. to Hearing Science and Acoustics, CDIS 311 Articulation Development and Disorders, CDIS 351 Language Assessment and Remediation, CDIS 361 Introduction to Diagnostic Audiology, CDIS 401 Clinical Methods in Communication Disorders | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | CDIS 600 Speech for Graduate Students (1-4), CDIS 601 Speech Science (4), CDIS 604 Counseling in CDIS (3), CDIS 605 Communication Disorders and Aging (3), CDIS 606 Diagnostics in Communication Disorders I (2), CDIS 607 Diagnostics in Communication Disorders I I (1-3), CDIS 611 Motor Speech Disorders (3), CDIS 617 Clinical Issues I (2), CDIS 618 Clinical Issues II (2), CDIS 619 Clinical Issues III (1), CDIS 620 Clinical Issues IV (2), CDIS 621 Voice Disorders (3), DIS 631 Aphasia and Related Neuropathologies (3), CDIS 641 Stuttering (3), CDIS 645 Aural Rehabilitation (3), CDIS 651 Oral-Facial Anomalies (2), CDIS 653 Dysphagia (3), CDIS 661 Pediatric Language Disorders (3), CDIS 663 Issues in Phonological Intervention (3), CDIS 671 Language Disorders in the School-Age Population (3), CDIS 676 Research Methods in Communication Disorders (3), CDIS 679 Administration of Speech-Language-Hearing Programs in the Schools (3), CDIS 680 Graduate Seminar in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded A/F, CDIS 681 Graduate Seminar in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded S/U, CDIS 682 Topics in Communication Disorders (2-3); Graded A/F, CDIS 683 Topics in Communication Disorders (2-3); Graded S/U, CDIS 685 Directed Readings in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded S/U, CDIS 686 Independent Study in Communication Disorders (1-4); Graded A/F, CDIS 687 Independent Study in Communication Disorders (1-4); Graded S/U, CDIS 689 Internship (1-9), CDIS 691 Research Problems in Communication Disorders (1-3), CDIS 692 Research Group in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded A/F, CDIS 693 Research Group in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded S/U, CDIS 694 Workshop on Current Topics in Communication Disorders (1-3), CDIS 695 Workshop in Communication Disorders (1-3), CDIS 697 Practicum in Speech-Language Pathology (1-3), CDIS 699 Thesis Research (1-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders, 200 Health Center Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2515 | The Department's facilities in the University Health Center house the Bowling Green State University Speech and Hearing Clinic. Special features of the Clinic include a complete hearing aid dispensing facility, and clinical treatment rooms which can be monitored by faculty/staff supervisors from their offices. Other features of the facility include classrooms with closed-circuit TV capability, speech and hearing science laboratories, complete auditory testing facilities, seminar and study rooms, and offices for faculty, staff, and graduate students. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master of Science in Speech-Language Pathology without Thesis | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | This program is Council of Academic Accreditation (CAA) accredited program meets the academic requirements of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association's Certificate of Clinical Competence as well as the requirements for Licensure from the State of Ohio. | Students should have graduation from an accredited undergraduate college or university. A minimum overall grade point average (GPA) of 3.00, and a minimum GPA of 3.20 in the major. Three letters of recommendation, GRE scores, and a personal letter of application. Successful completion of the following courses, or their equivalents (30 semester hours or 45 quarter hours). Students seeking public school certification may need additional course work at the graduate level. Descriptions of these courses can be found in the University's Undergraduate Catalog. CDIS 123 Introduction to Communication Disorders, CDIS 224 Phonetics, CDIS 225 Language Acquisition and Development, CDIS 301 Anat. and Phys. of the Speech Mechanism, CDIS 302 Intro. to Hearing Science and Acoustics, CDIS 311 Articulation Development and Disorders, CDIS 351 Language Assessment and Remediation, CDIS 361 Introduction to Diagnostic Audiology, CDIS 401 Clinical Methods in Communication Disorders | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | CDIS 600 Speech for Graduate Students (1-4), CDIS 601 Speech Science (4), CDIS 604 Counseling in CDIS (3), CDIS 605 Communication Disorders and Aging (3), CDIS 606 Diagnostics in Communication Disorders I (2), CDIS 607 Diagnostics in Communication Disorders I I (1-3), CDIS 611 Motor Speech Disorders (3), CDIS 617 Clinical Issues I (2), CDIS 618 Clinical Issues II (2), CDIS 619 Clinical Issues III (1), CDIS 620 Clinical Issues IV (2), CDIS 621 Voice Disorders (3), DIS 631 Aphasia and Related Neuropathologies (3), CDIS 641 Stuttering (3), CDIS 645 Aural Rehabilitation (3), CDIS 651 Oral-Facial Anomalies (2), CDIS 653 Dysphagia (3), CDIS 661 Pediatric Language Disorders (3), CDIS 663 Issues in Phonological Intervention (3), CDIS 671 Language Disorders in the School-Age Population (3), CDIS 676 Research Methods in Communication Disorders (3), CDIS 679 Administration of Speech-Language-Hearing Programs in the Schools (3), CDIS 680 Graduate Seminar in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded A/F, CDIS 681 Graduate Seminar in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded S/U, CDIS 682 Topics in Communication Disorders (2-3); Graded A/F, CDIS 683 Topics in Communication Disorders (2-3); Graded S/U, CDIS 685 Directed Readings in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded S/U, CDIS 686 Independent Study in Communication Disorders (1-4); Graded A/F, CDIS 687 Independent Study in Communication Disorders (1-4); Graded S/U, CDIS 689 Internship (1-9), CDIS 691 Research Problems in Communication Disorders (1-3), CDIS 692 Research Group in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded A/F, CDIS 693 Research Group in Communication Disorders (1-3); Graded S/U, CDIS 694 Workshop on Current Topics in Communication Disorders (1-3), CDIS 695 Workshop in Communication Disorders (1-3), CDIS 697 Practicum in Speech-Language Pathology (1-3), CDIS 699 Thesis Research (1-12) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders, 200 Health Center Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2515 | The Department's facilities in the University Health Center house the Bowling Green State University Speech and Hearing Clinic. Special features of the Clinic include a complete hearing aid dispensing facility, and clinical treatment rooms which can be monitored by faculty/staff supervisors from their offices. Other features of the facility include classrooms with closed-circuit TV capability, speech and hearing science laboratories, complete auditory testing facilities, seminar and study rooms, and offices for faculty, staff, and graduate students. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Master's in Environmental Health | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Environmental Health | This program offers tremendous opportunity for people interested in having a meaningful and important professional career. Our academic program at BGSU is one of only 24 nationally recognized as meeting rigorous professional standards by the National Environmental Health Science and Protection Accreditation Council. | Students should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ENVH 105 - Environmental Health Science, ENVH 210H - The Global Commons: International Perspectives on Environmental Health and Protection, ENVH 301 - Public Health and Sanitation, ENVH 306 - Environmental Regulation, Organization and Administration, ENVH 309 - Environmental Assessment Methods I, ENVH 310 - Environmental Assessment Methods II, ENVH 402 - Principles of Water Quality, ENVH 405 - Hazardous Material Management, ENVH 407 - Environmental Toxicology, ENVH 449 - Epidemiology, ENVH 605 - Introduction to Environmental Health | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Environmental Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Environmental Health, Suite 62, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department offers an integrated study of physical, chemical and biological agents and their effect on the environment and human health. It is one of only 27 accredited environmental health programs in the country. The Program focuses on applying the basic sciences to environmental health. This includes: Defining and describing potential or existing environmental problems, Understanding the pertinent regulatory, social, technical, and economic factors, Developing practical and integrative prevention plans and solutions. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Masters Degree Program in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics | This program provides its students with rigorous courses in micro- and macro-economic theory, econometrics, and the evaluation of public policy, with some emphasis on regional economic development. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ECON 502 - Econometrics, ECON 573 - History of Economic Thought, ECON 607 - Graduate Econometrics, ECON 610 - Microeconomic Theory, ECON 611 - Macroeconomic Theory, ECON 619 - Regional and Urban Economic Development, ECON 671 - Policy Topics in Quantitative and Theoretical Economics | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics | College of Business Administration, Department of Economics, 3002 Business Administration Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2646 | The Department of Economics at Bowling Green State University offers several choices of programs. Students can earn a bachelor of science in economics, an undergraduate business degree with a specialization in economics, or they can minor in economics. A bachelor of arts degree with a major in economics is also available in BGSU’s College of Arts and Sciences. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Masters in School Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program is direct and indirect services to all students through collaborative -problem solving methods (consultation), educational research, counseling, skill development, advocacy, assessment, and intervention activities. Graduates in this program are trained from a psychological perspective which includes a systematic and ecological, problem-solving approach which will facilitate meeting the diverse educational, cultural, psychological, behavioral, social, and emotional needs of all children, adolescents, and youth. The following areas are emphasized: Role and Function, Classroom Analysis, Dynamic Assessment, Neuropsychological Learning and Behavior onsultation and Collaboration Problem, Solving Practices, Personality Theory and Behavioral Assessment, Counseling Use of Technology, Child Case Studies |
Student should have TOEFL and MELAB scores are valid for two years after the date of testing. Upon receipt of your application, additional information about TOEFL AND MELAB examinations will be provided by International Programs, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores; GRE scores are valid for five years after the date of testing; if necessary, the GRE may be taken after arrival at Bowling Green State University; Transcripts: Two official transcripts and diplomas (including English translations). Neither copies of transcripts nor transcripts issued to students are acceptable. Applicants must submit transcripts from ALL institutions attended (except BGSU), regardless of the number or type of credit hours taken, terms attended, or whether transfer credits are reflected on another transcript. The Graduate College will not send applicants’ files to the School of HMSLS from evaluation until all transcripts have been submitted. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Masters of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program is a flexible program which may be designed to prepare for entry into the job market or for further study in a variety of fields such as mathematics, statistics, computer science, applied mathematics, operations research, economics or finance. Formal programs are offered in mathematics, statistics, and scientific computation. Programs of study are based on a required core area supplemented by a combination of elective course work in mathematics, statistics or computer science. | Students should have two official transcripts to be sent from each institution attended (except Bowling Green State University----only one is needed from this institution). These transcripts are to be sent directly from the institution(s). In those cases where temporary transcripts are submitted initially, formal admission to the Graduate College is granted upon receipt of official transcripts showing the degree earned and the date it was completed. Submit official test scores for the Graduate Record Examination Aptitude Test. Student are encouraged to submit test scores for the G.R.E. Advanced Test in Mathematics, but are not required to do so. If student native language is not English, student must submit test scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the Official Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Masters of Arts in Mathematics - Statistics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program is a flexible program which may be designed to prepare for entry into the job market or for further study in a variety of fields such as mathematics, statistics, computer science, applied mathematics, operations research, economics or finance. Formal programs are offered in mathematics, statistics, and scientific computation. Programs of study are based on a required core area supplemented by a combination of elective course work in mathematics, statistics or computer science. | Students should have two official transcripts to be sent from each institution attended (except Bowling Green State University----only one is needed from this institution). These transcripts are to be sent directly from the institution(s). In those cases where temporary transcripts are submitted initially, formal admission to the Graduate College is granted upon receipt of official transcripts showing the degree earned and the date it was completed. Submit official test scores for the Graduate Record Examination Aptitude Test. Student are encouraged to submit test scores for the G.R.E. Advanced Test in Mathematics, but are not required to do so. If student native language is not English, student must submit test scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the Official Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Masters of Arts in Teaching - Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program is designed for students who plan a teaching career in the public schools, at a community college, or at a small four-year liberal arts school. The program provides a large amount of flexibility so that each individual student can pursue his/her particular career objectives. Coursework involves graduate courses in mathematics, graduate courses in education, and optionally, graduate-level courses in other departments such as computer science, physics, or operations research. | Students should have two official transcripts to be sent from each institution attended (except Bowling Green State University----only one is needed from this institution). These transcripts are to be sent directly from the institution(s). In those cases where temporary transcripts are submitted initially, formal admission to the Graduate College is granted upon receipt of official transcripts showing the degree earned and the date it was completed. Submit official test scores for the Graduate Record Examination Aptitude Test. Student are encouraged to submit test scores for the G.R.E. Advanced Test in Mathematics, but are not required to do so. If student native language is not English, student must submit test scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the Official Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Masters of Rehabilitation Counseling Program | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | This program is to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary to become highly functional Rehabilitation Counselors through a combination of theoretical knowledge and practical experiences. The goals of the RCP are as follows: The RCP faculty will create and maintain a scholarly and rigorous academic environment that provides a solid and current foundation for practicing rehabilitation counselors. Student RPC will recruit, educate and graduate a diverse population of students who are skilled in rehabilitation counseling in a variety of settings. he RPC will expose students to a variety of rehabilitation interventions, treatment settings, and persons with disabling conditions. tudents who have been graduated from RPC will be able to sit for and will have a high likelihood of passing the professional examinations needed to work in the field of rehabilitation. tudents who have been graduated from RPC will be able to attain and maintain, responsible employment in the rehabilitation field of their choice. he RPC faculty will be seen as valuable members of both the local and national rehabilitation community. he RPC will work closely with public and private agencies to ensure well-trained graduates who are considered valuable employees in those agencies. |
Student should have an official transcripts from each college or university attended, GRE Scores or TOEFL/MELAB scores (for Non-English speakers who have less than five years of residency in the US), Three letters of recommendation | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | REHB 656 Principles of Rehabilitation Counseling (3 cr.), REHB 657 Counseling in the Rehabilitation Process (3 cr.), REHB 658 Psychological Aspects of Disability (3 cr.), REHB 659 Job Analysis and Work Evaluation (3 cr.), REHB 660 Work Adjustment and Job Placement (3 cr.), REHB 662 Practicum (3 cr.), REHB 663 Advanced Practicum (Prerequisite REHB: 662) (3 cr.), REHB 664 Internship (Prerequisite: REHB 662) (12 cr.), REHB 665 Medical Aspects of Rehabilitation (3 cr.), REHB 667 Community Approaches to Counseling (3 cr.), REHB 678 Research in Rehabilitation (Prerequisite EDFI 641/EDFI 642) (3 cr.), EDFI 641 Statistics in Education (3 cr.), PSYC 560 Introduction to Psychological Testing (3 cr.), EDSE 678 Assessment and testing in the Mental Health Setting (3 cr.), COUN 702 Advanced Assessment (Prerequisite EDFI 678) (3 cr.), REHB 661 Family Intervention (3 cr.), REHB 674 American s with Disabilities Act (3 cr.), REHB 675 Seminar in Alcohol and Drug Abuse (3 cr.), REHB 677 DSM-IV Diagnosis and Treatment (3 cr.), REHB 685 Readings in Rehabilitation (Independent Study) (1-4 cr.), REHB 585 Job Coaching (3 cr.), REHB 676 Forensic Rehabilitation (3 cr.), EDFI 664 Crisis Counseling (3 cr.), EDFI 676 Counseling the Culturally Diverse (3 cr.), EDFI 679 Group Counseling Models and Procedures (3 cr.) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services | College of Education and Human Development, School of Intervention Services, 451 Education Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7259 | The School of Intervention Services has a distinguished history in both undergraduate and graduate education. The faculty are dedicated to personnel preparation that is theory driven and research based. Students work toward licensure and degrees in the following areas.The mission of the School of Intervention Services is to advocate for and participate in effecting access for all exceptional individuals and their families to appropriate education and related services that will increase their options for lives as independent, productive, and contributing citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Masters of Science in Applied Statistics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program is offered jointly by the Department of Mathematics and Statistics and the Department of Applied Statistics and Operations Research. The intent of the program is to prepare the student for direct entry into a career as a statistician in business, industry or government. | Students should have two official transcripts to be sent from each institution attended (except Bowling Green State University----only one is needed from this institution). These transcripts are to be sent directly from the institution(s). In those cases where temporary transcripts are submitted initially, formal admission to the Graduate College is granted upon receipt of official transcripts showing the degree earned and the date it was completed. Submit official test scores for the Graduate Record Examination Aptitude Test. Students are encouraged to submit test scores for the G.R.E. Advanced Test in Mathematics, but are not required to do so. If student native language is not English, student must submit test scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the Official Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB). | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Masters of Science in Criminal Justice | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Human Services | This program is high-caliber program will equip you for leadership roles in criminal justice agencies, as well as provide a solid base for the pursuit of a doctoral degree. Their areas of specialization include victimology, police organizations, corrections, juvenile justice, criminal law, crime prevention, and more. The program's small class settings foster a dynamic relationship with these professionals. | Students should have Undergraduate study: To gain admissions to the MSCJ program, you must have a minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.00 (on a four point scale), and an undergraduate degree in criminal justice, criminology, or closely related field. Students with a GPA below 3.00 or holding a different undergraduate degree may be considered for conditional admission. Students admitted under conditional status will be required to achieve an overall 3.00 GPA on the first 12 credit hours of graduate study. Failure to meet this requirement will result in dismissal from the program. Bowling Green State University also requires all graduate students submit scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Letters of recommendation: Students must also submit three letters of recommendation from individuals with knowledge of the applicant's qualifications and ability to successfully complete graduate study. Examples of individuals typically asked to write letters of recommendation are past professors, supervisors, or colleagues holding a graduate degree. Personal Letter of Application: Applicants must supply a written statement outlining their interests in graduate study, and their expectations and future goals. This letter is extremely important since the Graduate Admissions Committee will base many decisions on its content and quality. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Criminal Justice Processes and Institutions, The Nature of Crime, Research Methods in Criminal Justice, Data and Statistical Analysis in Criminal Justice, The Organization and Management of Justice, Seminar in Contemporary Policing, Seminar in Contemporary Juvenile Justice, Seminar in Contemporary Corrections, Intermediate Sanctions and the Community, Seminar in Court Administration, Criminal Justice Policy Analysis, Race, Gender and Diversity Issues in Criminal Justice, Seminar in Criminal Justice Ethics, Deviant Behavior, Theories of Juvenile Delinquency, Sociology of Violence, Sociology of Law, Public Administration and Public Policy, Public Personnel Administration | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Human Services | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Human Services, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department was formed in 1999 by merging the degree programs in Criminal Justice, Gerontology and Social Work. The combined department brings together faculty and students who have a mutual desire to study and investigate social issues facing our ever complex communities, and to provide training to students who will be prepared to assist individuals and groups in need. The faculty work together to provide a strong program of study to all those interested in pursuing study in the human services arena. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | This program encourages graduate students to undertake cross-disciplinary studies whenever courses in other departments and programs bear on their research. The Department has curricular ties of one kind or another to several departments and cross-disciplinary programs. A variety of topics in applied ethics can better be understood if the theoretical approaches and empirical results of other disciplines are taken into account. Students working in environmental ethics might benefit from studying related issues in courses in environmental policy, for example. Students in medical ethics might want to take courses in public health. Courses in Women's Studies are relevant to work in many areas of moral philosophy. | Students must have the results of Graduate Record Exam Aptitude Test (scores over 5 years old not acceptable) and results of Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:History of Ancient Philosophy, Wittgenstein and His Influence, Fundamentals of Medical Ethics, Philosophy of Language, Philosophy of Law, Political Legitimacy, Vindicating Explanatory Reductions, Free Will and Moral Responsibility, Desert and Distributive Justice, Control and Self Control, Decision Theory: Foundations and Applications, Rational Choice Theory, Theory of Knowledge. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, 305 Shatzel Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2117 | The Department of Philosophy is an internationally recognized community of scholars and students, known widely for its specialization in, and contributions to, moral philosophy, broadly construed, which includes metaethics, normative ethics, applied ethics, political philosophy and aesthetics.Undergraduate students may earn a B.A. in philosophy, and graduate students may earn a Masters or Ph.D. in the Department's applied philosophy program.The Department is committed to providing the highest quality of education for students as well as to increasing the body of philosophical knowledge. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in American Culture Studies | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies | This program is directed by an intellectual community made up of over sixty faculty members. The program features two broad interdisciplinary academic tracks from which students choose their major concentration: (1) Critical Studies in Media, Film, and Culture; and (2) Ethnicity, Gender, and Social Identities. These are designed to allow our students to be exposed to and to address contemporary cutting-edge research and debates in the field of Cultural Studies. They also reflect the unique academic strengths of our graduate faculty, who are deeply involved in interdisciplinary and cross-disciplinary teaching and research. The American Culture Studies program includes faculty members from the following departments and graduate programs: Communication Studies, English, Ethnic Studies, History, Philosophy, Popular Culture, Sociology, Theatre/Film, and Women’s Studies. Recognizing that American culture is complex and multifaceted, this program requires work in a variety of subject areas, encouraging students to reflect on both the historic heritage and contemporary expression of our national experiences. | Student should have two official transcripts from each college or university student have attended; scores for the General Test of the Graduate Record Examination. Foreign students are required to pass the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) examination or its equivalent.The following materials must be submitted to the American Culture Studies program office in support of student application: (a) three letters of recommendation from current or former instructors or other persons qualified to evaluate probable success in the doctoral program; (b) evidence of ability to conduct academic research in an interdisciplinary area, such as copies of research papers or M.A. thesis chapters; (c) a two-four page statement of purpose delineating the applicant’s purpose for taking the Ph.D. as well as an outline of career goals; (d) a current one-two page resume or c.v. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Theories of American Culture Studies, Genealogy of American Culture, Publication and Professional Development, Key Debates in Cultural Studies. Either (a) Critical Studies in Film, Media, and Culture, or (b) Ethnicity, Gender, and Social Identities. Either a disciplinary minor, such as Communication Studies, English, History, etc., or an interdisciplinary minor, such as Film Studies, Museum/Archival Studies, etc., or a graduate certificate program, such as those in Ethnic Studies, Women’s Studies, Performance Studies, etc. ACS 602 Teaching American Culture Studies CS 730 Theories of American Culture Studies, ACS 680 Popular Culture and Media Theory or ETHN 620 Theories of Race, Ethnicity, Multiculturalism, ACS 740 Genealogy of American Culture, ACS 760 Critical Approaches in Film Studies or S 620 Feminist Theory, ACS 745 Publication and Professional Development, ACS 750 Key Debates in Cultural Studies, ACS 798 Readings for the Preliminary Exam, ACS 799 Dissertation Hours |
Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Culture Studies, 101 East Hall, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 8886 | This department offers at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. These range from computer art and neuroscience to telecommunications and popular culture, from biology and Japanese to computer science and women’s studies and beyond. In fact, the College offers almost 100 majors, over 100 minors, 22 masters programs, and 11 doctoral programs designed to introduce you to a fascinating world of ideas. They will also help you develop skills necessary to succeed in hundreds of satisfying careers, prepare you for such professions as law, medicine, and journalism, provide you with a firm foundation for graduate work, spark your imagination, and expand your horizons. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics and Scientific Computation | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program is Mathematical modeling and numerical analysis are increasingly important in many areas of science and technology. The dramatic improvement in algorithms and hardware in recent decades has facilitated the treatment of applied mathematical models which were considered intractable only a few years ago. This has led to the emergence of Scientific Computing as a "third scientific methodology", as distinct from theory and experimentation. Exploiting this new approach requires (a) sound mathematical training, (b) expertise in the practical aspects of computing and algorithm development, and (c) an interdisciplinary, scientific viewpoint which transcends traditional disciplinary boundaries. The student will also find opportunities for the interdisciplinary application of mathematics in a number of diverse areas. These include Geophysics, Materials Science, Mathematical Biology, Physics, and Chemistry. | Students should have two official transcripts to be sent from each institution attended (except Bowling Green State University----only one is needed from this institution). These transcripts are to be sent directly from the institution(s). In those cases where temporary transcripts are submitted initially, formal admission to the Graduate College is granted upon receipt of official transcripts showing the degree earned and the date it was completed. Submit official test scores for the Graduate Record Examination Aptitude Test. Students are encouraged to submit test scores for the G.R.E. Advanced Test in Mathematics, but are not required to do so. If student native language is not English, studnet must submit test scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the Official Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB). | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Biological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | This program is designed, with the advice of the student's doctoral committee, to meet the student's needs and interests. Students must complete a preliminary written and oral examination covering general biological knowledge, usually by the end of the second year of study. Students successfully completing this examination and defending a proposal re considered to be candidates for the Ph.D. degree. Candidates must complete an independent research project acceptable to their doctoral committee. This research project is to be described and evaluated in the dissertation. | Students should have two official transcripts from all institutions attended (Request for Transcripts form), GRE general test/GMAT, or PRAXIS (Curriculum and Teaching only) scores, TOEFL scores are required from applicants whose native language is not English Three letters of recommendation must be forwarded to the department to which admission is requested. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | BIOL 101. Environment of Life (3), BIOL 104. Introduction to Biology (4), BIOL 108. Life in the Sea (3), BIOL 109. Life in Extreme Environments (3), BIOL 200. Biology Today (1), BIOL 204. Concepts in Biology I (5), BIOL 205. Concepts in Biology II (5), BIOL 301. Field Biology of the Vertebrates (3), BIOL 310. Biology of Aging (3), BIOL 313. Microbiology (4), BIOL 314. Microbiology for Health Professionals (3), BIOL 315. Microbiology Laboratory for Health Professionals (1), BIOL 330. Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience (3), BIOL 331. Human Anatomy and Physiology I (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 332. Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4), BIOL 343. General Botany (4), BIOL 350. General Genetics (4) | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biological Sciences, 217 Life Sciences Building, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2332 | This department is a diverse group of faculty and students focused on the study of living organisms across a wide variety of scales from the cellular and molecular to the landscape scales. In addition, students and faculty regularly collaborate with colleagues in other departments and institutions to foster truly interdisciplinary approaches both in the classroom and in the research setting. Research strengths of the department include: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Ecology and Conservation Biology, and Neuroscience and Behavior. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information email reslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Environmental Health | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Environmental Health | This program offers tremendous opportunity for people interested in having a meaningful and important professional career. Our academic program at BGSU is one of only 24 nationally recognized as meeting rigorous professional standards by the National Environmental Health Science and Protection Accreditation Council. | Students should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ENVH 105 - Environmental Health Science, ENVH 210H - The Global Commons: International Perspectives on Environmental Health and Protection, ENVH 301 - Public Health and Sanitation, ENVH 306 - Environmental Regulation, Organization and Administration, ENVH 309 - Environmental Assessment Methods I, ENVH 310 - Environmental Assessment Methods II, ENVH 402 - Principles of Water Quality, ENVH 405 - Hazardous Material Management, ENVH 407 - Environmental Toxicology, ENVH 449 - Epidemiology, ENVH 605 - Introduction to Environmental Health | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Environmental Health | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Environmental Health, Suite 62, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department offers an integrated study of physical, chemical and biological agents and their effect on the environment and human health. It is one of only 27 accredited environmental health programs in the country. The Program focuses on applying the basic sciences to environmental health. This includes: Defining and describing potential or existing environmental problems, Understanding the pertinent regulatory, social, technical, and economic factors, Developing practical and integrative prevention plans and solutions. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | This program purpose of the cognate requirement is to provide either a broad background in mathematics and statistics or experience working in an area of mathematical application such as physics, biology, psychology, sociology, computer science, finance and economics. This work is generally completed at the post-master's level. There are two sets of core requirements for Ph.D. students, one for probability and statistics students and the second for all others. The remaining course work is determined in consultation with the graduate advisor so as to achieve a coherent program of study. | Students should have two official transcripts to be sent from each institution attended (except Bowling Green State University----only one is needed from this institution). These transcripts are to be sent directly from the institution(s). In those cases where temporary transcripts are submitted initially, formal admission to the Graduate College is granted upon receipt of official transcripts showing the degree earned and the date it was completed. Submit official test scores for the Graduate Record Examination Aptitude Test. Student are encouraged to submit test scores for the G.R.E. Advanced Test in Mathematics, but are not required to do so. If student native language is not English, student must submit test scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the Official Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB). | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, 450 Mathematical Sciences Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2636 | This department offer a full range of undergraduate and graduate degrees, including the Master of Arts and the Ph.D. in Mathematics and Statistics. We are located on the fourth floor of the Mathematical Sciences Building (MSC). | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Photochemical Sciences | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program offers a unique, interdisciplinary research experience for students having backgrounds in chemistry, physics, biology, and/or materials science. Research is focused on studying how the interactions of light with matter can affect a variety of chemical, physical and biological systems. Both basic knowledge and practical applications are being pursued by small to mid-sized research teams. In particular, Center faculty have been instrumental in contributing to the fundamental development of photo-driven chemical processes and in addressing critical environmental and energy problems over the last two decades, receiving worldwide recognition for these efforts. | A bachelor's degree in chemistry or a related major from an accredited college or university with a GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4-point scale. Students with GPA's between 2.8 and 3.0 may also be considered for admission provided there are other indicators of likely success in the program, such as high grades in upper-level chemistry courses and experience in academic or industrial research. The University requires that all graduate students take the GRE exam. We do not have a minimum GRE score requirement and consider the student's transcripts as the primary indicator of being able to succeed in our Ph.D. program. International students must have a minimum TOEFL score of 213/550. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | PCS 701 - Photochemistry and Photophysics 1, PCS 702 - Photochemistry and Photophysics 2, PCS 703 - Materials and Light, PCS 716 - Bioinorganic Chemistry, PCS 717 - Biorganic Chemistry, PCS 750-761 - Research Topics in Photochemical Sciences, PCS 750 - Research Topics in Photosynthesis, PCS 751 - Research Topics in Polymer Photochemistry and Photophysics, PCS 752 - Research Topics in Photochemistry of Biomecules, PCS 753 - Research Topics in Photoinitiated Electron Transfer Reactions and Photodynamic Therapy, PCS 754 - Research Topics in Vibration Spectroscopy and Vibration Overtone Activation, PCS 756 - Research Topics in Laser Spectroscopy, PCS 757 - Research Topics in Molecular Recognition and Photoactivated Systems, PCS 758 - Research Topics in Inorganic Redox Processes, PCS 759 - Research Topics in Photoelectron Microscopy, PCS 760 - Research Topics in Optoelectronics, PCS 766 - Spectral Methods, PCS 780 - Advanced Seminar in Photochemical Sciences, PCS 781 - Seminar in Photochemical Sciences, PCS 782 - Advanced Topics in Photochemical Sciences, PCS 783 - Special Topics in Photochemical Sciences, PCS 785 - Readings in Photochemical Sciences, PCS 787 - Independent Study in Photochemical Sciences, PCS 791 - Directed Research in Photochemical Sciences, PCS 799 - Dissertation Research. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2031 | This department begins with a dedicated faculty providing a wide range of courses, including sequences in biochemistry, analytical, organic, physical, inorganic chemistry, and opportunities in materials science. Courses are supported with excellent laboratory facilities and state of the art instrumentation. Chemistry has been central to the development of an interdisciplinary program in materials science and is an important part of BGSU's program in scientific computing. offers a M.S. degree in Chemistry and a Ph.D. in Photochemical Sciences. The Center for Photochemical Sciences and the Department of Chemistry have developed a uniquely focused Ph.D. program in the photochemical sciences, designed for students with backgrounds in physics, biological sciences or chemistry. The coursework prepares students in the area of photochemistry and photophysics, and examines applications in fundamental areas of chemistry, materials science, biological sciences, physics, and spectroscopy and/or photopolymer science. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Policy History | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program is attractive because of its breadth as well as its depth. Policy History students can specialize in European, Russian, Latin American, and Asian history, as well as in history of North America. This program offers exciting opportunities for comparative study and enables students to develop teaching fields in non-Western history, often giving them a competitive edge in the job market. Policy History integrates the work of political and institutional historians (whose work focuses on the state) and social historians (whose work often examines the effects of state policy). It therefore offers students unique opportunities to explore the interrelationships among politics, institutions, and society and to examine the contexts in which important decisions have been made, the ways in which policies have often been dramatically transformed when put in place, and the fact that most policies have unintended consequences. This program has developed five areas of special strength. These include: · Women, Gender, and Policy, Social Policy, Foreign Policy/International Security, Economic Policy, The State and State Formation | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Bowling Green State University, Williams 128, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2030 | This department is the investigation of change and continuity in human societies. Historical study aims to understand the past in order to understand the present more fully. Studying history creates a trained habit of thinking in the long-term, and integrating political, social, economic, artistic, intellectual and cultural factors into both the long-term and short-term aspects of society. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Psychology - Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program students may chose to concentrate in one of three areas within clinical psychology -- Clinical Child Psychology, Behavioral Medicine or Clinical Community Psychology -- by taking specific electives and getting specific practica and research experiences. (Students who do not choose an area of concentration may participate in concentration-specific experiences, but only as space permits.) In addition to the areas of concentration, we also offer two areas of specialization: Occupational Health Psychology and the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. program follows a scientist-practitioner model of training in which the development of research skills, coursework and clinical practica are integrated into a coherent program of study. This integrated approach has prepared our graduates to function successfully in the many settings in which clinical psychologists work, such as colleges and universities, medical schools, community mental health centers, hospitals, research centers, and private practice. | Students should have Undergraduate Psychology courses: 30 hours including statistics and research methods. GRE required: Verbal, Quantitative, GRE recommended: Advanced Test in Psychology. Although we have no minimum score requirements, median GRE scores of current students are in the 70th-80th percentile range. Median GPA is 3.70. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Suite 62, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is truly an exciting time to study psychology. New things are being learned everyday about how people behave, how the mind and brain work, and how that knowledge can be used to help people, organizations, and society. As you explore our web site, we hope that you see that the Psychology Department at BGSU is deeply committed to advancing that knowledge by doing our own research, teaching it to our students, and helping those whom we hope can benefit from it. This program speciality areas in clinical, developmental, industrial -organizational, and the neural and cognitive sciences. All faculty teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The Psychology Building includes two of five floors (over 20,000 square feet) dedicated to human and animal research. Four computing facilities are housed in the Psychology Building for undergraduate and graduate student use. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Psychology - Developmental Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program provides a challenging, yet supportive environment in which students can acquire a strong foundation in theory, research, and methodology in developmental psychology across the life span. In collaboration with a diverse faculty, students actively engage in an individualized program of study. The training students receive prepares them for careers in either academic or applied settings. | Students should have GRE required: Verbal, Quantitative, GRE recommended: Advanced Test in Psychology. Although we have no minimum score requirements, median GRE scores of current students are in the 70th-80th percentile range. Median GPA is 3.70. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Suite 62, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is truly an exciting time to study psychology. New things are being learned everyday about how people behave, how the mind and brain work, and how that knowledge can be used to help people, organizations, and society. As you explore our web site, we hope that you see that the Psychology Department at BGSU is deeply committed to advancing that knowledge by doing our own research, teaching it to our students, and helping those whom we hope can benefit from it. This program speciality areas in clinical, developmental, industrial -organizational, and the neural and cognitive sciences. All faculty teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The Psychology Building includes two of five floors (over 20,000 square feet) dedicated to human and animal research. Four computing facilities are housed in the Psychology Building for undergraduate and graduate student use. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Psychology - I-O Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is to prepare students for careers as active contributors to the psychology of work. Learning and developmental experiences are provided through coursework, research and applied projects. We value a broad background in psychological theories and principles, and the development of sound research and problem-solving skills. We feel that a mixture of classroom experience, individual study, research, and supervised field experience provides a strong foundation for our graduates as they begin or continue careers in teaching, research, and consultation in either the private or public sector. All in all, we feel that our graduate program offers exceptional training and support for students interested in a career in I-O psychology. | Students should have GRE required: Verbal, Quantitative, GRE recommended: Advanced Test in Psychology. Although we have no minimum score requirements, median GRE scores of current students are in the 70th-80th percentile range. Median GPA is 3.70. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Suite 62, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is truly an exciting time to study psychology. New things are being learned everyday about how people behave, how the mind and brain work, and how that knowledge can be used to help people, organizations, and society. As you explore our web site, we hope that you see that the Psychology Department at BGSU is deeply committed to advancing that knowledge by doing our own research, teaching it to our students, and helping those whom we hope can benefit from it. This program speciality areas in clinical, developmental, industrial -organizational, and the neural and cognitive sciences. All faculty teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The Psychology Building includes two of five floors (over 20,000 square feet) dedicated to human and animal research. Four computing facilities are housed in the Psychology Building for undergraduate and graduate student use. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Psychology - Neural and Cognitive Sciences (NCS) | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program offer courses in statistics, cognitive psychology, basic neuroscience and cognition, visual and auditory perception, neuroethology, behavioral ecology, artificial neural networks, language, evolutionary psychology, and other subjects. Though students traditionally choose to focus almost exclusively on cognitive science or neuroscience, the program allows students to become involved in research that integrates the two sub-fields. | Students should have GRE required: Verbal, Quantitative, GRE recommended: Advanced Test in Psychology. Although we have no minimum score requirements, median GRE scores of current students are in the 70th-80th percentile range. Median GPA is 3.70. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Suite 62, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is truly an exciting time to study psychology. New things are being learned everyday about how people behave, how the mind and brain work, and how that knowledge can be used to help people, organizations, and society. As you explore our web site, we hope that you see that the Psychology Department at BGSU is deeply committed to advancing that knowledge by doing our own research, teaching it to our students, and helping those whom we hope can benefit from it. This program speciality areas in clinical, developmental, industrial -organizational, and the neural and cognitive sciences. All faculty teach at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The Psychology Building includes two of five floors (over 20,000 square feet) dedicated to human and animal research. Four computing facilities are housed in the Psychology Building for undergraduate and graduate student use. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Rhetoric and Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program utilize the range of approaches rhetorical, cultural, empirical, and technological that characterize the field of rhetoric and composition in the twenty-first century. While some courses emphasize writing instruction and writing administration, students have varied scholarly interests and do research on a wide range of dissertation topics. The program has a very strong placement record into tenure-line faculty positions at universities and colleges. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Doctoral | Bowling Green State University | The courses are:Introduction to Rhetoric and Composition as a Discipline, History of Rhetoric and Written Discourse, Issues in Historical Rhetoric, Rhetoric and Written Discourse, Research in Rhetoric and Writing, Computer Mediated Writing: Theory and Practice, Publication in Rhetoric and Writing, Special Topic R and W Seminar. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, East Hall 213, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 7543 | The English Department offers an outstanding faculty and staff, a distinctive and interesting course selection, friendly students, and many opportunities for exploring the potential. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Sociology - Demography | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program has as its goal the training of well-rounded generalists rather than narrow specialists; and all students electing to concentrate in this area will be expected to demonstrate a broad knowledge and understanding of (a) the major substantive areas of demography, and (b) the data and research tools that are unique to the field of demography. The normal procedures for students to acquire this knowledge and understanding are: (1) independent study and research under the tutelage of various members of the faculty; (2) reading on their own initiative in the current journals of the profession; and (3) participating in the formal seminars offered by the department of sociology. Students who pursue a Ph.D. minor in demography need to complete a minimum of four courses from the lists provided. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Applicants should submit a copy of their master’s thesis, their thesis proposal if the thesis is not yet completed, or a sample of other academic writing, such as a class paper, if the thesis proposal is not yet completed. The three letters of reference for those applying to the Ph.D. program should be from professors at the graduate level, and at least one of these should be from a member of the student’s thesis committee, preferably the chair. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Sociology 520 Techniques of Demographic Analysis I, Sociology 621 Population and Society, Sociology 720 Techniques of Demographic Analysis II, Sociology 656 Family Demography, Sociology 726 Migration, Sociology 727 Morbidity and Mortality, Sociology 728 Human Fertility and Family Planning, Sociology 627 Demographic Data Analysis, Sociology 680 Sociology of Aging, Sociology 723 Population and Development, Sociology 719 Advanced Statistics, Geography 524 Geographic Information Systems | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Speech-Language Pathology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | This program is designed to develop the scientific and cognitive skills needed to identify and independently study important questions concerning human communication. In pursuit of these goals, students engage actively in research and teaching. The doctoral program emphasizes a student-centered approach to doctoral education. Students participate in research throughout their program and are closely supervised in their research and teaching experiences. The curriculum is individually designed to meet students’ educational needs and professional goal. The program is designed to develop basic and analytical knowledge in: (a) the sciences of normal speech and language, (b) disorders of speech and language, (c) related disciplines providing insight into human communication as well as to develop: (d) research and technical skills in instrumentation and research methodologies, (e) dissemination of information via oral and written means. | Completion of an appropriate master's degree from an accredited college or university. A minimum overall grade point average (GPA) of 3.00 for the Master's Degree. Three letters of recommendation addressing the applicant's fitness for doctoral study. GRE scores. 2 official copies of transcripts from all institutions of higher learning attended. A personal letter of application, discussing reasons for pursuing the doctoral degree; professional goals; reasons for selecting BGSU; and research interests. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders | College of Health and Human Services, Department of Communication Disorders, 200 Health Center Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2515 | The Department's facilities in the University Health Center house the Bowling Green State University Speech and Hearing Clinic. Special features of the Clinic include a complete hearing aid dispensing facility, and clinical treatment rooms which can be monitored by faculty/staff supervisors from their offices. Other features of the facility include classrooms with closed-circuit TV capability, speech and hearing science laboratories, complete auditory testing facilities, seminar and study rooms, and offices for faculty, staff, and graduate students. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Technology Management | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program is a web-based program designed to meet the needs of today's technical professionals by offering academically rigorous coursework and experience through distance education. Students enter the program to seek higher level positions within a technology-based organization or they desire a career change to higher education. Some common characteristics of the students in the Technology Management program are: full-time employment; significant industry experience; high level of motivation and desire to learn; fundamental appreciation and desire to understand technological issues; and location bound. | Student should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ITE 679 - Strategic Planning of Technological Processes, DTEC 6800 - Internet Research Methods, 195/733 - Impacts of Technology, MFC 5015 - Legal Aspects of Industry, TECH 682 - Technological Systems, Assessment, and Innovation | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Technology Management | Distance / Online | Variable | $4080 per semester for 12 to 18 credit hours. | Center for International Programs | This program is designed to meet the needs of today's technical professionals by offering academically rigorous coursework and experience through distance education. Students enter the program to seek higher level positions within a technology-based organization or they desire a career change to higher education. The program offers five specializations: Construction Management, Digital Communications, Human Resource Development and Training, Manufacturing Systems, and Quality Systems. | Students should have two official transcripts from each college or university you have attended; scores for the General Test of the Graduate Record Examination. Foreign students are required to pass the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) examination or its equivalent. Three letters of recommendation from current or former instructors or other persons qualified to evaluate probable success in the M.A. program; evidence of ability to conduct academic research in an interdisciplinary setting, such as copies of undergraduate research papers; a two-four page statement of purpose delineating the applicant ’s purpose for taking the M.A. as well as an outline of career goals, both short- and long-range; a current one-two page resume or c.v. | Doctoral | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Technology Management - Construction Management | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program is directed toward applied research, the advancement of the construction organization, and professional management leading to the effective and efficient control of the construction process. | Student should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | TECH 682 (710) - Advanced Practices in Construction Management, MF and C 7320 - Ethics and Professional Issues of the Construction Process, MCT 701 - Construction Data, CMGT 6664 - Advanced Practices in Construction Management, AEC 702 - Risk Management of the Construction Process Site, MF and C 6315 - Legal Aspects of the Construction Process, MCT 702 - Construction Management Techniques, TECH 711 - Construction Economics, CMGT 7600 - Construction Inspection and Quality Control Processes, AEC 701 - Emerging Trends in Construction Managmt. of International Projects | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Technology Management - Digital Communications | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program need for faster and more efficient transmission, reception, storage, and retrieval of information in our high-change society has caused digital communications to be one of the fastest growing fields in technology. The purpose of advanced studies in this area is to increase the knowledge about the design and implementation of systems to communicate in a cost-effective manner. | Student should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | ECT 631- Local Area Networks, TCS 910 - Wide Area Networks, TCS 730 Network Services for the Enterprise, ECT 735 - Network Services Administration, DCS 750 - E-Commerce, DCS 630 - Communication Technology, TECH 760 - Process Control in Networking Environments, TECH 830 - Data Compression, Coding and Security, TCS 831 - Regulatory and Policy Issues for Communication, ECT 850 - Topics and Issues in Digital Communication Systems | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Technology Management - Human Resource Development and Training | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program is integrated use of training and development, organizational development, and career development to improve individuals, group, and organizational effectiveness. HRD and IT relies on more than one subject discipline and draws on theories and insights from education, management, industrial and individual psychology, communication, counseling, economics, sociology, and related areas of research. | Student should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | TECH 76X - Theory and Research in Human Resource Development, ITE 656 - International and Cross-Cultural Training, UW/S 170XXX, or BGSU TECH XXX, or ISU ITE XXX - Contemporary Problems and Issues in Human Resource Development, 170-5XX - Systematic Design of Human Resource Development Programs, ITE 76X - Evaluation of Human Resource Development Programs, TECH 78X - Evaluation of Learner Performance Improvement, ITE 75X - Legal and Ethical Dimensions of HRD Practitioners, 170/6XX - Management and Coordination of Training and Development, ITE 79X - Improving Human Performance in Organizations, TECH 69X - Career Development Theories and Techniques in HRD | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Technology Management - Manufacturing Systems | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program helps to operate and control processes that add value to a product. Another key characteristic of a manufacturing system is its ability to replicate the product profitably. While traditional manufacturing programs have focused on manufacturing technologies, manufacturing systems concentrates on the all activities and practices used to integrate an enterprise's production. | Student should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Tech 60X - Computer Based Tools in Manufacturing, ECT 634 - Computer-Based Automated Systems Integration, MCT 671 - Systems in Manufacturing, ITEC 6200 - Project Management for Manufacturing, ITEC 6112 - Analytical Studies and Planned Experimentation in Industry, MF and C 6500 - Manufacturing Specialization, MCT 700 - Human Relations and Leadership in Manufacturing, MF and C 6525 - Manufacturing Economy, TECH 78X - Computer Integrated Manufacturing Management, MF and C 7550 - Current Issues in Manufacturing Emerging Technologies | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Technology Management - Quality Systems | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | This program is dedicated to providing people with corporate leadership abilities and faculty for the profession. Graduates shall have a global vision encompassing quality systems. The primary QSS focus is to provide people with the ability to manage complex organizations to meet the requirements of customer satisfaction in public and private sectors. | Student should have an official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | IMT 812 - Reliability, Maintainability and Serviceability, IMT 813 - Quality Standards Leadership, QS 727 - Documentation-based Process Improvement, ITE 79X - Improving Human Performance in Organizations, IMT 811 - Experimental Design and Process Analysis, QS 726 - Quality Systems, QS 702 - Quality Change Culture, INMGT 796-700C - Strategic Concepts In Quality, IMT 814 - Quality Systems Seminar | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems | College of Technology, Department of Technology Systems, Bowling Green State University, College of Technology Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2439 | The College of Technology offers an individualized mix of innovative majors. All lead to the Bachelor of Science in Technology degree. The focus is a hands on approach to education. Students in all programs are required to complete multiple semester-long paid Cooperative Education experiences. Most programs are accredited by the NAIT, NCATE, or ACCE. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | This program is especially designed for those students planning careers as faculty members in higher education with a degree emphasis in the theories (both historical and contemporary), histories, and cultural applications of theatre and performance in various contexts. It is this aspect of the program that prepares students to contribute meaningfully to theatre and performance scholarship and to be effective teachers within those disciplines. Practically, the course of study aims to prepare graduates to conduct original research in a way that will contribute to the level of scholarship in the student's area of specialization, to teach, and to participate in theatre production in educational settings in a range of capacities. Accordingly, students are evaluated in three areas: scholarship, teaching ability, and artistry. Thus, it is assumed that upon graduation the holder of a Ph.D. will possess a thorough understanding of the theory and history of theatre and performance. | Students should have official transcripts from all post-secondary schools (no photocopies accepted), Official score from the GRE/GMAT exam, Official TOEFL examination score or Michigan Test. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Film, 338 South Hall, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2222 | This department is to foster the scholar-artist-citizen through both practical and inquiry-based learning in the classroom and performance labs, on our stages, and out in the community. It is expected that faculty teaching and research and creative activity in theatre and film work together to enhance, support, and reflect this mission. We define the scholar-artist-citizen as a student who excels in the theory and practice of the core values. The core values are Creativity-inventive practice within and beyond the traditions and processes of theatre and film performance, including expressive application of the various technologies of performance. To do so requires Collaboration-as a necessary process of inquiry in creative activity. To do so requires Communication-fluency in the various languages of artistic expression (both high and low cultural forms) and critical practice (textual as well as applied). To do so requires Commitment-to the processes of artistic practice as collaboration and commitment to the larger critical values associated with the role of theatre and film in society as an agent of personal expression as well as public discourse. To do so requires an awareness of Community-an understanding of social responsibility and individualism and the ability and desire to contribute to each within and outside the academy as scholar-artist-citizens. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. majoring in Criminology and Deviance | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program has two important goals. First, its core curriculum requirements and examination policies are designed to insure that the student will acquire a thorough knowledge of the major issues and theories of criminology and deviance. Second, its diversified seminar offerings and flexible courses of independent study are designed to encourage the student to develop several reas of expertise within criminology or the sociology of deviance. Attaining both goals is essential for becoming a productive professional. |
Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Sociology 644 – Deviant Behavior; and Sociology 646 – Theories of Criminality, and three of the following: Sociology 645 – Juvenile Delinquency, Sociology 647 -- Sociology of Mental Illness, Sociology 680 -- Topics in Sociology (on a topic related to criminology and deviance), Sociology 741 – Corrections, Sociology 743 -- Sociology of Violence, Sociology 745 – Sociology of Law | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. majoring in Social Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program offers both an M.A. program in social psychology and a Ph.D. program with social psychology as either a minor or major area. The social psychology program, emphasizes flexibility and coursework tailored to meet the needs and interests of our students. Nevertheless, all students are encouraged to select additional courses from the core curriculum in social psychology as is consistent with their own professional goals and development. In short, each student must accept responsibility for designing a course of study that will best serve his or her professional goals. The Department of Sociology's faculty in Social Psychology will make every reasonable effort to insure that students will meet all degree requirements and emerge as well-qualified professionals. The Social Psychology faculty believes that this program is a challenging opportunity for able, motivated students. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Applicants should submit a copy of their master’s thesis, their thesis proposal if the thesis is not yet completed, or a sample of other academic writing, such as a class paper, if the thesis proposal is not yet completed. The three letters of reference for those applying to the Ph.D. program should be from professors at the graduate level, and at least one of these should be from a member of the student’s thesis committee, preferably the chair. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | SOC 647: Sociology of Mental Illness, SOC 650: Proseminar in Social Psychology, SOC 653: Social Psychology of the Marital Dyad, SOC 680: Selected Topics* (i.e., Adolescence), SOC 738: Race and Ethnic Relations, SOC 750: Advanced Social Psychology (Theory), SOC 753: Socialization | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. minor in Quantitative Methods | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program is designed to give students a solid grounding in the spectrum of statistical techniques that are most frequently used in sociology, including analysis of variance, linear regression, regression with limited dependent variables, structural equation modeling, advanced demographic techniques, and similar topics. In addition to hese topics taught within the department, students are encouraged to seek similar oursework outside the department, particularly in the departments of applied statistics and psychology. Students attaining this minor should be able to be nowledgeable users of basic and advanced statistical techniques in their own research. Moreover, they should have the skills to teach courses in quantitative methods at the undergraduate or beginning graduate level, as well as to serve as statistical resource people for faculty and students, at their own institutions. |
Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Applicants should submit a copy of their master’s thesis, their thesis proposal if the thesis is not yet completed, or a sample of other academic writing, such as a class paper, if the thesis proposal is not yet completed. The three letters of reference for those applying to the Ph.D. program should be from professors at the graduate level, and at least one of these should be from a member of the student’s thesis committee, preferably the chair. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | SOC 719: Covariance Structure Models, SOC 719: Regression With Limited Dependent Variables, SOC 720: Demographic Techniques II, SOC 680 Experimental Design, MATH 541: Probability and Statistics I, MATH 542: Probability and Statistics II, STAT 502: Regression Analysis, STAT 630: Applied Multivariate Analysis, STAT 634: Discrete Data Analysis, PSYC 761: Psychological Measurement I, PSYC 762: Psychological Measurement II. | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. minoring in Criminology and Deviance | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program has two important goals. First, its core curriculum requirements and examination policies are designed to insure that the student will acquire a thorough knowledge of the major issues and theories of criminology and deviance. Second, its diversified seminar offerings and flexible courses of independent study are designed to encourage the student to develop several reas of expertise within criminology or the sociology of deviance. Attaining both goals is essential for becoming a productive professional. |
Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Sociology 644 – Deviant Behavior; and Sociology 646 – Theories of Criminality and two of the following: Sociology 645 – Juvenile Delinquency, Sociology 647 -- Sociology of Mental Illness, Sociology 680 -- Topics in Sociology (on a topic related to criminology and deviance), Sociology 741 – Corrections, Sociology 743 -- Sociology of Violence, Sociology 745 – Sociology of Law | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Ph.D. minoring in Social Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | This program offers both an M.A. program in social psychology and a Ph.D. program with social psychology as either a minor or major area. The social psychology program, emphasizes flexibility and coursework tailored to meet the needs and interests of our students. Nevertheless, all students are encouraged to select additional courses from the core curriculum in social psychology as is consistent with their own professional goals and development. In short, each student must accept responsibility for designing a course of study that will best serve his or her professional goals. The Department of Sociology's faculty in Social Psychology will make every reasonable effort to insure that students will meet all degree requirements and emerge as well-qualified professionals. The Social Psychology faculty believes that this program is a challenging opportunity for able, motivated students. | Students should have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution and a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4 point scale. Admission to the Ph.D. program is contingent on the completion of a master’s degree in sociology, or an equivalent graduate degree, and a cumulative graduate GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4 point scale. All applicants should submit transcripts of all previous college work, scores on the Graduate Record Examination, and three letters of recommendation, at least two of which are from professors familiar with the applicant's academic work. Applicants must also submit a 500-hundred word personal statement describing the research interests they hope to pursue in graduate school, their professional goals and aspirations, and why they believe the Bowling Green’s graduate program will help them pursue these interests and achieve these goals. This personal statement is particularly important because it helps the Graduate Committee decide if the department can meet the applicant's educational and career goals. Applicants whose native language is not English must submit evidence of English language proficiency by forwarding scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Applicants should submit a copy of their master’s thesis, their thesis proposal if the thesis is not yet completed, or a sample of other academic writing, such as a class paper, if the thesis proposal is not yet completed. The three letters of reference for those applying to the Ph.D. program should be from professors at the graduate level, and at least one of these should be from a member of the student’s thesis committee, preferably the chair. | Doctoral | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | SOC 647: Sociology of Mental Illness, SOC 650: Proseminar in Social Psychology, SOC 653: Social Psychology of the Marital Dyad, SOC 680: Selected Topics* (i.e., Adolescence), SOC 738: Race and Ethnic Relations, SOC 750: Advanced Social Psychology (Theory), SOC 753: Socialization | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2294 | This department is the scientific study of human relationships—how people work, play, cooperate, compete, and live together in many different groups and settings—offices, homes, gangs, teams, neighborhoods, and cities. Our comprehensive undergraduate curriculum ensures that students learn to use sociological concepts and methods to help them understand real-world social phenomena. Our undergraduate program prepares students to enter many occupations that require the knowledge of social relationships and communication and critical thinking skills emphasized in our courses. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | |
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Pre - Medical | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is for students who plan to enter medical school after graduating from college. When a student is "pre-med", he or she is not only taking the classes required for admission to medical school, but also has a major in a specific subject matter area. For example, a student can major in Art and still go to medical school so long as he or she has 1) successfully completed the courses required for admission to medical school, 2) has both a strong science and overall college GPA, and 3) has demonstrated a dedicated interest in health care delivery. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Pre-professional | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Bowling Green State University, 205 Administration Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2015 | Founded in 1929 as the College of Liberal Arts, the College of Arts and Sciences today is the largest and most diverse college at BGSU. Arts & Sciences faculty take a special interest in helping students achieve at the highest levels. Each year, hundreds of Arts and Sciences students work individually with faculty members on independent study and research projects. These experiences enable students to develop a deep understanding of a discipline, acquire problem-solving skills, and prepare for graduate and professional school. The College also contributes to BGSU's dynamic arts scene. A nationally recognized School of Art, an outstanding Theater and Film Department, a growing Film Studies program, and highly regarded Creative Writing program offer students rich opportunities to develop their creative abilities and sponsor a wealth of plays, readings, shows, screenings, and lectures that enrich the entire campus community. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Pre-Dental | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is useful for students who plan to enter dental school after graduating from college. When a student is "pre-dent", he or she is not only taking the classes required for admission to dental school, but also has a major in a specific subject matter area. For example, a student can major in Art and still go to dental school so long as he or she has 1) successfully completed the courses required for admission to dental school, 2) has both a strong science and overall college GPA, and 3) has demonstrated a dedicated interest in health care delivery. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Pre-professional | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Bowling Green State University, 205 Administration Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2015 | Founded in 1929 as the College of Liberal Arts, the College of Arts and Sciences today is the largest and most diverse college at BGSU. Arts & Sciences faculty take a special interest in helping students achieve at the highest levels. Each year, hundreds of Arts and Sciences students work individually with faculty members on independent study and research projects. These experiences enable students to develop a deep understanding of a discipline, acquire problem-solving skills, and prepare for graduate and professional school. The College also contributes to BGSU's dynamic arts scene. A nationally recognized School of Art, an outstanding Theater and Film Department, a growing Film Studies program, and highly regarded Creative Writing program offer students rich opportunities to develop their creative abilities and sponsor a wealth of plays, readings, shows, screenings, and lectures that enrich the entire campus community. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Pre-Law | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is offered through the College of Arts and Sciences at Bowling Green State University. The Pre-Law track offers students the skills, focus, and broad-based education that will steer them towards success at the top law schools in the country. BGSU has a strong record of preparing students for success in law school and the legal profession. The Pre-Law program gives students a competitive edge by combining challenging and varied courses, specially-designed advising for our students, and the involvement of leading University alumni in the field of law. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Pre-professional | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Bowling Green State University, 205 Administration Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2015 | Founded in 1929 as the College of Liberal Arts, the College of Arts and Sciences today is the largest and most diverse college at BGSU. Arts & Sciences faculty take a special interest in helping students achieve at the highest levels. Each year, hundreds of Arts and Sciences students work individually with faculty members on independent study and research projects. These experiences enable students to develop a deep understanding of a discipline, acquire problem-solving skills, and prepare for graduate and professional school. The College also contributes to BGSU's dynamic arts scene. A nationally recognized School of Art, an outstanding Theater and Film Department, a growing Film Studies program, and highly regarded Creative Writing program offer students rich opportunities to develop their creative abilities and sponsor a wealth of plays, readings, shows, screenings, and lectures that enrich the entire campus community. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Pre-Occupational Therapy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is for students who plan to enter a school of occupational therapy after graduating from college. When a student is "pre-occupational therapy", he or she is not only taking the classes required for admission to occupational therapy school, but also has a major in a specific subject matter area. For example, a student can major in Art and still go to occupational therapy school so long as he or she has 1) successfully completed the courses required for admission to occupational therapy school, 2) has a strong overall college GPA, and 3) has demonstrated a dedicated interest in health care delivery. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Pre-professional | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Bowling Green State University, 205 Administration Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2015 | Founded in 1929 as the College of Liberal Arts, the College of Arts and Sciences today is the largest and most diverse college at BGSU. Arts & Sciences faculty take a special interest in helping students achieve at the highest levels. Each year, hundreds of Arts and Sciences students work individually with faculty members on independent study and research projects. These experiences enable students to develop a deep understanding of a discipline, acquire problem-solving skills, and prepare for graduate and professional school. The College also contributes to BGSU's dynamic arts scene. A nationally recognized School of Art, an outstanding Theater and Film Department, a growing Film Studies program, and highly regarded Creative Writing program offer students rich opportunities to develop their creative abilities and sponsor a wealth of plays, readings, shows, screenings, and lectures that enrich the entire campus community. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Pre-Pharmacy | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is useful to students who plan to enter a College of Pharmacy and obtain their Pharm.D. degree. There is rarely if ever a "pre-pharm" major available at a university, but all the courses needed to gain admission to a college of pharmacy are available at BGSU. Pre-pharm students at BGSU have two options prior to entering a college of pharmacy: 1) They may complete a four year experience at BGSU and obtain a Bachelor's degree in ANY major (so long as they complete the prerequisites to gain admission to a college of pharmacy), or 2) They may complete roughly three years of coursework at BGSU and apply to be admitted to a college of pharmacy after only three years of undergraduate classes; with this option, students will not earn a Bachelor's degree prior to entering a college of pharmacy. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Pre-professional | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Bowling Green State University, 205 Administration Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2015 | Founded in 1929 as the College of Liberal Arts, the College of Arts and Sciences today is the largest and most diverse college at BGSU. Arts & Sciences faculty take a special interest in helping students achieve at the highest levels. Each year, hundreds of Arts and Sciences students work individually with faculty members on independent study and research projects. These experiences enable students to develop a deep understanding of a discipline, acquire problem-solving skills, and prepare for graduate and professional school. The College also contributes to BGSU's dynamic arts scene. A nationally recognized School of Art, an outstanding Theater and Film Department, a growing Film Studies program, and highly regarded Creative Writing program offer students rich opportunities to develop their creative abilities and sponsor a wealth of plays, readings, shows, screenings, and lectures that enrich the entire campus community. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Pre-Veterinary | Full Time | Variable | US $9,140 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | This program is useful for students who plan to enter veterinary school after graduating from college. For example, a student can major in Art and still go to veterinary school so long as he or she has 1) successfully completed the courses required for admission to veterinary school, 2) has both a strong science and overall college GPA, and 3) has demonstrated a dedicated interest in veterinary medicine. | Students must have a high school record that includes four units of English; three units each of mathematics, science and social studies; two units of a foreign language; and one unit of visual or performing arts with a cumulative grade point average. Scores of SAT, ACT and TOEFL are also required. | Pre-professional | Bowling Green State University | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, Bowling Green State University, 205 Administration Building, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2015 | Founded in 1929 as the College of Liberal Arts, the College of Arts and Sciences today is the largest and most diverse college at BGSU. Arts & Sciences faculty take a special interest in helping students achieve at the highest levels. Each year, hundreds of Arts and Sciences students work individually with faculty members on independent study and research projects. These experiences enable students to develop a deep understanding of a discipline, acquire problem-solving skills, and prepare for graduate and professional school. The College also contributes to BGSU's dynamic arts scene. A nationally recognized School of Art, an outstanding Theater and Film Department, a growing Film Studies program, and highly regarded Creative Writing program offer students rich opportunities to develop their creative abilities and sponsor a wealth of plays, readings, shows, screenings, and lectures that enrich the entire campus community. | Yes | BGSU offers residents the opportunity to live in university-sponsored apartments.The one bedroom or three bedroom apartments will be available as singles or doubles. Students with 30 or more completed semester credit hours a G.P.A of 2.8 and no student discipline record will be eligible to live in the apartments. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunk able. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. All residence halls have electronic door-access security systems and are staffed during late-night hours. Dining facilities offer full-course meals, salads and desserts, pizza, grill favorites and specialty items. No shopping, cooking or clean-up. For more information emailreslife@bgsu.eduor contact +1 419 372 2011. | ||
| 201441 | Bowling Green State University | Specialist in Education | Full Time | Variable | $892 per credit hour for fall 2008-spring 2009 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies | This program of study is spread over courses in educational administration, professional education outside the area of educational administration, and research methods and educational statistics. An internship or field experience is required. | Student should have an official transcripts of all undergraduate and graduate work. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) scores taken within the past five years; preferred minimum composite score of 800. Applicants must have one year of teaching experience in a school setting. Prospective students without teaching experience may be considered; however, a rationale will need to be provided by the student as to why we should consider their application, and the faculty committee will also interview the prospective student. Applicants must also possess a Masters degree. | Masters | BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY | Bowling Green State University | 687 | BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies | College of Education and Human Development, School of Leadership and Policy Studies, Suite 61, McDonald North, BOWLING GREEN, Ohio, 43403, +1 419 372 2247 | This department is to prepare educators to assume leadership roles in formulating and implementing administrative policy and improving practice at all levels of education and in agencies outside of formal educational settings. A variety of graduate and advanced graduate preparation programs is offered to meet the needs of different professionals in a wide range of settings for individuals wishing to enter the professional fields as well as those continuing their education within them. In addition to the formal program areas of the School of Leadership and Policy Studies, service curriculum is provided to support the development of educational leadership through curricula in research methodology and assessment, history and philosophy of education, comparative education, and educational psychology. | Yes | Housing to create outstanding living and dining environment that promote student learning and academic success. All residence halls have a laundry room(s), study areas, TV lounge and computer labs. Each hall is co-ed and non-smoking. Most rooms are carpeted. All rooms have draperies or blinds. All halls and Greek and/or small group living units are provided with beds that are both loftable and bunkable. Cable television access is provided. Cable service includes 70 television channels and WRSA Movie Channel. Provided in each double room: two single beds, two closets or wardrobes, two desks with chairs, two dressers, two wastebaskets, computer connections, one analog telephone line with voice mailbox and Caller-ID capabilities. Contact Information: Phone: +1 419 372 2011, Fax: 419-372-0477, E-mail: reslife@bgsu.edu, Location: 222 Conklin North | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A. Degree in Hebrew | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages | Bradley offers limited courses in Modern Israeli Hebrew (not Biblical or religious Hebrew). Only two years of Hebrew are offered: Introductory Hebrew 101 and 102 and Intermediate Hebrew 201 and 202. The Introductory and Intermediate Hebrew levels are offered every other year, that is, 101 and 102 are offered one year and 201 and 202 are offered the next year. As with other foreign languages, two years of Hebrew study at Bradley fulfill the requirement to obtain a B.A. degree. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include FLH 101, 102 Elementary Hebrew (4 hrs. each); FLH 201, 202 Intermediate Hebrew (3 hrs. each). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2500 | The department offer programs leading to a minor or a Bachelor of Arts in French, German, and Spanish, as well as beginning and intermediate courses in Hebrew. With over 170 majors and minors, the program caters to the diverse interests of Bradley University’s students. From beginning language courses through advanced-level culture, translation, linguistics, commercial and literature classes, each program offers a variety of learning experiences that enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small, which allows students to receive personal attention for their individual needs. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A. in English - English Major/Business Minor | Full Time | 124 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program is for students interested in an MBA program or a number of business and professional fields. Students who major in English develop their skills in preparation for careers in teaching, publishing, industry, business, or service agencies; for such professional studies as law, library science, or medicine; or for graduate studies in literature, language, or creative writing. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include General Education 40 hrs; Foreign Language 3-14 hrs; English Major 33 hrs; Business Minor (Some business minor courses will fulfill gen. ed.) 27-30 hrs; Electives or second Minor 10-24 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2490 | The English department offers programs in literature, language and writing leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in English. A variety of learning experiences enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small so that students can interact with each other and their professors. The department sponsors a visiting writer series, a literary magazine, an essay contest, two annual poetry contests, and the DeGise professional writing competition. It also sponsors a chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honorary society. | No | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A. in English - English Major/Writing | Full Time | 124 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program is for students interested in creative writing or preparation for professional writing, publishing, editing, advertising, etc. Students who major in English develop their skills in preparation for careers in teaching, publishing, industry, business, or service agencies; for such professional studies as law, library science, or medicine; or for graduate studies in literature, language, or creative writing. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include General Education 40 hrs; Foreign Language 3-14 hrs; English Major (ENG 495 could be creative project) 33 hrs; Electives, or Minor (suggested: mass communications for students interested in advertising), or courses selected from creative writing sequence (ENG 207, 303, 307, 407, 503, 507), or advanced writing sequence (ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, 306), ENG 492, ENG 580 37-48 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2490 | The English department offers programs in literature, language and writing leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in English. A variety of learning experiences enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small so that students can interact with each other and their professors. The department sponsors a visiting writer series, a literary magazine, an essay contest, two annual poetry contests, and the DeGise professional writing competition. It also sponsors a chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honorary society. | No | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A. in English - Teacher Education | Full Time | 124-135 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program is for students wishing to meet the requirements for a teaching certificate in English from the Illinois State Board of Education. Students who major in English develop their skills in preparation for careers in teaching, publishing, industry, business, or service agencies; for such professional studies as law, library science, or medicine; or for graduate studies in literature, language, or creative writing. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include General Education 39 hrs; Foreign Language 3-14 hrs; English major 40 hrs; Secondary Education professional courses 42 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2490 | The English department offers programs in literature, language and writing leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in English. A variety of learning experiences enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small so that students can interact with each other and their professors. The department sponsors a visiting writer series, a literary magazine, an essay contest, two annual poetry contests, and the DeGise professional writing competition. It also sponsors a chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honorary society. | No | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A. in English Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program provides variety of learning experiences that enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Students who major in English develop their skills in preparation for careers in teaching, publishing, industry, business, or service agencies; for such professional studies as law, library science, or medicine; or for graduate studies in literature, language, or creative writing. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Requirements at 100-200 level: ENG 180 Intro to English Education 1 hr; ENG 233 American Literature to 1865 or ENG 235 American Literature 1865 to Present 3 hrs; ENG 237 English Literature to 1800 or ENG 239 English Literature 1800 to Present 3 hrs; ENG 270 Introduction to Literary Criticism and Theory 3 hrs; Requirements at 300 level: ENG 311 Introduction to Language 3 hrs; ENG 312 English Grammar 3 hrs; ENG 320 Young Adult Literature 3 hrs; ENG 347 Shakespeare 3 hrs; ENG 391 Methods of Teaching Writing 3 hrs; ENG 392 Methods of Teaching Reading and Literature 3 hrs; Requirement at 400-level: ENG 472 Methods of Teaching Integrated Language Arts 3 hrs; English Education Electives 9 hrs; 200-Level Courses (choose no more than one): ENG 207 Creative Writing I; ENG 233 American Literature to 1865; ENG 235 American Literature 1865 to Present; ENG 237 British Literature to 1800; ENG 239 British Literature 1800 to Present; 300-, 400-, and 500-Level Courses (choose 2 or 3 courses): ENG 300 Exposition; ENG 301 Argumentative Writing; ENG 303 Autobiography; ENG 304 Research Individual Disciplines; ENG 305 Technical Writing; ENG 306 Business Writing; ENG 307 Creative Writing II; ENG 329 Studies African American Literature; ENG 330 Studies Native American Literature; ENG 331 Studies in Women Writers; ENG 332 Early American Literature; ENG 334 19th-Century American Literature; ENG 336 20th-Century American Literature; ENG 341 Medieval English Literature; ENG 344 Renaissance English Literature; ENG 358 18th-Century British Literature; ENG 361 British Romantic Literature; ENG 363 British Victorian Literature; ENG 364 20th-Century British Literature; ENG 368 Science Fiction and Fantasy; ENG 370 Literary Criticism and Theory; ENG 372 Poetry as Genre; ENG 373 Fiction as Genre; ENG 374 Drama as Genre; ENG 378 Individual Authors; ENG 380 Topics in Language and Literature; ENG 381 Literatures of Asia; ENG 407 Creative Writing III; ENG 492 Practicum in English; ENG 503 Creative Non-Fiction; ENG 506 Writing in the Professions; ENG 507 Workshop For Writers; ENG 508 Composing Hypertext; ENG 550 Language Theory; ENG 560 Writing Theory; ENG 570 Contemporary Literature Criticism; ENG 580 Methods Teaching Composition; Required Gen. Ed. course in World Literature: Choose one of the following 3 hrs: ENG 123 European Writers or ENG 385 Literatures of Europe or ENG 381 Literatures of Asia. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2490 | The English department offers programs in literature, language and writing leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in English. A variety of learning experiences enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small so that students can interact with each other and their professors. The department sponsors a visiting writer series, a literary magazine, an essay contest, two annual poetry contests, and the DeGise professional writing competition. It also sponsors a chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honorary society. | No | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A. or B.S. Degree in History | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History | The curriculum is planned to provide an opportunity for more detailed study of human civilizations in Europe, the Americas, and the non-western world. Some history majors prepare themselves to teach in secondary schools, junior colleges, or colleges, many other careers are open to students who have become competent in historical analysis. Professions such as business, law, library science, archaeology, museum and archival work and a variety of local, state and federal government positions are open to students majoring in history. Faculty counselors will talk with students desiring information on career opportunities. Students majoring in history must complete a minimum of 30 hours of history credit, 24 of which must be above 100 level and 15 of which must be above the 200 level. Students desiring to earn a teaching certificate in Illinois must have a minimum of 8 hours in U. S. History and 8 hours in European or World History. They also need a total of 36 hours of history and must complete the certification requirements listed under the Department of Teacher Education (Secondary Education). | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include successful completion of Evolution of Western Civilization, a core course required of all Bradley students (not counted as part of the 30-hour history minimum); Africa, Asia, Latin America, Middle East, or Russia (6 hours, 3 of which must be 300 level or above); 6 hours of U.S. history, including either 203 or 204 and 3 hours of 300 level; 6 hours of European history at the 300 level (Western Civilization is a prerequisite for all European history courses); HIS 350 Historical Methods Seminar; 6 hours of electives from History Department; HIS 450, 451, or 452 Research Seminar; Cross-cultural component (In addition to the 30 hours, all History majors must complete one of the four following options): A. An approved international study experience selected from a variety of Bradley programs including international internships, Bradley Summer Semester abroad, and directed programs at selected international institutions. A minimum of 6 hours must be taken abroad. B. Successful completion of the equivalent of 202 in any foreign language. C. At least 6 hours drawn from the following courses: AAS 200, 211, 300; HIS 304, 305, 339, 375, 382; WMS 200, ENG 129, 190, 329, 330, 331, SOC 313, 314, 315; D. Secondary Education students can fulfill this requirement through ETE 280 and one of the approved courses in category c. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2401 | Bradley University is an independent, privately endowed, coeducational institution. Located on an 85-acre campus in Peoria, Illinois, Bradley was founded in 1897 as Bradley Polytechnic Institute by Lydia Moss Bradley as a memorial to her children and husband, Tobias. It became a four-year college in 1920 and in 1946 became a university and began offering graduate programs. Bradley is accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. With approximately 5,300 undergraduate and 800 graduate students, Bradley is the ideal size for living and learning. Bradley provides a broad choice of academic and pre-professional programs with more than 100 programs of study in five colleges: the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, College of Education and Health Sciences, College of Engineering and Technology, Foster College of Business Administration, and Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts. Through its Graduate School, Bradley awards 14 degrees in over 30 academic areas, including a doctor of physical therapy degree. Programs offered through Continuing Education extend the resources of the university to promote lifelong learning. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A. or B.S. Degree in History Major - Business Minor | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program is for the student who wishes to combine a background in both history and business for the goal of immediate employment opportunities or entrance to an MBA program. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include successful completion of Evolution of Western Civilization, a core course required of all Bradley students (not counted as part of the 30-hour history minimum); Africa, Asia, Latin America, Middle East, or Russia (6 hours, 3 of which must be 300 level or above); 6 hours of U.S. history, including either 203 or 204 and 3 hours of 300 level; 6 hours of European history at the 300 level (Western Civilization is a prerequisite for all European history courses); HIS 350 Historical Methods Seminar; 6 hours of electives from History Department; HIS 450, 451, or 452 Research Seminar; Cross-cultural component (In addition to the 30 hours, all History majors must complete one of the four following options): A. An approved international study experience selected from a variety of Bradley programs including international internships, Bradley Summer Semester abroad, and directed programs at selected international institutions. A minimum of 6 hours must be taken abroad. B. Successful completion of the equivalent of 202 in any foreign language. C. At least 6 hours drawn from the following courses: AAS 200, 211, 300; HIS 304, 305, 339, 375, 382; WMS 200, ENG 129, 190, 329, 330, 331, SOC 313, 314, 315; D. Secondary Education students can fulfill this requirement through ETE 280 and one of the approved courses in category c. In addition to the courses in history the minor requires 30 hours in the Foster College of Business Administration in the following courses: ATG 157, 158; ECO 221/100, 222; QM 262, FIN 322, BMA 172, 342, 352; and MTG 315. Students for the minor should also complete MTH 115. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2401 | Bradley University is an independent, privately endowed, coeducational institution. Located on an 85-acre campus in Peoria, Illinois, Bradley was founded in 1897 as Bradley Polytechnic Institute by Lydia Moss Bradley as a memorial to her children and husband, Tobias. It became a four-year college in 1920 and in 1946 became a university and began offering graduate programs. Bradley is accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. With approximately 5,300 undergraduate and 800 graduate students, Bradley is the ideal size for living and learning. Bradley provides a broad choice of academic and pre-professional programs with more than 100 programs of study in five colleges: the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, College of Education and Health Sciences, College of Engineering and Technology, Foster College of Business Administration, and Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts. Through its Graduate School, Bradley awards 14 degrees in over 30 academic areas, including a doctor of physical therapy degree. Programs offered through Continuing Education extend the resources of the university to promote lifelong learning. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./ B.S. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Economics | This program is designed to provide students with an understanding of economic theory, quantitative tools, a specialized understanding of those particular areas of interest in economics, and a broad background in the humanities, physical sciences, and social sciences. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include ENG 101 Composition - 3 hrs; MTH 115 Brief Calculus with Applications I - 4 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles - 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process - 3 hrs; BUS 100 Contemporary Business - 3 hrs; BMA 172 / Competency Exam - 1 hr; General Education Courses - 15 hrs; BUS 210 Team Dynamics - 1 hr; ATG 158 Accounting Principles - 3 hrs; ECO 221 Principles of Microeconomics -3 hrs; ECO 222 Principles of Macroeconomics - 3 hrs; QM 262, 263 Quantitative Analysis I and II - 6 hrs; Philosophy Elective - 3 hrs; General Education Courses - 13 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing - 3 hrs; ECO 332 Intermediate Microeconomics Theory - 3 hrs; ECO 333 Intermediate Macroeconomics Theory - 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance - 3 hrs; IB 206 Introduction to International Business - 2 hrs; BMA 342 Legal Environment of Business - 3 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations - 3 hrs; BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies - 1 hr; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing - 3 hrs; ECO 300 Economics Colloquium for Juniors - 1 hr; Economics Electives - 6 hrs; BMA 372 Management Information Systems - 3 hrs; ECO 498, 499 Senior Seminar in Economics - 3 hrs; ECO 400 Economics Colloquium for Seniors - 1 hr; BMA 353 Operations Management - 3 hrs; BMA 452 Strategic Management and Business Policy - 3 hrs; Heterodox Elective - 3 hrs; Behavioral Sciences - 6 hrs; Free Electives - 4 hrs; General Education Courses - 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Economics | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Economics, 209 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2297 | The Department of Economics is home to eight full-time faculties. The faculty boasts degrees from some of the most respected doctoral programs in the country. To stay on the cutting edge of their field, every faculty member is engaged in research. The payoff for students is in the classroom. Three of the faculties have won the University’s top teaching award while several others have been recognized with Foster College teaching and research awards. The department hosts Students in Free Enterprise, a student organization that has won many regional competitions and has also competed and one at the national level. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Actuarial Science - Business | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | This program prepare students for entry into diverse professional enterprises, including consulting firms, government risk pooling entities such as the social security administration, insurance companies, public utilities, and select regulatory agencies. A career in actuarial science is widely recognized as one of the most attractive professions available to college graduates. Actuaries apply a unique set of business and mathematical skills in solving financial and social problems. Examples of organizations employing actuaries include insurance companies, public utilities, and select regulatory agencies. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include ATG 157 Accounting Principles - Financial 3 hrs; ATG 158 Accounting Principles - Managerial 3 hrs; BUS 100 Contemporary Business 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; MTH 121 Calculus I 4 hrs; MTH 122 Calculus II 4 hrs; General Education Requirements 8 hrs; BMA 172 / Competency Exam 1 hr; BUS 210 Team Dynamics 1 hr; BMA 175 Introduction to Developing Business Applications 3 hrs; ECO 221 Principles of Microeconomics 3 hrs; ECO 222 Principles of Macroeconomics 3 hrs; MTH 223 Calculus III 4 hrs; MTH 207 Elementary Linear Algebra with Applications 3 hrs; MTH 325 Probability and Statistics I 3 hrs; General Education Requirements 8 hrs; Behavioral Science Requirements 3 hrs; BMA 342 Legal Environment of Business 3 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies 1 hr; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; IB 206 Introduction to International Business 2 hrs; IME 313 Operations Research I 3 hrs; MTH 326 Probability and Statistics II 3 hrs; MTH 335 Topics in Actuarial Science (taken twice under different topics) 3 hrs; General Education Requirements 3 hrs; Two courses chosen from: ECO 301; FIN 325; FIN 327; FIN 328; FIN 423; FIN 425, ASB 315 6 hrs; One additional course from the group: ECO 301; FIN 325; FIN 327; FIN 328; FIN 423; FIN 425, ASB 315 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 3 hrs; MTH 427 Applied Statistical Methods 3 hrs; MTH 335 Topics in Actuarial Science (taken twice under different topics) 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; BMA 372 Management Information Systems 3 hrs; BMA 452 Strategic Management and Business Policy 4 hrs; Behavioral Science Requirements 3 hrs; Free Electives 6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods, 227 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2313 | The Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods consists of nine full-time faculties, including a Financial Executive-in-Residence. Professors in the department possess a wide array of expertise and teach finance, quantitative methods, risk management and actuarial science courses at the undergraduate level, conduct a Finance Concentration in the MBA program, participate in the Executive MBA Program, the Caterpillar Management for the 21st Century program and other executive and professional development programs. Faculty research has been published in many scholarly journals and the department publishes the Journal of Economic and Financial Practice. The Bradley Investment Organization student group develops a mock equity portfolio to practice tracking and analyzing securities. The department sponsors additional student organizations: Financial Management Association, Acclaimed Intellectual Property Association, and Gamma Iota Sigma, the national association for risk management students. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Administration of Criminal Justice | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Administration of Criminal Justice Program | This is an interdepartmental program of the faculties of history, political science, and sociology. Illinois Central College cooperates by offering lower-division courses in criminal justice on the Bradley campus. The mission of the administration of criminal justice program at Bradley University is to provide the students with a thorough understanding of the institutions, structures, and processes through which society defines, perceives, and responds to deviance. Graduates of the program will have numerous career options, including graduate study in the discipline; pursuit of a career in the law; attainment of a professional degree in cognate disciplines such as public administration, social work, and correctional counseling; responsible careers in the growing private security industry; and line and specialist positions in service delivery organizations within the various criminal justice systems. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Lower Division Courses (21 hours): ACJ 110 Introduction to Criminal Justice 3 hrs; ACJ 225 Criminal Law 3 hrs; ACJ 250 Police Organization and Administration 3 hrs; PLS 105 Introduction to American Government 3 hrs; PLS 202 State and Local Government 3 hrs; SOC 100 The Sociological Perspective 3 hrs; HIS 201 American History: Social 3 hrs; Research Requirement (3 hours): PLS 209 Scope and Methods of Political Science 3 hrs or SOC 240 Research Methods 3 hrs; Upper Division Courses (21 hours): PLS 360 Judicial Politics3 hrs; PLS 419 Introduction to Public Administration 3 hrs or PLS 420 Public Management 3 hrs; SOC 430 Perspectives on Deviance 3 hrs; Two of the following courses 6 hrs: SOC 331 Correctional Policies and Society; SOC 332 Juvenile Delinquency; SOC 333 Sociology of Violence; SOC 334 Crime and Society; approved SOC 390 courses; One of the following courses 3 hrs: SOC 302 The Sociology of Diversity; SOC 312 Social Inequality; SOC 313 Race, Ethnicity and Power; SOC 342 Social Policy; HIS 309 History of U.S. Law Enforcement; Internship Requirement (3 hours); PLS 480 Internship in Political Science or SOC 391/392 Internship in Applied Sociology 3 hrs; Strongly Recommended Electives (not required): ACJ 130 Introduction to Investigation; HIS 303 American Urban History; PLS 440 Public Policy Analysis; PLS 422 Urban Politics; PLS 459 Constitutional Law; PLS 460 Constitutional Law; SOC 322 Self and Social Interaction; SOC 340 Demography and Urban Studies. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Administration of Criminal Justice Program | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Administration of Criminal Justice Program, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 676 7611 | The Administration of Criminal Justice Program is an interdisciplinary program designed to provide an education in the social science of criminal justice within the context of a broad-based liberal arts education. The mission of the Administration of Criminal Justice program at Bradley University is to provide the students with a thorough understanding of the institutions, structures and processes through which society defines, perceives and responds to deviance. This mission is accomplished via a unique collaboration between the departments of History, Sociology, and Political Science. The Program is managed by a coordinating committee made up of two members each from these three departments. The curriculum is drawn from courses from the three departments, along with four core courses in the Administration of Criminal Justice. These four core courses are taught in collaboration with Illinois Central College. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Business Management and Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | This program provides a solid grounding in the skills and concepts necessary to meet the complex and challenging tasks of management. The program concentrates on developing the decision-making, problem identification, problem-solving, and interpersonal skills essential for combining the organization’s resources to promote organizational effectiveness. Students in the management and administration major are prepared for management positions in both industry and not-for-profit settings. In larger organizations, graduates typically expect to obtain entry-level management positions. Further, the major provides the background necessary to later advance to middle and upper-level management positions. In smaller firms, graduates may expect to enter middle or upper-level management positions. Students who are uncertain as to their career goals will find that the management and administration major provides excellent preparation in business for a wide range of job opportunities. Additionally, students are well prepared for graduate-level business (MBA, DBA, PhD) or public administration (MPA) programs, law school, and other graduate school programs. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of geometry, 4 units of English (1/2 or 1 unit of which may be speech), 2 units of history and/or government. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include BUS 100 Contemporary Business 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; MTH 115 Brief Calculus with Applications I 4 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles Financial 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; General Education Courses12 hrs; BMA 172/Competency Exam 1 hr; ATG 158 Accounting Principles Managerial 3 hrs; BUS 210 Team Dynamics1 hr; BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies 1 hr; ECO 221, 222 Principles of Economics 6 hrs; QM 262, 263 Quantitative Analysis I and II 6 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; IB 206 International Business 2 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective course outside FCBA10 hrs; BMA 342 Legal Environment of Business 3 hrs; BMA 358 Managerial Decision Making 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective course outside FCBA 3 hrs; BMA 356 Human Resource Management 3 hrs; BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior 3 hrs; BMA Elective 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; Economics Junior-Senior Elective 3 hrs; BMA 353 Operations Management 3 hrs; BMA 358 Managerial Decision Making 3 hrs; BMA electives 6 hrs; Behavioral science or free elective outside FCBA 3 hrs; BMA 452 Strategic Management and Business Policy 4 hrs; BMA 372 Management Information Systems 3 hrs; BMA electives 6 hrs; Free elective outside the FCBA 3 hr. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration, 308 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2306 | The Department of Business Management and Administration is the largest department in the Foster College of Business Administration, offering three majors, two concentrations, and two minors. Seventeen full-time faculty members teach in the department. Many have won university or college awards for teaching and research. The department received the inaugural Helen Bartlett Award for Excellence in Service to Students and sponsors the Journal of Small Business Strategy. The department is host to the Bradley chapters of the Collegiate Entrepreneurs’ Organization, the Association of Information Technology Professionals, Society for Human Resource Managers and the Society for the Advancement of Management. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Business Management and Administration - Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | This program provides a solid grounding in the skills and concepts necessary to meet the complex and challenging tasks of management. The program concentrates on developing the decision-making, problem identification, problem-solving, and interpersonal skills essential for combining the organization’s resources to promote organizational effectiveness. Students in the management and administration major are prepared for management positions in both industry and not-for-profit settings. In larger organizations, graduates typically expect to obtain entry-level management positions. Further, the major provides the background necessary to later advance to middle and upper-level management positions. In smaller firms, graduates may expect to enter middle or upper-level management positions. Students who are uncertain as to their career goals will find that the management and administration major provides excellent preparation in business for a wide range of job opportunities. Additionally, students are well prepared for graduate-level business (MBA, DBA, PhD) or public administration (MPA) programs, law school, and other graduate school programs. The human resource management concentration prepares students for careers in recruiting and training, compensation management, benefits administration, and labor-management relations. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of geometry, 4 units of English (1/2 or 1 unit of which may be speech), 2 units of history and/or government. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include BUS 100 Contemporary Business 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; MTH 115 Brief Calculus with Applications I 4 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles - Financial 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; General Education Courses12 hrs; BMA 172/Competency Exam 1 hr; ATG 158 Accounting Principles - Managerial 3 hrs; BUS 210 Team Dynamics1 hr; BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies 1 hr; ECO 221, 222 Principles of Economics 6 hrs; QM 262, 263 Quantitative Analysis I and II 6 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; IB 206 International Business 2 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective course outside FCBA10 hrs; BMA 342 Legal Environment of Business 3 hrs; BMA 356 Human Resource Management 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; PSY 310 Industrial and Organization Psychology or PSY 411 Tests and Measurements 3 hrs; BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior 3 hrs; BMA 372 Management Information Systems 3 hrs; BMA 456 Compensation Management 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective course outside FCBA3 hrs; BMA 353 Operations Management 3 hrs; BMA 355 Labor-Management Relations 3 hrs; BMA 358 Managerial Decision Making 3 hrs; ECO 310 Labor Problems 3 hrs; BMA 457 Human Resource Theory and Program Design 3 hrs; BMA 446 Employment Law 3 hrs; BMA 452 Strategic Management and Business Policy 4 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective course outside FCBA9 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration, 308 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2306 | The Department of Business Management and Administration is the largest department in the Foster College of Business Administration, offering three majors, two concentrations, and two minors. Seventeen full-time faculty members teach in the department. Many have won university or college awards for teaching and research. The department received the inaugural Helen Bartlett Award for Excellence in Service to Students and sponsors the Journal of Small Business Strategy. The department is host to the Bradley chapters of the Collegiate Entrepreneurs’ Organization, the Association of Information Technology Professionals, Society for Human Resource Managers and the Society for the Advancement of Management. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Business Management and Administration - Legal Studies in Business | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | This program provides a solid grounding in the skills and concepts necessary to meet the complex and challenging tasks of management. The program concentrates on developing the decision-making, problem identification, problem-solving, and interpersonal skills essential for combining the organization’s resources to promote organizational effectiveness. Students in the management and administration major are prepared for management positions in both industry and not-for-profit settings. In larger organizations, graduates typically expect to obtain entry-level management positions. Further, the major provides the background necessary to later advance to middle and upper-level management positions. In smaller firms, graduates may expect to enter middle or upper-level management positions. Students who are uncertain as to their career goals will find that the management and administration major provides excellent preparation in business for a wide range of job opportunities. Additionally, students are well prepared for graduate-level business (MBA, DBA, PhD) or public administration (MPA) programs, law school, and other graduate school programs. The legal studies in business concentration prepare students for careers with a significant legal component, such as trust administration, real estate, or government. Some students go on to law school. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of geometry, 4 units of English (1/2 or 1 unit of which may be speech), 2 units of history and/or government. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include BUS 100 Contemporary Business 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; MTH 115 Brief Calculus with Applications I 4 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles Financial 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; General Education Courses12 hrs; BMA 172/Competency Exam 1 hr; ATG 158 Accounting Principles Managerial 3 hrs; BUS 210 Team Dynamics1 hr; BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies 1 hr; ECO 221, 222 Principles of Economics 6 hrs; QM 262, 263 Quantitative Analysis I and II 6 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; IB 206 International Business 2 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective course outside FCBA10 hrs; BMA 342 Legal Environment of Business 3 hrs; BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; Behavioral Science or free elective course 3 hrs; BMA 345 Law of Business 3 hrs; BMA 356 Human Resource Management 3 hrs; BMA 372 Management Information Systems 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective course outside FCBA 3 hrs; BMA 353 Operations Management 3 hrs; BMA 358 Managerial Decision Making 3 hrs; BMA 395 Real Estate Principles 3 hrs; BMA Elective 3 hrs; Free Elective outside FCBA 3 hrs; BMA 446 Employment Law 3 hrs; BMA 452 Strategic Management and Business Policy 4 hrs; Choice of ECO 352, ECO 362, PLS 317, PLS 459, PLS 460 3 hrs; ECO Jr.-Sr. elective or free elective outside FCBA 6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration, 308 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2306 | The Department of Business Management and Administration is the largest department in the Foster College of Business Administration, offering three majors, two concentrations, and two minors. Seventeen full-time faculty members teach in the department. Many have won university or college awards for teaching and research. The department received the inaugural Helen Bartlett Award for Excellence in Service to Students and sponsors the Journal of Small Business Strategy. The department is host to the Bradley chapters of the Collegiate Entrepreneurs’ Organization, the Association of Information Technology Professionals, Society for Human Resource Managers and the Society for the Advancement of Management. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Computer Information Systems | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | Computer information systems is a discipline that focuses on information technology and its applications, i.e., on methods, technology, and tools to generate, process, modify, store, retrieve, and distribute information. Computer information systems has a wide variety of applications, but the mathematical requirements are not as rigorous as they are for computer science because there is less focus on theoretical and algorithmic foundations. Graduates are employed by a variety of industries and non-profit organizations as software engineers and/or developers, system administrators and/or developers, system analysts, network administrators, web developers and/or technologists, software test engineers, and database administrators and/or developers. The concentrations available in this program are computer game technology; software, Web, and computer security. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Computer Science and Computer Information Systems: 45 semester hours including CS 101, CS 102, CS 140, CIS 210, CS 220, CS 370, CS 390, CIS 393, CS 480, CIS 430, CIS 445, CIS 475, and CIS 491; Choose one course from the following list: BMA 379 or equivalent, CIS 415, CIS 435, CIS 495; a track consisting of at least 9 semester hours approved by the department; Mathematics: MTH 120 and MTH 111, or equivalents; Psychology: PSY 104 and PSY 320, or equivalents; Communication: COM 292 or equivalent; English: ENG 305 or ENG 306, or equivalents; Business Management and Administration: BMA 352 and BMA 385, or equivalents; Computer Game Technology Concentration 12 hours: Required courses: CIS 451 Computer Game Design 3 hrs; CIS 452 Computer Game Modification 3 hrs; CIS 459 Computer Game Capstone Project 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose one from the following): CIS 453 Concepting and Storytelling 3 hrs; CIS 455 Computer Graphics 3 hrs; CIS 456 Game Engine Programming 3 hrs; CIS 457 Digital Animation 3 hrs; CIS 458 Sound Design 3 hrs; Software, Web, and Computer Security Concentration 12 hours: BMA 379 Information System Security, or equivalent 3 hrs; CIS 415 Applied Cryptography 3 hrs; CIS 435 Computer Networks and System Security 3 hrs; CIS 495 Software and Web Applications Security 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Computer Science | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | Computer science is the study of theoretical and algorithmic foundations used in computer systems. Students are trained to analyze requirements, design, develop, and test software systems, devise new innovations and applications in computing, and solve scientific, engineering, and business problems requiring computer applications. Graduates are employed by a variety of industries and non-profit organizations as software engineers and/or developers, system administrators and/or developers, system analysts, network administrators, web developers and/or technologists, software test engineers, and database administrators and/or developers. The concentrations available in this program are computer game technology; software, Web, and computer security. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Computer Science: 45 semester hours including CS 101, CS 102, CS 140, CS 210, CS 215, CS 220, CS 321, CS 330, CS 370, CS 390, CS 480, CS 490, CS 491; at least 24 semester hours must be 300 level or higher; Mathematics and Science: 12 semester hours of mathematics, including MTH 120, MTH 121, MTH 122, and one elective at the 200 level or higher; MTH 325, or IME 311, or QM 262; 8 semester hours of science: two courses, with laboratories, designated for science or engineering majors; Computer Game Technology Concentration 12 hours: Required courses: CIS 451 Computer Game Design 3 hrs; CIS 452 Computer Game Modification 3 hrs; CIS 459 Computer Game Capstone Project 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose one from the following): CIS 453 Concepting and Storytelling 3 hrs; CIS 455 Computer Graphics 3 hrs; CIS 456 Game Engine Programming 3 hrs; CIS 457 Digital Animation 3 hrs; CIS 458 Sound Design 3 hrs; Software, Web, and Computer Security Concentration 12 hours: BMA 379 Information System Security, or equivalent 3 hrs; CIS 415 Applied Cryptography 3 hrs; CIS 435 Computer Networks and System Security 3 hrs; CIS 495 Software and Web Applications Security 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Entrepreneurship | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | This program prepares students to own, manage, or work successfully in small and emerging businesses or to enhance their value in large organizations. Students learn how to research new product or service ideas, determine their feasibility, and develop business plans necessary to launch a business, a new product, or a new service. They develop the skills to operate a business once it is started, grow the business, and eventually sell it or pass it on to next generation. The major helps students understand the functional areas of business and apply the theory to the unique situations found in small or growing ventures. Students with an entrepreneurship major are also prepared for careers in consulting or working within a family business setting. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of geometry, 4 units of English (1/2 or 1 unit of which may be speech), 2 units of history and/or government. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include BUS 100 Contemporary Business 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; MTH 115 Brief Calculus with Applications I 4 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles Financial 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; BMA 172/Competency Exam 1 hr; General Education courses 12 hrs; ATG 158 Accounting Principles Managerial 3 hrs; BUS 210 Team Dynamics 1 hr; BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies 1 hr; ECO 221, 222 Principles of Economics 6 hrs; QM 262, 263 Quantitative Analysis I and II 6 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective courses outside FCBA 15 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; BMA 342 Legal Environment of Business 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; BMA 372 Management Information Systems 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; BMA 382 Entrepreneurship 3 hrs; BMA 383 Small Business Management 3 hrs; BMA 385 Technology Entrepreneurship 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; IB 206 International Business – 2 hrs; General Education courses 3 hrs; BMA 356 Human Resource Management 3 hrs; MTG 381 Integrated Marketing Communications or MTG 393 Retailing, or MTG 410 Services Marketing 3 hrs; BMA/FIN 384 Entrepreneurial Finance or ATG 204 Cost Accounting 3 hrs; BMA 353 Operations Management 3 hrs; BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior 3 hrs; ECO 310 Labor Economics or ECO 335 Managerial Economics 3 hrs; BMA 452 Strategic Management and Business Policy 4 hrs; Behavioral science or free electives outside FCBA 9 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration, 308 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2306 | The Department of Business Management and Administration is the largest department in the Foster College of Business Administration, offering three majors, two concentrations, and two minors. Seventeen full-time faculty members teach in the department. Many have won university or college awards for teaching and research. The department received the inaugural Helen Bartlett Award for Excellence in Service to Students and sponsors the Journal of Small Business Strategy. The department is host to the Bradley chapters of the Collegiate Entrepreneurs’ Organization, the Association of Information Technology Professionals, Society for Human Resource Managers and the Society for the Advancement of Management. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | This program prepares students for careers not just entry-level positions - in the competitive world of finance. Students learn to understand the problems of obtaining and using financial resources and financial risk management. The program helps develop students’ analytical skills, use of computers for analysis and presentations, and communication skills. The major is flexible, allowing students to select courses preparing them for work in international financial management, investments, futures, forward markets, options markets, real estate, insurance, or personal financial planning. The finance major enables students to understand the problems of obtaining and using monetary resources. Students select options preparing them for work in corporate finance, the securities area, futures, forward markets, options markets, real estate, insurance, or personal financial planning. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include BUS 100 Contemporary Business 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; MTH 115 or 121 Calculus I 4 hrs; QM 260 Quantitative Methods in Finance or MTH 122 Calculus II 3 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles Financial 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; Programming Language (Section F) 3 hrs; General Education and/or Behavioral Science 8 hrs; BMA 172 / Competency Exam 1 hr; ATG 158 Accounting Principles 3 hrs; BUS 210 Team Dynamics 1 hr; ECO 221 Principles of Microeconomics 3 hrs; ECO 222 Principles of Macroeconomics 3 hrs; QM 262 Quantitative Analysis I 3 hrs; QM 263 Quantitative Analysis II 3 hrs; General Education, Behavioral Science, Finance Elective (FIN 220) and/or Tools Course (Section C, ATG 204) 16 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; IB 206 Introduction to International Business 2 hrs; BMA 342 Legal Environment of Business 3 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; BMA 372 Management Information Systems 3 hrs; BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies 1 hr; Finance Electives (Consider Section D, FIN 323) 6 hrs; Tools Course (Section C), Finance Elective, General Education and/or Free Electives 3 hrs; BMA 353 Operations Management 3 hrs; ECO Junior-Senior Elective (Consider Section D, ECO 390 or 391) 3 hrs; Finance Electives (Consider Section D, FIN 323) 6 hrs; Senior Finance Elective 3 hrs; FIN 494 Financial Strategy 3 hrs; BMA 452 Strategic Management and Business Policy 4 hrs; International Requirement (Section D) or Free Elective 3 hrs; General Education, Finance Elective, and/or Free Electives 6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods, 227 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2313 | The Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods consists of nine full-time faculties, including a Financial Executive-in-Residence. Professors in the department possess a wide array of expertise and teach finance, quantitative methods, risk management and actuarial science courses at the undergraduate level, conduct a Finance Concentration in the MBA program, participate in the Executive MBA Program, the Caterpillar Management for the 21st Century program and other executive and professional development programs. Faculty research has been published in many scholarly journals and the department publishes the Journal of Economic and Financial Practice. The Bradley Investment Organization student group develops a mock equity portfolio to practice tracking and analyzing securities. The department sponsors additional student organizations: Financial Management Association, Acclaimed Intellectual Property Association, and Gamma Iota Sigma, the national association for risk management students. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Foods, Nutrition, and Wellness Major | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program is designed for the student who wants to study food and nutrition but does not want to become a registered dietitian. This major will not allow the student to apply to dietetic internships or become a registered dietitian. This major combines the student's interest in nutrition and wellness with other areas of interest and allows the student to individualize his/her program of study. A minor is required with this concentration. Students can select their minor to support their special interests, e.g. health professions, government feeding programs, health and fitness centers, and the food industry. Careers in wellness, foods science, food service, product development, food marketing, communication, and business consulting offer many diverse opportunities for graduates in this major. The Foods, Nutrition, and Wellness major offer a flexible professional program for the pursuit of entry level careers in foods and nutrition. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include University Requirements: MTH 111 Elementary Statistics 3 hrs; ECO 100 Introduction to Economics or ECO 221 Principles of Microeconomics 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; CHM 100 Fundamentals of General Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 101 Fundamentals of General Chemistry Lab 1 hr; Another science course to meet the 6-hour requirement; Family and Consumer Sciences Core 12 hours: FCS 140 Introduction to Family and Consumer Sciences 2 hrs; FCS 246 Family Systems and Applications 3 hrs; FCS 300 Consumer Issues in America 3 hrs; FCS elective to be chosen from the following: FCS 341 Human Development Through the Lifespan 3 hrs; FCS 342 Child Development Laboratory 3 hrs; FCS 440 Family Relations 3 hrs; FCS 400 Senior Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences 1 hr; Required Professional Work Experience: FCS 461 Practicum in Foods, Nutrition, and Dietetics 3 hrs; Additional Required FCS Courses 34 hours: FCS 104 Introductory Food Principles 4 hrs; FCS 220 Consumer Issues in Health Care 3 hrs; FCS 303 Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 306 Community Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 307 Life Cycle Nutrition 2 hrs; FCS 309 Investigation of Food Topics 3 hrs; FCS 405 Food Service Systems 3 hrs; FCS 407 Nutritional Assessment 2 hrs; FCS 408 Management in Food Service 3 hrs; FCS 410 Advanced Nutrition 4 hrs; FCS 411 Medical Nutrition Therapy 4 hrs; Required Professional Work Experience: FCS 461 Practicum in Foods, Nutrition, and Dietetics 3 hrs; Additional Required FCS Courses 23 hours: 1. Required: FCS 104 Introductory Food Principles 4 hrs; FCS 220 Consumer Issues in Health care 3 hrs; FCS 303 Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 306 Community Nutrition 3 hrs; 2. Select 10 hours from the following: FCS 203 Health, Safety and Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 304 Sports and Exercise Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 307 Life Cycle Nutrition 2 hrs; FCS 309 Investigation of Food Topics 3 hrs; FCS 405 Food Service Systems 3 hrs; FCS 408 Management in Food Service 3 hrs; FCS 410 Advanced Nutrition 4 hrs; FCS 411 Medical Nutrition Therapy 4 hrs; Required Supporting Course 6-7 hours: BIO 111 Introduction to Cell Biology 3-4; BIO 200 Human Anatomy and Physiology 3; Required Minor: 12-23 hours: student choosing a concentration in Foods and Nutrition is allowed sufficient curriculum flexibility to specialize in a particular area of interest including public and community nutrition, nutrition and wellness, or foodservice management. Guided by the interest of the student, a minor to support the student’s career goals will be incorporated into the degree plan. Depending on the minor chosen, 12-23 hours of minor coursework will be required. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Bradley Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2433 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences traces its roots to the founding of Bradley University, when Nellie Kedzie designed a home economics curriculum that blended theoretical teaching with hands-on learning. Today that educational philosophy continues to underpin the department, which was renamed to focus on the family as a consuming unit while preparing graduates to meet new and emerging challenges in the field. Career opportunities continue to expand in this field, and Bradley’s FCS department enjoys a high job-placement rate. You’ll choose from careers in teaching, family-and-consumer-sciences-related business, social services, nutrition and dietetics, retail (fashion) merchandising, and others. The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences offers both a local and global focus, empowering graduates to respond to diverse and complex family and consumer issues. It is the department of choice for those studying the interaction of family systems, the relationship between individuals and their environment, and the global influence on well-being and the community. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in International Business | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, International Business Program | The objective of the International Business program is to provide opportunities for students to gain competence in various aspects of international business. The program is interdisciplinary; integrating international studies and foreign languages with business. Bradley's nationally-recognized undergraduate International Business program is one of a few programs of its kind in the country. Students have the option to select career oriented electives in business to prepare them for placement in accounting; finance; human resources; marketing entry level positions. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Foreign Language: 200 Level or above, of which 3 semesters must be in the same language; International Studies: IS 103, 104 Introduction to International Studies; Area Studies - 6 credit hours; International Business: IB 306 Introduction to International Business; IB 323 International Financial Management; IB 390 International Monetary Economics or IB 391 International Trade 2; IB 406 International Business Senior Project; IB 407 Management of International Markets; IB 408 International Business Leadership; Elective courses to be selected from Business, Foreign Language, or International Studies; one of the following 12 or 13 hour career-oriented business functional area emphases: Accounting: ATG 201, ATG 301, and ATG 322 plus two courses to be selected from ATG 204, ATG 277, ATG 401 and ATG 457; Finance: Four courses to be selected from FIN 325, FIN 327, FIN 328, FIN 421, FIN 422, FIN 423, and FIN 424; Human Resource Management: Four courses to be selected from the following: BMA 345, BMA 355, BMA 356, BMA 357, and BMA 459. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, International Business Program | Foster College of Business Administration, International Business Program, 405 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2287 | The objective of the international business curriculum is to provide opportunities for students to gain competence in various aspects of international business. The program is interdisciplinary, integrating international studies and foreign languages with business. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Learning Behavior Specialist I | Full Time | 128 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | Students choosing special education will major in the Learning Behavior Specialist I (LBS I) program. An Illinois Type 10 LBS I Certification qualifies individuals to teach children between the ages of three and 21 with a wide range of disabilities: LD, ED, Intellectual Disabilities, Autism, TBI, Orthopedic, and Other Health Impairments (not including vision or hearing). Additional course work is required for teaching in the general education classroom at the middle school level. Additional course work is required for the Early Childhood Special Education Approval. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Communication Skills: COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 3 hrs; Mathematics: Gen. Ed. Math 3 hrs; Science: a minimum of 11 hours, including coursework in at least three of these disciplines: biology, chemistry, earth science, or physics; Students must have 6 hours of math and/or science beyond General Education requirements to qualify for a Bachelor of Science degree; Coursework must include at least one laboratory science; FS SCI 101 4 hrs; Science electives 7-8 hrs; Foreign Language: Must present credit for two years of college-level foreign language or its equivalent if BA; Humanities: Fine Arts (ART, MUS, or THE) 3 hrs; Human Values Literary or Human Values Philosophical (HL/HP) 3 hrs; Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; Social Forces: Gen. Ed. Social Forces or ETE 115. 0 hrs; Western Civilization (CIV 100) 3 hrs; PSY 104 3 hrs; Professional Education Requirements: Professional Education Component: ETE 100 Technology Applications 1 hr; ETE 107 Mathematics for Teachers I 3 hrs; ETE 108 Mathematics for Teachers II 3 hrs; ETE 115 Schools and Schooling in American Society 3 hrs; ETE 116 Field Experience: Schools and Schooling in American Society 1 hr; ETE 205 Effective Teaching Strategies 3 hrs; ETE 225 Human Development 4 hrs; ETE 280 Exploring Diversity: Learners, Families, and Communities 3 hrs; ETE 325 Methods of Teaching Reading K-8 3 hrs; ETE 335 Methods of Teaching Social Studies K-8 3 hrs; ETE 336 Methods of Teaching Science K-8 3 hrs; ETE 339 Methods of Teaching Mathematics K-8 3 hrs; ETE 353 Methods of Teaching Language Arts K-8 3 hrs; Special Education for LBS I: ETE 234 Language Development 3 hrs; ETE 329 Characteristics and Methods of Emotional and Learning Disabilities 3 hrs; ETE 330 Curriculum Adaptations for Learners with Exceptionalities 3 hrs; ETE 331 Assistive Technology 3 hrs; ETE 342 Guiding Learners and Developing Classroom Communities 3 hrs; ETE 391 Characteristics and Methods of Developmental Disabilities 3 hrs; ETE 392 Novice Teaching for LBS I 4 hrs; ETE 401 Secondary Special Education 3 hrs; ETE 425 Life Planning for Learners with Exceptionalities 3 hrs; ETE 426 Assessment for Learners with Exceptionalities 3 hrs; ETE 445 Educational Collaboration 3 hrs; ETE 490 Student Teaching Professional Portfolio 1 hr; ETE 496 Student Teaching for LBS I K-8 13 hrs; One professional elective 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education, Westlake Hall 203, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3190 | The Department of Teacher Education offers undergraduate programs in early childhood, elementary, secondary, K-12 (art, foreign language, and music), and special education. The Department also offers a graduate degree and certificate programs in Curriculum and Instruction. The mission of Teacher Education at Bradley University is to prepare teachers who will be effective leaders, advocates, and life-long learners. We believe that teaching and learning are dynamic, interactive, life-long processes based on empowering interactions among learners. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Learning Behavior Specialist I/Elementary Education (LBS I/ELE) Option | Full Time | 148 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | The LBS I - ELE program qualifies individuals for both an Illinois Type 10 LBS I Certificate and an Illinois Type 03 Elementary Certificate. The LBSI Certification qualifies individuals to teach children between the ages of 3 and 21 with a wide range of disabilities: LD, ED, Intellectual Disabilities, Autism, TBI, Orthopedic, and Other Health Impairments (not including vision or hearing). The Elementary Certification qualifies individuals to teach kindergarten through 9th grade in self-contained classrooms. Students in this program must choose a concentration from one of the following areas: fine arts, foreign language, science, or social studies. Additional course work for an endorsement is required for teaching in the general education classroom at the middle school level. Additional course work is required for an Early Childhood Special Education Approval. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Communication Skills: COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 3 hrs; Mathematics: Gen. Ed. Math 3 hrs; Science: a minimum of 11 hours, including coursework in at least three of these disciplines: biology, chemistry, earth science, or physics; Students must have 6 hours of math and/or science beyond General Education requirements to qualify for a Bachelor of Science degree; Coursework must include at least one laboratory science; FS SCI 101 4 hrs; Science electives 7-8 hrs; Foreign Language: Must present credit for two years of college-level foreign language or its equivalent if BA; Humanities: Fine Arts (ART, MUS, or THE) 3 hrs; Human Values Literary or Human Values Philosophical (HL/HP) 3 hrs; Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; Social Forces: Gen. Ed. Social Forces or ETE 115. 0 hrs; Western Civilization (CIV 100) 3 hrs; PSY 104 3 hrs; Professional Education Requirements: Professional Education Component: ETE 100 Technology Applications 1 hr; ETE 107 Mathematics for Teachers I 3 hrs; ETE 108 Mathematics for Teachers II 3 hrs; ETE 115 Schools and Schooling in American Society 3 hrs; ETE 116 Field Experience: Schools and Schooling in American Society 1 hr; ETE 205 Effective Teaching Strategies 3 hrs; ETE 225 Human Development 4 hrs; ETE 260 Children’s Literature 3 hrs; ETE 280 Exploring Diversity: Learners, Families, and Communities. 3 hrs; ETE 306 Novice Teaching for PreK-8 4 hrs; ETE 325 Methods of Teaching Reading K-8 3 hrs; ETE 335 Methods of Teaching Social Studies K-8 3 hrs; ETE 336 Methods of Teaching Science K-8 3 hrs; ETE 339 Methods of Teaching Mathematics K-8 3 hrs; ETE 353 Methods of Teaching Language Arts K-8 3 hrs; Special Education for LBS I: ETE 234 Language Development. 3 hrs; ETE 329 Charateristics and Methods of Emotional and Learning Disabilities 3 hrs; ETE 330 Curriculum Adaptations for Learners with Exceptionalities 3 hrs; ETE 331 Assistive Technology 3 hrs; ETE 342 Guiding Learners and Developing Classroom Communities 3 hrs; ETE 391 Characteristics and Methods of Developmental Disabilities 3 hrs; ETE 392 Novice Teaching for LBS I 4 hrs; ETE 401 Secondary Special Education 3 hrs; ETE 425 Life Planning for Learners with Exceptionalities. 3 hrs; ETE 426 Assessment for Learners with Exceptionalities 3 hrs; ETE 445 Educational Collaboration 3 hrs; ETE 490 Student Teaching Professional Portfolio 1 hr; ETE 494 Student Teaching for LBS I and Prek–8 13 hrs; An 18-hour concentration from the following: Fine Arts; Foreign Language; General Science; or General Social Studies 18. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education, Westlake Hall 203, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3190 | The Department of Teacher Education offers undergraduate programs in early childhood, elementary, secondary, K-12 (art, foreign language, and music), and special education. The Department also offers a graduate degree and certificate programs in Curriculum and Instruction. The mission of Teacher Education at Bradley University is to prepare teachers who will be effective leaders, advocates, and life-long learners. We believe that teaching and learning are dynamic, interactive, life-long processes based on empowering interactions among learners. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Liberal Arts and Sciences Physics | Full Time | 129 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This degree prepares the student for a career in physics research or as an excellent preparation for graduate study in physics. The courses in this program produce a strong physics background to enable the student to branch into a wide array of areas of specialization for the future. For advanced students, this degree will promote their placement into fine graduate programs across the country. The students who choose this major can generally be grouped into three categories as follows: Professional Physicist: these students intend to continue their formal education in physics by pursuing a graduate degree in physics; Professional School Preparatory: these students are using the physics major as preparation for enter professional school programs such as medicine, engineering, or law; Second Major: these students use the physics major to develop their problem solving skills and for increasing their understanding of the physical universe while choosing their primary major in areas such as computer science, chemistry, or mathematics. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Gen. Ed.-Western Civilization 3 hrs; PHY 199 Physics Seminar 1 hr; CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1 hr; ENG 101 Composition 3 hrs; MTH 121 Calculus I 4 hrs; PHY 110 University Physics I 4 hrs; Gen. Ed.-Fine Arts 3 hrs; Gen. Ed.-Social Forces 3 hrs; COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; MTH 122 Calculus II 4 hrs; Physics 201 University Physics II 4 hrs; Elective 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. Social Forces-Economics 3 hrs; MTH 223 Calculus III 4 hrs; Gen. Ed. Human Values-Philosophy 3 hrs; PHY 202 Applied Quantum Physics or elective 3 hrs; Gen. Ed.-Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; Elective 3 hrs; MTH 224 Elementary Differential Equations 4 hrs; MTH 207 Linear Algebra 3 hrs; MTH 501 or an approved math course 3 hrs; PHY 305 Electricity and Magnetism 3 hrs; PHY 301 Classical Mechanics 3 hrs; ENG 30X Junior Composition 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. Human Values (Literature) 3 hrs; PHY 303 Quantum Physics or Elective 3 hrs; PHY 306 Electromagnetic Waves 3 hrs; PHY 350 Applied Quantum Physics Lab 1 hr; PHY Elective 3 hrs; Electives 6 hrs; PHY 563 Special Problems in Physics 1 hr; PHY 501 Quantum Mechanics I 3 hrs; PHY 563 Special Problems in Physics 1 hr; PHY 467 Statistical and Thermal Physics 3 hrs; PHY Elective 3 hrs; Electives 6 hrs; PHY Elective 6 hrs; PHY 563 Special Problems in Physics 1 hr; Electives 9 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Bradley University, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3010 | The Department of Physics offers majors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the College of Engineering and Technology. The department consists of four full-time faculty members as well as one full time instructor and two part time instructors who teach every semester. The staff includes an electronics technician, a machinist who supervises the machine shop, and the department secretary. The classes are taught by faculty members holding the Ph.D. Classes are small; introductory class enrollment is 36 students per section, and upper level classes are 10 or less. The department is a student-friendly department. The students receive individual attention from both faculty and staff. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Management Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | The Management information systems (MIS) is an exciting field that combines people skills with technical skills. The MIS major blends the fields of business and information technology. It enables students to be successful in developing appropriate business applications. Information is seen by business as an increasingly important resource. The MIS major teaches students how to manage this vital resource. Graduates of the program can expect interesting and challenging job opportunities in a dynamic field. The MIS major can be a fast track to management positions or the basis for advanced graduate work. Typical graduates’ first jobs are in technical and information related fields or as consultants. After gaining experience, graduates develop new business applications as analysts and then assume management positions. This major prepares students for some of the nation’s fastest growing career opportunities such as systems analysis, computer networking, and business intelligence. The MIS major differs from other computer majors in its emphasis on human aspects and business applications. While knowledge of computer systems is a large part of the program, a larger portion is devoted to getting the right job done. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of geometry, 4 units of English (1/2 or 1 unit of which may be speech), 2 units of history and/or government. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; BUS 100 Contemporary Business 3 hrs; MTH 115 Brief Calculus with Applications I 4 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles - Financial 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; BMA 172/Competency Exam 1 hr; BMA/CIS 175 Intro. to Developing Business Applications 3 hrs; BMA/CIS 275 Business Applications Using Visual Basic 3 hrs; General Education Courses 9 hrs; ATG 158 Accounting Principles - Managerial 3 hrs; ECO 221, 222 Principles of Economics 6 hrs; QM 262, 263 Quantitative Analysis I and II 6 hrs; BMA 272 Mgt. Applications of Personal Computers 3 hrs; BMA 276 Developing Info. Systems for E-commerce 3 hrs; BUS 210 Team Dynamics 1 hr. BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies 1 hr; BUS 220 Career Planning Strategies 1 hr; IB 206 International Business 2 hrs; General Education and Behavioral Science Courses 7 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; BMA 342 Legal Environment of Business 3 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; BMA 372 Management Information Systems 3 hrs; BMA 373 Business Data Communications or BMA 374 Database Management and Administration 3 hrs; BMA 375 Business Systems Analysis and Design 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; General education, behavioral science, and free elective courses outside FCBA 7 hrs; BMA 353 Operations Management 3 hrs; Two courses from: BMA 357, 373, 374, 378 or 379 6 hrs; BMA 452 Strategic Management and Business Policy 4 hrs; BMA 478 Implementing Business Computer Systems 3 hrs; Economics Junior-Senior Elective 3 hrs; General Education, behavioral science, or elective course outside FCBA 12 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Business Management and Administration, 308 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2306 | The Department of Business Management and Administration is the largest department in the Foster College of Business Administration, offering three majors, two concentrations, and two minors. Seventeen full-time faculty members teach in the department. Many have won university or college awards for teaching and research. The department received the inaugural Helen Bartlett Award for Excellence in Service to Students and sponsors the Journal of Small Business Strategy. The department is host to the Bradley chapters of the Collegiate Entrepreneurs’ Organization, the Association of Information Technology Professionals, Society for Human Resource Managers and the Society for the Advancement of Management. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Marketing - Concentration in Professional Selling | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing | This program involves a flexible program that can be tailored to a variety of professional opportunities. After graduation, Bradley marketing students excel in an array of careers, including advertising, research, retail, industrial marketing. Bradley's Marketing majors gain real-world experience in the classroom, giving them a competitive edge when seeking employment. Working in teams, marketing students serve as consultants to real business clients. Students conduct marketing research studies, design advertising plans, design business and marketing plans, or sell real products. Every marketing student is guaranteed at least two of these types of experiences before graduation. The concentration in professional selling requires 13.5 hours of specific coursework in addition to those required for the Marketing major. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Required courses: MTG 205 Marketing Presentations 1.5 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; MTG 341 Marketing Research I 3 hrs; MTG 490 Managerial Marketing 3 hrs; Concentration in Professional Selling: MTG 304 Professional Selling 3 hrs; MTG 384 Sales Management 3 hrs; MTG 404 Advanced Professional Selling 3 hrs; MTG 420 Business Marketing 3 hrs; MTG 493 Experiential Learning/Sales 1.5 hrs; Advertising Specialization: Suggested Marketing Electives: MTG 304 Professional Selling; MTG 350 Consumer Behavior; MTG 381 Integrated Marketing Communications; MTG 405 Strategic Advertising Cases; Other Suggested Courses: ART 305 Editorial Design; COM 300 or 325; PSY 308 Social Psychology; Marketing Research Specialization: Suggested Marketing Electives: MTG 350 Consumer Behavior; MTG 360 Product and Price Strategy; MTG 400 Topics in Marketing; MTG 441 Marketing Research II; MTG 492 Independent Study or Research in Marketing; Other Suggested Courses: BMA 374 Database Management and Administration or QM 326 Business Forecasting; PSY 415 Intermediate Statistics for Psychology; Marketing Management Specialization: Suggested Marketing Electives: MTG 346 International Marketing; MTG 360 Product and Price Strategy; MTG 370 Marketing Channels or MTG 309 Marketing Logistics; MTG 384 Sales Management; MTG 420 Business Marketing; Other Suggested Courses: ECO 332, 333, or 335; BMA 372 Management Information Systems; PSY 310 Industrial and Organizational Psychology; Retailing Specialization: Suggested Marketing Electives: MTG 304 Professional Selling; MTG 350 Consumer Behavior; MTG 360 Product and Price Strategy; MTG 370 Marketing Channels or MTG 309 Marketing Logistics; MTG 393 Retailing; MTG 410 Services Marketing; Other Suggested Courses: FCS 140 Introduction to Family and Consumer Sciences or FCS 336 The History of Fashion; BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior or BMA 382 Entrepreneurship; Industrial Marketing/Sales Management Specialization: Suggested Marketing Courses: MTG 304 Professional Selling; MTG 346 International Marketing; MTG 360 Product and Price Strategy; MTG 370 Marketing Channels or MTG 309 Marketing Logistics; MTG 384 Sales Management; MTG 420 Business Marketing; MTG 492 Independent Study or Research in Marketing; Other Suggested Courses: PSY 308 Social Psychology or PSY 310 Industrial and Organizational Psychology; SOC 100 The Sociological Perspective; BMA 356 Human Resource Management or BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing, 409 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2280 | The Department of Marketing is committed to excellence in teaching, research, and student mentoring. The department consists of ten full-time faculties. Marketing theory and practice evolves and changes continually and faculty stay on the leading edge through their ongoing research and consulting activities. All have published original research in leading marketing journals, contributing to the body of knowledge that they teach. Student organizations provide plenty of opportunities for students to put theory into practice and to demonstrate leadership skills. The student chapter of the American Marketing Association has won awards for outstanding programming and outstanding marketing of the chapter. In 2006, the Bradley sales team placed 1st in the National Collegiate Sales Competition in Atlanta. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Marketing - Concentration in Social Media Marketing | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing | This program involves a flexible program that can be tailored to a variety of professional opportunities. After graduation, Bradley marketing students excel in an array of careers, including advertising, research, retail, industrial marketing. Bradley's Marketing majors gain real-world experience in the classroom, giving them a competitive edge when seeking employment. Working in teams, marketing students serve as consultants to real business clients. Students conduct marketing research studies, design advertising plans, design business and marketing plans, or sell real products. Every marketing student is guaranteed at least two of these types of experiences before graduation. he concentration in social media marketing prepares graduates to address the growing influence of social media on the marketing programs of businesses, institutions, and governments. The concentration requires 12 hours of specific coursework within the 13.5 elective hours of the marketing major. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Required courses: MTG 205 Marketing Presentations 1.5 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; MTG 341 Marketing Research I 3 hrs; MTG 490 Managerial Marketing 3 hrs; Concentration in Social Media Marketing: MTG 350 Consumer Behavior 3 hrs; MTG 381 Integrated Marketing Communications 3 hrs; MTG 391 Social Media Marketing 3 hrs; One 3-hour course from the following list that represents potential domains for the application of social media: MTG 355 Sports Marketing; MTG 304 Professional Selling; MTG 393 Retailing; MTG 405 Strategic Advertising Cases; MTG 410 Services Marketing; MTG 420 Business Marketing; Advertising Specialization: Suggested Marketing Electives: MTG 304 Professional Selling; MTG 350 Consumer Behavior; MTG 381 Integrated Marketing Communications; MTG 405 Strategic Advertising Cases; Other Suggested Courses: ART 305 Editorial Design; COM 300 or 325; PSY 308 Social Psychology; Marketing Research Specialization: Suggested Marketing Electives: MTG 350 Consumer Behavior; MTG 360 Product and Price Strategy; MTG 400 Topics in Marketing; MTG 441 Marketing Research II; MTG 492 Independent Study or Research in Marketing; Other Suggested Courses: BMA 374 Database Management and Administration or QM 326 Business Forecasting; PSY 415 Intermediate Statistics for Psychology; Marketing Management Specialization: Suggested Marketing Electives: MTG 346 International Marketing; MTG 360 Product and Price Strategy; MTG 370 Marketing Channels or MTG 309 Marketing Logistics; MTG 384 Sales Management; MTG 420 Business Marketing; Other Suggested Courses: ECO 332, 333, or 335; BMA 372 Management Information Systems; PSY 310 Industrial and Organizational Psychology; Retailing Specialization: Suggested Marketing Electives: MTG 304 Professional Selling; MTG 350 Consumer Behavior; MTG 360 Product and Price Strategy; MTG 370 Marketing Channels or MTG 309 Marketing Logistics; MTG 393 Retailing; MTG 410 Services Marketing; Other Suggested Courses: FCS 140 Introduction to Family and Consumer Sciences or FCS 336 The History of Fashion; BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior or BMA 382 Entrepreneurship; Industrial Marketing/Sales Management Specialization: Suggested Marketing Courses: MTG 304 Professional Selling; MTG 346 International Marketing; MTG 360 Product and Price Strategy; MTG 370 Marketing Channels or MTG 309 Marketing Logistics; MTG 384 Sales Management; MTG 420 Business Marketing; MTG 492 Independent Study or Research in Marketing; Other Suggested Courses: PSY 308 Social Psychology or PSY 310 Industrial and Organizational Psychology; SOC 100 The Sociological Perspective; BMA 356 Human Resource Management or BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Marketing, 409 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2280 | The Department of Marketing is committed to excellence in teaching, research, and student mentoring. The department consists of ten full-time faculties. Marketing theory and practice evolves and changes continually and faculty stay on the leading edge through their ongoing research and consulting activities. All have published original research in leading marketing journals, contributing to the body of knowledge that they teach. Student organizations provide plenty of opportunities for students to put theory into practice and to demonstrate leadership skills. The student chapter of the American Marketing Association has won awards for outstanding programming and outstanding marketing of the chapter. In 2006, the Bradley sales team placed 1st in the National Collegiate Sales Competition in Atlanta. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S. in Physics Teaching Major - Secondary Education | Full Time | 142-145 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program prepares the student as a high school physics teacher in conjunction with the education department. The graduates of this program are currently highly sought after not only in the state of Illinois, but also across the country as there is currently a severe shortage of physics teachers. The physics teaching majors have been well placed in recent years. Students preparing to teach physics at the high school level must complete the requirements for a secondary teaching certificate to be certified in the state of Illinois. This consists of a minimum of 38 semester hours in professional education courses. The courses used to fulfill the General Education requirement must also be chosen to fulfill certification requirements. Secondary Education-Physics Teaching majors are also required to take courses that will qualify them to be certified in a second teaching area which will require that from 6 to 15 semester hours be completed in the area chosen. Students must consult with advisors from both the Physics Department and College of Education and Health Sciences. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include PHY 110 University Physics I 4 hrs; PHY 199 Physics Seminar 1 hr; MTH 121 Calculus I 4 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. (SF) 3 hrs; CHM 110 Gen. Chem. I or CHM 300 3 hrs; PHY 201 University Physics II 4 hrs; MTH 122 Calculus II 4 hrs; COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; ETE 115 Schools and Schooling in American Society 3 hrs; ETE 116 Field Experience for ETE 115 1 hr; Gen. Ed. - Human Values (ENG 115 or 121) 3 hrs; PHY 202 Applied Quantum Physics 3 hrs; PHY 350 Applied Quantum Physics Laboratory 1 hr; MTH 223 Calculus III 4 hrs; CS 101 Intro. to Programming 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. CIV 100 Western Civilization 3 hrs; ETE 100 Technology Applications 1 hr; ETE 280 Exploring Diversity 3 hrs; PHY 320 Optics 3 hrs; PHY 350 Optics Laboratory 1 hr; MTH 224 Elem. Differential Equations 4 hrs; ETE 225 Human Development 4 hrs; BIO 101 Life Sci. I or BIO 300 3 hrs; FCS 203 or NUR 163, 220, 221, 263, or 376 3 hrs; PHY 305 Electricity and Magnetism 3 hrs; Second Teaching Area 3 hrs; English: 300-level Junior Composition 3 hrs; ETE 360 Teaching Reading in the Content Field 3 hrs; ETE 370 General Secondary Methods I 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. Fine Arts 3 hrs; PHY 301 Classical Mechanics 3 hrs; PHY 306 Electromagnetic Waves 3 hrs; Second Teaching Area 3 hrs; ETE 374 Methods of Teaching Secondary Science 3 hrs; ETE 371 General Secondary Methods II 3 hrs; ETE 379 Novice Teaching in the Secondary School 2 hrs; Gen. Ed. Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; PHY 501 Quantum Mechanics I 3 hrs; PHY 467 Statistical and Thermal Physics 3 hrs; Second Teaching Area 2; MTH 501 or an approved mathematics course 3 hrs; ETE 342 Guiding Learners and Developing Classroom Communities 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. (Humanities Phil.) 3 hrs; PHY 361 Electronics 3 hrs; PHY 563 Special Problems in Physics 2 hrs; ETE 490 Student Teaching Professional Portfolio 1 hr; ETE 499 Student Teaching in the Secondary Schools 10 or 13 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Bradley University, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3010 | The Department of Physics offers majors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the College of Engineering and Technology. The department consists of four full-time faculty members as well as one full time instructor and two part time instructors who teach every semester. The staff includes an electronics technician, a machinist who supervises the machine shop, and the department secretary. The classes are taught by faculty members holding the Ph.D. Classes are small; introductory class enrollment is 36 students per section, and upper level classes are 10 or less. The department is a student-friendly department. The students receive individual attention from both faculty and staff. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S./B.F.A. in Art Education - Teacher Certifcation | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Teaching in the public schools requires a certificate issued by the state of Illinois. Art education majors desiring to teach art at the elementary or secondary level must complete the same requirements as those for a BA or BS degree with a major in studio art, as well as professional education requirements. The state of Illinois requires content area competency tests for certification. Students will be assigned advisors in art and in the department of teacher education. Regular consultation with both advisors is extremely important. This degree requires more than 124 semester hours to complete. It is also possible to earn a BFA degree with teacher certification. However, both options will require more than four years of study. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | |||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S.in Economics (LAS) | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences | Economics is a rigorous and quantitative social science; it provides a scientific method of organizing facts, quantifying and testing hypotheses, and specifying policy alternatives. At the same time, it is a social science, and exposes its majors to the great economic systems past and present. Thus, economics provides a theoretical structure from which to pursue intellectual questions of the highest order. Bradley's Economics-LAS major is designed to provide students with an understanding of economic theory; quantitative tools for dealing with economic variables; a specialized understanding of those particular areas of interest in economics; a broad background in the humanities, physical sciences, and social sciences. Students in the Economics-LAS major are exposed to a wide variety of faculty expertise. In addition to teaching, many instructors consult and are involved in local business development. This practical experience is brought into the classroom. The Economics-LAS major is specifically designed for those students who are planning a career in government, politics, public policy or the law. In addition, this major is excellent preparation for students who wish to pursue a Ph.D. in economics when combined with a minor in mathematics. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Economics 221 (or 100), and 222 6 hrs; Economics Colloquium for Juniors (300) 1 hr; Intermediate Microeconomic Theory (332) 3 hrs; Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory (333) 3 hrs; Economics Colloquium for Seniors (400) 1 hr; Senior Seminar (498, 499) 3 hrs; Economics Electives 6 hrs; At least one heterodox economics course (ECO 313, 345, 351, 362, 444) 3 hrs; Minimum of 26 semester hours in economics including at least 23 semester hours above the 100 level; QM 262, 263, or equivalent 6 hrs; Philosophy 3 hrs; Mathematics (Calculus), MTH 121 or MTH 115 4 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles Financial 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2380 | The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences provides students with the central disciplines of a university education: the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences and mathematical and computational sciences. Programs in the College lead to degrees with specialization in over 20 areas of study. Students may pursue the Bachelor of Arts or the Bachelor of Science. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.A./B.S.in Individualized Major Program | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences | The purpose of the individualized major program is to provide an opportunity for students to design their own courses of study. Students who have completed at least one semester at Bradley or at any other college or university may apply for the program. Entry into the program presupposes a definite objective on the student’s part. Students without definite academic plans should register in academic exploration rather than in the individualized major program. Students in this program must create their own areas of specialization (majors) by developing programs of study around their own particular academic interests. These programs of study may span several academic disciplines, but cannot duplicate existing majors within the university. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2380 | The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences provides students with the central disciplines of a university education: the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences and mathematical and computational sciences. Programs in the College lead to degrees with specialization in over 20 areas of study. Students may pursue the Bachelor of Arts or the Bachelor of Science. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | |||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.S. Degree in Hospitality Leadership | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The purpose of the program is to prepare graduates for careers in hospitality including event planning, foodservice, hotel and lodging management and other recreation and tourism careers. Hospitality Leadership students will have campus experience in an actual foodservice operation, Lydia’s Lounge. They may become a global scholar, but at a minimum are required to complete one study abroad experience. Students will have opportunity to apply for a semester in Disney to complete one of the required internship and complete transferrable classes at a Walt Disney Resort. Students will complete a minor in either management, marketing or professional sales. Options for Hospitality Leadership Majors include: a semester in Hollywood to complete an internship, as well as other courses applicable towards graduation requirements, a 3 + 2 program for students to complete Hospitality Leadership and complete the MBA in 5 years. Hospitality Leadership students will complete 640 internship hours in a variety of hospitality settings. This program prepares leaders to take a respected place in the growing hospitality industry throughout the world. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Fine Arts: Music or Theater Arts 3; Human Values Philosophy or Human Values Literary: RLS 101 Comparative religions 3; Social Forces: ECO 221 Principles of Microeconomics 3; PYS 104 Principles of Psychology 3; Fundamental Concepts in Science: CHM 100 General Chemistry (FS) 3; BIO 101 Life Sciences 1 (FS) 3; FCS 301Nutrition Today (TS) 3; BIO 202 Microbiology and Immunology 3; FCS Core: FCS 140 Introduction to FCS 3; FCS 246 Family Systems 3; FCS 300 Consumer Issues in America 3; Choice of FCS 341, FCS 342, FCS 440 3; FCS 400 Senior Seminar in FCS 1; Additional Required FCS Courses: FCS 170 Hospitality Leadership I 3; FCS 171 Sanitation, Health and Safety 3; FCS 172 Hospitality Practices 3; FCS 270 Event Planning 3; FCS 272 Facilities Services I 3; FCS 370 Hospitality MNGT Accounting 3; FCS 372 Facilities Services II 3; FCS 375 Hospitality Practicum I 3; FCS 376 Hospitality Seminar 1; FCS 470 Special Topics in Hospitality Businesses 3; FCS 475 Hospitality Practicum II 3; FCS 476 Hospitality Seminar II 1; Required Supporting Courses: ATG 157 3; MTG 315 3; BMA 352 3. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Bradley Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2433 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences traces its roots to the founding of Bradley University, when Nellie Kedzie designed a home economics curriculum that blended theoretical teaching with hands-on learning. Today that educational philosophy continues to underpin the department, which was renamed to focus on the family as a consuming unit while preparing graduates to meet new and emerging challenges in the field. Career opportunities continue to expand in this field, and Bradley’s FCS department enjoys a high job-placement rate. You’ll choose from careers in teaching, family-and-consumer-sciences-related business, social services, nutrition and dietetics, retail (fashion) merchandising, and others. The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences offers both a local and global focus, empowering graduates to respond to diverse and complex family and consumer issues. It is the department of choice for those studying the interaction of family systems, the relationship between individuals and their environment, and the global influence on well-being and the community. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.S. in Civil Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction | This program provides students the necessary background for continued professional growth and prepares them for engineering careers. The program offers a broad spectrum of specialties including structures, water resources, environmental engineering, transportation, highway and pavement design, geotechnical engineering, and construction management. The curriculum is designed to give students the broad technical background required for modern civil engineering practice and/or to pursue higher education. Students are trained to be leaders who understand their critical roles in the development and maintenance of society’s infrastructure. The program is founded on a strong core in mathematics as well as natural and engineering sciences. Design practices in civil engineering are integrated throughout the curriculum, culminating in a capstone design course under the supervision of well-qualified faculty and industrial partners. A sequence of courses in the humanities and social sciences helps students understand the impact of engineering solutions on society. The courses selected in the humanities and social sciences are chosen to provide both breadth and depth and meet university general education requirements. The curriculum gives students as much flexibility in technical electives as possible while meeting all accreditation requirements. Within the civil engineering program, students have the option to select elective courses from three areas of emphasis: Internationalization, Sustainability, or Infrastructure. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include CE 100 Intro. to Civil Engineering 1 hr; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; MTH 121 Calculus I 4 hrs; COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; General Education Western Civilization 3 hrs; General Education Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; CE 150 Mechanics I 3 hrs; MTH 122 Calculus II 4 hrs; PHY 110 University Physics I 4 hrs; CON 132 Construction Graphics 2 hrs; CE 124 Emerging Technologies in CEC 1 hr; Basic Science Biology/Astronomy 3 hrs; CE 206 Surveying 2 hrs; CE 250 Mechanics II 3 hrs; CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Lab 1 hr; MTH 223 Calculus III 4 hrs; CE 224 CADD 3 hrs; CE 210 Numerical Methods in CE 3 hrs; CE 270 Mechanics of Materials 3 hrs; CE 260 Fluid Mechanics 3 hrs; General Education Social Forces 3 hrs; MTH 224 Differential Equations 3 hrs; CON 326 Construction Estimating 3 hrs; CE 359 Structural Analysis 4 hrs; CE 360 Introduction to Environmental Engineering 4 hrs; CE 350 Geotechnical Engineering 4 hrs; CE 310 Probability, Statistics and Decision Making in CE 3 hrs; ENG 305 Technical Writing 3 hrs; CE 393 Sustainability and Public Policy 2 hrs; CE 365 Reinforced Concrete Design 4 hrs; CE 356 Pavement Design 4 hrs; CE 480 Transportation Engineering 3 hrs; CE 442 Design of Steel Structures 3 hrs; General Education—Fine Arts 3 hrs; CE Electives 6 hrs; CE 493 Senior Design Project I 1 hr; CE 498 CE Design Project II 3 hrs; Electives 6 hrs; General Education Human Values 3 hrs; General Education Social Forces 3 hrs. Technical Electives: Basic Science (Students may apply up to a maximum of 9 semester hours but not less than 3 semester hours from the following courses): Any biology course; Any astronomy course; Civil Engineering Electives: CE 465 Surface Water Hydrology; CE 481 Projects I; CE 482 Projects II; CE 491 Special Topics I; CE 492 Special Topics II; CE 508 Advanced Soil Mechanics; CE 541 Pollution Modeling; CE 546 Groundwater Hydrology; CE 555 Sustainability and Environmental Regulations; CE 560 Advanced Structural Analysis; CE 570 Advanced Mechanics of Materials; CE 575 Structural Dynamics; CE 580 Highway Safety; CE 588 Transportation Economics; CE 591 Advanced Topics I; CE 592 Advanced Topics II; CE 593 Advanced Project I; CE 594 Advanced Project II; CE 422 Foundation Analysis and Design; CE 430 Water Supply and Hydraulic Engineering; CE 481 Projects I; CE 482 Projects II; CE 491 Special Topics I; CE 492 Special Topics II; CE 515 Advanced Foundation Engineering; CE 542 Advanced Water Treatment; CE 543 Advanced Wastewater Treatment; CE 562 Advanced Steel Design; CE 565 Advanced Concrete Design; CE 567 Prestressed Concrete Design; CE 577 Seismic Design; CE 583 Geometric Highway Design; CE 587 Traffic Signal Design; CE 591 Advanced Topics I; CE 592 Advanced Topics II; CE 593 Advanced Project I; CE 594 Advanced Project II. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2942 | This department leads the university in terms of the number of students sent abroad each year. One of the most significant aspects of the department is the uniqueness of the curriculum it offers. The latest concepts in emerging technologies along with microcomputers are employed in most courses, to insure that our graduates are exposed to the latest technological advances in engineering. The faculties are dedicated professionals with a genuine desire to share their knowledge and experience with students. The diverse backgrounds of the faculty members, outstanding facilities, and small class size, will help the students develop the skills they need to succeed in practice or pursue higher education. Over the years, the seniors have been involved in the analysis and design of many practical projects. The students helped design a recreation facility in southern Indiana involving the construction of two large earth dams, two lakes, and several roads. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.S. in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | 131 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program consists of several curricular components that give the student the opportunity to build a solid foundation of basic physical principles and obtain experience in design as well as insight into the profession and practice of electrical engineering. The lecture sequence consists mostly of required core courses through which the student learns about and acquires problem solving and/or design skills in circuit analysis, programming in C++, electronics, microprocessors, signals and systems, and electromagnetic fields. Furthermore, through elective courses, the student can specialize in areas such as applied electromagnetics, communications, controls, digital signal processing, digital and computer systems, electromechanical systems, embedded systems, medical imaging, and wireless components and systems. This program requires the student to complete a 12-hour professional elective stem. This stem allows the student to take a coherent set of courses so as to enhance the student’s competitiveness in the job market or better prepare for graduate or professional school. A wide range of career opportunities is available to the electrical engineering graduate in many different technical areas and industries. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include EE 101 Intro. Electrical Engineering 1 hr; EE 102 Computer and Programming in EE 2 hrs; MTH 121 Calculus I 4 hrs; CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Lab 1 hr; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. - CIV 100, 101, or 102 Western Civilization or ECO 100 Intro. to Economics 3 hrs; COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; MTH 122 Calculus II 4 hrs; PHY 110 University Physics I 4 hrs; Gen. Ed. - Fine Arts 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. - ECO 100 Intro. to Economics or CIV 100, 101, or 102 Western Civilization 3 hrs; EE 201 Digital Hardware Organization 2 hrs; EE 205 Fundamentals of Circuit Analysis 4 hrs; EE 221 Data Structures and OOP 3 hrs; MTH 223 Calculus III 4 hrs; PHY 201 University Physics II 4 hrs; EE 206 Sophomore Laboratory 2 hrs; EE 231 Simulation and Analysis for Electrical Engineers 2 hrs; MTH 207 Elementary Linear Algebra with Applications 3 hrs; MTH 224 Differential Equations 3 hrs; PHY 202 Applied Quantum Physics 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. Social Forces 3 hrs; EE 301 Signals and Systems I 3 hrs; EE 303 Principles of Electronics I 3 hrs; EE 365 Microprocessors 3 hrs; EE 331 Junior Laboratory I 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; EE 302 Signals and Systems II 3 hrs; EE 304 Principles of Electronics II 3 hrs; EE 332 Junior Laboratory II 2 hrs; EE 381 T-Lines and EM Fields 3 hrs; Approved Professional Elective 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. - Human Values 3 hrs; EE 450 Electronic Product Design 1 hr; EE 451 Senior Capstone Project I 3 hrs; Approved EE Electives 6 hrs; Approved Professional Electives 6 hrs; EE 402 Senior Design Seminar 1 hr; EE 452 Senior Capstone Project II 3 hrs; Approved EE Electives 6 hrs.; Approved Professional Elective 3 hrs; Gen. Ed.-Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2732 | The Department offers degree programs in Electrical Engineering (B.S.E.E. and M.S.E.E.), and Electrical Engineering with Computer option (B.S.E.E.). It takes special pride in the particularly close student-faculty relationships it has developed over the years. Despite the current economic downturn, the job market for Bradley Electrical and Computer Engineers has been very good with recent graduates receiving excellent starting salaries from companies large and small. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.S. in Electrical Engineering with Computer Option | Full Time | 131 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | This program consists of several curricular components that give the student the opportunity to build a solid foundation of basic physical principles and obtain experience in design as well as insight into the profession and practice of electrical engineering. The lecture sequence consists mostly of required core courses through which the student learns about and acquires problem solving and/or design skills in circuit analysis, programming in C++, electronics, microprocessors, signals and systems, and electromagnetic fields. Furthermore, through elective courses, the student can specialize in areas such as applied electromagnetics, communications, controls, digital signal processing, digital and computer systems, electromechanical systems, embedded systems, medical imaging, and wireless components and systems. This program requires the student to complete a 12-hour professional elective stem. This stem allows the student to take a coherent set of courses so as to enhance the student’s competitiveness in the job market or better prepare for graduate or professional school. A wide range of career opportunities is available to the electrical engineering graduate in many different technical areas and industries. The computer option of electrical engineering differs from the regular program in that it requires four EE digital electives. It is also expected that the students in the option focus their project work in the digital area. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include EE 101 Intro. Electrical Engineering 1 hr; EE 102 Computational Techniques for EE 2 hrs; MTH 121 Calculus I 4 hrs; CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Lab 1 hr; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; Gen. Ed.-CIV 100, 101, or 102 Western Civ. or ECO 100 Intro. to Economics 3 hrs; COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; MTH 122 Calculus II 4 hrs; PHY 110 University Physics I 4 hrs; Gen. Ed.-Fine Arts 3 hrs; Gen. Ed.-ECO 100 Intro. to Economics or CIV 100, 101, or 102 Western Civ. 3 hrs; EE 201 Digital Hardware Organization 2 hrs; EE 205 Fundamentals of Circuit Analysis 4 hrs; EE 221 Data Structures and Object-Orientated Programming 3 hrs; MTH 223 Calculus III 4 hrs; PHY 201 University Physics II 4 hrs; EE 206 Sophomore Laboratory 2 hrs; EE 231 Simulation and Analysis for Electrical Engineers 2 hrs; MTH 207 Elementary Linear Algebra with Applications 3 hrs; MTH 224 Differential Equations 3 hrs; PHY 202 Applied Quantum Physics 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. Social Forces 3 hrs; EE 301 Signals and Systems I 3 hrs; EE 303 Principles of Electronics I 3 hrs; EE 365 Microprocessors 3 hrs; EE 331 Junior Laboratory I 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; EE 302 Signals and Systems II 3 hrs; EE 304 Principles of Electronics II 3 hrs; EE 332 Junior Laboratory II 2 hrs; EE 381 T-Lines and EM Fields 3 hrs; Approved Professional Elective 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. – Human Values 3 hrs; EE 450 Electronic Product 1 hr; EE 451 Senior Capstone Project I 3 hrs; EE Digital Electives 6 hrs; Approved Professional Electives 6 hrs; EE 402 Senior Design Seminar 1 hr; EE 452 Senior Capstone Project II 3 hrs; EE Digital Electives 6 hrs; Approved Professional Elective 3 hrs; Gen. Ed. - Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2732 | The Department offers degree programs in Electrical Engineering (B.S.E.E. and M.S.E.E.), and Electrical Engineering with Computer option (B.S.E.E.). It takes special pride in the particularly close student-faculty relationships it has developed over the years. Despite the current economic downturn, the job market for Bradley Electrical and Computer Engineers has been very good with recent graduates receiving excellent starting salaries from companies large and small. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.S. or B.A. Degree in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies | The philosophy program offers courses designed to serve a variety of academic needs by providing a confrontation with the principal thinkers and the fundamental issues that have shaped humankind’s intellectual heritage, by providing a philosophical perspective of several other fields, and by providing - as preparation for graduate study ¬- a solid grounding in the chief figures, methods, division, and problems of philosophy. Regardless of the students’ vocational interests, academic major program, or plans for graduate work, the program seeks to stimulate their intellectual involvement in the continuing re-exploration of basic and meaningful questions. The program emphasizes that the student demonstrate, in philosophy courses, the ability to communicate effectively and acceptably in both written and oral English. The philosophy program provides individualized curricula for students majoring in philosophy. Besides preparation for teaching on the college level, a major in philosophy serves as an excellent pre-law curriculum. In addition, students majoring in economics, the political and social sciences, arts and humanities, history, communications, psychology, and business will find a second major in philosophy eminently beneficial in their own fields of academic emphasis. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include PHL 102 Logic (3 hours); PHL 103 An Inquiry Into Values (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; PHL 201 Philosophy Proseminar I (3 hours); PHL 202 Philosophy Proseminar II (3 hours); PHL 300 Ancient and Medieval Philosophy (3 hours); PHL 304 Renaissance and Modern Philosophy (3 hours); PHL 306 Recent Philosophy (3 hours); PHL 307 Classical Political Philosophy (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; PHL 308 Modern Political Philosophy (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; PHL 311 Existentialism (3 hours); PHL 320 Symbolic Logic (3 hours); PHL 344 Philosophy of Religion (3 hours); PHL 347 Ethics (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; PHL 350 Art in Human Experience (3 hours) Gen. Ed. FA; PHL 403 Seminar in Philosophy (3 hours); PHL 404 Seminar in Philosophy (3 hours); PHL 407 American Political Thought (3 hours); PHL 551 Reading in Philosophy (1-3 hours); PHL 552 Reading in Philosophy (1-3 hours). Student must complete not less than 24 semester hours in philosophy, including not less than 20 hours in courses numbered 200 or above and complete the all-University course requirements and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences course requirements. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2440 | The Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies offers two major programs of study. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | B.S. or B.A. Degree in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies | The primary concern of the program is for the undergraduate student who would elect study in this significant area of human culture and life. A comprehensive and non-sectarian program of studies is provided to meet the special interests and needs of all students. The program is also appropriate for students electing a major in religious studies with the intention of preparing for matriculation for the Master of Arts Degree in Religious Studies (or religion) at another institution. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include RLS 101 Comparative Religion (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; RLS 121 Islamic Civilization (3 hours) Gen. Ed. NW; RLS 200 Contemporary Religion in the United States (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; RLS 280 Psychology of Religion (3 hours); RLS 300 Hebrew Bible/Old Testament (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; RLS 302 New Testament (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; RLS 308 Christian Beliefs and Teachings (3 hours); RLS 310 Religion and Society (3 hours) Gen. Ed. SF; RLS 320 Muslim-Christian Relations (3 hours) Gen. Ed. SF; RLS 321 Islam & the West: Clash of Civilization (3 hours) Gen. Ed. SF; RLS 330 The Human Condition (3 hours); RLS 331 Religions of the Eastern World (3 hours) Gen. Ed. NW; RLS 332 Religions of the World II (3 hours) Gen. Ed. HP; RLS 336 Buddhism and Asian Civilizations (3 hours) Gen. Ed. NW; RLS 338 China: Religion and Culture (3 hours) Gen. Ed. NW; RLS 340 Japan: Religion and Culture (3 hours) Gen. Ed. NW; RLS 344 Philosophy of Religion (3 hours); RLS 350 Topics in Religious Studies (3 hours); RLS 497 Problems in Religious Studies (1-3 hours); RLS 498 Problems in Religious Studies (1-3 hours). Student must complete not less than 24 semester hours in religious studies, including not less than 20 in courses numbered 200 or above; and complete the all-University course requirements and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences course requirements. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2440 | The Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies offers two major programs of study. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | BA/BS in Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | Accounting is an extremely flexible major. The students not only learn about accounting principles but also study business and technology concepts. This broad training opens diverse career paths. Many of the graduates accept positions with public accounting firms and corporations. However, an accounting degree will also allow movement into finance, information systems, management, or consulting positions. An accounting degree helps a student look beyond the numbers to assist both people and businesses with shaping their financial futures. This program meets the needs of students seeking accounting careers in private industry and the public sector and, additionally, lays the foundation for those seeking careers in public practice. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include ATG 201 Accounting Principles-Accounting Techniques; ATG 204 Cost Accounting; ATG 301 Intermediate Accounting I; ATG 302 Intermediate Accounting II; ATG 383 Accounting Systems and Control; ATG 401 Advanced Accounting I; ATG 457 Auditing; ATG 477 Federal Taxes I; Accounting Elective (3 hours); ATG 485 Special Topics in Accounting; ATG 501 Advanced Accounting II; ATG 514 Advanced Managerial Accounting; ATG 526 Fraud Examination; ATG 547 Internal Auditing; ATG 561 International Accounting Issues; ATG 583 Accounting Information Systems; ATG 585 Contemporary Issues in Accounting; ATG 590 Professional Accounting Problems; BMA 345 Law of Business. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, 427 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2290 | The Department of Accounting consists of nine full-time faculties, including one executive-in-residence. The highest priority of the department is to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary to become certified accounting professionals. Many of the accounting faculties are CPAs, giving them practical insight to share with future accounting professionals. Bradley is one of three private Illinois universities that have earned undergraduate accounting accreditation from AACSB International. Less than five percent of the business schools in the nation have accounting programs accredited by AACSB International. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | BA/BS in Accounting with Concentration in Internal Auditing | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | This program meets the needs of students seeking accounting careers in private industry and the public sector and, additionally, lays the foundation for those seeking careers in public practice. Internal auditors are employees of organizations who are responsible for evaluating corporate governance, risk management, and internal control activities. Since internal auditing touches nearly every aspect of an organization, it provides a tremendous opportunity for students to launch their careers because of the breadth of exposure they will receive. Students who have declared an undergraduate accounting major may take 12 hours of course work in order to receive a concentration in internal auditing. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include ATG 201 Accounting Principles-Accounting Techniques; ATG 204 Cost Accounting; ATG 301 Intermediate Accounting I; ATG 302 Intermediate Accounting II; ATG 383 Accounting Systems and Control; ATG 401 Advanced Accounting I; ATG 457 Auditing; ATG 477 Federal Taxes I; Accounting Elective (3 hours); ATG 485 Special Topics in Accounting; ATG 501 Advanced Accounting II; ATG 514 Advanced Managerial Accounting; ATG 526 Fraud Examination; ATG 547 Internal Auditing; ATG 561 International Accounting Issues; ATG 583 Accounting Information Systems; ATG 585 Contemporary Issues in Accounting; ATG 590 Professional Accounting Problems; BMA 345 Law of Business. Concentration Requirements: Three 3-hour courses: ATG 530 Professional Interviewing Skills - 3 hrs; ATG 547 Internal Auditing - 3 hrs; ATG 548 Computer Assisted Audit Techniques - 3 hrs; One 3-hour elective: Students are required to take one three-hour elective supporting the practice of internal auditing. This elective must be approved by the coordinator of the Internal Audit Education Partnership Program. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, 427 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2290 | The Department of Accounting consists of nine full-time faculties, including one executive-in-residence. The highest priority of the department is to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary to become certified accounting professionals. Many of the accounting faculties are CPAs, giving them practical insight to share with future accounting professionals. Bradley is one of three private Illinois universities that have earned undergraduate accounting accreditation from AACSB International. Less than five percent of the business schools in the nation have accounting programs accredited by AACSB International. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | BS/MS in Biochemistry | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The BS/MS program, commonly referred to as 4:1 program, is integrated, accelerated, and research intensive programs that provide opportunities for students to begin a MS while completing requirements for the BS. This program is designed to provide a broad experience in the chemical or biochemical sciences by enhancing the student’s academic and laboratory skills and strengthening critical writing and presentation skills. The program provides a solid foundation for immediate employment or further education. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. Applicants may apply to the program after completing CHM 252; to be admitted, the student must have achieved an overall GPA of 2.50, an average GPA of 2.75 in chemistry courses, and a C or better in all chemistry, mathematics, biology, and physics courses. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Common Curriculum Requirements: CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 116 General Chemistry II 4 hrs; CHM 117 General Chemistry II Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 252 Organic Chemistry I 4 hrs; CHM 253 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 256 Organic Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 257 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 292 Chemical Informatics 1 hr; CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 360 Biochemistry 3 hrs; CHM 470 Physical Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 380 Junior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 0 hrs; One semester of biology (BIO 151), one year of college level physics (PHY 110, 201 or PHY 107, 108) and calculus (MTH 121, 122 or MTH 115, 116); BS Requirements: CHM 361 Biochemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 471 Physical Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 499 Directed Studies in Chemistry 2 hrs; CHM 520 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 562 Protein Structure and Function 3 hrs; CHM 566 Intermediary Metabolism 3 hrs; CHM 580 Literature Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; BIO 310 Genetics 4 hrs; BIO 464 Cell Biology 4 hrs; MS Requirements: CHM 536 Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 599 Research 8 hrs; CHM 680 Research Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; CHM 699 Thesis 1 hr; MS Requirements: CHM 536 Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 599 Research 8 hrs; CHM 680 Research Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; CHM 699 Thesis 1 hr; Graduate Biochemistry Electives: CHM 564 Biochemical Literature 1-2 hrs; CHM 568 Topics in Biochemistry 1-3 hrs; BIO 503 Molecular Genetics 3 hrs; BIO 509 Human Genetics 3 hrs; BIO 568 Cell/Molecular Immunology 3 hrs; Graduate Chemistry Electives: CHM 500 Chemical Topics 1-3 hrs; CHM 512 Molecular Modeling 1 hr; CHM 514 Chemical Group Theory 1 hr; CHM 516 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 520 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 526 Advanced Analytical Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 528 Topics in Analytical Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 532 Descriptive Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 537 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 538 Topics in Inorganic Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 540 Materials Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 541 Materials Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 548 Topics in Materials Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 550 Industrial Organic Chemistry 1 hr; CHM 552 Physical Organic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 554 Organic Spectroscopy 3 hrs; CHM 555 Organic Spectroscopy Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 558 Topics in Organic Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 562 Protein Structure and Function 3 hrs; CHM 566 Intermediary Metabolism 3 hrs; CHM 568 Topics in Biochemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 577 Physical Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 578 Topics in Physical Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 584 Readings in Chemistry or Biochemistry 1-3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | BS/MS in Chemistry | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The BS/MS program, commonly referred to as 4:1 program, is integrated, accelerated, and research intensive programs that provide opportunities for students to begin a MS while completing requirements for the BS. This program is designed to provide a broad experience in the chemical or biochemical sciences by enhancing the student’s academic and laboratory skills and strengthening critical writing and presentation skills. The program provides a solid foundation for immediate employment or further education. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. Applicants may apply to the program after completing CHM 252; to be admitted, the student must have achieved an overall GPA of 2.50, an average GPA of 2.75 in chemistry courses, and a C or better in all chemistry, mathematics, biology, and physics courses. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Common Curriculum Requirements: CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 116 General Chemistry II 4 hrs; CHM 117 General Chemistry II Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 252 Organic Chemistry I 4 hrs; CHM 253 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 256 Organic Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 257 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 292 Chemical Informatics 1 hr; CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 360 Biochemistry 3 hrs; CHM 470 Physical Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 380 Junior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 0 hrs; One semester of biology (BIO 151), one year of college level physics (PHY 110, 201 or PHY 107, 108) and calculus (MTH 121, 122 or MTH 115, 116); BS Requirements: CHM 361 Biochemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 471 Physical Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 476 Physical Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 436 Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 437 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 499 Directed Studies in Chemistry and Biochemistry 2 hrs; CHM 520 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 580 Literature Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; a minimum of five additional hours in chemistry numbered 500 or above, excluding CHM 522. (No more than three of the five credit hours may be laboratory work.) 5 hrs; MS Requirements: CHM 599 Research 8 hrs; CHM 680 Research Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; CHM 699 Thesis 1 hr; Graduate Chemistry Electives: CHM 500 Chemical Topics 1-3 hrs; CHM 512 Molecular Modeling 1 hr; CHM 514 Chemical Group Theory 1 hr; CHM 516 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 520 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 526 Advanced Analytical Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 528 Topics in Analytical Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 532 Descriptive Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 537 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 538 Topics in Inorganic Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 540 Materials Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 541 Materials Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 548 Topics in Materials Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 550 Industrial Organic Chemistry 1 hr; CHM 552 Physical Organic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 554 Organic Spectroscopy 3 hrs; CHM 555 Organic Spectroscopy Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 558 Topics in Organic Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 562 Protein Structure and Function 3 hrs; CHM 566 Intermediary Metabolism 3 hrs; CHM 568 Topics in Biochemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 577 Physical Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 578 Topics in Physical Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 584 Readings in Chemistry or Biochemistry 1-3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | BSN/MSN Nursing Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | This program is designed for the undergraduate nursing major that desires to complete the MSN in Administration along with the BSN. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences, three units of high school mathematics and science (biology/physiology, chemistry and physics). All test values must be earned on the same examination. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; CHM 100, 101 Fund. of Gen. Chem. 4 hrs;BIO 111 Cell Biology 3 hrs; MTH 111 Statistics 3 hrs; ENG 101 Composition 3 hrs; CHM 150 Fund. of Organic Chemistry 2 hrs; CHM 160 Fund. of Biochemistry 2 hrs; BIO 202 Microbiology and Immunology 4 hrs; SOC 100 Social Perspectives 3 hrs; General Education Courses/Electives 3 hrs; BIO 200 Anatomy and Physiology 3 hrs; BIO 203 Anatomy and Physiology Lab 2 hrs; NUR 200 Fundamentals of Nursing (T) 4 hrs; NUR 203 Fundamentals of Nursing (P) 2 hrs; FCS 301 Nutrition Today 3 hrs; BIO 205 Pathophysiology 3 hrs; NUR 204 Intro. to Health Assessment 2 hrs; NUR 206 Adult Health I (T) 3 hrs; NUR 207 Adult Health I (P) 2 hrs; PSY 304 Developmental Psychology 3 hrs; General Education Courses/Electives 3 hrs; General Education Courses/Electives 3 hrs; NUR 306 Maternal/Newborn Nursing (T) 3 hrs; NUR 307 Maternal/Newborn Nursing (P) 2 hrs; NUR 308 Nursing of Children (T) 3 hrs; NUR 309 Nursing of Children (P) 2 hrs; NUR 318 Pharmacology and Implications 2 hrs; PSY 445 Abnormal Psychology 3 hrs; NUR 303 Research in Nursing 3 hrs; NUR 314 Psychiatric Nursing (T) 2 hrs; NUR 315 Psychiatric Nursing (P) 2 hrs; NUR 316 Adult Health II (T) 4 hrs; NUR 317 Adult Health II (P) 2 hrs; ENG 300 Composition 3 hrs; General Education Courses/ Electives 3 hrs; NUR 404 Community Health Nursing (T) 2 hrs; NUR 408 Adult Health III: Medical-Surgical Nursing (T) 3 hrs; NUR 409 Senior Practicum I (P) 5 hrs; NUR 410 Adult Health IV: Nursing Care of the Patient with Multi-System Challenges (T) 3 hrs; NUR 414 Senior Seminar I 1 hr; NUR 417 Senior Practicum II (P) 5 hrs; NUR 418 Nursing Leadership (T) 1 hr; NUR 522 Health Policy 3 hrs; MSN Core Component 8 hrs: NUR 501 Nursing Theories: Analysis and Development 3 hrs; NUR 505 Leadership in the Health Care System 3 hrs; NUR 510 Legal Issues in Nursing 2 hrs; MSN Research Component 7-9 hrs: NUR 520 Research Methods in Nursing 3 hrs; NUR 525 Nursing Research Seminar 2 hrs; NUR 699 Thesis 4 hrs. or NUR 698 Directed Research in Nursing 2 hrs; Nursing Administration Program 14 hrs: NUR 630 Nursing Administration I, Theory 3 hrs; NUR 631 Nursing Administration I, Practicum 4 hrs; NUR 632 Nursing Administration II, Theory 3 hrs; NUR 633 Nursing Administration II, Practicum 4 hrs; Electives 2-4 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | BSN/MSN Nursing Education | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | This program is designed for the undergraduate nursing major that desires to complete the MSN in Education along with the BSN. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences, three units of high school mathematics and science (biology/physiology, chemistry and physics). All test values must be earned on the same examination. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; CHM 100, 101 Fund. of Gen. Chem. 4 hrs;BIO 111 Cell Biology 3 hrs; MTH 111 Statistics 3 hrs; ENG 101 Composition 3 hrs; CHM 150 Fund. of Organic Chemistry 2 hrs; CHM 160 Fund. of Biochemistry 2 hrs; BIO 202 Microbiology and Immunology 4 hrs; SOC 100 Social Perspectives 3 hrs; General Education Courses/Electives 3 hrs; BIO 200 Anatomy and Physiology 3 hrs; BIO 203 Anatomy and Physiology Lab 2 hrs; NUR 200 Fundamentals of Nursing (T) 4 hrs; NUR 203 Fundamentals of Nursing (P) 2 hrs; FCS 301 Nutrition Today 3 hrs; BIO 205 Pathophysiology 3 hrs; NUR 204 Intro. to Health Assessment 2 hrs; NUR 206 Adult Health I (T) 3 hrs; NUR 207 Adult Health I (P) 2 hrs; PSY 304 Developmental Psychology 3 hrs; General Education Courses/Electives 3 hrs; General Education Courses/Electives 3 hrs; NUR 306 Maternal/Newborn Nursing (T) 3 hrs; NUR 307 Maternal/Newborn Nursing (P) 2 hrs; NUR 308 Nursing of Children (T) 3 hrs; NUR 309 Nursing of Children (P) 2 hrs; NUR 318 Pharmacology and Implications 2 hrs; PSY 445 Abnormal Psychology 3 hrs; NUR 303 Research in Nursing 3 hrs; NUR 314 Psychiatric Nursing (T) 2 hrs; NUR 315 Psychiatric Nursing (P) 2 hrs; NUR 316 Adult Health II (T) 4 hrs; NUR 317 Adult Health II (P) 2 hrs; ENG 300 Composition 3 hrs; General Education Courses/ Electives 3 hrs; NUR 404 Community Health Nursing (T) 2 hrs; NUR 408 Adult Health III: Medical-Surgical Nursing (T) 3 hrs; NUR 409 Senior Practicum I (P) 5 hrs; NUR 410 Adult Health IV: Nursing Care of the Patient with Multi-System Challenges (T) 3 hrs; NUR 414 Senior Seminar I 1 hr; NUR 417 Senior Practicum II (P) 5 hrs; NUR 418 Nursing Leadership (T) 1 hr; NUR 522 Health Policy 3 hrs; MSN Core Component 8 hrs: NUR 501 Nursing Theories: Analysis and Development 3 hrs; NUR 505 Leadership in the Health Care System 3 hrs; NUR 510 Legal Issues in Nursing 2 hrs; MSN Research Component 7-9 hrs: NUR 520 Research Methods in Nursing 3 hrs; NUR 525 Nursing Research Seminar 2 hrs; NUR 699 Thesis 4 hrs. or NUR 698 Directed Research in Nursing 2 hrs; Nursing Education Program 14 hrs; NUR 660 Seminar in Nursing Education 3 hrs; NUR 661 Nursing Education Practicum I 4 hrs; NUR 662 Nursing Education Practicum II 4 hrs; ETE 651 Curriculum Theory and Development or ETE 655 Instructional Theory 3 hrs; Electives 2-4 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in English | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This degree requires completion of a 202 or 300-level foreign language course. Only three hours of foreign language are required if the student places at the 202 level or above; as many as 14 hours may be required if the student has less proficiency. In addition to fulfilling the requirements for a B.A. degree, all English majors must complete a minimum of 33 hours in courses above the 100-level. Students who major in English develop their skills in preparation for careers in teaching, publishing, industry, business, or service agencies; for such professional studies as law, library science, or medicine; or for graduate studies in literature, language, or creative writing. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Requirements at the 200-Level - 12 hrs: ENG 233 American Literature to 1865; ENG 235 American Literature 1865 to Present; ENG 237 British Literature to 1800; ENG 239 British Literature 1800 to Present; Requirements at the 300-Level - 3 hrs: ENG 347 Shakespeare; Five different courses from at least four of the following groups: 15 hrs: Group 1. British Periods: ENG 341 Medieval English Literature; ENG 344 Renaissance English Literature; ENG 358 18th Century British Literature; ENG 361 British Romantic Literature; ENG 363 British Victorian Literature; ENG 364 20th Century British Literature; Group 2. American Periods: ENG 332 Early American Literature; ENG 334 19th Century American Literature; ENG 336 20th Century American Literature; Group 3. Genres: ENG 368 Science Fiction and Fantasy; ENG 372 Poetry as Genre; ENG 373 Fiction as Genre; ENG 374 Drama as Genre; Group 4. Individual Authors: ENG 378 Individual Authors; Group 5. Cultural Literary Studies: ENG 329 Studies in African American Literature; ENG 330 Studies in Native American Literature; ENG 331 Studies in Women Writers; ENG 381 Literatures of Asia; Group 6. Topics in Language and Composition: ENG 311 Introduction to Language; ENG 312 English Grammar; ENG 580 Methods of Teaching Composition; Group 7. Criticism and Theory: ENG 370 Literary Criticism and Theory; Group 8. Writing Courses: ENG 207 Creative Writing I; ENG 300 Exposition; ENG 301 Argumentative Writing; ENG 303 Autobiography; ENG 304 Research in Individual Disciplines; ENG 305 Technical Writing; ENG 306 Business Communication; ENG 307 Creative Writing II; ENG 407 Creative Writing III; ENG 492 Practicum in English; ENG 503 Creative Non-Fiction; ENG 507 Workshop for Writers; Requirements at the Senior Level - 3 hrs: ENG 480 Senior Project; ENG 495 Independent Study. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2490 | The English department offers programs in literature, language and writing leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in English. A variety of learning experiences enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small so that students can interact with each other and their professors. The department sponsors a visiting writer series, a literary magazine, an essay contest, two annual poetry contests, and the DeGise professional writing competition. It also sponsors a chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honorary society. | No | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts Degree in International Studies | Full Time | 132 semester hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Institute of International Studies | This program is appropriately diversified to offer a broad political, historical and cultural background as well as to prepare students either for direct entry into government, business or professional service, or for graduate study in international relations, international law, or a related field. Bradley’s Institute of International Studies program remains one of the nation’s few self-contained programs devoted exclusively to undergraduate education in International Studies. Unlike programs at most institutions, International Studies at Bradley is not an interdisciplinary or inter-departmental major, but rather a single academic unit in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include General Education: English Composition 6 hrs; Mathematics 3 hrs; Speech 3 hrs; Western Civilization 3 hrs; Literary Analysis 3 hrs; Fine Arts 3 hrs; Science and Technology 6 hrs; International Studies: IS 103, 104, 182, 250, 255, 275, 495, and any other seven IS courses; Foreign Language: French, German, Spanish: 6 semesters or the equivalent, with two courses at the 300 level; Courses in American government (PLS 105); principles of economics (ECO 221 and 222) and statistics (MTH 111, PSY 205, QM 262 or PLS 209). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Institute of International Studies | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Institute of International Studies, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2450 | The Institute of International Studies offers programs of study leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree in international relations. This degree will serve as a basis for various careers in the field of international relations, for graduate work in international studies or for the understanding of international affairs. The Institute of International Studies at Bradley University was created in 1958 at the suggestion of then-Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. Since its founding, the Institute has established a reputation for superior undergraduate instruction. The Institute is committed to providing a strong pre-professional as well as general program of undergraduate study in international relations drawing students from all areas of the country and around the world. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts Degree or Bachelor of Science Degree with a major in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Applied Music (min. of 4 semesters) 8 hrs; Ensemble (each semester) 4-8 hrs; MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; Two of the following: MUS 235 Music in Its Hist. Persp. I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Hist. Persp. II 3 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Hist. Persp. III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Hist. Persp. IV 3 hrs; Music Electives 9-13. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts Degree with a Major in Art History | Full Time | 43 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | This major is intended to provide a thorough and broad background as a basis for concentrated study and research. Although one foreign language is required to meet the university requirements for the B.A. degree, those intending to go on to graduate art history study are advised to become proficient in a second foreign language. This program provides students with knowledge of the contributions that artists and art make to the discipline and to the society. The field involves the study of visual images and objects in various media, in particular, painting, drawing and sculpture, architecture, photography, video and the decorative arts. The program focuses on the historical, cultural, social, and political context of art and encourages the development of analytical and visual skills and an appreciation for differing aesthetics. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Required Art History courses (6 hours): ART 243 Non-western Art - 3 hrs; ART 245 American Art - 3 hrs; Elective courses in Art History (18 hours): ART 330, ART 335, ART 340, ART 350, ART 360, ART 375, ART 380, ART 390, ART 417, ART 480; Studio Core (13 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; Art 220/221 Professional Lecture Series - 1 hr. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts in French | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages | This program offers a variety of courses in French language, French and Francophone culture and civilization, translation, phonetics, conversation, literature, and business French for students at all levels. To expand French beyond the classroom, the French section sponsors a weekly French conversation table as well as the student-run Bradley French club, which hosts a variety of cultural activities throughout the year. Students majoring in one of the foreign languages will find that Bradley emphasizes the applied skills of speaking the language and understanding the language when it is spoken by a native in ordinary conversation. Topics courses offer a wide variety of language courses in small classes where the student receives personal attention. Students can also choose from a wide variety of language offerings including literature and linguistics, translation, culture, and commercial courses. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include FLF 303 Composition (pre-requisite for other 300 level courses); FLF 304 Conversation; FLF 320 Phonetics; 1 Literature Course: FLF 325, FLF 340 or FLF 341; 1 Civilization Course: FLF 305 or FLF 321; 3 French Electives. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2500 | The department offer programs leading to a minor or a Bachelor of Arts in French, German, and Spanish, as well as beginning and intermediate courses in Hebrew. With over 170 majors and minors, the program caters to the diverse interests of Bradley University’s students. From beginning language courses through advanced-level culture, translation, linguistics, commercial and literature classes, each program offers a variety of learning experiences that enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small, which allows students to receive personal attention for their individual needs. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts in German | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages | The German language is considered the first language of over 150 million persons worldwide. Since the English language is considered by linguists to be a member of the Germanic language family, students at the elementary level find the German language relatively easy to learn and to master. By the end of the third year of study, students are able to read, write, speak, and understand the German language with a high degree of competence. Most of the German language students at Bradley elect study abroad through one of the partner programs in Vienna, Heidelberg, or Dresden. Students majoring in one of the foreign languages will find that Bradley emphasizes the applied skills of speaking the language and understanding the language when it is spoken by a native in ordinary conversation. Topics courses offer a wide variety of language courses in small classes where the student receives personal attention. Students can also choose from a wide variety of language offerings including literature and linguistics, translation, culture, and commercial courses. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include FLG 101, 102 Elementary German (4 hrs. each); FLG 201, 202 Intermediate German (3 hrs. each); FLG 303 Composition (3 hrs.); FLG 304 Conversation (3 hrs.); FLG 316 Topics in German Language and Literature (3 hrs.); FLG 321 Survey of German Culture and Civilization (3 hrs.); FLG 325 Introduction to German Literature (3 hrs.); FLG 334 Commercial German (3 hrs.); FLG 492 Practicum in German (1-3 hrs.); FLG 495 Independent Study (1-3 hrs.). Student must take a minimum of 24 hours at 300 level or above, and approval by the foreign language advisor. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2500 | The department offer programs leading to a minor or a Bachelor of Arts in French, German, and Spanish, as well as beginning and intermediate courses in Hebrew. With over 170 majors and minors, the program caters to the diverse interests of Bradley University’s students. From beginning language courses through advanced-level culture, translation, linguistics, commercial and literature classes, each program offers a variety of learning experiences that enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small, which allows students to receive personal attention for their individual needs. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program is designed to maximize students’ capacity to analyze and interpret the significance and dynamics of political events and governmental processes be they at the global level or at the local community level. Students build an excellent foundation for numerous careers by mastering the accumulated basic general knowledge of political science and developing the related analytical skills. Political science majors most frequently pursue careers in law, business, governmental service, private political organizations, journalism, and academic political science. Many students with yet other career aspirations major in political science so they can understand not only how government affects them, but also how they can affect government. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include a core of four courses to provide grounding in the traditional subfields of the discipline: PLS 105 Introduction to American Government; PLS 205 Introduction to Comparative Politics; PLS 207 Introduction to Political Theory; PLS 208 Fundamentals of International Relations; a research methods course: PLS 209 Scope and Methods of Political Science; two upper-level (300- or 400-level) courses in each of two subfields to permit concentration and to acquire a depth of understanding. Subfield coursework is distributed as follows: American Politics: PLS 105, 202, 301, 310, 311, 360, 419, 420, 421, 422, 440, 459, 460, 494; Comparative Politics: PLS 205, 303, 304, 305, 306, 491; International Relations: PLS 208, 302, 317, 318, 319, 492; Political Theory: PLS 207, 300, 307, 308, 407, 493; a senior seminar designed to be a culminating experience: PLS 491 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PLS 492 Seminar in International Relations; PLS 493 Seminar in Political Theory; PLS 494 Seminar in American Politics. In addition to the University Basic Skills requirements, the University and College General Education requirements, each student majoring in Political Science is required to complete a foreign language requirement. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 426E Bradley Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2496 | Political Science aims at turning politically interested and concerned students, whatever their career plans or their other interests, into politically literate college graduates. It equips them intellectually to comprehend and deal with their political world after graduation, in ways appropriate to their individual inclinations, be it as intelligent citizens, as journalists, as active participants in business or in electoral politics, as candidates for office or as public officials, or as academic political scientists. In other words, political science aims at political education 'in depth" for those students who have a particular interest in things political, whatever their occupational and professional goals and whatever their other talents and interest. While political science is usually equated with preparation for law school, a political science major prepares individuals for a variety of different careers. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages | Spanish is the most popular foreign language studied by North American students from middle schools to colleges and universities. In order to posses a competitive edge in areas such as business, education, law, health care, international affairs and social sciences among others, knowledge and command of the Spanish language and culture offer a tool for success. Students majoring in one of the foreign languages will find that Bradley emphasizes the applied skills of speaking the language and understanding the language when it is spoken by a native in ordinary conversation. Topics courses offer a wide variety of language courses in small classes where the student receives personal attention. Students can also choose from a wide variety of language offerings including literature and linguistics, translation, culture, and commercial courses. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include FLS 303 Composition; FLS 304 Conversation; FLS 325 Intro to Literature; 1 Linguistics Course - FLS 320; 1 Peninsular Literature Course - FLS 340 or FLS 341; 1 Latin American Literature Course - FLS 342 or FLS 343; 1 Civilization Course - FLS 321 or FLS 322; 1 Spanish Elective. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Languages, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2500 | The department offer programs leading to a minor or a Bachelor of Arts in French, German, and Spanish, as well as beginning and intermediate courses in Hebrew. With over 170 majors and minors, the program caters to the diverse interests of Bradley University’s students. From beginning language courses through advanced-level culture, translation, linguistics, commercial and literature classes, each program offers a variety of learning experiences that enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small, which allows students to receive personal attention for their individual needs. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Music (Music Business) | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program offers students the opportunity to not only study music, but also prepare to enter the music business industry. Students take advantage of the nationally recognized business college, build a solid foundation in music fundamentals, and complete a music business internship (cfa301) in area of the industry of their choice. Topics such as copyright, intellectual property rights, arts management, retail sales, and the structure of the recording and publishing industry are covered in depth. Bradley’s affiliation with NAMM (the national association of music merchants) allows its music business student’s access to the NAMM show in Anaheim, California each January. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Applied Music (min. of 4 semesters) 8 hrs; Ensemble (Each semester) 4–8 hrs; MUS 001 Recital lab (Each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-training and Sight Singing 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-training and Sight Singing 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills 2 hrs; Two of the following: MUS 235 Music in Its Hist. Persp. I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Hist. Persp. II 3 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Hist. Persp. III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Hist. Persp. IV 3 hrs; MUS 101 Intro to Music Business 3 hrs; MUS 301 Contemporary Issues in Music Business 3 hrs; CFA 301 Cooperative Education/Internship 2-6 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles 3 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; ECO 100 or ECO 221 3 hrs; MTG 304 Professional Selling 3 hrs; MTG 393 Retailing or MTG 410 Services Marketing 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Ceramics Concentration | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. Ceramics is the art or process of making useful or ornamental objects from clay by shaping and then firing them at high temperatures. The ceramics major involves the study of clay history and techniques and the implementation of them towards an individual expression as well as contributing to that history language and contemporary art discourse. The careers in ceramics concentration are engraver, professor of art, professional artist, textile designer, landscape designer and lithographer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas. The required courses in Ceramics Concentration are ART 201 Introduction to Ceramics - 3 hrs; ART 202 High and Low Fire Ceramics - 3 hrs; ART 301 Ceramic Production - 3-6 hrs; ART 302 Advanced Ceramics - 3-6 hrs; ART 401 Ceramic Portfolio Design Studio - 3-6 hrs; ART 402 Ceramic Sculpture - 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Drawing Concentration | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. The drawing major is designed to develop essential drawing skills and develop a deep appreciation of drawing to the conceptualization and design of other mediums. The field has significant overlap with many other artistic fields, including illustration, design, drafting, animation, calligraphy, cartooning, and visual communication. Students will produce a body of work that expresses their individual voice and perspective on a primary graphic art. The careers in drawing concentration are album cover designer, animator, cartoonist, children's book illustrator, freelance designer, tattoo artist, storyboard illustrator, professional artist and comic strip artist. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas. The required courses in Drawing Concentration are ART 203 Drawing Studio I - 3 hrs; ART 204 Drawing Studio II - 3 hrs; ART 303 Intermediate Drawing I - 3-6 hrs; ART 304 Intermediate Drawing II - 3-6 hrs; ART 403 Advanced Drawing I - 3-6 hrs; ART 404 Advanced Drawing II - 3-6 hrs; | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Graphic Design Concentration | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. This highly popular graphic design program provides a balanced professional and theoretical education preparing the students for a career in print, advertising, electronic design, publishing, or continued study at the graduate level. This program consists of a core of six studio classes plus electives such as Design History and Web Design. Basic skills with requisite software are taught alongside a strong emphasis on creative concept development. Graphic design students engage in a variety of individual and team projects, often working with real clients and agencies. The final year culminates in a senior project and intensive portfolio preparation, ensuring that when the students graduate they are ready to pursue their professional goals. Bradley's active student chapter of the AIGA (the leading national graphic design professional organization) offers opportunities for leadership, professional growth and networking. The careers in graphic design concentration are advertising, album cover designer, freelance artist/designer, storyboard illustrator, magazine designer and web designer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas. The required courses for Graphic Design Concentration are ART 205 Typographic Design - 3 hrs; ART 206 Graphic Design Methods and Processes - 3 hrs; ART 305 Editorial Design - 3 hrs; ART 306 Corporate Standards and Branding - 3 hrs; ART 405 Graphic Information Systems - 3 hrs; ART 406 Graphic Design Portfolio - 3 hrs; ART 496 BFA Graphic Design Senior Project - 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Painting Concentration | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. The painting major is designed to introduce and explore the various mediums, techniques and histories of painting. The curriculum establishes the relationship between significant painting traditions, modern and contemporary art discourse and the student’s personal reflection on the image. Students are encouraged to construct a body of work that incorporates regional, national, and global perspectives on visualization. The careers in painting concentration are airbrush artist, art agent, art administrator, professor of art, painter, pet portrait artist, portrait artist, freelance artist/designer, sketch artist, cartoonist and children’s book illustrator. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas. The required courses for Painting Concentration are ART 209 Beginning Painting I - 3 hrs; ART 210 Beginning Painting II - 3 hrs; ART 309 Intermediate Painting I - 3-6 hrs; ART 310 Intermediate Painting II - 3-6 hrs; ART 409 Advanced Painting I - 3-6 hrs; ART 410 Advanced Painting II - 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Photography Concentration | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. The photography major provides studies in the aesthetic and practical areas of camera-generated imagery. This includes black and white and color photography using traditional darkroom techniques, as well as cutting edge technology with computer-generated and manipulated images and digital processing. Students will develop a body of work that articulates an individual expression on the sizable impact that the medium has had on art history and criticism in the last 100 years. The careers in photography concentration are professional artist, professor of art, photojournalist, photographer, aerial photographer, fashion photographer, filmmaker, freelance artist/designer and graphic designer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas. The required courses for Photography Concentration are ART 225 Basic Black and White Photography - 3 hrs; ART 228 Basic Digital Photography - 3 hrs; ART 325 Zone System for 35mm Camera - 3-6 hrs; ART 326 Manipulated Image - 3-6 hrs; ART 327 Studio Lighting and Illustration Photography - 3 hrs; ART 427 Advanced Digital Photography - 3-6 hrs; ART 426 Photographic Portfolio - 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Printmaking Concentration | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. Printmaking involves the transferring of an image from one surface such as an inked plate to a paper, fabric, metal or wood support. The printmaking major will explore the essential technical languages of the print media including intaglio, lithography, etching and silkscreen, as well as the incorporation of photographic and digital imaging processes. Students will learn how to edit a print as well as the production of individual images that build upon print language and contemporary art discourse. The careers in printmaking concentration are engraver, professor of art, professional artist, textile designer, landscape designer, architectural model-builder, art director and lithographer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas. The required courses for Printmaking Concentration are ART 211 Relief Printmaking - 3 hrs; ART 212 Intaglio Printmaking - 3 hrs; ART 311 Basic Lithography -3 6 hrs; ART 312 Intermediate Printmaking - 3 6 hrs; ART 411, 412 Advanced Printmaking Studio 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Sculpture Concentration | Full Time | 58 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. The sculpture major is designed to introduce and explore the various mediums, techniques and histories of 3-dimensional art. The curriculum establishes the relationship between sculpture’s significant traditions, modern and contemporary art discourse and the student’s personal reflection on the object. Students are also encouraged to produce a dynamic body of work that establishes both local and global perspective in imagining and occupying space. The careers in sculpture concentration are professor of art, architectural model-builder, art director, engraver and professional artist. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas. The required courses for Sculpture Concentration are ART 213 Beginning Sculpture I - 3 hrs; ART 214 Beginning Sculpture II - 3 hrs; ART 313 Intermediate Sculpture I - 3 6 hrs; ART 314 Intermediate Sculpture II - 3 6 hrs; ART 413 Advanced Sculpture I - 3-6 hrs; ART 414 Advanced Sculpture II - 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Theatre Arts - Performance Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Theatre Arts | This program offers students who desire a more intensive educational experience in acting and directing the opportunity for focused study. Working closely with faculty, student artists are challenged through a dynamic course of study in acting, voice, movement, scene study, and auditioning techniques to develop a personal creative process that will serve them well as a young artist. With the application of performance skills in both studio and main stage productions, as well as a comprehensive exploration of theatre traditions and styles, Bradley students graduate with experience under their belt, confidence in their training, and a belief in the power of the theatre to influence the changing world. Students pursuing the performance concentration must complete all of the major requirements plus 19 semester hours of specific performance based classes. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. Students desiring to pursue a concentration in performance or production are required to audition or present a design/theatre technology portfolio prior to admission to the concentration. The performance concentration audition consists of two contrasting monologues, one serious and one comic, plus an optional 16 bars of music. The entire audition should not exceed three minutes. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include THE 115 Fundamentals of Acting 3 hrs; THE 121 The Creative Process of Theatre 3 hrs; THE 125 Stagecraft 3 hrs; THE 131 Introduction to the Theatre 3 hrs; THE 223 Theatrical Producing 3 hrs; THE 226 Fundamentals of Design 3 hrs; THE 230 Costume Construction 3 hrs; THE 316 Fundamentals of Directing 3 hrs; THE 336 History of Theatre and Drama I 3 hrs; THE 337 History of Theatre and Drama II 3 hrs; THE 338 History of Theatre and Drama III 3 hrs; THE 439 Global Encounters 3 hrs; Practicum 3 hrs; Performance Concentration: THE 201 Voice for the Actor 3 hrs; THE 203 Movement for the Actor 3 hrs; THE 215 Intermediate Acting 3 hrs; THE 310 Junior Seminar 3 hrs; THE 315 Advanced Acting 3 hrs; THE 410 Senior Seminar 1 hr; THE 415 Acting: Period Styles 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Theatre Arts | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Theatre Arts, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2660 | The Department of Theatre Arts is an artistic and educational community that values creativity, innovation, and imagination fired by passion, balanced with excellence in craftsmanship, and tempered with discipline and knowledge. The mission is to educate theatre artists and their audiences in the intellectual foundations, global traditions, and creative processes of the art of theatre. The Department of Theatre Arts is committed to being a prominent theatre education program nationally recognized for the global perspective, the commitment to excellence in creative expression and scholarship, and for providing a multifaceted educational experience within a nurturing, student-focused environment. The Department of Theatre Arts fosters academic achievement, artistic and educational collaboration, freedom of expression, and personal integrity. We stress dignity and respect of the individual and the practice of inclusiveness. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Theatre Arts - Production Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Theatre Arts | This program fills a specific niche at Bradley University attracting students that are seeking an opportunity for additional study and practice in production and design within the scope of comprehensive theatre arts major. Students pursuing the production concentration must complete all of the major requirements plus 19 semester hours of specific production and design-based classes. 13 semester hours of these classes are listed as upper division credit. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. Students desiring to pursue a concentration in performance or production are required to audition or present a design/theatre technology portfolio prior to admission to the concentration. The performance concentration audition consists of two contrasting monologues, one serious and one comic, plus an optional 16 bars of music. The entire audition should not exceed three minutes. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include THE 115 Fundamentals of Acting 3 hrs; THE 121 The Creative Process of Theatre 3 hrs; THE 125 Stagecraft 3 hrs; THE 131 Introduction to the Theatre 3 hrs; THE 223 Theatrical Producing 3 hrs; THE 226 Fundamentals of Design 3 hrs; THE 230 Costume Construction 3 hrs; THE 316 Fundamentals of Directing 3 hrs; THE 336 History of Theatre and Drama I 3 hrs; THE 337 History of Theatre and Drama II 3 hrs; THE 338 History of Theatre and Drama III 3 hrs; THE 439 Global Encounters 3 hrs; Practicum 3 hrs; Production Concentration: THE 225 Advanced Stagecraft 3 hrs; THE 229 CADD for Theatre 3 hrs; THE 310 Junior Seminar 3 hrs; THE 326 Stage Lighting 3 hrs; THE 329 Scenic Design 3 hrs; THE 330 Costume Design 3 hrs; THE 410 Senior Seminar 1 hr. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Theatre Arts | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Theatre Arts, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2660 | The Department of Theatre Arts is an artistic and educational community that values creativity, innovation, and imagination fired by passion, balanced with excellence in craftsmanship, and tempered with discipline and knowledge. The mission is to educate theatre artists and their audiences in the intellectual foundations, global traditions, and creative processes of the art of theatre. The Department of Theatre Arts is committed to being a prominent theatre education program nationally recognized for the global perspective, the commitment to excellence in creative expression and scholarship, and for providing a multifaceted educational experience within a nurturing, student-focused environment. The Department of Theatre Arts fosters academic achievement, artistic and educational collaboration, freedom of expression, and personal integrity. We stress dignity and respect of the individual and the practice of inclusiveness. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science in Early Childhood Education | Full Time | 127 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | The purpose of the program is to prepare graduates to become educators who work with children from birth to third grade. The State of Illinois early childhood special education approval is included as part of the early childhood education major. This approval qualifies the graduate to teach in early childhood special education programs for students age three through eight. The early childhood educators will graduate with experiences enabling them to work in primary grades, kindergarten, preschool, or nursery school. The Early Childhood major also requires a concentration in liberal arts. Students may choose a concentration from Social Studies, General Science, English, Fine Arts, Mathematics or Foreign Language. Successful completion of the program leads to the Illinois Type 04 Early Childhood certificate. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Communication Skills: COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; ENG 101 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 3 hrs; Mathematics: Gen. Ed. Math 3 hrs; Science: SCI 101 4 hrs; FS Science elective 3-4 hrs; Science elective 5-6 hrs; Humanities: Fine Arts (ART, MUS, or THE) 3 hrs; Human Values-Literary (HL) or Philosophical (HP) 3 hrs; Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; Social Forces: PSY 104 Principles of Psychology: Social Forces and Individual Behavior 3 hrs; Western Civilization 3 hrs; ETE 115 (or ECO, IS, PLS, PSY, SOC for SF); Other: FCS 203 Health, Safety, and Nutrition 3 hrs; Professional Education Requirements: ETE 100 Technology Applications 1 hr; ETE 107 Conceptualizing Math for Teachers I 3 hrs; ETE 115 Schools and Schooling in American Society 3 hrs; ETE 197 Music in the P-8 Schools 1 hr; ETE 198 Movement in the P-8 Schools 1 hr; ETE 199 Art in the P-8 Schools 1 hr; ETE 201 The Early Childhood Education Profession: Roles, Responsibilities, and Experiences 4 hrs; ETE 205 Effective Teaching Strategies 3 hrs; ETE 225 Human Development 4 hrs; ETE 234 Language Development 3 hrs; ETE 260 Children’s Literature 3 hrs; ETE 280 Exploring Diversity: Learners, Families, and Communities 3 hrs; ETE 300 Emergent Literacy: Reading and Writing Across the Curriculum 3 hrs; ETE 304 Early Childhood Novice Teaching 4 hrs; ETE 333 Early Childhood Special Education Methods 3 hrs; ETE 342 Guiding Learners and Developing Classroom Communities 3 hrs; ETE 343 Early Childhood Methods 6 hrs; ETE 443 Early Childhood Assessment 3 hrs; ETE 467 History and Philosophy of Early Childhood Education: An Analysis 3 hrs; ETE 497 Student Teaching/Early Childhood Internship 13 hrs; Area of concentration electives 18. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education, Westlake Hall 203, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3190 | The Department of Teacher Education offers undergraduate programs in early childhood, elementary, secondary, K-12 (art, foreign language, and music), and special education. The Department also offers a graduate degree and certificate programs in Curriculum and Instruction. The mission of Teacher Education at Bradley University is to prepare teachers who will be effective leaders, advocates, and life-long learners. We believe that teaching and learning are dynamic, interactive, life-long processes based on empowering interactions among learners. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science in Elementary Education | Full Time | 125-126 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | This degree leads to the Type 03 Elementary certificate in Illinois, qualifying students to teach any grade from K-9 in a self-contained classroom. An endorsement composed of six semester hours of coursework is required for those who wish to teach middle school. The elementary major requires students to choose a concentration in one of the following areas: English/language arts, fine arts, foreign language, mathematics, science, or social studies. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Professional Education Program Requirements: Communication Skills: COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; ENG 101 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 3 hrs; Mathematics: Gen. Ed. Math 3 hrs; Science: FS SCI 101 4 hrs; Science electives 7-8 hrs; Humanities: Fine Arts (ART, MUS, or THE) 3 hrs; Human Values-Literary (HL) or Philosophical (HP) 3 hrs; Non-Western Civilization – 3 hrs; Social Forces: American Government (PLS 105) 3 hrs; Western Civilization (CIV 100) 3 hrs; Social Forces Elective (SOC 100, PSY 104, ECO 100, IS 100, PLS 205 or ETE 115); Other: Health/Physical Development (FCS 203; NUR 163, 220, 221, 263, 376) 3 hrs; Professional Education Requirements: ETE 100 Technology Applications 1 hr; ETE 107 Conceptualizing Math for Teachers I 3 hrs; ETE 108 Conceptualizing Math for Teachers II 3 hrs; ETE 115 Schools and Schooling in American Society 3 hrs; ETE 116 Field Experience Schools and Schooling 1 hr; ETE 197 Music in the P-8 Schools 1 hr; ETE 198 Movement in the P-8 Schools 1 hr; ETE 199 Art in the P-8 Schools 1 hr; ETE 205 Effective Teaching Strategies 3 hrs; ETE 225 Human Development 4 hrs; ETE 227 Development of Early Adolescent (optional) (3); ETE 228 Strategies for Middle School Instruction (optional) (3); ETE 260 Children’s Literature 3 hrs; ETE 280 Exploring Diversity: Learners, Families and Communities 3 hrs; ETE 306 Novice Teaching K-8 4 hrs; ETE 325 Methods of Teaching Reading K-8 3 hrs; ETE 330 Curricular Adaptations for Learners with Exceptionalities 3 hrs; ETE 335 Methods of Teaching Social Studies K-8 3 hrs; ETE 336 Methods of Teaching Science K-8 3 hrs; ETE 339 Methods of Teaching Mathematics K-8 3 hrs; ETE 342 Guiding Learners and Developing Classroom Communities 3 hrs; ETE 353 Methods of Teaching Language Arts K-8 3 hrs; ETE 490 Student Teaching Professional Portfolio 1 hr; ETE 498 Student Teaching K-8 13 hrs; Area of concentration electives 18. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education, Westlake Hall 203, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3190 | The Department of Teacher Education offers undergraduate programs in early childhood, elementary, secondary, K-12 (art, foreign language, and music), and special education. The Department also offers a graduate degree and certificate programs in Curriculum and Instruction. The mission of Teacher Education at Bradley University is to prepare teachers who will be effective leaders, advocates, and life-long learners. We believe that teaching and learning are dynamic, interactive, life-long processes based on empowering interactions among learners. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science in Interactive Media - Animation and Visual Effects Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media | This program maintains a strong focus on creative and conceptual problem-solving in the creation of material for aspiring new-media professionals, within a sound theoretical framework. Interactive Media is text, audio, video, illustration, photography, and animation assembled in a non-linear, interactive format for delivery on the Internet, mobile networks, on digital media, or within informational kiosks and other presentation formats. This concentration focuses on elements of interactive media that include digital storytelling, visual effects, narrative, interactive performance, cinematography, and animation. This area is both artistic and technical in nature. The most important focus of this concentration is capturing and retaining the attention of the audience using high quality design and production techniques. The careers in this concentration are 3D modeling, animation, character design and special effects. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core requirements (25 hours): ART105 Two Dimensional Design (3); IM 113 Introduction to Interactive Media (3); IM 115 Introduction to Interactive Media Development (3); ART205 Typographic Design (3); IM 213 Basic Interactive Media Authoring (4); IM 215 Introduction to Scripting Languages (3); IM 250 Introduction to New Media Theory (3); IM 285 Introduction to Video for Interactive Media (3); Other major requirements (16 hours): IM 313 Intermediate Interactive Media Authoring (3); IM 350 Intellectual Property for New Media (3); IM 365 Design for the World Wide Web (3); IM 385 Intermediate Video for Interactive Media (3); IM 426 Interactive Media Portfolio (1); IM 450 Issues in New Media Theory (3); Animation and Visual Effects Concentration (16 Hours): IM 413 Advanced Multimedia Authoring (4); IM 443 Concepting and Storytelling for Animation and Visual Effects (3); IM 457 Digital Animation (3); IM 458 Sound Design (3); IM 471 Digital Animation II (3). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media, Caterpillar Global Communications Center 200, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 4528 | The Interactive Media program prepares students to be critical thinkers in a continually evolving field that required interdisciplinary, theoretical and application knowledge in the design, development and production of interactive media. The program requires completion of core courses in interactive media development, authoring, scripting, video, new media theory, and design. Student will specialize in an area with consultation with their adviser. Specialty areas may focus on gaming, animation, music technology or virtual environments. Bradley Interactive Media students are a part of the internationally recognized Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts. Slane College students have access to exceptional facilities, labs, studios, stages, and technology in five different buildings. Located in the state-of-the-art Caterpillar Global Communications Center, Interactive Media students have a dedicated lab accessible 24 hours a day, software and hardware required for all coursework, and access to the specialized equipment via the service bureau. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science in Interactive Media - Game Design Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media | This program maintains a strong focus on creative and conceptual problem-solving in the creation of material for aspiring new-media professionals, within a sound theoretical framework. Interactive Media is text, audio, video, illustration, photography, and animation assembled in a non-linear, interactive format for delivery on the Internet, mobile networks, on digital media, or within informational kiosks and other presentation formats. This concentration contributes to the engagement of users through a highly popular form of interactive media. Course topics include game design, interactive storytelling, game play, art for games, sound for games, and programming for games. The concentration culminates in a semester long, team based capstone project in which students will work together to create a production-quality game. The careers in this concentration are game design, game development and game programming. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core requirements (25 hours): ART105 Two Dimensional Design (3); IM 113 Introduction to Interactive Media (3); IM 115 Introduction to Interactive Media Development (3); ART205 Typographic Design (3); IM 213 Basic Interactive Media Authoring (4); IM 215 Introduction to Scripting Languages (3); IM 250 Introduction to New Media Theory (3); IM 285 Introduction to Video for Interactive Media (3); Other major requirements (16 hours): IM 313 Intermediate Interactive Media Authoring (3); IM 350 Intellectual Property for New Media (3); IM 365 Design for the World Wide Web (3); IM 385 Intermediate Video for Interactive Media (3); IM 426 Interactive Media Portfolio (1); IM 450 Issues in New Media Theory (3); Game Design Concentration (15 Hours): IM 451 Computer Game Design (3); IM 453 Concepting and Storytelling (3); IM 459 Computer Game Capstone Project (3); In addition, choose 2 of the following (6 hours total): IM 452 Computer Game Modification (3); IM 455 Computer Graphics (3); IM 456 Game Engine Programming (3); IM 457 Digital Animation (3); IM 458 Sound Design (3). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media, Caterpillar Global Communications Center 200, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 4528 | The Interactive Media program prepares students to be critical thinkers in a continually evolving field that required interdisciplinary, theoretical and application knowledge in the design, development and production of interactive media. The program requires completion of core courses in interactive media development, authoring, scripting, video, new media theory, and design. Student will specialize in an area with consultation with their adviser. Specialty areas may focus on gaming, animation, music technology or virtual environments. Bradley Interactive Media students are a part of the internationally recognized Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts. Slane College students have access to exceptional facilities, labs, studios, stages, and technology in five different buildings. Located in the state-of-the-art Caterpillar Global Communications Center, Interactive Media students have a dedicated lab accessible 24 hours a day, software and hardware required for all coursework, and access to the specialized equipment via the service bureau. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science in Interactive Media - Web and Application Design Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media | This program maintains a strong focus on creative and conceptual problem-solving in the creation of material for aspiring new-media professionals, within a sound theoretical framework. Interactive Media is text, audio, video, illustration, photography, and animation assembled in a non-linear, interactive format for delivery on the Internet, mobile networks, on digital media, or within informational kiosks and other presentation formats. This concentration will meet a growing demand for designers and by the students to learn about the creation and implementation of websites and applications. Websites have become highly interactive and function similarly to stand-alone application software that is used for a variety of purposes. This concentration focuses on the design of those systems, including design of non-traditional systems like mobile devices, kiosks, and installations. The careers in this concentration are data architecture, interface design, data modeling and social network integration. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core requirements (25 hours): ART105 Two Dimensional Design (3); IM 113 Introduction to Interactive Media (3); IM 115 Introduction to Interactive Media Development (3); ART205 Typographic Design (3); IM 213 Basic Interactive Media Authoring (4); IM 215 Introduction to Scripting Languages (3); IM 250 Introduction to New Media Theory (3); IM 285 Introduction to Video for Interactive Media (3); Other major requirements (16 hours): IM 313 Intermediate Interactive Media Authoring (3); IM 350 Intellectual Property for New Media (3); IM 365 Design for the World Wide Web (3); IM 385 Intermediate Video for Interactive Media (3); IM 426 Interactive Media Portfolio (1); IM 450 Issues in New Media Theory (3); Web and Application Design Concentration (16 Hours): IM 325 Search Engine Optimizations and Analytics (3); IM 344 Virtual World Building and Research (3); IM 413 Advanced Multimedia Authoring (4); IM 453 Concepting and Storytelling (3); IM 465 Advanced Web Design (3). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Interactive Media, Caterpillar Global Communications Center 200, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 4528 | The Interactive Media program prepares students to be critical thinkers in a continually evolving field that required interdisciplinary, theoretical and application knowledge in the design, development and production of interactive media. The program requires completion of core courses in interactive media development, authoring, scripting, video, new media theory, and design. Student will specialize in an area with consultation with their adviser. Specialty areas may focus on gaming, animation, music technology or virtual environments. Bradley Interactive Media students are a part of the internationally recognized Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts. Slane College students have access to exceptional facilities, labs, studios, stages, and technology in five different buildings. Located in the state-of-the-art Caterpillar Global Communications Center, Interactive Media students have a dedicated lab accessible 24 hours a day, software and hardware required for all coursework, and access to the specialized equipment via the service bureau. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science in Medical Technology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences | This interdepartmental major prepares students for admission to an accredited medical technology hospital program. The program is a 3+1 program in which students spend three years completing university course work to fulfill the general requirements for a bachelor’s degree. The student may then apply to an affiliated hospital program for one year. After successful completion of the clinical year, the students are awarded a bachelor’s degree. Students may then sit for the national certification exam in medical technology. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Biology 23-24 hrs; Chemistry 19-23 hrs; College Mathematics 3 hrs; English 6 hrs; Speech Communication 3 hrs; General Education Electives and other Electives 38 hrs. 45 hours of science courses: BIO 151 Molecules to Cells 4 hrs; BIO 112 Intro. to Ecology and Evolution 4 hrs; BIO 406 General Microbiology 4 hrs; BIO 468 Immunology of Host Defense 3 hrs; BIO 200 Human Anatomy and Physiology 3 hrs; BIO 203 Human Anatomy and Physiology Laboratory 2 hrs; BIO 205 Pathophysiology or BIO 361 Microanatomy 3-4 hrs; CHM 110, 111 General Chemistry I or CHM 100, 101 Fundamentals of General Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 116, 117 General Chemistry II (5) or CHM 150 Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry (2) and CHM 161 Organic-Biochemistry Laboratory for Health Sciences (1) 3 or 5 hrs; CHM 122 Clinical Laboratory Science 1 hr; BIO 464 Cell Biology (4) or CHM 160 Fundamentals of Biochemistry (2) 2 or 4 hrs; CHM 252 and 253 Organic Chemistry 5 hrs; CHM 256 and 257 Organic Chemistry II 4 hrs; MTH 111 Elem. Statistics or MTH 109 College Algebra 3 hrs. Clinical Year courses: Clinical Chemistry I 4-6 hrs; Clinical Chemistry II 2-4 hrs; Clinical Hematology 5 hrs; Clinical Hemostasis 1 hr; Clinical Immunohematology 4 hrs; Clinical Immunology 3 hrs; Clinical Microbiology I 4-6 hrs; Clinical Microbiology II 2-4 hrs; Special Topics in Clinical Laboratory Science 1 hr; Clinical Management and Education 1 hr. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2380 | The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences provides students with the central disciplines of a university education: the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences and mathematical and computational sciences. Programs in the College lead to degrees with specialization in over 20 areas of study. Students may pursue the Bachelor of Arts or the Bachelor of Science. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science in Social Work | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Social Work | This program prepares students for beginning practice in social work and to provide an educational foundation for students planning to pursue graduate study in social work. The major provides a well-rounded academic background in the generalist social work practice model. The professional practice component includes practice courses and a field practicum. The program receives full accreditation by the council on social work education. This accreditation assures that the school is committed to continuous improvement and quality in the area of social work. The curriculum requires majors to complete 72 credit hours, including 21 hours of liberal arts requirements, 45 hours of social work requirements, and 6 hours of electives. The professional practice component includes practice courses and a field practicum. Students will complete a minimum of 420 field hours in an approved community agency. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Liberal Arts Courses (21 hrs.): MTH 111 Elementary Statistics or PSY 205 Quantitative Methods; ECO 100 Intro to Economics or ECO 221 Microeconomics and ECO 222 Macroeconomics; PLS 105 Introduction to American Government; SOC 302 Sociology of Diveristy or SOC 313 Race, Ethnicity, and Power or ETE 280 Exploring Diversity: Learners, Families, and Communities; SOC 100 The Sociological Perspective; BIO 101 Life Science I; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology; Social Work Core Requirements (45 hrs.): Social Welfare Policy and Services - 6 hrs: SW 250 Introduction to Social Welfare; SW 355 Social Welfare Policy; Human Behavior and the Social Environment - 12 hrs: SOC 310 Sociology of the Family; PSY 445 Abnormal Psychology; SW 354 Human Behavior in the Social Environment I; SW 358 Human Behavior and the Social Environment II; Research - 3 hrs; SW 260 Research Methods; Social Work Practice 12 hrs; SW 350 Foundation for Social Work Practice; SW 351, 352 Social Work Practice I, II; SW 353 Social Work Practice III; Field Practicums - 12 hrs: SW 393 Social Work Practicum; SW 395 Social Work Seminar; Electives - 6 hrs: SW 310 Child Welfare I; SW 320 Child Welfare II; SW 356 Topics in Social Work; SW 490 Individual Study in Social Work; SW 499 Honors Colloquium; SOC 211 Contemporary Social Problems; SOC 311 Comparative Family Systems; SOC 312 Social Inequality; SOC 314 Native Americans; SOC 315 Gender and Society; SOC 321 Individual and Society; SOC 332 Juvenile Delinquency; SOC 333 Sociology of Violence; SOC 341 Medical Sociology; SOC 343 Sociology of Mental Health; AAS 200 Intro. to African-American Studies; NUR 221 Substance Abuse. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Social Work | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Social Work, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2388 | The Department of Sociology and Social Work offers a variety of courses in sociology, anthropology, and social work useful to students with diverse professional goals. Sociology is a popular major for students planning careers in such professions as law, business, journalism, health care, education, politics, social work, or public administration. It provides a solid body of knowledge on the nature and problems of human relations and a distinctive way of looking at the world. Through readings, research, and systematic discussion students are introduced to fundamental problems of the contemporary world in an innovative and challenging manner and are prepared to become imaginative and sensitive participants in the events that will shape the 21st century. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Social Work | This program provides a solid body of knowledge on the nature and problems of human relations and a distinctive way of looking at the world. The courses offer a range of methodologies and research techniques which can be applied in a variety of fields such as administration, criminal justice, health care, counseling, and social work. In addition, exposure to theoretical and methodological issues and to comparative, historical, and critical analyses provides those students who want to pursue graduate work with a strong academic background. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include General Education Courses: Cultural Diversity (CD) and Social Forces (SF): SOC 100 The Sociological Perspective (SF); SOC 302 Sociology of Diversity (CD); SOC 312 Social Inequality (SF); SOC 313 Race, Ethnicity, and Power (CD, SF); SOC 314 Native Americans (CD); SOC 315 Gender and Society (CD, SF); SOC 325 Science, Technology and Modernity (SF); SOC 326 Sociology of Globalization (SF); Non-Western Civilization: SOC 300 Cross-Cultural Perspective on Gender; SOC 301 Peoples and Culture of the Non-Western World; SOC 311 Comparative Family Systems (of non-Western cultures); SOC 314 Native Americans; Human Values (Philosophical): SOC 321 Individual and Society; SOC 420 Critical Theory; Requirements for the Major: SOC 100 The Sociological Perspective; SOC 240 Research Methods; SOC 320 Social Theory or SOC 420 Critical Theory. At least 15 of the 30 required hours must be at the 300 level or above. Only one internship course may apply towards the 30-hour requirement. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Social Work | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology and Social Work, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2388 | The Department of Sociology and Social Work offers a variety of courses in sociology, anthropology, and social work useful to students with diverse professional goals. Sociology is a popular major for students planning careers in such professions as law, business, journalism, health care, education, politics, social work, or public administration. It provides a solid body of knowledge on the nature and problems of human relations and a distinctive way of looking at the world. Through readings, research, and systematic discussion students are introduced to fundamental problems of the contemporary world in an innovative and challenging manner and are prepared to become imaginative and sensitive participants in the events that will shape the 21st century. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Arts with Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program encourages students to actively pursue their own writing while engaging the work of writers from diverse cultures and time periods. The goal is for students to refine their individual skills, informed by a broad aesthetic and cultural background. Students may choose from workshops in poetry, fiction, autobiography, and nature writing, up to 18s/hrs for the writing workshop program. This work may culminate in a creative project, a compilation of the student’s own poetry, fiction, or nonfiction. The creative writing program sponsors three significant awards for student writers, acknowledging the high quality of student creative work on campus and fostering a sense of community among these students. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2490 | The English department offers programs in literature, language and writing leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in English. A variety of learning experiences enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small so that students can interact with each other and their professors. The department sponsors a visiting writer series, a literary magazine, an essay contest, two annual poetry contests, and the DeGise professional writing competition. It also sponsors a chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honorary society. | No | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | |||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Ceramics Concentration | Full Time | 85 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. Ceramics is the art or process of making useful or ornamental objects from clay by shaping and then firing them at high temperatures. The ceramics major involves the study of clay history and techniques and the implementation of them towards an individual expression as well as contributing to that history language and contemporary art discourse. The careers in ceramics concentration are engraver, professor of art, professional artist, textile designer, landscape designer and lithographer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The module include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas; Professional Orientation/Seminar Courses (3 hours): ART 420 B.F.A. Seminar I - 2 hrs; ART 421 B.F.A. Seminar II - 1 hr. The required courses in Ceramics Concentration are ART 201 Introduction to Ceramics - 3 hrs; ART 202 High and Low Fire Ceramics - 3 hrs; ART 301 Ceramic Production - 3-6 hrs; ART 302 Advanced Ceramics - 3-6 hrs; ART 401 Ceramic Portfolio Design Studio - 3-6 hrs; ART 402 Ceramic Sculpture - 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Drawing Concentration | Full Time | 85 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. The drawing major is designed to develop essential drawing skills and develop a deep appreciation of drawing to the conceptualization and design of other mediums. The field has significant overlap with many other artistic fields, including illustration, design, drafting, animation, calligraphy, cartooning, and visual communication. Students will produce a body of work that expresses their individual voice and perspective on a primary graphic art. The careers in drawing concentration are album cover designer, animator, cartoonist, children's book illustrator, freelance designer, tattoo artist, storyboard illustrator, professional artist and comic strip artist. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The module include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas; Professional Orientation/Seminar Courses (3 hours): ART 420 B.F.A. Seminar I - 2 hrs; ART 421 B.F.A. Seminar II - 1 hr. The required courses in Drawing Concentration are ART 203 Drawing Studio I - 3 hrs; ART 204 Drawing Studio II - 3 hrs; ART 303 Intermediate Drawing I - 3-6 hrs; ART 304 Intermediate Drawing II - 3-6 hrs; ART 403 Advanced Drawing I - 3-6 hrs; ART 404 Advanced Drawing II - 3-6 hrs; | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Graphic Design Concentration | Full Time | 85 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. This highly popular graphic design program provides a balanced professional and theoretical education preparing the students for a career in print, advertising, electronic design, publishing, or continued study at the graduate level. This program consists of a core of six studio classes plus electives such as Design History and Web Design. Basic skills with requisite software are taught alongside a strong emphasis on creative concept development. Graphic design students engage in a variety of individual and team projects, often working with real clients and agencies. The final year culminates in a senior project and intensive portfolio preparation, ensuring that when the students graduate they are ready to pursue their professional goals. Bradley's active student chapter of the AIGA (the leading national graphic design professional organization) offers opportunities for leadership, professional growth and networking. The careers in graphic design concentration are advertising, album cover designer, freelance artist/designer, storyboard illustrator, magazine designer and web designer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The module include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas; Professional Orientation/Seminar Courses (3 hours): ART 420 B.F.A. Seminar I - 2 hrs; ART 421 B.F.A. Seminar II - 1 hr. The required courses for Graphic Design Concentration are ART 205 Typographic Design - 3 hrs; ART 206 Graphic Design Methods and Processes - 3 hrs; ART 305 Editorial Design - 3 hrs; ART 306 Corporate Standards and Branding - 3 hrs; ART 405 Graphic Information Systems - 3 hrs; ART 406 Graphic Design Portfolio - 3 hrs; ART 496 BFA Graphic Design Senior Project - 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Painting Concentration | Full Time | 85 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. The painting major is designed to introduce and explore the various mediums, techniques and histories of painting. The curriculum establishes the relationship between significant painting traditions, modern and contemporary art discourse and the student’s personal reflection on the image. Students are encouraged to construct a body of work that incorporates regional, national, and global perspectives on visualization. The careers in painting concentration are airbrush artist, art agent, art administrator, professor of art, painter, pet portrait artist, portrait artist, freelance artist/designer, sketch artist, cartoonist and children’s book illustrator. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The module include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas; Professional Orientation/Seminar Courses (3 hours): ART 420 B.F.A. Seminar I - 2 hrs; ART 421 B.F.A. Seminar II - 1 hr. The required courses for Painting Concentration are ART 209 Beginning Painting I - 3 hrs; ART 210 Beginning Painting II - 3 hrs; ART 309 Intermediate Painting I - 3-6 hrs; ART 310 Intermediate Painting II - 3-6 hrs; ART 409 Advanced Painting I - 3-6 hrs; ART 410 Advanced Painting II - 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Photography Concentration | Full Time | 85 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. The photography major provides studies in the aesthetic and practical areas of camera-generated imagery. This includes black and white and color photography using traditional darkroom techniques, as well as cutting edge technology with computer-generated and manipulated images and digital processing. Students will develop a body of work that articulates an individual expression on the sizable impact that the medium has had on art history and criticism in the last 100 years. The careers in photography concentration are professional artist, professor of art, photojournalist, photographer, aerial photographer, fashion photographer, filmmaker, freelance artist/designer and graphic designer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The module include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas; Professional Orientation/Seminar Courses (3 hours): ART 420 B.F.A. Seminar I - 2 hrs; ART 421 B.F.A. Seminar II - 1 hr. The required courses for Photography Concentration are ART 225 Basic Black and White Photography - 3 hrs; ART 228 Basic Digital Photography - 3 hrs; ART 325 Zone System for 35mm Camera - 3-6 hrs; ART 326 Manipulated Image - 3-6 hrs; ART 327 Studio Lighting and Illustration Photography - 3 hrs; ART 427 Advanced Digital Photography - 3-6 hrs; ART 426 Photographic Portfolio - 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Printmaking Concentration | Full Time | 85 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. Printmaking involves the transferring of an image from one surface such as an inked plate to a paper, fabric, metal or wood support. The printmaking major will explore the essential technical languages of the print media including intaglio, lithography, etching and silkscreen, as well as the incorporation of photographic and digital imaging processes. Students will learn how to edit a print as well as the production of individual images that build upon print language and contemporary art discourse. The careers in printmaking concentration are engraver, professor of art, professional artist, textile designer, landscape designer, architectural model-builder, art director and lithographer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The module include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas; Professional Orientation/Seminar Courses (3 hours): ART 420 B.F.A. Seminar I - 2 hrs; ART 421 B.F.A. Seminar II - 1 hr. The required courses for Printmaking Concentration are ART 211 Relief Printmaking - 3 hrs; ART 212 Intaglio Printmaking - 3 hrs; ART 311 Basic Lithography - 3 6 hrs; ART 312 Intermediate Printmaking - 3 6 hrs; ART 411, 412 Advanced Printmaking Studio 3 6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art - Sculpture Concentration | Full Time | 85 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Studio art majors at Bradley University learn a diverse skill set, which includes technical knowledge, creative problem solving, and academic competence. A strong foundations program grounds each studio art major in traditional processes while also introducing them to digital and time-based arts. The studio art major is flexible enough to meet the needs of each individual student. The sculpture major is designed to introduce and explore the various mediums, techniques and histories of 3-dimensional art. The curriculum establishes the relationship between sculpture’s significant traditions, modern and contemporary art discourse and the student’s personal reflection on the object. Students are also encouraged to produce a dynamic body of work that establishes both local and global perspective in imagining and occupying space. The careers in sculpture concentration are professor of art, architectural model-builder, art director, engraver and professional artist. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The module include Art History (12 hours): Art History Core (6 hours): ART 140 Survey of Art History I - 3 hrs; ART 142 Survey of Art History II - 3 hrs; Elective courses in art history (6 hours); Studio (46 hours): Studio Core (19 hours): ART 101 Drawing I - 3 hrs; ART 102 Drawing II - 3 hrs; ART 105 Two-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 106 Three-Dimensional Design - 3 hrs; ART 220/221 Professional Lecture Series- 1 hr; ART 230 Life Drawing - 3 hrs; IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia - 3 hrs; Area of Concentration (18 hours); Studio Electives (9 hours): Courses from areas other than the student’s concentration area, including at least one from the 2-D areas and at least one from the 3-D areas; Professional Orientation/Seminar Courses (3 hours): ART 420 B.F.A. Seminar I - 2 hrs; ART 421 B.F.A. Seminar II - 1 hr. The required courses for Sculpture Concentration are ART 213 Beginning Sculpture I - 3 hrs; ART 214 Beginning Sculpture II - 3 hrs; ART 313 Intermediate Sculpture I - 3 6 hrs; ART 314 Intermediate Sculpture II - 3 6 hrs; ART 413 Advanced Sculpture I - 3 6 hrs; ART 414 Advanced Sculpture II - 3 6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students who have a strong interest in composing their own music. The curriculum at Bradley offers students eight semesters of music theory and music composition courses. Graduates generally continue on to graduate school or seek employment as arrangers, orchestrators, music copyists or composers. Although the program is not directed toward popular music (song writing) students will have a solid background that will allow them to pursue any number of compositional styles. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Composition Major: Applied Music 20 hrs; APL 180/380 Applied Music Composition 8 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition (one taken in core) 2 hrs; MUS 401 Orchestration 2 hrs; MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education - Instrumental Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students for a career as a public school teacher in general music, band, choir or orchestra. In addition to earning a Bachelor of Music degree, each student meets the state of Illinois teacher certification requirements for music teaching in grades K-12. Students who pursue this degree generally seek a teaching position immediately following graduation. State reciprocal programs mean students educated in Illinois are not limited to only pursuing a teaching position within the state. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Instrumental Concentration: Applied Music (7 semesters minimum) 14 hrs; MUS 115 Voice Class 1 hr; MED 155 Brass Techniques 2 hrs; MED 251 String Techniques 2 hrs; MED 252 Advanced String Techniques 1 hr; MED 257 Percussion Techniques 2 hrs; MED 322 Conducting II 2 hrs; MED 354 Woodwind Techniques 2 hrs; MED 355 Advanced Woodwind Techniques 1 hr; MUS 323 Marching Band Techniques 1 hr; MUS 401 Orchestration 2 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education - Piano Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students for a career as a public school teacher in general music, band, choir or orchestra. In addition to earning a Bachelor of Music degree, each student meets the state of Illinois teacher certification requirements for music teaching in grades K-12. Students who pursue this degree generally seek a teaching position immediately following graduation. State reciprocal programs mean students educated in Illinois are not limited to only pursuing a teaching position within the state. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Piano Concentration: APL 189/389 Applied Music Piano (min. 7 semesters) 14 hrs; MED 155 Brass Techniques 2 hrs; MED 251 String Techniques 2 hrs; MED 257 Percussion Techniques 2 hrs; MED 322 Conducting II 2 hrs; MUS 327 Accompanying, or MUS 328 Accompanying (4 semesters) 4 hrs; MUS 331 Piano Pedagogy 2 hrs; MUS 354 Woodwind Techniques 2 hrs; MUS 355 Advanced Woodwind Techniques 1 hr; MUS 433 Piano Literature 2 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education - Teacher Certification | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Music students desiring to teach in the public schools must complete the BM degree with a major in music education and the requirements for teacher certification. Students will be assigned an advisor in music and in the Department of Teacher Education. Regular consultation with both advisors is extremely important. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Professional Education Requirements: ETE 100 Technology Applications 1 hr; ETE 115 Schools and Schooling in Am. Society 3 hrs; ETE 116 Field Experience 1 hr; ETE 225 Human Development 4 hrs; ETE 280 Exploring Diversity: Learners, Families and Communities 3 hrs; ETE 342 Guiding Learners and Developing Classroom Communities 3 hrs; ETE 351 Elementary School Music for Music Majors 3 hrs; ETE 352 Secondary School Music 3 hrs; ETE 360 Teaching Reading in the Content Field 3 hrs; ETE 381 Field Exp. in Elem. Music Teaching 1 hr; ETE 382 Field Exp. in Secondary Music Teaching 1 hr; ETE 490 Student Teaching Professional Portfolio 1 hr; ETE 498 Student Teaching in the Elem. School 7 hrs; ETE 499 Student Teaching in the Secondary School 7 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education - Vocal Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students for a career as a public school teacher in general music, band, choir or orchestra. In addition to earning a Bachelor of Music degree, each student meets the state of Illinois teacher certification requirements for music teaching in grades K-12. Students who pursue this degree generally seek a teaching position immediately following graduation. State reciprocal programs mean students educated in Illinois are not limited to only pursuing a teaching position within the state. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Vocal Concentration: APL 197/397 Applied Music Voice (min. 7 semesters) 14 hrs; MUS 125 Foreign Language Diction 2 hrs; MED 155 Brass Techniques 2 hrs; MED 251 String Techniques 2 hrs; MED 257 Percussion Techniques 2 hrs; MED 322 Conducting II 2 hrs; MED 354 Woodwind Techniques 2 hrs; MED 355 Advanced Woodwind Techniques 1 hr; MUS 375 Opera Workshop 1 hr; MUS 470 Vocal Pedagogy 2 hrs; MUS 480 Vocal Literature 2 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Orchestral/Band Instruments Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students for careers as performers but also as private lesson teachers, church musicians and other related careers. A number of Bradley graduates have gone on to graduate school and completed their doctorates to become college professors. Students in this program receive intensive training in developing their performance skills for solo and ensemble performance. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Orchestral/Band Instruments Concentration: Applied Music (max. 4 hrs./sem.) 20 hrs; MUS 003 Junior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 491 Independent Study (Instrumental Music Literature and Pedagogy) 2 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Organ Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students for careers as performers but also as private lesson teachers, church musicians and other related careers. A number of Bradley graduates have gone on to graduate school and completed their doctorates to become college professors. Students in this program receive intensive training in developing their performance skills for solo and ensemble performance. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Organ Concentration: APL 187/387 Applied Music Organ (max. 4 hrs./sem.) 20 hrs; MUS 003 Junior Recital 0 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Piano Accompanying Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students for careers as performers but also as private lesson teachers, church musicians and other related careers. A number of Bradley graduates have gone on to graduate school and completed their doctorates to become college professors. Students in this program receive intensive training in developing their performance skills for solo and ensemble performance. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Piano Accompanying Concentration: APL 189/389 Applied Music Piano (max. 4 hrs./sem.) 16 hrs; Applied Music/accompanying techniques 16 hrs; MUS 125 Foreign Language Diction 2 hrs; MUS 421 Advanced Choral Conducting 1 hr; MUS 422 Advanced Instrumental Conducting 1 hr; MUS 480 Vocal Literature 2 hrs; MUS 491 Independent Study (Instrumental Music Literature) 2 hrs; Additional Requirements: Foreign language (French and German) 7 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Piano Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students for careers as performers but also as private lesson teachers, church musicians and other related careers. A number of Bradley graduates have gone on to graduate school and completed their doctorates to become college professors. Students in this program receive intensive training in developing their performance skills for solo and ensemble performance. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Piano Concentration: APL 189/389 Applied Music Piano (max. 4 hrs./sem.) 20 hrs; Half Junior Recital 0; MUS 327 Accompanying or MUS 328 Accompanying (4 semesters) 4 hrs; MUS 331 Piano Pedagogy 2 hrs; MUS 433 Piano Literature 2 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Music in Performance - Voice Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | This program prepares students for careers as performers but also as private lesson teachers, church musicians and other related careers. A number of Bradley graduates have gone on to graduate school and completed their doctorates to become college professors. Students in this program receive intensive training in developing their performance skills for solo and ensemble performance. | Applicant must have a minimum of four years experience in orchestra, band, choir, and/or chorus or four years of private music instruction. An audition either in person or on tape is required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: MUS 001 Recital Lab (each semester) 0 hrs; MUS 002 Senior Recital 0 hrs; MUS 141/341, 142/342, 143/343, 144/344, 145/345, or 146/346 (ensemble each semester) 8 hrs; MUS 161 Music Theory I 2 hrs; MUS 162 Music Theory II 2 hrs; MUS 163 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 164 Elementary Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 165 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 166 Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 235 Music in Its Historical Perspective I 3 hrs; MUS 236 Music in Its Historical Perspective II 3 hrs; MUS 261 Music Theory III 2 hrs; MUS 262 Music Theory IV 2 hrs; MUS 263 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 264 Ear-Training and Sightsinging 1 hr; MUS 265 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 266 Advanced Keyboard Skills-Class Piano 2 hrs; MUS 305 Counterpoint or MUS 319 Composition or MUS 405 Theories of Atonal Music 2-3 hrs; MED 321 Conducting I 2 hrs; MUS 335 Music in Its Historical Perspective III 3 hrs; MUS 336 Music in Its Historical Perspective IV 3 hrs; Voice Concentration: APL 197/397 Applied Music Voice (max. 4 hrs./sem.) 20 hrs; MUS 003 Junior Recital 0; MUS 125 Foreign Language Diction 2 hrs; MUS 375 Opera Workshop 2 hrs; MUS 470 Vocal Pedagogy 2 hrs; MUS 480 Vocal Literature 2 hrs; Additional requirements: Foreign language (French and German) 16 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Music, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2595 | Music at Bradley has a double mission: to prepare music students for successful careers as teachers or administrators in music; as professional performers; as composers; or as professionals in music related fields such as music business and to prepare both professional and general students who are not music majors for lifelong pleasure in music. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed for students interested in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, biology, secondary education, cell and molecular biology, ecology and evolution, or medical technology. All students majoring in biology, and those students desiring additional focus in one of the department's concentrations, must earn a grade of C or better in all required biology courses. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include core courses: BIO 150, 151, 250, 251, 260, 261, 310; CHM 110, 111, 116, 117, 252, 253 (CHM 256 and 257 are required for students in the cell and molecular biology-preprofessional concentration and recommended for others); MTH 115 or 121 (MTH 116 or 122 highly recommended); PHY 107 and 108. Choose a minimum of one course (with combined required laboratory) from each of the following categories. Students must also take two additional courses (lab is optional) from one of the categories. Sub-Organismal: BIO 312, 314, 375, 381, 382, 384, 464, 468, 503, 509, 525, 564, 568; Organismal: BIO 302, 323, 324, 334, 361, 406, 419, 501, 506, 530, 561; Supra-Organismal: BIO 420, 440, 450, 460, 463, 510, 519, 520, 540, 550, 563, 565. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 101 Olin Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3020 | The Department of Biology aims to graduate students who are scientifically literate, broadly trained citizens with the desire and skills to become life-long learners. To this end, we strive to provide quality, state-of-the-art teaching and research experiences for students and faculty, and to attract and retain quality faculty and students. The department maintains a curriculum that emphasizes active, investigative learning techniques and reflects the current interdisciplinary nature of scientific projects.Highlights of the department are a central curriculum that provides the basics necessary in all biology professions; specific concentrations available to help students specialize according to their interests; contact with professors, not teaching assistants; small class sizes where students and professors get to know one another; laboratory classes that help students learn from a hands-on perspective; research opportunities where undergraduates collaborate directly with faculty; a newly remodeled science building. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Biology - Cell and Molecular Biology-Preprofessional Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed for students interested in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, biology, secondary education, cell and molecular biology, ecology and evolution, or medical technology. All students majoring in biology, and those students desiring additional focus in one of the department's concentrations, must earn a grade of C or better in all required biology courses. In addition to the requirements for the biology major, to receive the cell and molecular biology-preprofessional concentration, students must have a gpa ≥ 3.2 in the biology major. Students must complete a year-long cell and molecular biology research project. Prior to graduation, the biology department’s curriculum committee will review the completed research project to ensure that the students have conducted research appropriate for the concentration. Students in the cell and molecular biology-preprofessional concentration will also be required to have second semester of organic chemistry. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include core courses: BIO 150, 151, 250, 251, 260, 261, 310; CHM 110, 111, 116, 117, 252, 253 (CHM 256 and 257 are required for students in the cell and molecular biology-preprofessional concentration and recommended for others); MTH 115 or 121 (MTH 116 or 122 highly recommended); PHY 107 and 108. For the concentration students must choose three courses from the following list or two courses from the list and research: BIO 312, 314, 361, 375, 381, 382, 384, 406, 464, 468, 502, 503, 506, 509, 525, 564, and 568. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 101 Olin Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3020 | The Department of Biology aims to graduate students who are scientifically literate, broadly trained citizens with the desire and skills to become life-long learners. To this end, we strive to provide quality, state-of-the-art teaching and research experiences for students and faculty, and to attract and retain quality faculty and students. The department maintains a curriculum that emphasizes active, investigative learning techniques and reflects the current interdisciplinary nature of scientific projects.Highlights of the department are a central curriculum that provides the basics necessary in all biology professions; specific concentrations available to help students specialize according to their interests; contact with professors, not teaching assistants; small class sizes where students and professors get to know one another; laboratory classes that help students learn from a hands-on perspective; research opportunities where undergraduates collaborate directly with faculty; a newly remodeled science building. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Biology - Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed for students interested in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, biology, secondary education, cell and molecular biology, ecology and evolution, or medical technology. All students majoring in biology, and those students desiring additional focus in one of the department's concentrations, must earn a grade of C or better in all required biology courses. In addition to the requirements for the biology major, to receive the ecology and evolutionary biology (EEB) concentration, students must have a GPA ≥ 3.2 in the biology major. Students must complete a year-long EEB related research project. Prior to graduation, the biology department’s curriculum committee will review the completed research project to ensure that the students have conducted research appropriate for the concentration. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include core courses: BIO 150, 151, 250, 251, 260, 261, 310; CHM 110, 111, 116, 117, 252, 253 (CHM 256 and 257 are required for students in the cell and molecular biology-preprofessional concentration and recommended for others); MTH 115 or 121 (MTH 116 or 122 highly recommended); PHY 107 and 108. For the concentration students must choose three courses from the following list or two courses from the list and research: BIO 302, 323, 324, 334, 419, 420, 440, 450, 460, 463, 501, 502, 510, 519, 520, 530, 540, 550, 561, 563, 565. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 101 Olin Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3020 | The Department of Biology aims to graduate students who are scientifically literate, broadly trained citizens with the desire and skills to become life-long learners. To this end, we strive to provide quality, state-of-the-art teaching and research experiences for students and faculty, and to attract and retain quality faculty and students. The department maintains a curriculum that emphasizes active, investigative learning techniques and reflects the current interdisciplinary nature of scientific projects.Highlights of the department are a central curriculum that provides the basics necessary in all biology professions; specific concentrations available to help students specialize according to their interests; contact with professors, not teaching assistants; small class sizes where students and professors get to know one another; laboratory classes that help students learn from a hands-on perspective; research opportunities where undergraduates collaborate directly with faculty; a newly remodeled science building. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Biology - Medical Technology Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed for students interested in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, biology, secondary education, cell and molecular biology, ecology and evolution, or medical technology. All students majoring in biology, and those students desiring additional focus in one of the department's concentrations, must earn a grade of C or better in all required biology courses. Students with a biology degree with a medical technology concentration would be able to enter any medical technology program around the country provided that the appropriate certification exams are taken. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include core courses: BIO 150, 151, 250, 251, 260, 261, 310; CHM 110, 111, 116, 117, 252, 253 (CHM 256 and 257 are required for students in the cell and molecular biology-preprofessional concentration and recommended for others); MTH 115 or 121 (MTH 116 or 122 highly recommended); PHY 107 and 108. In addition to the requirements for the biology major, a minimum of 12 hours must be taken; in order to be eligible for entrance to any post-graduate medical technology program, students must take Introduction to Medical Technology (BIO/CHM 141, 1hour), Organic Chemistry (CHM 256 and 257, 4 hours), Immunology (3 hours or 4 hours with laboratory), Physiology (BIO 381 or BIO 384 - 3 or 4 hours depending on whether the student takes a course with laboratory), and Microbiology (4 hours, must be taken with laboratory to meet Medical Technology Program requirements). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 101 Olin Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3020 | The Department of Biology aims to graduate students who are scientifically literate, broadly trained citizens with the desire and skills to become life-long learners. To this end, we strive to provide quality, state-of-the-art teaching and research experiences for students and faculty, and to attract and retain quality faculty and students. The department maintains a curriculum that emphasizes active, investigative learning techniques and reflects the current interdisciplinary nature of scientific projects.Highlights of the department are a central curriculum that provides the basics necessary in all biology professions; specific concentrations available to help students specialize according to their interests; contact with professors, not teaching assistants; small class sizes where students and professors get to know one another; laboratory classes that help students learn from a hands-on perspective; research opportunities where undergraduates collaborate directly with faculty; a newly remodeled science building. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science Degree in Biology - Secondary Teaching Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed for students interested in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, biology, secondary education, cell and molecular biology, ecology and evolution, or medical technology. All students majoring in biology, and those students desiring additional focus in one of the department's concentrations, must earn a grade of C or better in all required biology courses. Students would complete the degree requirements for the biology major then complete the additional hours of education courses required (39 hours) by the Department of Teacher Education, in compliance with the State of Illinois secondary teaching certification requirements. To be certified in the state of Illinois, students must complete the requirements of a secondary teaching certificate. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include core courses: BIO 150, 151, 250, 251, 260, 261, 310; CHM 110, 111, 116, 117, 252, 253 (CHM 256 and 257 are required for students in the cell and molecular biology-preprofessional concentration and recommended for others); MTH 115 or 121 (MTH 116 or 122 highly recommended); PHY 107 and 108. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 101 Olin Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3020 | The Department of Biology aims to graduate students who are scientifically literate, broadly trained citizens with the desire and skills to become life-long learners. To this end, we strive to provide quality, state-of-the-art teaching and research experiences for students and faculty, and to attract and retain quality faculty and students. The department maintains a curriculum that emphasizes active, investigative learning techniques and reflects the current interdisciplinary nature of scientific projects.Highlights of the department are a central curriculum that provides the basics necessary in all biology professions; specific concentrations available to help students specialize according to their interests; contact with professors, not teaching assistants; small class sizes where students and professors get to know one another; laboratory classes that help students learn from a hands-on perspective; research opportunities where undergraduates collaborate directly with faculty; a newly remodeled science building. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science Degree with a Major in Engineering Physics | Full Time | 129-130 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | This program is designed to provide the student with a strong background in basic science and mathematics while at the same time developing in them the ability to apply pertinent knowledge to the practice of engineering. Graduates of the program will be prepared to pursue graduate studies in physics, engineering, or related fields and to hold significant positions in government and industry. Like most engineers employed in research and development, the engineering physicist will be involved in designing, developing, and supervising the construction of new and often unique devices utilizing basic scientific information. The strong background of the engineering physicist in the basic and engineering sciences and mathematics affords the graduate of the program a wide variety of employment and educational opportunities. Many of these opportunities are different from those of the traditional engineering disciplines, particularly at the entry level of employment. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include PHY 199 Freshman Seminar 1; CHM 110 General Chemistry 4; CHM 111 General Chemistry Lab 1; ENG 101 English Composition 3; MTH 121 Calculus I 4; ME 101 Found. of Mechanical Engin. or Gen Ed (FA) 2-3; ME 273 Comput. Methods in ME or EE 101 Intro. to EE 1; PHY 110 University Physics I 4; CHM 112 Engineering Chemistry 3; MTH 122 Unified Calculus 4; COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3; ME 102 Engineering Design Graphics or EE 102 Computers and Programming in EE 2; PHY 201 University Physics II 4; MTH 223 Calculus III 4; Gen. Ed. (W. Civ) 3; Gen. Ed. (FA or HV, Philosophy) 3; Engineering Topics (Approved) 3; PHY 202 Applied Quantum Physics 3; PHY 350 Applied Quantum Physics Lab 1; MTH 224 Differential Equations 4; Gen. Ed. (Non-Western Civilization) 3; Gen. Ed. (Social Forces) 3; Engineering Topics (Approved) 3; PHY 305 Electricity and Magnetism 3; PHY 301 Classical Mechanics 3; ENG 305 Technical Writing 3; Engineering Topics (Approved) 6-3; Gen. Ed. (Human Values, Philosophy) 3-0; PHY 361 Electronics 3; PHY 306 Electromagnetic Waves 3; MTH 207 Linear algebra 3; Engineering Topics (Approved) 6; PHY 501 Quantum Mechanics I 3; PHY and EGT Design Project 3; PHY 467 Statistical and Thermal Physics 3; Engineering Topics (Approved) 6; Gen. Ed. (Social Forces) 3; PHY and EGT Design Project 3; PHY 320 Optics 3; PHY 350 Optics Lab 1; PHY or MTH Elective 3 Engineering Topics (Approved) 6. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Bradley University, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3010 | The Department of Physics offers majors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the College of Engineering and Technology. The department consists of four full-time faculty members as well as one full time instructor and two part time instructors who teach every semester. The staff includes an electronics technician, a machinist who supervises the machine shop, and the department secretary. The classes are taught by faculty members holding the Ph.D. Classes are small; introductory class enrollment is 36 students per section, and upper level classes are 10 or less. The department is a student-friendly department. The students receive individual attention from both faculty and staff. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science degree in Biochemistry | Full Time | 69-70 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This course of study is designed for students wishing to prepare for entrance into a graduate program or a career in biochemistry or a related area. The biochemistry curriculum also provides excellent preparation for students wishing to pursue a professional degree in medicine (allopathic, osteopathic, or veterinary). | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Common Curriculum Requirements: CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 116 General Chemistry II 4 hrs; CHM 117 General Chemistry II Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 252 Organic Chemistry I 4 hrs; CHM 253 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 256 Organic Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 257 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 292 Chemical Informatics 1 hr; CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 360 Biochemistry 3 hrs; CHM 380 Junior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 0 hrs; CHM 470 Physical Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 480 Senior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; One semester of biology (BIO 151), one year of college-level physics (PHY 110, 201 or PHY 107, 108), calculus (MTH 121, 122 or MTH 115, 116); Biochemistry: CHM 361 Biochemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 420 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 465 Protein Structure and Function 3 hrs; CHM 466 Intermediary Metabolism 3 hrs; CHM 471 Physical Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; BIO 310 Genetics 4 hrs; BIO 464 Cell Biology 4 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry Major | Full Time | 69-70 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This major is designed for students wishing to attend graduate school in chemistry or who plan to seek immediate employment in chemistry or an allied field. Students completing this major will receive an American Chemical Society Certified Degree. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Common Curriculum Requirements: CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 116 General Chemistry II 4 hrs; CHM 117 General Chemistry II Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 252 Organic Chemistry I 4 hrs; CHM 253 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 256 Organic Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 257 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 292 Chemical Informatics 1 hr; CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 360 Biochemistry 3 hrs; CHM 380 Junior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 0 hrs; CHM 470 Physical Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 480 Senior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; One semester of biology (BIO 151), one year of college-level physics (PHY 110, 201 or PHY 107, 108), calculus (MTH 121, 122 or MTH 115, 116); Chemistry Major: CHM 361 Biochemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 420 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 436 Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 437 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 471 Physical Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 476 Physical Chemistry II 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry-Business | Full Time | 79-80 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This major is designed for students wishing to combine chemistry with a basic knowledge of business for immediate employment in the field or to help prepare for entrance into an MBA program. Typical employment options for graduates with this major are found in companies or industries dealing with chemical procurement, production, or processing; the careers include: cost analysis, sales, marketing, advertising, customer service, and management. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Common Curriculum Requirements: CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 116 General Chemistry II 4 hrs; CHM 117 General Chemistry II Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 252 Organic Chemistry I 4 hrs; CHM 253 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 256 Organic Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 257 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 292 Chemical Informatics 1 hr; CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 360 Biochemistry 3 hrs; CHM 380 Junior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 0 hrs; CHM 470 Physical Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 480 Senior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; One semester of biology (BIO 151), one year of college-level physics (PHY 110, 201 or PHY 107, 108), calculus (MTH 121, 122 or MTH 115, 116); Chemistry-Business: CHM 316 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 420 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 450 Industrial Organic Chemistry 1 hr; Plus four additional hours, selected from the list below: CHM 332 Descriptive Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 361 Biochemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 436 Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 437 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 440 Materials Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 441 Materials Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 471 Physical Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; Eighteen hours taken in the Foster College of Business Administration: ATG 157 Accounting Principles-Financial 3 hrs; BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3 hrs; ECO 221 Principles of Microeconomics or ECO 100 Intro. to Economics 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing or MTG 304 Professional Selling 3 hrs; Three hours selected from the list below: ATG 158 Accounting principles-Managerial 3 hrs; ECO 222 Principles of Macroeconomics or any 300-level course in FIN, BMA, or MTG 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry-Preprofessional | Full Time | 72-74 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This course of study is designed to provide curricular flexibility to students who are interested in studying chemistry while preparing to attend pharmacy, optometry, or dental school. Students enrolled in this degree program will work closely with their CHMP advisor to select elective courses that best meet their career objectives. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Common Curriculum Requirements: CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 116 General Chemistry II 4 hrs; CHM 117 General Chemistry II Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 252 Organic Chemistry I 4 hrs; CHM 253 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 256 Organic Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 257 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 292 Chemical Informatics 1 hr; CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 360 Biochemistry 3 hrs; CHM 380 Junior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 0 hrs; CHM 470 Physical Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 480 Senior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; One semester of biology (BIO 151), one year of college-level physics (PHY 110, 201 or PHY 107, 108), calculus (MTH 121, 122 or MTH 115, 116); Chemistry-Preprofessional: CHM 361, BIO 200, BIO 203, BIO 406; MTH 111; Seven additional hours of chemistry and three to four additional hours of biology, selected from the lists below: CHM 332 Descriptive Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 420 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 422 Clinical Chemistry 2 hrs; CHM 436 Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 437 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 452 Physical Organic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 454 Organic Spectroscopy 3 hrs; CHM 455 Organic Spectroscopy Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 465 Protein Structure and Function 3 hrs; CHM 466 Intermediary Metabolism 3 hrs; CHM 467 Advanced Biochemistry Lab 1 hr; CHM 471 Physical Chemistry Lab I 3 hrs; CHM 476 Physical Chemistry II 3 hrs; BIO 205 Pathophysiology 3 hrs; BIO 251 Ecology, Evolution, and Biodiversity 4 hrs; BIO 310 Genetics 4 hrs; BIO 323 Comparative Anatomy 4 hrs; BIO 361 Microanatomy 4 hrs; BIO 382 Endocrinology 3 hrs; BIO 384 Neurobiology 3-4 hrs; BIO 468 Immunology of Host Defense 3-4 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry-Secondary Teaching | Full Time | 99-103 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This course of study is designed to provide graduates with the education and training to teach chemistry at the secondary-school level. Students who select this major must also complete all the education requirements as mandated by the Illinois State Board of Education, which includes at least 42 hours of course work in the College of Education and Health Sciences. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Common Curriculum Requirements: CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 116 General Chemistry II 4 hrs; CHM 117 General Chemistry II Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 252 Organic Chemistry I 4 hrs; CHM 253 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; CHM 256 Organic Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 257 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 292 Chemical Informatics 1 hr; CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 360 Biochemistry 3 hrs; CHM 380 Junior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 0 hrs; CHM 470 Physical Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 480 Senior Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; One semester of biology (BIO 151), one year of college-level physics (PHY 110, 201 or PHY 107, 108), calculus (MTH 121, 122 or MTH 115, 116); Chemistry-Secondary Teaching: CHM 471 Physical Chemistry Laboratory I 1 hr; Six additional hours, three from Category A and three from Category B, selected from the lists below: Category A: CHM 316 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; GES 101 Principles of Earth Science 3 hrs; Category B: CHM 332 Descriptive Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 420 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Construction | Full Time | 126-127 hours | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction | The construction industry is large, varied, and complex. It is intimately interwoven with, and exerts significant influence on, the overall economy of the nation. Constructors - the modern construction professionals are educated in engineering and architectural principles in the building process, allowing effective communication with the many persons with whom contact is necessary: the design professionals (engineers and architects), specialty subcontractors, manufacturers and distributors of construction materials and products, financiers and others. Additionally, and most importantly, the constructor is a manager. The constructor’s education must include the essentials of contemporary management philosophy, sound business and construction practice, and enlightened human relations. This multidisciplinary curriculum has been developed from these aims which are in consonance with the goals of the Associated Schools of Construction, and with the philosophy of the American Institute of Constructors. The program was developed for the typical student interested in general preparation for a construction career. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include CON 100 Introduction to Construction 1 hr; COM 103 Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; MTH 115 or MTH 121 Calculus I 4 hrs; General Education - Western Civilization 3 hrs; Science Elective 4 hrs; CON 132 Construction Graphics 2 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; General Education - Human Values 3 hrs; PHY 107 or Physics 110 4 hrs; CIS 102 or Programming Elective 3 hrs; CE 124 Emerging Technologies 1 hr; CE 150 Mechanics I or IMT 222 Statics 3 hrs; ECO 221 Microeconomics 3 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting - Financial 3 hrs; CON 270 Construction Materials and Methods I 3 hrs; CE 206 Surveying 2 hrs; CE 224 CADD 3 hrs; CE 270 Mechanics of Materials or IMT 324 Strength of Materials 3-4 hrs; ECO 222 Macroeconomics 3 hrs; ATG 158 Accounting-Managerial 3 hrs; CON 262 Mechanical and Electrical Systems I 3 hrs; QM 262 Quantitative Analysis I 3 hrs; ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306 Advanced Writing 3 hrs; CON 320 Soil Mechanics 3 hrs; CON 326 Construction Estimating 3 hrs; CON 372 Construction Productivity 3 hrs; BMA 342 The Legal Environment of Business 3 hrs; CON 356 Construction Safety 3 hrs; CON 342 Construction Equipment 3 hrs; CON 380 Construction Contracts 2; CON 392 Construction Scheduling 3 hrs; BMA 352 Business Management 3 hrs; Construction or Construction Science Elective 3 hrs; CON 487 Design of Steel and Concrete Structures 3 hrs; CON 493 Senior Project Planning 1 hr; General Education - Fine Arts 3 hrs; General Education - Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; Construction or Construction Science Elective 3 hrs; Management Elective 3 hrs; CON 489 Design of Wood and Masonry Structures 3 hrs; CON 498 Senior Project 3 hrs; Construction or Construction Science Elective 3 hrs; Construction or Construction Science Elective 3 hrs; Management Elective 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2942 | This department leads the university in terms of the number of students sent abroad each year. One of the most significant aspects of the department is the uniqueness of the curriculum it offers. The latest concepts in emerging technologies along with microcomputers are employed in most courses, to insure that our graduates are exposed to the latest technological advances in engineering. The faculties are dedicated professionals with a genuine desire to share their knowledge and experience with students. The diverse backgrounds of the faculty members, outstanding facilities, and small class size, will help the students develop the skills they need to succeed in practice or pursue higher education. Over the years, the seniors have been involved in the analysis and design of many practical projects. The students helped design a recreation facility in southern Indiana involving the construction of two large earth dams, two lakes, and several roads. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Dietetics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program provides the student with the academic preparation necessary to apply to dietetics internships and become registered dietitians. Registered dietitians work as accredited professionals in clinical nutrition, community nutrition, education and research, food and nutrition management, consultation and business. They are regarded as the experts in nutrition and dietetics. The dietetics program is committed, through excellence, nurturing and innovative teaching, to provide students with both theoretical knowledge and opportunities for experiential learning to comply with the foundation knowledge and skills requirements of CADE to prepare graduates for dietetic internships, and competent entry-level professionals who will be leaders in changing and evolving roles in nutrition and dietetics in societal health. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include University Requirements: MTH 111 Elementary Statistics 3 hrs; ECO 100 Introduction to Economics 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; CHM 100 Fundamentals of General Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 101 Fundamentals of General Chemistry Lab 1 hr; CHM 150 Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry 2 hrs; Family and Consumer Sciences Core 12 hours: FCS 140 Introduction to Family and Consumer Sciences 2 hrs; FCS 246 Family Systems and Applications 3 hrs; FCS 300 Consumer Issues in America 3 hrs; FCS elective to be chosen from the following: FCS 341 Human Development Through the Lifespan 3 hrs; FCS 342 Child Development Laboratory 3 hrs; FCS 440 Family Relations 3 hrs; FCS 400 Senior Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences 1 hr; Required Professional Work Experience: FCS 461 Practicum in Foods, Nutrition, and Dietetics 3 hrs; Additional Required FCS Courses 34 hours: FCS 104 Introductory Food Principles 4 hrs; FCS 220 Consumer Issues in Health Care 3 hrs; FCS 303 Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 306 Community Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 307 Life Cycle Nutrition 2 hrs; FCS 309 Investigation of Food Topics 3 hrs; FCS 405 Food Service Systems 3 hrs; FCS 407 Nutritional Assessment 2 hrs; FCS 408 Management in Food Service 3 hrs; FCS 410 Advanced Nutrition 4 hrs; FCS 411 Medical Nutrition Therapy 4 hrs; Required Supporting Courses 27-30 hours: CHM 161 Organic-Biochemistry Laboratory for Health Sciences 1 hr; CHM 160 Fundamentals of Biochemistry 2 hrs; BIO 111 Introduction to Cell Biology 4 hrs; BIO 200 Human Anatomy and Physiology 3 hrs; BIO 202 Microbiology and Immunology 4 hrs; BIO 203 Human Anatomy and Physiology Lab 2 hrs; BIO 205 Pathophysiology 3 hrs; BMA 352 Management and Organization Theory 3 hrs; or PSY 310 Industrial and Organizational Psychology; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; A 3-hour course in Learning Theory 3 hrs; Suggest: FCS 341 Human Development through the Lifespan or PSY 302 Psychology of Learning or PSY 304 Developmental Psychology; CHM 302 Medical Terminology 1 hr. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Bradley Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2433 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences traces its roots to the founding of Bradley University, when Nellie Kedzie designed a home economics curriculum that blended theoretical teaching with hands-on learning. Today that educational philosophy continues to underpin the department, which was renamed to focus on the family as a consuming unit while preparing graduates to meet new and emerging challenges in the field. Career opportunities continue to expand in this field, and Bradley’s FCS department enjoys a high job-placement rate. You’ll choose from careers in teaching, family-and-consumer-sciences-related business, social services, nutrition and dietetics, retail (fashion) merchandising, and others. The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences offers both a local and global focus, empowering graduates to respond to diverse and complex family and consumer issues. It is the department of choice for those studying the interaction of family systems, the relationship between individuals and their environment, and the global influence on well-being and the community. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Environmental Science - Biology Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | The purpose of the program is to prepare graduates for a professional career in environmental science or entrance into a graduate program. Students in Bradley’s environmental science program work directly with faculty. Most undergraduates have the opportunity to work independently on a reading and/or research project under the supervision of a faculty member, and receive credit towards graduation. Normally this is completed during the junior and senior years, and qualified students may earn credit towards graduation. Some students have had their work published or have presented their research at national conferences. Outside of the classroom, Bradley environmental science majors have a wealth of co curricular and cooperative learning experiences. These experiences prepare Bradley environmental science majors well for either immediate employment upon graduation, or for further study at the graduate or professional level. In addition, environmental science students have opportunities to travel abroad and study. Bradley environmental science graduates enjoy an excellent placement rate. Graduates gain employment in full time jobs or enroll in graduate or professional school within six months of graduation. Students have continued their studies at such schools as: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Texas A and M University, University of Iowa. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include core courses: BIO 111 Introduction to Cell Biology 4 hrs; BIO 112 Introduction to Ecology and Evolution 4 hrs; BIO 460 Ecology 4 hrs; BIO 470 Seminar 1–3 hrs; CHM 110, 111, 116, 117 General Chemistry 9 hrs; CHM 250 Organic Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 316 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; GES 101, 102 Principles of Earth Science 4 hrs; GES 110, 111 Principles of Historical Geology 4 hrs; One of the following (3-4): GES 201 Mineralogy; GES/BIO 302 Invertebrate Zoology; GES 321 Paleontology; Calculus 8 hrs; PHY 107, 108 General Physics 8 hrs. Students pursuing this concentration are strongly encouraged to take the BIO 150, 151, 250, 251, 260, 261 sequences in place of BIO 111, 112, 250. The biology concentration requires only one semester of calculus (4 hours). Biology Concentration: BIO 250 Organismic Biology 5 hrs; BIO 420 Ecosystems Ecology or BIO 463 Plant Ecology 4 hrs; Two of the following (7-8 hrs): BIO 302 Invertebrate Zoology; BIO 419 Ethology; BIO 323 Comparative Anatomy; BIO 324 Plant Diversity; BIO 334 Reproduction and Identification of Flowering Plants; BIO 381 Comparative Animal Physiology; BIO 406 General Microbiology; Two additional biology courses approved by the advisor (3 of these hours may be reading/research) 6-8 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 101 Olin Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3020 | The Department of Biology aims to graduate students who are scientifically literate, broadly trained citizens with the desire and skills to become life-long learners. To this end, we strive to provide quality, state-of-the-art teaching and research experiences for students and faculty, and to attract and retain quality faculty and students. The department maintains a curriculum that emphasizes active, investigative learning techniques and reflects the current interdisciplinary nature of scientific projects.Highlights of the department are a central curriculum that provides the basics necessary in all biology professions; specific concentrations available to help students specialize according to their interests; contact with professors, not teaching assistants; small class sizes where students and professors get to know one another; laboratory classes that help students learn from a hands-on perspective; research opportunities where undergraduates collaborate directly with faculty; a newly remodeled science building. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Environmental Science - Chemistry Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The purpose of the program is to prepare graduates for a professional career in environmental science or entrance into a graduate program. Students in Bradley’s environmental science program work directly with faculty. Most undergraduates have the opportunity to work independently on a reading and/or research project under the supervision of a faculty member, and receive credit towards graduation. Normally this is completed during the junior and senior years, and qualified students may earn credit towards graduation. Some students have had their work published or have presented their research at national conferences. Outside of the classroom, Bradley environmental science majors have a wealth of co curricular and cooperative learning experiences. These experiences prepare Bradley environmental science majors well for either immediate employment upon graduation, or for further study at the graduate or professional level. In addition, environmental science students have opportunities to travel abroad and study. Bradley environmental science graduates enjoy an excellent placement rate. Graduates gain employment in full time jobs or enroll in graduate or professional school within six months of graduation. Students have continued their studies at such schools as: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Texas A and M University, University of Iowa. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include core courses: BIO 111 Introduction to Cell Biology 4 hrs; BIO 112 Introduction to Ecology and Evolution 4 hrs; BIO 460 Ecology 4 hrs; BIO 470 Seminar 1–3 hrs; CHM 110, 111, 116, 117 General Chemistry 9 hrs; CHM 250 Organic Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 316 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; GES 101, 102 Principles of Earth Science 4 hrs; GES 110, 111 Principles of Historical Geology 4 hrs; One of the following (3-4): GES 201 Mineralogy; GES/BIO 302 Invertebrate Zoology; GES 321 Paleontology; Calculus 8 hrs; PHY 107, 108 General Physics 8 hrs. Chemistry Concentration: CHM 292 Chemical Informatics 1 hr; CHM 326 Analytical Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 351 Organic Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 470 Physical Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 520 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Environmental Science - Physics Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | The purpose of the program is to prepare graduates for a professional career in environmental science or entrance into a graduate program. Students in Bradley’s environmental science program work directly with faculty. Most undergraduates have the opportunity to work independently on a reading and/or research project under the supervision of a faculty member, and receive credit towards graduation. Normally this is completed during the junior and senior years, and qualified students may earn credit towards graduation. Some students have had their work published or have presented their research at national conferences. Outside of the classroom, Bradley environmental science majors have a wealth of co curricular and cooperative learning experiences. These experiences prepare Bradley environmental science majors well for either immediate employment upon graduation, or for further study at the graduate or professional level. In addition, environmental science students have opportunities to travel abroad and study. Bradley environmental science graduates enjoy an excellent placement rate. Graduates gain employment in full time jobs or enroll in graduate or professional school within six months of graduation. Students have continued their studies at such schools as: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Texas A and M University, University of Iowa. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include core courses: BIO 111 Introduction to Cell Biology 4 hrs; BIO 112 Introduction to Ecology and Evolution 4 hrs; BIO 460 Ecology 4 hrs; BIO 470 Seminar 1–3 hrs; CHM 110, 111, 116, 117 General Chemistry 9 hrs; CHM 250 Organic Chemistry 4 hrs; CHM 316 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; GES 101, 102 Principles of Earth Science 4 hrs; GES 110, 111 Principles of Historical Geology 4 hrs; One of the following (3-4): GES 201 Mineralogy; GES/BIO 302 Invertebrate Zoology; GES 321 Paleontology; Calculus 8 hrs; PHY 107, 108 General Physics 8 hrs. Physics Concentration: PHY 110, 201 University Physics 8 hrs; PHY 202 Applied Quantum Physics 3 hrs and the appropriate section of PHY 350 Advanced Physics Experiments 1 hr; Three of the following (9 hrs): PHY 320 Optics; PHY 330 Nuclear Physics; PHY 345 Radiation Biology; PHY 361 Electronics. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics, Bradley University, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3010 | The Department of Physics offers majors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the College of Engineering and Technology. The department consists of four full-time faculty members as well as one full time instructor and two part time instructors who teach every semester. The staff includes an electronics technician, a machinist who supervises the machine shop, and the department secretary. The classes are taught by faculty members holding the Ph.D. Classes are small; introductory class enrollment is 36 students per section, and upper level classes are 10 or less. The department is a student-friendly department. The students receive individual attention from both faculty and staff. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Health Science | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Health Science | This program consists of 68 credit hours in the liberal arts and in the sciences. Required science coursework in biology, chemistry, and physics along with the four core Health Science courses prepares the student for employment in the health area or for post-graduate study. The strong core of required courses within the college of education and health sciences, along with courses in the college of liberal arts and sciences, communication, and business provide additional essential content. Students majoring in Health Science are also required to declare a minor area of study during their sophomore year. Minor areas of study typically range from 12-15 credit hours (included in the 68 hours of the major) and allow the student to focus in an area of special interest. Health Science graduates have successfully entered the workforce and have also continued their education in post-graduate work in the areas of physical therapy, occupational therapy, medicine, pharmacology, physician assistant, optometry, chiropractic, as well as other health fields. Freshmen admitted to the health science program have the opportunity for direct admission into the Doctor of Physical Therapy program. The requirements include Math, science, and health science courses within the curriculum must be taken at Bradley; students must earn a grade of C or better on all courses; students are expected to exhibit appropriate pre-professional behavior including a positive attitude, sensitivity to differences, and the ability to manage conflict; students must meet the minimum GPAs: 3.41 in math and science courses and 3.41 overall in the sophomore year; 3.51 in math and science courses and 3.51 overall after the junior year; and 3.61 in math and science courses and 3.61 overall after the senior year. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences; three units of high school mathematics and science (biology/physiology, chemistry, and physics are recommended); ACT minimum scores of 24 in English, 24 in mathematics, and 24 composite or a SAT minimum combined score of 1100. All test values must be earned on the same examination. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include BUS 100 Contemporary Business or BMA 352 Managing in Organizations; BIO 111 Introduction to Cell Biology; BIO 112 Introduction to Ecology and Evolution; BIO 200, 203 Human Anatomy and Physiology (with lab); BIO 205 Pathophysiology; CHM 110 and 111; CHM 116 and 117 General Chemistry I, II; MTH 115 or 121 Calculus I; PHY 107, 108 General Physics I, II; ELH 310 Statistical Procedures or PSY 205 Quantitative Methods; FCS 303 Nutrition; ELH 370, 375 Human Relations Development; HS 110 Introduction to Health Science; HS 320 Fundamentals of the Health Sciences; HS/ETE 402 Educational Methods, Strategies, and Evaluation Techniques; HS 460 Basic Science of Human Movement; HS 480 Motion Analysis; Plus two of the following: HS/FCS 220 Consumer Issues in Health Care; NUR 217 Men’s Health Issues; NUR 219 Women and Health. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Health Science | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Health Science, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2855 | The Department of Physical Therapy and Health Science offers undergraduate and graduate education to students interested in careers in the health care industry. The undergraduate Health Science degree prepares the student for entry into a variety of graduate studies. The Doctor of Physical Therapy prepares students as general practitioners in Physical Therapy. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Manufacturing Engineering Technology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | This program prepares world-class manufacturing professionals. At Bradley students will learn an integrated approach to solving manufacturing problems, taking a project from the concept stage through design, analysis, manufacturing, and resource scheduling. The manufacturing design concentration emphasizes the design and selection of production machinery and equipment and the link between product design and production in terms of manufacturability. The program has technical depth in the specialty areas of product or component design and development, as well as in the area of manufacturing processes and their applications in industry. The manufacturing systems concentration emphasizes the optimal design and selection of production processes and their control. The curriculum embodies the technical and practical phases in design, development, manufacturing, programming, and utilization of materials. The student designed concentration is available to transfer students, from community colleges, that have pursued technical programs that have a different emphasis than the above concentrations. This will allow the student (with approval by the program advisor) to design a manufacturing engineering technology program to meet their defined career objectives. Thousands of new jobs are created in these fields every year. With a degree from Bradley University, students will be prepared for a position at a top company. Bradley manufacturing graduates currently hold leadership positions at companies such as The Boeing Company, Caterpillar Inc., Deere and Co., Ford Motor Company, General Electric Corporation, General Motors, Motorola, The Timken Company, and many others. Salaries for recent graduates have averaged approximately $45,000. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include General Education 27 hrs: ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; ENG 305 Technical Writing 3 hrs; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3 hrs; ECO 100 Introduction to Economics 3 hrs; Social Forces Elective 3 hrs; Western Civ Elective 3 hrs; Non-western Civ Elective 3 hrs; Human Values Elective 3 hrs; Fine Arts Elective 3 hrs; Math, Science and Computer 27 hrs: MTH 112 Pre-Calculus 4 hrs; IMT 212 Tech Calculus I 3 hrs; IMT 214 Tech Calculus II 3 hrs; PHY 107 General Physics I 4 hrs; PHY 108 General Physics II 4 hrs; CHM 100 Fundamentals of General Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 101 Fundamentals of General Chemistry Lab 1 hr; IME 105 Intro. to Computers and Computation 2 hrs; IME 117 Computer Numerical Applications 2 hrs; Technical Science 17 hrs: IMT 222 Statics 3 hrs; IMT 322 Dynamics 3 hrs; IMT 324 Strength of Materials 4 hrs; IMT 328 Mass and Energy Transfer 4 hrs; EET 320 Electricity and Power 3 hrs; Technical Core 35 hrs; IME 101 Intro. to Industrial and Manufacturing Eng. 1 hr; IME 103 Computer Aided Graphics 2 hrs; IME 341 Introduction to Manufacturing Processes 3 hrs; IME 395 Solid Modeling and Rapid Prototyping 3 hrs; IMT 232 Physical Metallurgy 4 hrs; IMT 262 Applied Statistics and Quality Control 3 hrs; IMT 332 Non-metallic Materials 3 hrs; IMT 342 Advanced Manufacturing Processes I or IMT 344 Advanced Manufacturing Processes II 3 hrs; IMT 346 Computer Aided Manufacturing and Automation I 3 hrs; IMT 362 Metrology and Instrumentation 3 hrs; IME 383 Industrial Management 3 hrs; IMT 498 Senior Industrial Project 4 hrs; Approved Technical Emphasis (Select A, B, or C 12 hrs): A. Manufacturing Design Concentration: IMT 392 Mechanical Component Design I 3 hrs; IMT 394 Dynamics of Machines 3 hrs; IMT 492 Mechanical Component Design II 3 hrs; IMT 494 Computer Aided Systems Design 3 hrs; B. Manufacturing Systems Concentration: IMT 448 Tooling Systems 3 hrs; IMT 464 Process Design and Planning 3 hrs; IMT 446 Computer Aided Manufacturing and Automation II 3 hrs; IMT 342 or IMT 344 (Second manufacturing processes course) 3 hrs; C. Student Designed (A related group of courses, selected by the student, and approved by the program advisor to meet student defined career objectives): Approved Technical Electives 9 hrs; Tech Elective I 3 hrs; Tech Elective II 3 hrs; Tech Elective III 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology, Morgan Hall, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2740 | The Bradley IMET Department, located in the Morgan Hall, houses some of the most current computing labs and manufacturing facilities. There are three computer labs with over 50 networked computers that include high-speed Internet and advanced software. IMET at Bradley is also home to a working manufacturing facility where students not only learn traditional manufacturing processes but also become familiarized with automated, high-tech computer-integrated machines, etc. IMET at Bradley offers B.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, and Manufacturing Engineering Technology; M.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering and Manufacturing Engineering. Students at all levels are given the opportunity to participate in co-op programs, study abroad programs, research projects and professional societies that further student development. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students earning a degree in mathematics go on to graduate school in mathematics: these students intend to pursue a career as a working mathematician; various graduate programs: these students use the mathematics major as preparation for programs in economics, computer science, philosophy, linguistics, theology, engineering, and physics, to name a few; careers in the real world: these students use their problem-solving skills to work as consultants, researchers, and managers in a variety of commercial areas. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include mathematics core curriculum: MTH 121, 122, 223 Calculus I, II, III; MTH 207 Elementary Linear Algebra with Applications; MTH 420 Introduction to Analysis; MTH 325 Probability and Statistics I; MTH 404 Modern Algebra I; MTH 494, 495 Senior Project I, II; CS 104 or 106 Programming; at least two of the following sequences: MTH 420 and 421 or 403; MTH 325 and 326; MTH 404 and 405; MTH 501 and 502; MTH 510 and 511; at least 24 semester hours of mathematics courses numbered 301 or above. Students considering further study of mathematics at the graduate level should elect courses such as: MTH 307 Linear Algebra; MTH 345 Differential Equations; MTH 403 Complex Variables; MTH 405 Modern Algebra II; MTH 406 Elementary Topology; MTH 421 Advanced Calculus. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Bradley University, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2502 | The Department of Mathematics consists of 15 full-time faculty members supplemented by additional part-time faculty and staff. The entire faculty teaches courses within the major. The faculties are active in scholarly research and engage in service to the university. The mission statement of the Department of Mathematics are to promote excellence in teaching, learning, and scholarship in the mathematical sciences; to prepare students for productive lives as citizens, professionals, and mathematical scientists by providing appropriate foundations via general education, beginning and advanced courses in the mathematical sciences, and by other academic support; to maintain and promote a shared commitment to and vision of the mathematical sciences. The department offers three programs for students interested in mathematics: actuarial science, mathematics for secondary school teaching, and the traditional mathematics major. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics - Actuarial Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | A degree in actuarial sciences in mathematics prepares students to apply mathematics to risk as it is related to insurance, annuities and pension plans. Students typically have passed at least one of the professional exams before graduation. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include MTH 121, 122, 223 Calculus I, II, III 12 hrs; MTH 207 Elementary Linear Algebra 3 hrs; MTH 325, 326 Probability and Statistics I, II 6 hrs; MTH 335 Topics in Actuarial Science (two different topics) 6 hrs; MTH 427 Applied Statistical Methods 3 hrs; Elective mathematics courses 6 hrs; CS 100 Introduction to Programming Concepts and Languages or CS 101 Introduction to Programming 3 or 4 hrs; ATG 157 Accounting Principles I 3 hrs; ECO 221, 222 Microeconomics, Macroeconomics 6 hrs; IME 313 Operations Research I 3 hrs; IME 314 Operations Research II 3 hrs; RMI 315 Principles of Risk Management 3 hrs; FIN 322 Business Finance 3 hrs; Required to take at least two additional three-hour courses from courses numbered MTH 301 or above other than MTH 325, MTH 326, MTH 335 and MTH 427; For an AS-M major a maximum of 25 percent of the total undergraduate program credit hours including required courses may consist of courses from the Foster College of Business Administration. Although no additional business courses are required, students wishing to take business courses in addition to those required courses listed above should consider choosing from among the following, subject to the restriction noted above: BUS 100, BUS 210, BUS 300, IB 306, ATG 158, MTG 315, BUS 342, BMA 352, BMA 372, BMA 452, ECO 301, FIN 325, FIN 425, any RMI course. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Bradley University, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2502 | The Department of Mathematics consists of 15 full-time faculty members supplemented by additional part-time faculty and staff. The entire faculty teaches courses within the major. The faculties are active in scholarly research and engage in service to the university. The mission statement of the Department of Mathematics are to promote excellence in teaching, learning, and scholarship in the mathematical sciences; to prepare students for productive lives as citizens, professionals, and mathematical scientists by providing appropriate foundations via general education, beginning and advanced courses in the mathematical sciences, and by other academic support; to maintain and promote a shared commitment to and vision of the mathematical sciences. The department offers three programs for students interested in mathematics: actuarial science, mathematics for secondary school teaching, and the traditional mathematics major. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics - Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students wishing to be certified to teach mathematics at the secondary level in Illinois enroll in this program. The mathematics requirements for this degree program consist of a core of required classes, the fulfillment of a breadth requirement, and a depth requirement. In addition, to be certified to teach mathematics at the secondary level in the state of Illinois one must complete the requirements for a secondary teaching certificate. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include mathematics core curriculum: MTH 121 Calculus I; MTH 122 Calculus II; MTH 223 Calculus III; MTH 207 Linear Algebra; MTH 325 Probability and Statistics I; MTH 404 Abstract Algebra I; MTH 420 Real Analysis I; CS 106 Intro. to Programming and Computer Science; The depth requirement can be fulfilled by completing two sequences from among the following five sequences: MTH 325-326, MTH 404-405, MTH 420 and MTH 421 or MTH 403, MTH 501-502, MTH 510-511; The breadth requirement can be fulfilled by completing a total of 24 semester hours in courses numbered 301 and above. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Bradley University, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2502 | The Department of Mathematics consists of 15 full-time faculty members supplemented by additional part-time faculty and staff. The entire faculty teaches courses within the major. The faculties are active in scholarly research and engage in service to the university. The mission statement of the Department of Mathematics are to promote excellence in teaching, learning, and scholarship in the mathematical sciences; to prepare students for productive lives as citizens, professionals, and mathematical scientists by providing appropriate foundations via general education, beginning and advanced courses in the mathematical sciences, and by other academic support; to maintain and promote a shared commitment to and vision of the mathematical sciences. The department offers three programs for students interested in mathematics: actuarial science, mathematics for secondary school teaching, and the traditional mathematics major. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | 133 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Mechanical engineering is the broadest and most versatile of the engineering professions. It utilizes a combination of human, material, and economic resources to translate ideas and theories into realistic problem solutions that satisfy the needs of society. Problems are solved in such varied areas as energy, environment, robotics, assistance for the handicapped, and air, land, sea, and space vehicles. The spectrum of mechanical engineering includes innovation and creation, research, design and synthesis, analysis, development, evaluation, production, and the marketing of machines, systems, and processes. Central to this activity is the design process which leads to the creation of solutions to real-world problems. Therefore the mechanical engineering curriculum integrates design experiences into all levels of the program and into a majority of the professional courses. This culminates in a required comprehensive design experience which is satisfied by a yearlong senior project and by the selection of a technical elective identified as satisfying this requirement in the program. Mechanical engineers are employed in a variety of service and product industries, in government, and in education. Many are self-employed as consultants. The undergraduate program also offers a particularly broad technical background for persons wishing to enter graduate programs in business, law and medicine. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include MTH 121 Unified Calculus I 4 hrs; COM 103 Oral Communication 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; ME 101 Foundations of ME 2 hrs; CHM 110/111 General Chemistry/Lab 4 hrs; MTH 122 Unified Calculus 4 hrs; CE 150 Mechanics I (Statics) 3 hrs; PHY 110 University Physics I 4 hrs; ME 102 Engineering Design Graphics 2 hrs; CHM 112 Engineering Chemistry 3 hrs; ME 351 Engineering Materials Science I 3 hrs; MTH 223 Unified Calculus 4 hrs; CE 250 Mechanics II (Dynamics) 3 hrs; PHY 201 University Physics II 4 hrs; Western Civ 3 hrs; ME 301 Thermodynamics I 3 hrs; MTH 224 Differential Equations 3 hrs; CE 270 Mechanics of Materials 3 hrs; ME 273 Computational Methods in ME 3 hrs; ECO 100 Intro to Econ 3 hrs; ME 302 Thermodynamics 2 hrs; ME 303 Instrumentation and Measurement 3 hrs; ME 341 Engineering Systems Dynamics - 3 hrs; ME 308 Thermodynamics of Fluid Flow 4 hrs; EE 327 Fundamentals of EE I 3 hrs; ENG 300-Level Writing 3 hrs; ME 403 Mechanical Engineering Systems Lab 2 hrs; ME 344 Kinematics and Dynamics of Machines 3 hrs; ME 342 Design of Machine Elements 3 hrs; ME 441 Mechanical Control Systems 3 hrs; EE 328 Fundamentals of EE II 3 hrs; Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; ME 410 ME Senior Project I 2 hrs; ME 415 Heat Transfer 3 hrs; IME 301 Engineering Economy 3 hrs; Human Values 3 hrs; Design Technical Elective 3 hrs; Approved Technical Elective 3 hrs; ME 411 ME Senior Project II 2 hrs; Social Forces 3 hrs; Fine Arts 3 hrs; Approved Technical Elective 3 hrs; Approved Technical Elective 3 hrs; Approved Technical Elective 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2711 | At Bradley, class sizes are small and faculty and students become closely associated during the educational process. Accordingly, professional guidance and mentoring is assured and lasting friendships develop. Standards are high, the atmosphere is intimate, and students are challenged to achieve their full potential as engineers and citizens. Through this hands-on experience they can develop into engineers able to enjoy and contribute to the enhancement of the quality of life. The department supports an array of Mechanical Engineering laboratories including dedicated laboratories for robotic, a material science, microprocessors, fluid dynamics, a thermal sciences, solar energy, a computers, and the Burke's Design Center These labs are well equipped with modern instrumentation, data acquisition, and computing facilities. These labs also include specialized equipment to support student and faculty classroom and project needs, such as subsonic and supersonic wind tunnels, a water table, an air conditioner trainer, a heat exchanger trainer, robots, lasers, rapid prototyping, and microprocessor prototyping boards. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering with Biomedical Concentration | Full Time | 135 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | This concentration aims to give students an interdisciplinary education with which to apply their engineering skills to current problems in medicine and biology. The curriculum integrates biomedical engineering experiences into all levels of the program. Students are introduced to current trends in the field through coursework by the selection of appropriate technical electives. As a part of the senior design projects, students in this concentration have the opportunity to design and develop medical devices for the medical and healthcare industry in the area. Additionally, students interested in pursuing graduate school in biomedical engineering have ample research opportunities at Bradley University through current collaboration with three hospitals, University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria, PeoriaNext and the USDA National Utilization of Agricultural Research Lab. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include MTH 121 Unified Calculus I 4 hrs; COM 103 Oral Communication 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; ME 101 Foundations of ME 2 hrs; CHM 110/111 General Chemistry/Lab 4 hrs; MTH 122 Unified Calculus 4 hrs; CE 150 Mechanics I (Statics) 3 hrs; PHY 110 University Physics I 4 hrs; ME 102 Engineering Design Graphics 2 hrs; Second Semester Chemistry 3 or 5 hrs; ME 351 Engineering Materials Science I 3 hrs; MTH 223 Unified Calculus 4 hrs; CE 250 Mechanics II (Dynamics) 3 hrs; PHY 201 University Physics II 4 hrs; Western Civ. 3 hrs; ME 301 Thermodynamics I 3 hrs; MTH 224 Differential Equations 3 hrs; CE 270 Mechanics of Materials 3 hrs; ME 280 Introduction to Biomedical Engineering 3 hrs; ME 273 Computational Methods in ME 3 hrs; BIO 200 Human Anatomy 3 hrs; BIO 203 Human Anatomy Lab 2 hrs; ME 303 Instrumentation and Measurement. 3 hrs; ME 308 Thermodynamics of Fluid Flow 4 hrs; ME 341 Engineering Systems Dynamics 3 hrs; EE 327 Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering I 3 hrs; ME 302 Thermodynamics II 2 hrs; ME 344 Kinematics and Dynamics of Machines 3 hrs; EE 328 Fundamentals of EE II 3; ME 441 Mechanical Control Systems 3 hrs; ENG 300-Level Writing 3 hrs; Non-Western Civilization 3 hrs; ME 410 ME Senior Project I 2 hrs; ME 342 Design of Machine Elements 3 hrs; ME 403 Mechanical Systems Lab 2 hrs; ME 415 Heat Transfer 3 hrs; Human Values 3 hrs; ECO 100 Introduction to Economics 3 hrs; ME 411 ME Senior Project II 2 hrs; Social Forces 3 hrs; Fine Arts 3 hrs; IME 301 Engineering Economy 3 hrs; Approved Biomedical Electives 6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2711 | At Bradley, class sizes are small and faculty and students become closely associated during the educational process. Accordingly, professional guidance and mentoring is assured and lasting friendships develop. Standards are high, the atmosphere is intimate, and students are challenged to achieve their full potential as engineers and citizens. Through this hands-on experience they can develop into engineers able to enjoy and contribute to the enhancement of the quality of life. The department supports an array of Mechanical Engineering laboratories including dedicated laboratories for robotic, a material science, microprocessors, fluid dynamics, a thermal sciences, solar energy, a computers, and the Burke's Design Center These labs are well equipped with modern instrumentation, data acquisition, and computing facilities. These labs also include specialized equipment to support student and faculty classroom and project needs, such as subsonic and supersonic wind tunnels, a water table, an air conditioner trainer, a heat exchanger trainer, robots, lasers, rapid prototyping, and microprocessor prototyping boards. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering with Energy Concentration | Full Time | 133 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Energy is the lifeblood of industrial economies and is essential for economic growth in developing countries. Today, some of the biggest engineering challenges are related to the production and efficient utilization of limited energy resources. This concentration prepares students to identify and analyze strategies to produce energy and to utilize energy resources in more economically efficient and environmentally friendly ways. In emerging industrial economies, the demand for new energy sources is growing at over 50 percent per decade, while in more mature growing industrial economies the growth is in the neighborhood of 10 percent per decade despite massive efforts to conserve. This has stimulated the demand for engineers and creative engineering solutions. Energy production resources are often not located in areas of the world with high energy demand, thus energy production and utilization have huge geopolitical implications. Accordingly, engineers must be cognizant of the robust set of governmental rules and regulations associated with the development of engineering solutions to the energy needs. Students selecting the Energy Concentration within Mechanical Engineering can elect courses related to solar energy, energy management, renewable energy, nuclear energy, electrical generation power plant design, energy conservation, and energy production. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules MTH 121 Unified Calculus I 4 hrs; COM 103 Oral Communication 3 hrs; ENG 101 English Composition 3 hrs; ME 101 Foundations of ME 2 hrs; CHM 110/111 Gen. Chem/Lab 4 hrs; MTH 122 Unified Calculus 4 hrs; CE 150 Mechanics I (Statics) 3 hrs; PHY 110 University Physics I 4 hrs; ME 102 Engineering Design Graphics 2 hrs; CHM 112 Engineering Chemistry 3 hrs; ME 351 Engineering Material Science I 3 hrs; MTH 223 Unified Calculus 4 hrs; CE 250 Mechanics II (Dynamics) 3 hrs; PHY 201 University Physics II 4 hrs; Western Civilization 3 hrs; ME 301 Thermodynamics I 3 hrs; MTH 224 Differential Equations 3 hrs; CE 270 Mechanics of Materials 3 hrs; ME 273 Computer Technology in ME 3 hrs; ECO 100 Introduction to Economics 3 hrs; ME 302 Thermodynamics 2 hrs; ME 303 Instrumentation and Measurements 3 hrs; ME 341 Engineering Systems Dynamics 3 hrs; ME 308 Thermodynamics of Fluid Flow 4 hrs; EE 327 Fund of EE I 3 hrs; ENG 300 Level writing 3 hrs; ME 403 Mechanical Systems Lab 2 hrs; ME 344 Kinematics and Dynamics of Machines 3 hrs; ME 342 Design of Machine Elements 3 hrs; ME 441 Mechanical Control Systems 3 hrs; EE 328 Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering II 3 hrs; Non Western Civilization 3 hrs; ME 410 ME Senior Project I 2 hrs; ME 415 Heat Transfer 3 hrs; IME 301 Engineering Economy 3 hrs; Design Technical Elective 3 hrs; Approved Energy Technical Electives 6 hrs; ME 411 ME Senior Project 2 hrs; Gen Ed - Social Forces 3 hrs; Gen Ed - Fine Arts 3 hrs; Gen Ed – Human Values 3 hrs; Approved Energy Technical Electives 6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2711 | At Bradley, class sizes are small and faculty and students become closely associated during the educational process. Accordingly, professional guidance and mentoring is assured and lasting friendships develop. Standards are high, the atmosphere is intimate, and students are challenged to achieve their full potential as engineers and citizens. Through this hands-on experience they can develop into engineers able to enjoy and contribute to the enhancement of the quality of life. The department supports an array of Mechanical Engineering laboratories including dedicated laboratories for robotic, a material science, microprocessors, fluid dynamics, a thermal sciences, solar energy, a computers, and the Burke's Design Center These labs are well equipped with modern instrumentation, data acquisition, and computing facilities. These labs also include specialized equipment to support student and faculty classroom and project needs, such as subsonic and supersonic wind tunnels, a water table, an air conditioner trainer, a heat exchanger trainer, robots, lasers, rapid prototyping, and microprocessor prototyping boards. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) | Full Time | 124 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | This program prepares graduates for the beginning practice of professional nursing in a variety of clinical settings. Students begin in the clinical setting during the sophomore year. At Bradley, the study of nursing blends theory and practice to prepare graduates to successfully complete the NCLEX-RN examination to become a registered nurse. The program is fully accredited by the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission. Nurses are increasingly at the forefront of innovative medical developments, and must cultivate new knowledge about what works in a situation and why. Bradley’s nursing program incorporates a study of liberal arts - which offers a rich and valuable background through foundation, elective, and supporting courses in the humanities, social sciences, and mathematics. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences, three units of high school mathematics and science (biology/physiology, chemistry and physics). All test values must be earned on the same examination. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include COM 103 Oral Comm. Process 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology: Social Forces and Individual Behavior 3 hrs; CHM 100 Fund. of Gen. Chemistry. 3 hrs; CHM 101 Fund. of Gen. Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; BIO 111 Cell Biology 3 hrs; MTH 111 Elementary Statistics 3 hrs; ENG 101 Composition 3 hrs; CHM 150 Fund. of Organic Chemistry 2 hrs; CHM 160 Fund. of Biochemistry 2 hrs; BIO 202 Microbiology and Immunology 4 hrs; SOC 100 Soc. Perspective 3 hrs; Elective or General Education 2 hrs; BIO 200 Anatomy and Physiology 3 hrs; BIO 203 Anatomy and Physiology Lab 2 hrs; NUR 200 Fundamentals of Nursing (T) 4 hrs; NUR 203 Fundamentals of Nursing (P) 2 hrs; FCS 301 Nutrition for Today 3 hrs; BIO 205 Pathophysiology 3 hrs; NUR 204 Intro. to Health Assessment 2 hrs; NUR 206 Adult Health I: Intro. to Medical-Surgical Nursing (T) 3 hrs; NUR 207 Adult Health I: Intro. to Medical-Surgical Nursing (P) 2 hrs; PSY 304 Developmental Psychology 3 hrs; Elective or General Education 3 hrs; NUR 306 Maternal/Newborn Nursing (T) 3 hrs; NUR 307 Maternal/Newborn Nursing (P) 2 hrs; NUR 308 Nursing of Children (T) 3 hrs; NUR 309 Nursing of Children (P) 2 hrs; NUR 318 Pharmacology and Nursing Implications 2 hrs; PSY 345 Abnormal Psychology 3 hrs; NUR 303 Research in Nursing 3 hrs; NUR 314 Psychiatric/Mental Health Nursing (T) 2 hrs; NUR 315 Psychiatric/Mental Health Nursing (P) 2 hrs; NUR 316 Adult Health II: Medical-Surgical Nursing (T) 4 hrs; NUR 317 Adult Health II: Medical-Surgical Nursing (P) 2 hrs; Elective or General Education 3 hrs; NUR 404 Community Health Nursing (T) 2 hrs; NUR 408 Adult Health III: Medical-Surgical Nursing (T) 3 hrs; NUR 409 Senior Practicum I (P) 5 hrs; Jr. ENG Composition (ENG 300, 301, 304, 305, or 306) 3 hrs; Electives or General Education 3 hrs; NUR 410 Adult Health IV: Nursing Care of the Patient with Multi-System Challenges (T) 3 hrs; NUR 414 Senior Seminar I 1 hr; NUR 417 Senior Practicum II (P) 5 hrs; NUR 418 Nursing Leadership (T) 1 hr; Electives or General Education 5 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing: LPN - BSN | Full Time | 124 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | This program is designed for the Licensed Practical Nurse that desires a baccalaureate degree in nursing. Credit is given for prior learning in nursing. The Licensed Practical Nurse may earn up to 11 semester hours of credit for prior learning. Following completion of NUR 300 and 310 with a minimum grade of C, the licensed practical nurse student may enroll in required junior nursing courses. Sixty-six hours may be transferred from a community college. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences, three units of high school mathematics and science (biology/physiology, chemistry and physics). All test values must be earned on the same examination. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include COM 103 Oral Comm. Process 3; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3; CHM 100 Fund. of General Chemistry 3; CHM 101 Chemistry Laboratory 1; BIO 111 Intro. To Cell Biology 3; MTH 111 Statistics 3; ENG 101 Composition 3; CHM 150 Fund. of Organic Chemistry 2; CHM 160 Fund. of Biochemistry 2; BIO 202 Microbiology 4; SOC 100 Social Perspectives 3; Elective or General Education Courses 2; BIO 200 Anatomy and Physiology 3; BIO 203 Anatomy and Physiology Lab 2; NUR 200 Fundamentals of Nursing (T) 4; NUR 203 Fundamentals of Nursing (P) 2; FCS 301 Nutrition Today 3; Elective or General Education 2; BIO 205 Pathophysiology 3; NUR 204 Health Assessment 2; NUR 206 Adult Health I (T) 3; NUR 207 Adult Health I (P) 2; PSY 304 Developmental 3; Elective or General Education 2; NUR 306 Maternal/Newborn Nsg (T) 3; NUR 307 Maternal/Newborn Nsg (P) 2; NUR 308 Nursing of Children (T) 3; NUR 309 Nursing of Children (P) 2; NUR 318 Pharmacology 2; PSY 345 Abnormal 3; NUR 303 Research in Nursing 3; NUR 314 Psychiatric Nsg (T) 2; NUR 315 Psychiatric Nsg (P) 2; NUR 316 Adult Health II (T) 4; NUR 317 Adult Health II (P) 2; Elective or General Education 3; NUR 404 Community Health Nsg (T) 2; NUR 408 Adult Health III (T) 3; NUR 409 Senior Practicum I (P) 5; ENG 300 Junior Composition 3; General Education or Elective 3; NUR 410 Adult Health IV (T) 3; NUR 414 Senior Seminar 1; NUR 417 Senior Practicum II (P) 5; NUR 418 Nursing Leadership (T) 1; Elective or General Education 5. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Nursing: RN - BSN | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | This program is designed for the Registered Nurse that desires a baccalaureate degree in nursing. Credit is given for prior learning in nursing. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences, three units of high school mathematics and science (biology/physiology, chemistry and physics). All test values must be earned on the same examination. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include English Composition 6; Speech 3; Fine Arts 3; Human Values 3; Western Civilization 3; Non-Western Civilization 3; Math (statistics) 3; Sciences; Chemistry 7; Microbiology 4; Anatomy and Physiology 5; Pathophysiology 3; Nutrition 3; Social Sciences: Psychology 9; Intro, Developmental and Abnormal; Sociology 3; Electives 8; Upper Division Nursing Courses: NUR 300 Conceptual Bases for Professional Nursing Practice 3; NUR 303 Nursing Research 3; NUR 310 Health Assessment 1; NUR 404 Community Health Nursing 2; NUR 418 Nursing Leadership: Concepts and Issues 1; NUR 417 Senior Practicum 5; NUR 522 Health Policy 3; Choice of Nursing Electives 9. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program is designed to maximize students’ capacity to analyze and interpret the significance and dynamics of political events and governmental processes be they at the global level or at the local community level. Students build an excellent foundation for numerous careers by mastering the accumulated basic general knowledge of political science and developing the related analytical skills. Political science majors most frequently pursue careers in law, business, governmental service, private political organizations, journalism, and academic political science. Many students with yet other career aspirations major in political science so they can understand not only how government affects them, but also how they can affect government. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include a core of four courses to provide grounding in the traditional subfields of the discipline: PLS 105 Introduction to American Government; PLS 205 Introduction to Comparative Politics; PLS 207 Introduction to Political Theory; PLS 208 Fundamentals of International Relations; a research methods course: PLS 209 Scope and Methods of Political Science; two upper-level (300- or 400-level) courses in each of two subfields to permit concentration and to acquire a depth of understanding. Subfield coursework is distributed as follows: American Politics: PLS 105, 202, 301, 310, 311, 360, 419, 420, 421, 422, 440, 459, 460, 494; Comparative Politics: PLS 205, 303, 304, 305, 306, 491; International Relations: PLS 208, 302, 317, 318, 319, 492; Political Theory: PLS 207, 300, 307, 308, 407, 493; a senior seminar designed to be a culminating experience: PLS 491 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PLS 492 Seminar in International Relations; PLS 493 Seminar in Political Theory; PLS 494 Seminar in American Politics. Students must successfully complete at least 6 hours of courses selected from physical and natural science, mathematics, computer science, statistics, or quantitative methods in addition to the hours used to fulfill the University general education requirements. The following courses may be used to fulfill the additional 6-hour requirement for the B.S. degree - all courses in astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer science, geological sciences, physics, mathematics (except MTH 100 and MTH 109), technical mathematics, and, in addition, these courses: BMA 372, ECO 319, FCS 303, PSY 415, PSY 536, QM 262, QM 263, and SCI 101. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 426E Bradley Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2496 | Political Science aims at turning politically interested and concerned students, whatever their career plans or their other interests, into politically literate college graduates. It equips them intellectually to comprehend and deal with their political world after graduation, in ways appropriate to their individual inclinations, be it as intelligent citizens, as journalists, as active participants in business or in electoral politics, as candidates for office or as public officials, or as academic political scientists. In other words, political science aims at political education 'in depth" for those students who have a particular interest in things political, whatever their occupational and professional goals and whatever their other talents and interest. While political science is usually equated with preparation for law school, a political science major prepares individuals for a variety of different careers. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication - Advertising Concentration | Full Time | 37-39 hours | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | This concentration has a strong emphasis on increasing writing skills and designing effective consumer-oriented messages both visually and verbally. By combining the study of consumer behavior, iconic campaigns and research methods, students are encouraged to expand their insight and skill through projects using real-world clients and reflecting common relevant situations. Internships and a close alliance with professionals help to reinforce this practical approach to the field giving students a well-rounded understanding of the social and economic role and the responsibility of advertising in the local, regional and international marketplace. The careers in advertising concentration are advertising consultant, radio promotion, director of marketing, editor/sales, communications/marketing coordinator, marketing support, graphic designer, marketing representative and integrated marketing communications specialist. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: COM 101 Survey of Communication 3 hrs; COM 300 Communication Theory 3 hrs; COM 417 Issues and Perspectives in Communications 3 hrs; Advertising Concentration: COM 112 Introduction to Media Production (1) or IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia (3) 1-3 hrs; COM 202 Basic Advertising Writing 3 hrs; COM 219 Public Relations 3 hrs; COM 220 Advertising as Communication 3 hrs; COM 320 Advertising Creative Strategy 3 hrs; COM 322 Media Planning 3 hrs; COM 325 Advertising Design and Production 3 hrs; COM 400 Communications Research 3 hrs; COM 481 Advertising Campaigns 3 hrs; MTG 315 Principles of Marketing 3 hrs; Advertising Concentration Electives: COM 437 Advertising in a Global Environment 3 hrs; COM 447 Issues and Ethics in Advertising 3 hrs; COM 474 Advanced Copywriting 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications, Caterpillar Global Communications Center, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2354 | The department offers exciting academic programs in Advertising, Electronic Media, Journalism, Organizational Communication, Public Relations and Sports Communication. There is a Caterpillar Global Communication Center, a 40,000 square foot technologically sophisticated facility in which every classroom and lab is linked to the Internet, local cable TV, and to the University computer system. A distance learning facility through which faculty build links between the campus and the communication professions, and between the US and learning opportunities overseas. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication - Journalism Concentration | Full Time | 37 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | This concentration is designed to teach students how to successfully gather and present news in a variety of mediums, including print, television, radio and online. Students learn the elements of journalism through a combination of hands-on interviewing and writing activities and more theoretical classroom discussions of law, ethics and best practices of journalists. The careers in journalism concentration are freelance photographer, reporter, newspaper, online editor, junior publicist, employee/investor newsletter editor, entertainment editor, Midwest correspondent, senior designer, defense/foreign policy reporter and group publisher. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: COM 101 Survey of Communication 3 hrs; COM 300 Communication Theory 3 hrs; COM 417 Issues and Perspectives in Communications 3 hrs; Journalism Concentration: Required Courses (16 hrs.): COM 112 Introduction to Media Production 1 hr; COM 201 Journalistic Writing 3 hrs; COM 215 Basic Reporting 3 hrs; COM 302 Computer-Assisted Reporting or COM 310 Broadcast News Reporting and Writing 3 hrs; COM 330 Communication Law and Ethics 3 hrs; COM 425 Public Affairs Reporting 3 hrs; Required Electives (12 hrs.): One course (3 hrs.) from: COM 315 Intercultural Communication Theory 3 hrs; COM 386 Media, Race, and Gender 3 hrs; COM 415 Global Media Systems 3 hrs; Two courses (6 hrs.) from: ART 228 Basic Digital Photography 3 hrs; COM 204 Audio Production 3 hrs; COM 307 News Feature Writing 3 hrs (Course cannot be used to satisfy two areas); COM 323 Newspaper Editing and Design 3 hrs; COM 335 Introduction to Video: Field Production 3 hrs; COM 340 Magazine Production 3 hrs (Course cannot be used to satisfy two areas); COM 345 Photojournalism and Documentary Photography 3 hrs; COM 365 Digital Photography 3 hrs; One course (3 hrs.) from: COM 307 News Feature Writing* 3 hrs; COM 314 Introduction to Video: Studio Production 3 hrs; COM 340 Magazine Production1 3 hrs; COM 414 Advanced Video-Studio Production 3 hrs; COM 435 Advanced Video-Field Production 3 hrs; COM 494 Communication Expedition (journalism focus; consent of advisor) 1-3 hrs; COM 495 Internship 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications, Caterpillar Global Communications Center, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2354 | The department offers exciting academic programs in Advertising, Electronic Media, Journalism, Organizational Communication, Public Relations and Sports Communication. There is a Caterpillar Global Communication Center, a 40,000 square foot technologically sophisticated facility in which every classroom and lab is linked to the Internet, local cable TV, and to the University computer system. A distance learning facility through which faculty build links between the campus and the communication professions, and between the US and learning opportunities overseas. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication - Organizational Communication Concentration | Full Time | 39 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | Organizational communication is the study of how people communicate within an organizational context (e.g. business, government, nonprofit) with the purpose of improving satisfaction, performance and effectiveness. The course of study is focused on the nature of communication in the workplace. Students pursuing degrees in this area develop expertise in team communication, interpersonal communication, influence and leadership, intercultural communication, conflict management, organizational decision-making, collecting and analyzing information about the organizational environment, and the ways computer-mediated communication influences organizations. The careers in organizational communication concentration are senior account executive, national marketing manager, director of operations, manager - sales development, event planner, state representative, corporate communications counsel, international/transnational communications specialist, industry/business/special interest association executive, record company executive, box office coordinator, development/puppeteer, producer/writer/director, financial consultant, strategic sourcing leader, college professor and legal secretary. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: COM 101 Survey of Communication 3 hrs; COM 300 Communication Theory 3 hrs; COM 417 Issues and Perspectives in Communications 3 hrs; Organizational Communication Concentration: Required Courses (18 hrs.): COM 201 Journalistic Writing 3 hrs; COM 219 Public Relations 3 hrs; COM 292 Organizational Communication 3 hrs; COM 392 Case Studies in Organizational Communication 3 hrs; COM 393 Small Group Communication 3 hrs; COM 400 Communications Research 3 hrs; Organizational Communication Courses (Choose 9 hrs.): COM 316 Researching Communication and Organizational Culture 3 hrs; COM 394 Communication and Conflict Management 3 hrs; COM 395 Interviewing Communication: Process and Strategy 3 hrs; COM 396 Communication and Organizational Change 3 hrs; COM 397 Virtual Teams, Communication and Collaboration 3 hrs; COM 398 Communication Training and Development 3 hrs; COM 399 Computer-mediated Communication 3 hrs; Communication Courses (Choose 3 hrs.): COM 303 Rhetorical Theory 3 hrs; COM 305 The Persuasive Process 3 hrs; COM 315 Intercultural Communication Theory 3 hrs; COM 327 Public Relations Writing 3 hrs; COM 430 Media Management 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications, Caterpillar Global Communications Center, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2354 | The department offers exciting academic programs in Advertising, Electronic Media, Journalism, Organizational Communication, Public Relations and Sports Communication. There is a Caterpillar Global Communication Center, a 40,000 square foot technologically sophisticated facility in which every classroom and lab is linked to the Internet, local cable TV, and to the University computer system. A distance learning facility through which faculty build links between the campus and the communication professions, and between the US and learning opportunities overseas. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication - Public Relations Concentration | Full Time | 42 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | Public relations majors learn how to develop and maintain key relationships between companies, nonprofit organizations, governments, and professional associations and their multiple target audiences. Students are introduced to the importance of ethical practices and corporate reputation in the business world. Classes focus on real-world examples and cases, and out-of-class experiences include job shadowing, internships and off-campus expedition classes in major metropolitan areas. Graduates from the program are employed in both entry-level and senior executive positions at agencies, small and large companies, nonprofit organizations and trade associations. The careers in public relations concentration are director of community relations, human resource director, community outreach association, photographer rep, public affairs specialist, director of public relations, crisis communications, PR and marketing director, celebrity publicist, customer service supervisor and customer services/satisfaction. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: COM 101 Survey of Communication 3 hrs; COM 300 Communication Theory 3 hrs; COM 417 Issues and Perspectives in Communications 3 hrs; Public Relations Concentration: Required courses (25-27 hrs.): COM 201 Journalistic Writing 3 hrs; COM 112 Introduction to Media Production (1) or IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia (3) 1-3 hrs; COM 215 Basic Reporting 3 hrs; COM 219 Public Relations 3 hrs; COM 220 Advertising as Communication 3 hrs; COM 327 Public Relations Writing 3 hrs; COM 383 Desktop Publishing 3 hrs; COM 400 Communications Research 3 hrs; COM 480 Public Relations: Case Studies and Campaigns 3 hrs; Required Non-Communication Courses: ATG 157 Accounting Principles-Financial 3 hrs; ECO 100 Introduction to Economics or ECO 221 Principles of Microeconomics 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications, Caterpillar Global Communications Center, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2354 | The department offers exciting academic programs in Advertising, Electronic Media, Journalism, Organizational Communication, Public Relations and Sports Communication. There is a Caterpillar Global Communication Center, a 40,000 square foot technologically sophisticated facility in which every classroom and lab is linked to the Internet, local cable TV, and to the University computer system. A distance learning facility through which faculty build links between the campus and the communication professions, and between the US and learning opportunities overseas. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication - Sports Communication Concentration | Full Time | 42 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | This program responds to the need for qualified communication professionals in the sports industry. The program familiarizes students with diverse aspects of sports communication including sports journalism, promotion and publicity, production and performance, and sports media relations. Students are prepared for management positions in professional, collegiate and amateur sports; jobs in sports media including radio and television stations and networks, print publication and internet sports; and as sports information and communication specialists. The careers in sports communication concentration are reporter, sports, sports director, professional baseball player, sports copy editor and sports editor. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: COM 101 Survey of Communication 3 hrs; COM 300 Communication Theory 3 hrs; COM 417 Issues and Perspectives in Communications 3 hrs; Sports Communication Concentration: Required Courses (27 hrs.): IM 113 Introduction to Multimedia 3 hrs; COM 160 Sports, Media, and Society 3 hrs; COM 201 Journalistic Writing 3 hrs; COM 260 Sports Writing and Announcing 3 hrs; COM 265 International Issues and Ethics in Sports 3 hrs; COM 360 Digital Journalism 3 hrs; COM 400 Communications Research 3 hrs; COM 460 Sports Promotion and Publicity 3 hrs; Required Non-Communication Course (3 hrs.): ATG 157 Accounting Principles-Financial or MTH 111 Elementary Statistics 3 hrs; Required Electives (6 hrs.): COM 215 Basic Reporting 3 hrs; COM 219 Public Relations 3 hrs; COM 220 Advertising as Communication 3 hrs; COM 292 Organizational Communication 3 hrs; COM 310 Broadcast News Reporting and Writing 3 hrs; COM 335 Introduction to Video: Field Production 3 hrs; COM 415 Global Media Systems 3 hrs; COM 420 Media Sales 3 hrs; COM 430 Media Management 3 hrs; COM 491 Topics in Communication 1-3; COM 494 Communication Expedition 1-3; COM 495 Communication Internship 1-3. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications, Caterpillar Global Communications Center, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2354 | The department offers exciting academic programs in Advertising, Electronic Media, Journalism, Organizational Communication, Public Relations and Sports Communication. There is a Caterpillar Global Communication Center, a 40,000 square foot technologically sophisticated facility in which every classroom and lab is linked to the Internet, local cable TV, and to the University computer system. A distance learning facility through which faculty build links between the campus and the communication professions, and between the US and learning opportunities overseas. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication - Television Arts Concentration | Full Time | 39 Credit-hour(s) | US $25,150 a year | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | This program prepares students for careers in audio and video production- both field and studio- post-production, non-linear editing, programming, broadcast sales and management, along with the history and theory of the business of broadcasting from its inception to today’s practices. Students work in the John C. Hench production studio, a state-of-the-art television facility, with national award-winning faculty having both academic and professional experience. The careers in Television Arts concentration are first assistant camera operator, media trainer, reporter, television, gaffer, sound designer, it program manager, production editor and utility/audio engineer. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include Core Requirements: COM 101 Survey of Communication 3 hrs; COM 300 Communication Theory 3 hrs; COM 417 Issues and Perspectives in Communications 3 hrs; Television Arts Concentration: Required Courses (15 hrs.): COM 203 Introduction to Electronic Media 3 hrs; COM 204 Audio Production 3 hrs; COM 400 Communications Research 3 hrs; COM 415 Global Media System 3 hrs; COM 430 Media Management 3 hrs; Production Track: COM 314 Introduction to Video: Studio Production 3 hrs; COM 335 Introduction to Video: Field Production 3 hrs; COM 414 Advanced Studio Production 3 hrs; COM 435 Advanced Field Production 3 hrs; COM 445 Nonlinear Post Production 3 hrs; COM 495 Communication Internship 3 hrs; Operations and Strategies Track: COM 292 Organizational Communication 3 hrs; COM 330 Communication Law and Ethics 3 hrs; COM 420 Media Sales 3 hrs; COM 450 Electronic Media Programming and Promotion 3 hrs; COM 495 Communication Internship 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Communications, Caterpillar Global Communications Center, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2354 | The department offers exciting academic programs in Advertising, Electronic Media, Journalism, Organizational Communication, Public Relations and Sports Communication. There is a Caterpillar Global Communication Center, a 40,000 square foot technologically sophisticated facility in which every classroom and lab is linked to the Internet, local cable TV, and to the University computer system. A distance learning facility through which faculty build links between the campus and the communication professions, and between the US and learning opportunities overseas. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts in Family and Consumer Sciences | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This flexible curriculum is designed for students who have interest areas in family and consumer sciences other than specific majors offered by the department at Bradley University. Examples of interest areas appropriate for this major include foods, nutrition, apparel, textiles, living environments, child development and family relationships, or careers in cooperative extension services. The major requires a minimum of 38 family and consumer sciences hours, including the family and consumer sciences core. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include University Requirements: ECO 100 Introduction to Economics or ECO 221 Principles of Microeconomics 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; Family and Consumer Sciences Core 12 hours: FCS 140 Introduction to Family and Consumer Sciences 2 hrs; FCS 246 Family Systems and Applications 3 hrs; FCS 300 Consumer Issues in America 3 hrs; FCS elective to be chosen from the following: FCS 341 Human Development Through the Lifespan 3 hrs; FCS 342 Child Development Laboratory 3 hrs; FCS 440 Family Relations 3 hrs; FCS 400 Senior Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences 1 hr; Required Professional Work Experience: FCS 461 Practicum in Foods, Nutrition, and Dietetics 3 hrs; Additional Required FCS Courses 34 hours: FCS 104 Introductory Food Principles 4 hrs; FCS 220 Consumer Issues in Health Care 3 hrs; FCS 303 Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 306 Community Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 307 Life Cycle Nutrition 2 hrs; FCS 309 Investigation of Food Topics 3 hrs; FCS 405 Food Service Systems 3 hrs; FCS 407 Nutritional Assessment 2 hrs; FCS 408 Management in Food Service 3 hrs; FCS 410 Advanced Nutrition 4 hrs; FCS 411 Medical Nutrition Therapy 4 hrs; Required Professional Work Experience: Choose one of the following: FCS 460 Family and Consumer Sciences Internship 3 hrs; FCS 461 Practicum in Foods, Nutrition, and Dietetics 3 hrs; EHS 301 Cooperative Education Internship – 0-3 hrs; Additional Required FCS courses: 1. Foods and Nutrition (choose at least two): FCS 104 Introductory Food Principles 4 hrs; FCS 203 Health, Safety and Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 303 Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 304 Sports and Exercise Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 306 Community Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 309 Investigation of Food Topics 3 hrs; FCS 405 Food Service Systems 3 hrs; FCS 406 Issues and Trends in Foods and Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 407 Nutritional Assessment 2 hrs; FCS 408 Management in Food Service 3 hrs; FCS 410 Advanced Nutrition 4 hrs; FCS 411 Medical Nutrition Therapy 4 hrs; 2. Clothing and Textiles (choose at least two): FCS 130 Clothing in Contemporary Society 3 hrs; FCS 133 Apparel Production 3 hrs; FCS 231 Pattern Making 3 hrs; FCS 233 Consumer Textiles 3 hrs; FCS 235 Apparel Product and Development 3 hrs; FCS 330 Fashion Merchandising 3 hrs; FCS 331 Fashion Merchandising Laboratory 1 hr; FCS 332 Advanced Clothing Construction 3 hrs; FCS 333 Advanced Textiles 3 hrs; FCS 334 Visual Merchandising and Promotion 3 hrs; FCS 338 International Fashion Merchandising 3 hrs; FCS 433 Issues and Trends in Apparel and Textiles 3 hrs; FCS 438 Global Trends in Apparel and Textiles 3 hrs; FCS 536 World of Fashion 3 hrs; 3. Human Ecology (choose at least two): FCS 220 Consumer Issues in Health Care 3 hrs; FCS 300 Consumer Issues in America 3 hrs; FCS 357 Housing and Interior Design 3 hrs; FCS 359 Applied Projects in Interior Design 3 hrs; 4. Child/Family (choose at least two): FCS 246 Family Systems and Applications 3 hrs; FCS 307 Life Cycle Nutrition 2 hrs; FCS 341 Human Development Through the Lifespan 3 hrs; FCS 342 Child Development Laboratory 3 hrs; FCS 440 Family Relations (choice within core) 3. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Bradley Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2433 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences traces its roots to the founding of Bradley University, when Nellie Kedzie designed a home economics curriculum that blended theoretical teaching with hands-on learning. Today that educational philosophy continues to underpin the department, which was renamed to focus on the family as a consuming unit while preparing graduates to meet new and emerging challenges in the field. Career opportunities continue to expand in this field, and Bradley’s FCS department enjoys a high job-placement rate. You’ll choose from careers in teaching, family-and-consumer-sciences-related business, social services, nutrition and dietetics, retail (fashion) merchandising, and others. The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences offers both a local and global focus, empowering graduates to respond to diverse and complex family and consumer issues. It is the department of choice for those studying the interaction of family systems, the relationship between individuals and their environment, and the global influence on well-being and the community. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts in Family and Consumer Sciences Education | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | This program offers a flexible curriculum for students who have special interests in areas such as: food, nutrition, apparel, textiles, interior design, family and child development. Students also have the option of taking an international concentration with their major. The international concentration requires 18 hours. Students who choose the family and consumer sciences education program (FCST) can meet Illinois certification requirements for teaching family and consumer sciences in junior and senior high schools. Graduates receiving certification have found employment in public schools throughout the United States. All students must complete the family and consumer sciences core. Student teaching (ETE 499) fulfills the professional work experience requirement. As in any good program, revisions are being made continually; students should consult the Department of Teacher Education chair about current program requirements. Secondary education teacher candidates should refer to the teacher education department for requirements in professional education courses for secondary education. Candidates will have an advisor in both Family and Consumer Sciences and in the Department of Teacher Education. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include FCST Foundational Requirements: FCS 140 Introduction to Family and Consumer Sciences 2 hrs; FCS 246 Family Systems and Applications 3 hrs; FCS 300 Consumer Issues in America 3 hrs; FCS 341 Human Development Through the Lifespan 3 hrs; FCS 342 Child Development Laboratory 3 hrs; FCS 440 Family Relations 3 hrs; FCS 400 Sr. Seminar in Family and Consumer Sciences 1; Nutrition, and Wellness and Hospitality: Choose 12 hours from the following courses: FCS 104 Introductory Food Principles 4 hrs; FCS 203 Health, Safety and Nutrition or FCS 303 Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 220 Consumer Issues in Health Care 3 hrs; FCS 306 Community Nutrition 3 hrs; FCS 309 Investigation of Food Topics 3 hrs; FCS 405 Food Service Systems or FCS 408 Management in Food Service 3 hrs; Apparel and Textiles: Choose 12 hours from the following courses: FCS 130 Clothing and Human Behavior 3 hrs; FCS 133 Apparel Production 3 hrs; FCS 233 Consumer Textiles 3 hrs; FCS 231 Pattern Making (3); or FCS 332 Advanced Clothing Construction (3); or FCS 330 Fashion Merchandising (3) and FCS 331 Fashion Show Production (1) 3 or 4; FCS 235 Apparel Product and Development 3 hrs; FCS 334 Visual Merchandising and Promotion 3 hrs; FCS 336 History of Fashion 3 hrs; Living Environments: Choose 12 hours from the following courses: FCS 233 Consumer Textiles 3 hrs; FCS 246 Family Systems and Applications 3 hrs; FCS 300 Consumer Issues in America 3 hrs; FCS 334 Visual Merchandising and Promotion 3 hrs; FCS 357 Housing and Interior Design 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Bradley Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2433 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences traces its roots to the founding of Bradley University, when Nellie Kedzie designed a home economics curriculum that blended theoretical teaching with hands-on learning. Today that educational philosophy continues to underpin the department, which was renamed to focus on the family as a consuming unit while preparing graduates to meet new and emerging challenges in the field. Career opportunities continue to expand in this field, and Bradley’s FCS department enjoys a high job-placement rate. You’ll choose from careers in teaching, family-and-consumer-sciences-related business, social services, nutrition and dietetics, retail (fashion) merchandising, and others. The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences offers both a local and global focus, empowering graduates to respond to diverse and complex family and consumer issues. It is the department of choice for those studying the interaction of family systems, the relationship between individuals and their environment, and the global influence on well-being and the community. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program provides students with a basic understanding of human behavior through the study of covert and overt behavior in humans and animals. The study of psychology encompasses physiological, cognitive, and societal influences on behavior and how these influences interact with one another. Learning, memory, neurology, perception, and reasoning are investigated as they relate to the behavior of the individual and groups. Psychology is studied in both the classroom and the laboratory setting. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include PSY 104; PSY 205; PSY 206; A minimum of one course from the each of the following categories: Category A - Social and Cognitive Bases: PSY 304 Developmental Psychology; PSY 307 Cognitive Psychology; PSY 308 Social Psychology; Category B - Biological Bases: PSY 302 Psychology of Learning; PSY 403 Physiological Psychology; PSY 404 Sensation and Perception; Category C - Applications: PSY 310 Industrial and Organizational Psychology; PSY 320 Human Factors; PSY 335 Health Psychology; PSY 345 Abnormal Psychology; Category D - Quantitative and Integrative: PSY 411 Tests and Measurement; PSY 415 Intermediate Statistics; PSY 439 History of Psychology; PSY 452 Personality Theories and Theorists; BIO 101, 102, or 200 (3 semester hours); Nine additional semester hours (three courses) from any of the psychology course offerings. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2584 | The Psychology Department at Bradley University has a distinguished history of preparing students to excel in work and life. Many Psychology students pursue careers in mental health fields and other health-related occupations; more generally, a good foundation in psychology provides skills that lead to a wide variety of exciting career paths. The faculties are scholars in their respective fields. Their areas of expertise span the range of the discipline - this means the psychology curriculum is characterized by breadth and depth. All major facets of behavior, from cell to culture, are represented in the curriculum. Laboratory experiences add to the depth and richness of the curriculum. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts in Retail Merchandising | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | The purpose of the program is to prepare graduates for careers in buying and sales and related areas in the fashion industry. In addition to their major coursework students will also pursue a minor in business management or marketing. The retail merchandising curriculum includes core courses in the history and philosophy of family and consumer sciences along with specialized courses in retail merchandising. These areas include apparel analysis, consumer behavior, fashion merchandising, and textiles. The department of family and consumer sciences offers both a local and global focus, empowering graduates to respond to diverse and complex family and consumer issues. Students in Bradley’s retail merchandising program work directly with dedicated faculty who create a close-knit community through teaching, advising, and mentorship. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include University Requirements: CHM 100 Fundamentals of General Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 101 Fundamentals of General Chemistry Lab 1 hr; ECO 100 or ECO 221 3 hrs; MTH 111 Elementary Statistics 3 hrs; PSY 104 Principles of Psychology 3 hrs; Students must complete a minimum of 38 hours in FCS courses; Family and Consumer Sciences Core 12 hrs; Required Professional Work Experience: FCS 460 Family and Consumer Sciences Internship 3 hrs; Additional Required FCS Courses 31 hours: FCS 130 Clothing and Human Behavior 3 hrs; FCS 133 Apparel Production 3 hrs; FCS 233 Consumer Textiles 3 hrs; FCS 235 Apparel Product Development and Analysis 3 hrs; FCS 330 Fashion Merchandising 3 hrs; FCS 331 Merchandising Lab 1 hr; FCS 333 Advanced Textiles 3 hrs; FCS 334 Visual Merchandising and Promotions 3 hrs; FCS 336 History of Fashion 3 hrs; FCS 438 Global Issues of Textile and Apparel 3 hrs; FCS elective (FCS 338 or 357) 3 hrs; Required Supporting Courses 6 hours: ART 227 Basic Graphic Design 3 hrs; MTG 381 Integrated Marketing Communications or COM 220 Advertising as Communication 3 hrs; Required Minor: Option I or Option II; Option I 15 hours: a management minor under the Business Management and Administration Department, Foster College of Business Administration; Option II 15 hours: a marketing minor under the Marketing Department Foster College of Business Administration. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Bradley Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2433 | The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences traces its roots to the founding of Bradley University, when Nellie Kedzie designed a home economics curriculum that blended theoretical teaching with hands-on learning. Today that educational philosophy continues to underpin the department, which was renamed to focus on the family as a consuming unit while preparing graduates to meet new and emerging challenges in the field. Career opportunities continue to expand in this field, and Bradley’s FCS department enjoys a high job-placement rate. You’ll choose from careers in teaching, family-and-consumer-sciences-related business, social services, nutrition and dietetics, retail (fashion) merchandising, and others. The Department of Family and Consumer Sciences offers both a local and global focus, empowering graduates to respond to diverse and complex family and consumer issues. It is the department of choice for those studying the interaction of family systems, the relationship between individuals and their environment, and the global influence on well-being and the community. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor of Science/Arts - Master of Science in Quantitative Finance (BS/A-MSQF) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | This program will equip the students with the skills, concepts, tools, and techniques to excel as a financial engineering professional. To achieve the BS/A-MSQF, students in good standing follow a particular track of undergraduate courses, enter the MSQF program in their senior year, and complete their master’s program studies during their fifth year. While freshman applicants are preferred, students may choose the BS/A-MSQF at any time during their undergraduate studies. For these students, foundational coursework may be necessary to properly prepare them for graduate level courses. This program allows the students to channel their voracious interest in mathematics, finance, and computer science in learning how their applications within complex problem solving contexts can inform business and financial challenges such as new product development, portfolio structuring, scenario simulation, derivative securities valuation, and risk management. The curriculum integrates mathematical, computer science, and finance skill sets within a course of study including calculus, probability theory, numerical methods, algorithms, neural networks, computation with uncertainty measurement and management, and dynamic valuation and pricing theories. The curriculum provides a solid theoretical background with a particular focus on applied skills. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Undergraduate Courses: Calculus I thru III; Derivatives I; Differential Equations; Elementary Linear Algebra; Financial Markets and Institutions; Financial Strategy; FIN Electives; Investment Analysis; Introduction to Developing Business Applications; Probability and Statistics I and II (in lieu of FCBA core req. QM 262 and 263); Portfolio Theory; Graduate Courses: Algorithms; Derivatives II; Expert Systems; Fixed Income; Numerical Methods I and II; Partial Differential Equations; Quantitative Finance Capstone; Quantitative Methods in Finance; Topics in Quantitative Finance; Readings in Quantitative Finance; Uncertainty Analysis and Measurement. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods, 227 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2313 | The Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods consists of nine full-time faculties, including a Financial Executive-in-Residence. Professors in the department possess a wide array of expertise and teach finance, quantitative methods, risk management and actuarial science courses at the undergraduate level, conduct a Finance Concentration in the MBA program, participate in the Executive MBA Program, the Caterpillar Management for the 21st Century program and other executive and professional development programs. Faculty research has been published in many scholarly journals and the department publishes the Journal of Economic and Financial Practice. The Bradley Investment Organization student group develops a mock equity portfolio to practice tracking and analyzing securities. The department sponsors additional student organizations: Financial Management Association, Acclaimed Intellectual Property Association, and Gamma Iota Sigma, the national association for risk management students. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelor's (BS) and Master of Science degree in Biology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program allows undergraduates to complete their bachelor's degree, transfer seamlessly to the master's degree, and finish both programs in five years. Nomination to the program will be based on grades, progress through the curriculum, and progress on a specific research project. Students will not be admitted to the program after the first day of spring semester their senior year. After nomination the student must follow the application procedures consistent with application to the Graduate School and Biology Graduate Program. Students admitted to the graduate program in biology pursuing an MS degree in biology as an undergraduate will need to complete 30 semester hours of graduate work. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences and 2 units of a single foreign language. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules for the first two years of the undergraduate curriculum includes BIO 1502 hrs; CHM 110 3 hrs; CHM 111 1 hr; MTH 115 or 121 4 hrs; ENG 101 or COM 103 3 hrs; BIO 151 4 hrs; CHM 116 4 hrs; CHM 117 1 hr; MTH 116 or 122 (recommended) 3-4 hrs; ENG 101 or COM 103 3 hrs; BIO 250 4 hrs; BIO 260 1 hr; CHM 252 and 253 5 hrs; Electives 7-8 hrs; BIO 251 4 hrs; BIO 2612 hrs; Electives 10 hrs. Of the total 30 hours of graduate work, fifteen hours must be classroom courses (i.e., non-independent study), one hour must be in the Thesis Proposal Preparation course (BIO 500) taken spring of the senior year, twelve hours must be taken at the 600 level, and six hours of Thesis (BIO 699) are required. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 101 Olin Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3020 | The Department of Biology aims to graduate students who are scientifically literate, broadly trained citizens with the desire and skills to become life-long learners. To this end, we strive to provide quality, state-of-the-art teaching and research experiences for students and faculty, and to attract and retain quality faculty and students. The department maintains a curriculum that emphasizes active, investigative learning techniques and reflects the current interdisciplinary nature of scientific projects.Highlights of the department are a central curriculum that provides the basics necessary in all biology professions; specific concentrations available to help students specialize according to their interests; contact with professors, not teaching assistants; small class sizes where students and professors get to know one another; laboratory classes that help students learn from a hands-on perspective; research opportunities where undergraduates collaborate directly with faculty; a newly remodeled science building. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelors of Science in Industrial Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | Industrial Engineering is concerned with the design, improvement, and installation of integrated systems. These systems may involve people, materials, information, equipment, or energy. The work of industrial engineers involves carefully analyzing and improving these systems. IEs have a strong background in mathematical, physical, and social sciences, as well as in engineering analysis and design. They also learn many of the same principles studied in business school. With preparation in both engineering and business, IE graduates have many employment opportunities. Industrial engineers have a slightly different focus than other engineers. Instead of focusing on engines, gears, circuits, or bridges, IEs concentrate on overall systems and processes. They step back and look at the big picture so they can improve quality and productivity in a wide range of environments. Since IEs can work in so many different fields, the list of projects they may be assigned can be quite varied. For example, an IE may design the admissions procedure at a hospital, improve a product assembly process to increase quality and reduce worker injury, or work with other engineers to design a new office building. The program offers students three concentration options: Engineering management, Logistics engineering, Systems Engineering. The engineering management concentration incorporates 12 hours from the existing minor in management that is already being offered by the foster college of business (FCB). The logistics engineering concentration emphasizes courses that will improve the student’s analytical skills, particularly as they pertain to material procurement within complex supply chain systems. The systems engineering concentration gives the student a program that most closely resembles our traditional IE program. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include IME 101 Introduction to Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering 1; IME 103 Computer Aided Graphics 2; MTH 121 Calculus I 4; CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1; ENG 101 English Composition 3; Gen. Ed. Social Forces Economics100/121 3; IME 110 Computers and Numerical Application 3; MTH 122 Calculus II 4; PHY 110 University Physics 4; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3; Gen. Ed. - Western Civilization 3; ME 301 Engineering Economy 3; MTH 223 Calculus III 4; PHY 201 University Physics II 4; CE 150 Mechanics I 3; Gen. Ed. Human Values 3; MTH 224 Differential Equations (or) MTH 207 Elementary Linear Algebra 3; CE 270 Mechanics of Materials 3; IME 311 Intro to Engineering Statistical Methods 3; IME 386 Industrial and Managerial Engineering 3; IME 331 Fundamentals of Materials Science 3; IME 305 Engineering Economy II 2; IME 312 Engineering Statistics II 3; IME 313 Operations Research I 3; IME 341 Introduction to Manufacturing Processes 3; IME 361 Simulations and Expert Systems Fundamentals 3; Concentration Core (or) IE Elective I 3; IME 422 Manufacturing Quality Control 3; IME 466 Facilities Planning 3; Concentration Core (or) IE Elective II 3; Technical Elective I-Approved List 3; Gen. Ed. -Social Forces I 3; IME 481 Lean Production Systems 3; IME 485 Occupational Ergonomics 3; Concentration Core (or) IE Elective III 3; Technical Elective I-Approved List 3; Gen. Ed. -Fine Arts I 3; IME 499 Senior Industrial Design Project 4; Concentration Core (or) IE Elective IV 3; Eng. 305 Technical Writing 3; Technical Elective I-Approved List 3; Gen. Ed. - Non-Western Civilization 3; Engineering Management Concentration: BMA 352 Managing in Organizations 3; BMA 356 Human Resource Management 3; BMA 357 Leadership and Interpersonal Behavior 3; BMA - Management Elective 3; Logistics Engineering Concentration: IME 412 Design and Analysis of Experiments 3; IME 461 Advanced Simulation 3; IME 483 Production Planning and Control 3; IME 486 Logistical Analysis Supply Chain Systems 3; Systems Engineering Concentration: PSY 310 Industrial and Organizational Psychology 3; IME 314 Operations Research II 3; IME 468 Expert Systems 3; IME 483 Production Planning and Control 3. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology, Morgan Hall, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2740 | The Bradley IMET Department, located in the Morgan Hall, houses some of the most current computing labs and manufacturing facilities. There are three computer labs with over 50 networked computers that include high-speed Internet and advanced software. IMET at Bradley is also home to a working manufacturing facility where students not only learn traditional manufacturing processes but also become familiarized with automated, high-tech computer-integrated machines, etc. IMET at Bradley offers B.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, and Manufacturing Engineering Technology; M.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering and Manufacturing Engineering. Students at all levels are given the opportunity to participate in co-op programs, study abroad programs, research projects and professional societies that further student development. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Bachelors of Science in Manufacturing Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | Manufacturing engineers use complex systems, high-tech equipment, robots, and machines to convert a few pennies worth of raw materials into finished products worth hundreds of times that. Be ready for the exciting world of manufacturing. Bradley manufacturing graduates currently hold leadership positions at companies such as The Boeing Company, Caterpillar Inc., Deere & Co., Ford Motor Company, Motorola, and Hewlett Packard. Bradley's manufacturing graduates have an average starting salary exceeding $50,000 per year. The program offers students two concentration options: Process Engineering and Lean Manufacturing. Process engineering concentration would be aimed at providing the graduates with a strong set of knowledge and skills in product design, manufacturing processes, materials selection and design, automation, and manufacturing systems. The graduates would successfully function in industries such as automotive, aerospace, and heavy equipment manufacturers. Lean manufacturing concentration on the other hand would prepare the graduates to concentrate on creating more value with less work, through cost reduction by the elimination of waste in manufacturing. They would learn about principles like pull processing, perfect first-time quality, waste minimization, continuous improvement, six sigma utilization, flexibility, and production flow. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: 2 units of algebra, 1 unit of plane geometry, 1/2 unit of trigonometry, 1 unit of physics, 1/2 unit of solid geometry, 1 unit of pre-calculus, and 1 unit of chemistry; 1/2 unit of graphics for industrial engineering. Applicants deficient in mathematics and science may be admitted. However, it is expected that the deficiency will be removed, preferably during the summer preceding entrance. ACT minimum scores of 24 composite, 24 in math or an SAT minimum combined score of 1100 is also required. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Bachelor degree | Bradley University | The modules include IME 101 Introduction to Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering 1; IME 103 Computer Aided Graphics 2; MTH 121 Calculus I 4; CHM 110 General Chemistry I 3; CHM 111 General Chemistry I Laboratory 1; ENG 101 English Composition 3; Gen. Ed. Social Forces Economics 3; ME 110 Intro to Computers and Computational Analysis 3; MTH 122 Calculus II 4; PHY 110 University Physics 4; COM 103 The Oral Communication Process 3; CHM 112 Engineering Chemistry or other Math/Sciences 3; ME 301 Engineering Economy I 3; MTH 223 Calculus III 4; PHY 201 University Physics II 4; CE 150 Mechanics I 3; Gen. Ed. Human Values 3; MTH 224 Elementary Differential Equations 3; CE 270 Mechanics of Materials 3; IME 386 Industrial and Managerial Engineering 3; IME 331 Fundamentals of Material Science 3; IME 341 Manufacturing Processes 3; IME 302 Introduction to Quality Engineering 3; IME 333 Materials Science Laboratory 1; IME 431 Materials Engineering 2; IME 395 Solid Model and Rapid Prototyping 3; Concentration Core (or) MFE Elective I 3; Gen. Ed. Western Civilization 3; IME 362 Metrology and Instrumentation 3; IME 441 Advanced Manufacturing Processes I or IME 443 Advanced Manufacturing Processes II 3; Concentration Core (or) MFE Elective II 3; Gen. Ed. Social Forces 3; Gen. Ed. Fine Arts 3; EE 327 Fundamentals of Electricity and Electronics 3; IME 445 Computer Aided Manufacturing 3; Concentration Core (or) MFE Elective III 3; Gen. Ed. Non-Western Civilization 3; Technical Elective 3; IME 499 Senior Design Project 4; ENG 305 Technical Writing 3; Concentration Core (or) MFE Elective IV 3; Approved Technical Electives 3; Process Engineering Concentration: IME 325 Transport Phenomena 3; IME 441 Advanced Manufacturing Processes I or 3 IME 443 Advanced Manufacturing Processes II 3; IME 447 Advanced Joining and Fabrication 3; IME 491 Design for Manufacturability 3; Lean Manufacturing Concentration: IME 412 Design of Experiments 3; IME 466 Facilities Planning 3; IME 481 Lean Production Systems 3; IME 486 Logistical Engineering 3. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology, Morgan Hall, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2740 | The Bradley IMET Department, located in the Morgan Hall, houses some of the most current computing labs and manufacturing facilities. There are three computer labs with over 50 networked computers that include high-speed Internet and advanced software. IMET at Bradley is also home to a working manufacturing facility where students not only learn traditional manufacturing processes but also become familiarized with automated, high-tech computer-integrated machines, etc. IMET at Bradley offers B.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, and Manufacturing Engineering Technology; M.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering and Manufacturing Engineering. Students at all levels are given the opportunity to participate in co-op programs, study abroad programs, research projects and professional societies that further student development. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Doctor of Physical Therapy | Full Time | 3 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Health Science | Physical Therapy is a profession committed to improving the quality of life of individuals in every sector of the population. From infants to the elderly and from athletes to those stricken by disease or injury, physical therapists work to restore movement, improve function, and promote healthy lifestyles. Physical therapists are qualified to evaluate and treat nearly any movement impairment. They practice in a variety of settings such as schools, private practice clinics, hospitals, long-term care facilities, industry, and outpatient clinics. The faculties of the physical therapy program at Bradley University are committed to teaching a foundation of basic sciences such as biomechanics, neurosciences, musculoskeletal, physiology, motor learning, and administrative theory. From this foundation students learn examination, evaluation, diagnostic, and intervention skills. They have ample time to practice their skills in five fully supervised clinical rotations. Graduates will be eligible to apply for licensure. | Applicant must have completed a baccalaureate degree with a Health Science major from Bradley University with a C or higher in all required courses or completed a baccalaureate degree with the following courses completed with a C or higher: Chemistry 1 year chemistry sequence for science majors (eg. 6-8 semester hours) with laboratory experience; Physics 1 year physics sequence for science majors (eg. 6-8 semester hours) with laboratory experience; Biology/Zoology 6-8 semester hours with content that includes an introduction to cell biology, biochemistry, and genetics; Anatomy 3-4 semester hours of vertebrate, mammalian, human, or comparative anatomy that includes a laboratory experience; Physiology 3-4 semester hours of vertebrate, mammalian, or human physiology (a two-semester sequence of combined anatomy and physiology will meet the anatomy and physiology requirement); Statistics 3 semester hours of statistics. They must have a minimum 3.0 grade point average in all mathematics and science courses taken and minimum 3.0 grade point average for all courses taken. GRE verbal and quantitative minimum total of 1000 is required. TOEFL score of 600 or higher, TSE of 50 or higher, and TWE of 4.5 or higher is needed for non-native English speaking applicants. Applicants must have skills in computer literacy, communication (written and verbal), medical terminology, and teaching. | Doctoral | Bradley University | The modules include PT 612 Functional Anatomy I; PT 614 Gross Anatomy I; PT 616 Research I; PT 622 Functional Anatomy II; PT 624 Gross Anatomy II; PT 630 Foundations of Physical Therapy; PT 636 Musculoskeletal Physical Therapy I; PT 640 Clinical Science I; PT 646 Research II; PT 650 Clinical Education I; PT 662 Neurological Physical Therapy I; PT 666 Research III; PT 670 Human Development Throughout the Lifespan; PT 680 Clinical Science II; PT 700 Musculoskeletal Physical Therapy II; PT 710 Clinical Education II; PT 710 Clinical Education II; PT 716 Research IV; PT 720 Teaching and Learning Theory in PT; PT 730 Neurological Physical Therapy II; PT 740 Clinical Science III; PT 750 Physical Therapy Administration and Management; PT 766 Research V; PT 770 Applied Exercise Principles; PT 780 Clinical Science IV; PT 790 Cardiovascular/Pulmonary/Integumentary Physical Therapy; PT 800 Clinical Education III; PT 810 Health and Wellness; PT 820 Professional Issues in Physical Therapy; PT 830 Physical Therapy Differential Diagnosis; PT 840 Independent Study (Optional); PT 850 Clinical Education IV; PT 860 Clinical Education V. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Health Science | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Health Science, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2855 | The Department of Physical Therapy and Health Science offers undergraduate and graduate education to students interested in careers in the health care industry. The undergraduate Health Science degree prepares the student for entry into a variety of graduate studies. The Doctor of Physical Therapy prepares students as general practitioners in Physical Therapy. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | EMBA - Executive Master of Business Administration in Leadership | Full Time | Variable | $680 per semester hour | Foster College of Business Administration | This program is especially designed for experienced professionals wishing to obtain a master's degree in business administration. EMBA students have a number of years of significant, post-baccalaureate career experience and continue to work full-time while enrolled in the program. The EMBA consists of 19 courses comprising 35 academic credit hours. The program lasts approximately 15 months and meets every other weekend on Friday and Saturday for the program's duration. Two extended periods of study, lasting 7 - 10 days each, will be required. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. Official score for the GMAT is also needed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | MBA | Bradley University | The modules include BUS 621 The Leadership Challenge 3 hrs; BUS 623 Scanning the Environment 1/2 hr; BUS 625 External Economic Environment 1 hrs; BUS 627 Managing Technology 2 hrs; BUS 629 Cost Management 1 1/2 hrs; BUS 631 Competition and Pricing 1 hr; BUS 633 Creating and Managing Customer Satisfaction 3 hrs; BUS 635 Communication Workshop 1 1/2 hrs; BUS 637 Attracting and Developing Talent 2 hrs; BUS 639 Building Employee Commitment 2 hrs; BUS 641 Dealing with Problem People 1 hr; BUS 643 Team Building 1 hr; BUS 645 Acquiring Capital and Making Investment Decisions 3 hrs; BUS 647 Global Environment and Issues 3 hrs; BUS 649 Developing Strategy 2 hrs; BUS 651 Performance Measurement and Control Systems 2 hrs; BUS 653 Strategic Positioning and Maximizing Performance 2 hrs; BUS 655 Leading Successful Change 1 1/2 hrs; BUS 658 EMBA Topics 2 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration | Foster College of Business Administration, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2253 | Bradley University is an independent, privately endowed, coeducational institution. Located on an 85-acre campus in Peoria, Illinois, Bradley was founded in 1897 as Bradley Polytechnic Institute by Lydia Moss Bradley as a memorial to her children and husband, Tobias. It became a four-year college in 1920 and in 1946 became a university and began offering graduate programs. Bradley is accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. With approximately 5,300 undergraduate and 800 graduate students, Bradley is the ideal size for living and learning. Bradley provides a broad choice of academic and pre-professional programs with more than 100 programs of study in five colleges: the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, College of Education and Health Sciences, College of Engineering and Technology, Foster College of Business Administration, and Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts. Through its Graduate School, Bradley awards 14 degrees in over 30 academic areas, including a doctor of physical therapy degree. Programs offered through Continuing Education extend the resources of the university to promote lifelong learning. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Integrated 3:2 Master of Science in Accounting Program | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | This program is designed for students who want to earn both undergraduate and graduate degrees in accounting. During the first three years at Bradley, the student focuses on the regular undergraduate curriculum. During the next two years, the student takes a combination of undergraduate and graduate classes. The bachelor's and master's degrees are awarded concurrently. The faculty developed this program in response to the requirements of many states that CPA exam candidates now need to have 150 hours of education. One of the 3:2 programs’ unique features is that successful applicants are guaranteed admission to the Master of Science in Accounting program. Well qualified students can be admitted to the program as freshmen when they are initially accepted to Bradley University or during their junior year. In this way, students use the extra hours to obtain a graduate degree. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Masters | Bradley University | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, 427 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2290 | The Department of Accounting consists of nine full-time faculties, including one executive-in-residence. The highest priority of the department is to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary to become certified accounting professionals. Many of the accounting faculties are CPAs, giving them practical insight to share with future accounting professionals. Bradley is one of three private Illinois universities that have earned undergraduate accounting accreditation from AACSB International. Less than five percent of the business schools in the nation have accounting programs accredited by AACSB International. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | |||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Major in Risk Management and Insurance | Full Time | Variable | US $25,150 a year | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | This program aims to prepare creative and highly motivated students to assume positions of responsibility and leadership in the risk management and insurance fields. Students will select focus areas in cooperation with their advisor. The focus area must consist of six credit hours, be consistent with and supportive of the student's career objectives, and be approved by a risk management and insurance faculty member. Examples of focus areas include actuarial science, entrepreneurship, financial institutions, human resource management, investments, and marketing. Other focus areas may also be acceptable. | Applicant must have completed the following minimum curriculum requirements: four units (years) of English (half or one unit of which may be speech), three units of college preparatory mathematics, two units of laboratory science and two units of social sciences. All applicants whose native language is not English have to obtain a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) score of 550 paper based, 213 computer based, or 79 internet based or a minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (International English Language Test System). | Major | Bradley University | The modules include RMI 315 Risk Management and Insurance Issues and Practice; FIN 322 Business Finance; RMI 365 Risk Analysis; RMI 415 Risk Control and Financing; RMI 465 Advanced Studies in Risk Management and Insurance; RMI majors must also successfully complete one of the following three courses: IB 323 (FIN 323) International Financial Management; IB 390 (ECO 390) International Monetary Economics; IB 391 (ECO 391) International Trade. In addition, students majoring in RMI must take six semester hours in an approved supporting area. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods, 227 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2313 | The Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods consists of nine full-time faculties, including a Financial Executive-in-Residence. Professors in the department possess a wide array of expertise and teach finance, quantitative methods, risk management and actuarial science courses at the undergraduate level, conduct a Finance Concentration in the MBA program, participate in the Executive MBA Program, the Caterpillar Management for the 21st Century program and other executive and professional development programs. Faculty research has been published in many scholarly journals and the department publishes the Journal of Economic and Financial Practice. The Bradley Investment Organization student group develops a mock equity portfolio to practice tracking and analyzing securities. The department sponsors additional student organizations: Financial Management Association, Acclaimed Intellectual Property Association, and Gamma Iota Sigma, the national association for risk management students. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art | Full Time | 30 semester hours | $680 per semester hour | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | The mission of the graduate art program is the professional development of individual studio and scholarly abilities, exemplified by a significant body of work. Students admitted to the program demonstrate the potential to solve contemporary problems in the visual arts and address new questions and issues. The purpose of this degree is to prepare students for professional practice in the field of studio art. Through participation in the program, students gain knowledge and insight into historical and contemporary ideas and studio theory and practice. | Applicants must have an undergraduate degree with a major in art or the equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. Applicants with previous graduate coursework must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in all graduate coursework, and have completed a minimum of 12 graduate credit hours for the graduate grade point average to be considered for admission. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Studio (major concentration) 12 hrs; Graduate studio electives 6 hrs; Graduate electives (may be University graduate courses, additional graduate studios, seminars, and/or written thesis) 3 hrs; Seminar in art history 3 hrs; Seminar in contemporary trends 3 hrs; Thesis (exhibition) 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Arts in Curriculum and Instruction (MA) | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | This program is designed to prepare the students to accept greater responsibility in their role as an educational leader and an informed decision maker. This is accomplished by providing them the opportunity to add to their knowledge base, increase their research skills, and inform their attitudes and dispositions. This program makes allowances for the diverse needs of early childhood through high school teachers. Its flexibility makes it possible for the students to focus their studies on any one of a variety of areas of concentration while at the same time strengthening their skills in technology applications, educational research, legal and social issues, diversity, curriculum theory, instructional theory, instructional design, assessment strategies, and creative contribution options. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test or the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Professional Core 18 Hours: Foundations and Research (6 hours); Educational Technology Component ( 3 hours); Curriculum and Instruction (9 hours); Directed Elective 3 Hours; Area of Concentration 9 Hours: The student must select one 9-hour area of concentration from among the following choices: Literacy Education; Special Education; Early Childhood Education; Gifted Education; Educational Technology; Science Education; Middle School Education; Reading Teacher; Multidisciplinary Education; Assessment; Capstone Option 3-6 Hours: Option A: 30 hours coursework; ETE 655 Instructional Theory; Comprehensive Examination; Option B: 27 hours coursework, ETE 699 Thesis (6); Option C: 27 hours coursework; ETE655 Instructional Theory; ETE Creative Research Contribution (3). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education, Westlake Hall 203, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3190 | The Department of Teacher Education offers undergraduate programs in early childhood, elementary, secondary, K-12 (art, foreign language, and music), and special education. The Department also offers a graduate degree and certificate programs in Curriculum and Instruction. The mission of Teacher Education at Bradley University is to prepare teachers who will be effective leaders, advocates, and life-long learners. We believe that teaching and learning are dynamic, interactive, life-long processes based on empowering interactions among learners. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Arts in English - Literature Emphasis | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program provides post-baccalaureate students with study in the theory and practice of English. It is intended to prepare students for professional advancement and for further study in either literature or writing. The literature track emphasizes the study of literary texts with related study of writing, theory, and methods. The literature track also requires an internship within the context of an undergraduate literature course, a portfolio of written work, and a written comprehensive exam over selected work taken in the program. Because the master's program is predicated upon the complementary relationship between theory and practice in the study of English, the program requires ENG 500 Theory and Practice of English, another course in theory, and the internship. Students in this program not only will become familiar with the aesthetic, formal, and theoretical underpinnings of their field of study, but also will learn how to address their audiences by means of professional discourse. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Theory and Practice of English 3 hrs; Language Theory or Writing Theory or Literary Criticism 3 hrs; American or English Periods 6 hrs; Selected Authors/Genres 6 hrs; Internship in Literature 3 hrs. To complete either 30-hour program, students elect three courses (nine credits) from literature, writing, theory, or independent study. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2490 | The English department offers programs in literature, language and writing leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in English. A variety of learning experiences enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small so that students can interact with each other and their professors. The department sponsors a visiting writer series, a literary magazine, an essay contest, two annual poetry contests, and the DeGise professional writing competition. It also sponsors a chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honorary society. | No | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Arts in English - Writing Emphasis | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program provides post-baccalaureate students with study in the theory and practice of English. It is intended to prepare students for professional advancement and for further study in either literature or writing. The writing track emphasizes the study and practice of writing with related study of literature, theory, and methods. The writing track also require an internship within the context of an undergraduate writing course, a portfolio of written work, and a written comprehensive exam over selected work taken in the program. Because the master's program is predicated upon the complementary relationship between theory and practice in the study of English, the program requires ENG 500 Theory and Practice of English, another course in theory, and the internship. Students in this program not only will become familiar with the aesthetic, formal, and theoretical underpinnings of their field of study, but also will learn how to address their audiences by means of professional discourse. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Theory and Practice of English 3 hrs; Writing in the Professions and/or Workshop for Writers and/or Creative Non-Fiction 6 hrs; Language Theory or Writing Theory or Literary Criticism 3 hrs; Literature Courses 6 hrs; Internship in Writing 3 hrs. To complete either 30-hour program, students elect three courses (nine credits) from literature, writing, theory, or independent study. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of English, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2490 | The English department offers programs in literature, language and writing leading to the Bachelor of Arts Degree in English. A variety of learning experiences enables students to reach their personal and intellectual potential. Classes are small so that students can interact with each other and their professors. The department sponsors a visiting writer series, a literary magazine, an essay contest, two annual poetry contests, and the DeGise professional writing competition. It also sponsors a chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honorary society. | No | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Arts in Human Development Counseling - Clinical Mental Health Counseling (CMHC) | Full Time | 60 semester hours | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling | This program requires 60 semester hours of graduate work at the master’s level for completion. This graduate program is designed to meet the certification requirements in clinical mental health counseling and requirements in the state of Illinois for counseling licensure as well as meeting CACREP standards. The program consists of a graduate core of six semester hours and a program core of 43 semester hours of study required of all candidates. In addition, students take an additional 11 semester hours of specialty area course work that may, in concert with the internship and practicum work required in the core program, permit them to develop a specialty area consistent with plans for future employment. Students must also pass each of the eight core areas of the Counselor Preparation Comprehensive Exam to advance toward graduation. All students should consult with their advisor to determine specific courses that will meet their professional goals. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test of the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Graduate Core 6 hrs: ELH 604 Research Methodology and Applications 3 hrs; ELH 606 Interpersonal Behavior and Org. Leadership 3 hrs; Program Core 43 hrs: ELH 530 Loss and Grief Counseling 1 hr; ELH 540 Human Growth and Development 3 hrs; ELH 551 Substance Abuse Counseling 2 hrs; ELH 586 Counseling Diverse Populations 3 hrs; ELH 620 Human Development Counseling 2 hrs; ELH 621 Career Dev. Across Lifespan 3 hrs; ELH 622 Counseling: Ethics and the Law 1 hr; ELH 623 Pre-Practicum in Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 624 Theories and Techniques of Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 625 Principles of Group Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 630 Psychodiagnostics, Psychopathology and Psychopharmacology 3 hrs; ELH 631 Crisis Intervention Counseling 1 hr; ELH 641 Appraisal of the Individual 3 hrs; ELH 654 Consultation in Helping Professions 3 hrs; ELH 661 Couples and Family Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 690 Practicum 1 hr; ELH 691 Internship I 2 hrs; ELH 692 Internship II 3 hrs; Clinical Mental Health Counseling Specialty Area Course Work 11 hrs; Required 6 hrs: ELH 640 Clinical Supervision in Counseling 2 hrs; ELH 651 Clinical Mental Health Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 663 Counseling and Dynamics of Aging 1 hr; Electives 5 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling, Campustown, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3193 | The Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling (LEHC) focuses on leadership as a key quality applied as part of best practices within each of the three program areas. Good leaders are passionate about their field of learning and have the courage to overcome limitations, and, by example, encourage others to do the same. Leaders are visionary and inspire others to positive action. Other qualities of highly effective leaders explored and developed in the programs include ethical, creative, empathic, risk-takers, learn from mistakes, develop a framework for the work of others, value diversity, committed to social justice. LEHC promotes both the personal and professional development of students who care for others, deal with ambiguity, think strategically, work from a multicultural mindset, are centered, and open to continual learning. The department is designed to promote highly competent and impassioned leaders in each of the graduate programs: Educational Administration, Human Service Administration, and Counseling within Schools and in Clinical Mental Health Settings. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Arts in Human Development Counseling - School Counseling (MA) | Full Time | 60 semester hours | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling | This program is designed to prepare professional counselors to work with a diverse population of clients in a variety of educational, community, and mental health settings. The master's degree program in human development counseling/school counseling meets the Illinois Standards for the School Service Personnel Certificate (23.11, 2nd edition 2002). Degree-seeking students enrolled in the master’s degree in school counseling program who hold or are qualified to hold a teacher certificate in Illinois must meet EHC department master’s degree requirements while completing 60 hours of graduate study. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test of the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Graduate Core Credits 6 hrs: ELH 604 Research Methodology and Applications 3 hrs; ELH 606 Interpersonal Behavior and Organizational Leadership 3 hrs; Program Core 43 hrs: ELH 530 Loss and Grief Counseling 1 hr; ELH 540 Human Growth and Development 3 hrs; ELH 551 Substance Abuse Counseling 2 hrs; ELH 586 Counseling Diverse Populations 3 hrs; ELH 620 Human Development Counseling 2 hrs; ELH 621 Career Development Across Lifespan 3 hrs; ELH 622 Counseling: Ethics and the Law 1 hr; ELH 623 Pre-Practicum in Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 624 Theories and Techniques of Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 625 Principles of Group Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 630 Psychodiagnostics, Psychopathology, and Psychopharmacology 3 hrs; ELH 631 Crisis Intervention Counseling 1 hr; ELH 641 Appraisal of the Individual 3 hrs; ELH 654 Consultation in Helping Professions 3 hrs; ELH 661 Couples and Family Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 690 Practicum in School Counseling 1 hr; ELH 691 Internship in School Counseling I 2 hrs; ELH 692 Internship in School Counseling II 3 hrs; School Counseling Specialty Area Course Work 11 hrs: ELH 653 Professional School Counseling K-8 3 hrs; ELH 655 Professional School Counseling in Secondary Schools 3 hrs; Electives 5 hrs; Required Electives for Non-teachers: ELH 585 Understanding Schools: A Primier for Non-Teachers 2 hrs; ELH 669 Special Education Law 2 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling, Campustown, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3193 | The Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling (LEHC) focuses on leadership as a key quality applied as part of best practices within each of the three program areas. Good leaders are passionate about their field of learning and have the courage to overcome limitations, and, by example, encourage others to do the same. Leaders are visionary and inspire others to positive action. Other qualities of highly effective leaders explored and developed in the programs include ethical, creative, empathic, risk-takers, learn from mistakes, develop a framework for the work of others, value diversity, committed to social justice. LEHC promotes both the personal and professional development of students who care for others, deal with ambiguity, think strategically, work from a multicultural mindset, are centered, and open to continual learning. The department is designed to promote highly competent and impassioned leaders in each of the graduate programs: Educational Administration, Human Service Administration, and Counseling within Schools and in Clinical Mental Health Settings. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Arts in Leadership in Educational Administration (MA) | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling | This program provides a contemporary approach to school administration as a sense-making, problem-solving activity that emphasizes leadership rather than management. Students learn to analyze organizational problems from multiple perspectives, learn about empowering leadership practices, and learn to develop qualities associated with effective leadership and informed decision-making. Courses focus on practical issues that school leaders face with an emphasis on making the connections that are necessary for effective administration. A required field experience provides additional opportunities for considering issues from a variety of perspectives and to make the connections between theory and practice. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test of the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Graduate Core 9 hrs: ELH 604 Research Methodology and Applications 3 hrs; ELH 605 Legal and Social Change 3 hrs; ELH 606 Interpersonal Behavior and Organizational Leadership 3 hrs; Departmental Required Courses 24 hrs: ELH 611 Instructional Leadership 3 hrs; ELH 662 Community Relations 1 hr; ELH 669 Special Education Law 2 hrs; ELH 670 Human Resource Management 3 hrs; ELH 673 Leadership Perspectives 3 hrs; ELH 676 The School Principalship 3 hrs; ELH 677 Educational Finance 2 hrs; ELH 678 United States Public School Law 3 hrs; ELH 686 Field Experiences in Administration 4 hrs; Suggested Electives 3 hrs: ELH 510 Statistical Procedures 3 hrs; ELH 550 Independent Study 3 hrs; ELH 586 Counseling Diverse Populations 3 hrs; ELH 612 Institutional Planning and Evaluation 3 hrs; ELH 620 Human Development Counseling 2 hrs; ELH 651 Clinical Mental Health Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 661 Couples and Family Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 681 Seminar in Educational Administration 3 hrs; ELH 699 Thesis 0-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling, Campustown, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3193 | The Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling (LEHC) focuses on leadership as a key quality applied as part of best practices within each of the three program areas. Good leaders are passionate about their field of learning and have the courage to overcome limitations, and, by example, encourage others to do the same. Leaders are visionary and inspire others to positive action. Other qualities of highly effective leaders explored and developed in the programs include ethical, creative, empathic, risk-takers, learn from mistakes, develop a framework for the work of others, value diversity, committed to social justice. LEHC promotes both the personal and professional development of students who care for others, deal with ambiguity, think strategically, work from a multicultural mindset, are centered, and open to continual learning. The department is designed to promote highly competent and impassioned leaders in each of the graduate programs: Educational Administration, Human Service Administration, and Counseling within Schools and in Clinical Mental Health Settings. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Arts in Leadership in Human Service Administration (MA) | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling | This program is designed to prepare students for administrative positions with human service and community action agencies. The program provides a contemporary approach to administration as a sense-making, problem solving activity that emphasizes leadership rather than management. Students learn to analyze organizational problems from multiple perspectives, empower leadership practices, and develop qualities associated with effective leadership and informed decision-making. The courses in this program provide a human development foundation and integrate a human relations orientation with conceptual and technical skills. A required field experience provides additional opportunities for considering issues from a variety of perspectives and to make the connections between theory and practice. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test of the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include College Core Required Courses 9 hrs: ELH 604 Research Methodology and Applications 3 hrs; ELH 605 Legal and Social Change 3 hrs; ELH 606 Interpersonal Behavior and Organizational Leadership 3 hrs; Departmental Required Courses 18 hrs: ELH 580 Financial Leadership in Human Service Administration 3 hrs; ELH 583 Supervision and Employee Engagement in Human Service Administration 3 hrs; ELH 610 Survey in Human Service Administration 3 hrs; ELH 612 Institutional Planning and Evaluation 3 hrs; ELH 673 Leadership Perspectives 3 hrs; ELH 686 Field Experience in Administration 3-6 hrs; Suggested Elective Courses 9 hours: ELH 540 Human Growth and Development 3 hrs; ELH 550 Independent Study 1-6 hrs; ELH 551 Substance Abuse Counseling 2 hrs; ELH 581 Topics in Human Service Administration 1-3 hrs; ELH 582 Grant Writing in Human Service Administration 3 hrs; ELH 586 Counseling Diverse Populations 3 hrs; ELH 620 Human Development Counseling 2 hrs; ELH 651 Clinical Mental Health Counseling 3 hrs; ELH 662 Community Relations 1 hr; ELH 681 Seminar in Educational Administration 1-6 hrs; ELH 682 Seminar in Human Service Administration 1-6 hrs; ELH 699 Thesis 0-6 hrs; MLS 633 Issues in Higher Education 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling, Campustown, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3193 | The Department of Leadership in Education, Human Services, and Counseling (LEHC) focuses on leadership as a key quality applied as part of best practices within each of the three program areas. Good leaders are passionate about their field of learning and have the courage to overcome limitations, and, by example, encourage others to do the same. Leaders are visionary and inspire others to positive action. Other qualities of highly effective leaders explored and developed in the programs include ethical, creative, empathic, risk-takers, learn from mistakes, develop a framework for the work of others, value diversity, committed to social justice. LEHC promotes both the personal and professional development of students who care for others, deal with ambiguity, think strategically, work from a multicultural mindset, are centered, and open to continual learning. The department is designed to promote highly competent and impassioned leaders in each of the graduate programs: Educational Administration, Human Service Administration, and Counseling within Schools and in Clinical Mental Health Settings. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Curriculum and Instruction - Special Education (MA) | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | This program is designed to prepare the students to accept greater responsibility in their role as an educational leader and an informed decision maker. This is accomplished by providing them the opportunity to add to their knowledge base, increase their research skills, and inform their attitudes and dispositions. This program makes allowances for the diverse needs of early childhood through high school teachers. Its flexibility makes it possible for the students to focus their studies on any one of a variety of areas of concentration while at the same time strengthening their skills in technology applications, educational research, legal and social issues, diversity, curriculum theory, instructional theory, instructional design, assessment strategies, and creative contribution options. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test or the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Graduate Core: ELH 604 Research Methodology and Applications 3; ELH 605 Legal and Social Change 3; Educational Technology Component: ETE 672 Technology Applications for Students with Exceptionalities 3; Curriculum and Instruction: ETE 651 Curriculum Theory and Development 3; ETE 653 Instructional Strategies Designs 3; ETE 663 Schooling in a Diverse World 3; Assessment: ETE 643 Assessment and Evaluation Practicum for Learners with Exceptionalities 3; Program Core for LBS I: ETE 671 Instructional Strategies and Designs in Special Education 4; ETE 674 Issues, Trends, and Research in Special Education 3; ETE 678 Leadership and Collaboration in Special Education 3; ETE 697 Advance Practicum in Special Education 1-5; ETE 698 Creative/Research Contribution 0-6 or ETE 699 Thesis 0-3; Electives: ETE 550 Independent Study (Special Education Focus) 1-3; ETE 650 Topics in Education (Special Education Topic) 1-3; ETE 655 Instructional Theory 3; ETE 673 Self-Determination for Individuals with Disabilities 3; ELH 669 Special Education Law 1. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Teacher Education, Westlake Hall 203, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3190 | The Department of Teacher Education offers undergraduate programs in early childhood, elementary, secondary, K-12 (art, foreign language, and music), and special education. The Department also offers a graduate degree and certificate programs in Curriculum and Instruction. The mission of Teacher Education at Bradley University is to prepare teachers who will be effective leaders, advocates, and life-long learners. We believe that teaching and learning are dynamic, interactive, life-long processes based on empowering interactions among learners. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Fine Arts Degree with a Major in Studio Art | Full Time | 60 semester hours | $680 per semester hour | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | The mission of the graduate art program is the professional development of individual studio and scholarly abilities, exemplified by a significant body of work. Students admitted to the program demonstrate the potential to solve contemporary problems in the visual arts and address new questions and issues. The purpose of this degree is to prepare students for professional practice in the field of studio art. Through participation in the program, students gain knowledge and insight into historical and contemporary ideas and studio theory and practice. | Applicants must have an undergraduate degree with a major in art or the equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. Applicants with previous graduate coursework must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in all graduate coursework, and have completed a minimum of 12 graduate credit hours for the graduate grade point average to be considered for admission. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Studio (major concentration) 30 hrs; Graduate studio electives 9 hrs; Graduate electives (may be University graduate courses, additional graduate studios, seminars, and/or written thesis) 6 hrs; Seminars in art history 6 hrs; Seminar in contemporary trends 6-12 hrs; Thesis (exhibition) 3-6 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art | Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts, Department of Art, Heuser Art Center, 1400 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2967 | The Art Department is housed in the 33,000 sq. ft. Heuser Art Center that is equipped with high-speed wireless internet and state of the art studios in Ceramics, Painting, Printmaking, Drawing, Photography, Graphic Design and a professional exhibitions program. The department also houses the nationally known Cradle Oak Press, a professional printmaking collaborative that brings renowned artists to Bradley to work together with students and faculty. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Accounting | Full Time | 30 semester hours | $680 per semester hour | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | This program provides graduate education that prepares students to meet professional practice challenges in public, private, and not-for-profit accounting. The program is designed to broaden the student’s knowledge, to provide for in-depth study, and to complement theoretical study with relevant and significant research. Graduates should be prepared for meeting the 150-hour CPA examination education requirement and entrance into, or advancement within, their chosen careers. This program requires 30 semester hours. At least 15 of these hours consist of courses in accounting. There are also nine elective semester hours of 600-level courses from the Foster College of Business Administration. The six remaining semester hours of elective coursework at the 500 or 600 levels may be taken inside or outside of the Foster College of Business Administration. The program allows a maximum of six semester hours to be taken outside of the Foster College of Business Administration and requires a minimum of nine semester hours outside of accounting. | Applicants must hold an undergraduate accounting degree or the equivalent from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Accounting Courses Required (12 hours): ATG 601 Financial Accounting Theory; ATG 657 Advanced Auditing; ATG 677 Federal Taxes II; ATG 690 Applied Professional Accounting Research; For the remaining three required accounting hours students may select courses from one of the following: ATG 501 Advanced Accounting II; ATG 514 Advanced Managerial Accounting; ATG 526 Fraud Examination; ATG 547 Internal Auditing; ATG 561 International Accounting Issues; ATG 583 Accounting Information Systems; ATG 585 Contemporary Issues in Accounting; ATG 590 Professional Accounting Problems; Elective (9 hours) Foster College of Business Administration; Other Electives (6 hours). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, 427 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2290 | The Department of Accounting consists of nine full-time faculties, including one executive-in-residence. The highest priority of the department is to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary to become certified accounting professionals. Many of the accounting faculties are CPAs, giving them practical insight to share with future accounting professionals. Bradley is one of three private Illinois universities that have earned undergraduate accounting accreditation from AACSB International. Less than five percent of the business schools in the nation have accounting programs accredited by AACSB International. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Accounting with Concentration in Internal Auditing | Full Time | Variable | $680 per semester hour | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | This program provides graduate education that prepares students to meet professional practice challenges in public, private, and not-for-profit accounting. The program is designed to broaden the student’s knowledge, to provide for in-depth study, and to complement theoretical study with relevant and significant research. Graduates should be prepared for meeting the 150-hour CPA examination education requirement and entrance into, or advancement within, their chosen careers. Internal auditors are employees of organizations who are responsible for evaluating corporate governance, risk management, and internal control activities. Since internal auditing touches nearly every aspect of an organization, it provides a tremendous opportunity for students to launch their careers because of the breadth of exposure they will receive. Students enrolled in the Master of Science in Accounting program or the 3:2 Accounting program may take 9 hours of graduate course work in order to receive a concentration in internal auditing. | Applicants must hold an undergraduate accounting degree or the equivalent from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The Concentration Requirements are two three-hour courses: ATG 547 Internal Auditing – 3 hrs; ATG 548 Computer Assisted Audit Techniques – 3 hrs; one three-hour elective from the following: ATG 526 Fraud Examination – 3 hrs; ATG 530 Professional Interviewing Skills – 3 hrs; ATG 585 Contemporary Issues in Accounting – 3 hrs. (provided the course is focused on internal auditing); ATG 590 Professional Accounting Problems - 3 hrs (provided the course is focused on internal auditing); ATG 605 Cooperative Education / Internship in Accounting – 3 hrs (provided the internship is in internal auditing). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Accounting, 427 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2290 | The Department of Accounting consists of nine full-time faculties, including one executive-in-residence. The highest priority of the department is to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary to become certified accounting professionals. Many of the accounting faculties are CPAs, giving them practical insight to share with future accounting professionals. Bradley is one of three private Illinois universities that have earned undergraduate accounting accreditation from AACSB International. Less than five percent of the business schools in the nation have accounting programs accredited by AACSB International. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Biochemistry (MS) | Full Time | Variable | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This program is ideal for chemistry and biology majors who wish to advance their knowledge and professional careers by taking advanced work in biochemistry and related disciplines. In addition to challenging coursework, the program emphasizes a long-term mentored research project culminating in a written thesis and oral thesis defense. The program is designed to cultivate excellent laboratory skills, effective communication and students’ capacity for critical thought. | Applicants must have a Bachelor’s degree in chemistry, biochemistry or a related field and have completed one year each of college level calculus and physics. The applicant must have achieved a cumulative GPA of 3.0 in the last sixty hours of undergraduate course work, a cumulative GPA of 2.75 in undergraduate chemistry courses, and a C or better in each of the following courses and their accompanying labs: general chemistry, organic chemistry (two semesters), analytical chemistry (one semester), and biochemistry (one semester). Students lacking any of these courses may be admitted to the program conditionally, with full acceptance being granted after all undergraduate prerequisites are completed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Required Courses: CHM 536 Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 562 Protein Structure and Function 3 hrs; CHM 566 Intermediary Metabolism 3 hrs; CHM 570 Physical Chemistry I 3 hrs; CHM 580 Literature Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; CHM 599 Research 8 total hrs; CHM 680 Research Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; CHM 699 Thesis 1 hr; BIO 564 Advanced Molecular Biology 3 hrs; Biochemistry Electives: CHM 564 Biochemical Literature 1-2 hrs; CHM 568 Topics in Biochemistry 1-3 hrs; BIO 575 Endocrinology 3 hrs; BIO 509 Human Genetics 3 hrs; BIO 568 Cell and Molecular Immunology 3-4 hrs; BIO 570 Neurobiology 3 hrs; PHY 545 Biophysics 3 hrs; Chemistry Electives: CHM 500 Chemical Topics 1-3 hrs; CHM 512 Molecular Modeling 1 hr; CHM 514 Chemical Group Theory 1 hr; CHM 516 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 520 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 526 Advanced Analytical Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 528 Topics in Analytical Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 532 Descriptive Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 537 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 538 Topics in Inorganic Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 540 Materials Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 541 Materials Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 548 Topics in Materials Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 550 Industrial Organic Chemistry 1 hr; CHM 552 Physical Organic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 554 Organic Spectroscopy 3 hrs; CHM 555 Organic Spectroscopy Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 558 Topics in Organic Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 562 Protein Structure and Function 3 hrs; CHM 566 Intermediary Metabolism 3 hrs; CHM 568 Topics in Biochemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 577 Physical Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 578 Topics in Physical Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 584 Readings in Chemistry 1-3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Biology (MS) | Full Time | 32 semester hours | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is for the students who wish to advance their knowledge in the field, to enhance their professional careers, or to prepare for subsequent post-master's programs. The department offers graduate courses in most biological disciplines, in keeping with the philosophy that advanced work across the breadth of the field is appropriate at the master's level. In addition, since research is the cornerstone of biology, each student is required to complete a thesis based on original research. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. Minimum prerequisites for admission to the graduate program in biology are: 16 semester hours of biology beyond freshman biology, one semester of organic chemistry, one semester of physics, one semester of calculus, last 60-hour undergraduate GPA above 3.0, and a sum of the GRE verbal and quantitative sections above 1000. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include minimum of 26 hours in biology; the remaining hours in cognate courses (e.g., in education, psychology, or computer science) approved by the graduate coordinator. Of the total 32 hours, fifteen hours must be classroom courses (i.e., non-independent study), one hour must be in Thesis Proposal Preparation (BIO 500), and twelve hours must be taken at the 600 level. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 101 Olin Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3020 | The Department of Biology aims to graduate students who are scientifically literate, broadly trained citizens with the desire and skills to become life-long learners. To this end, we strive to provide quality, state-of-the-art teaching and research experiences for students and faculty, and to attract and retain quality faculty and students. The department maintains a curriculum that emphasizes active, investigative learning techniques and reflects the current interdisciplinary nature of scientific projects.Highlights of the department are a central curriculum that provides the basics necessary in all biology professions; specific concentrations available to help students specialize according to their interests; contact with professors, not teaching assistants; small class sizes where students and professors get to know one another; laboratory classes that help students learn from a hands-on perspective; research opportunities where undergraduates collaborate directly with faculty; a newly remodeled science building. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Chemistry (MS) | Full Time | Variable | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | This program is designed for students who wish to advance their knowledge and professional careers by taking advanced work in chemistry and related disciplines. Candidates for the MS degree must take a minimum of 31 semester hours in chemistry and related subjects. Of these hours, 8 semester hours must be devoted to original research. A publishable thesis is required for graduation based on this research. Of the remaining courses, up to 6 semester hours may be taken at the graduate level in cognate fields such as engineering, education, mathematics, business, or biology. Individual programs of study are developed in conference between the student, the thesis advisor, and the graduate coordinator. | Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree in chemistry, biochemistry or a related field and have completed one year each of college level calculus and physics. The applicant must have achieved a cumulative GPA of 3.0 in the last sixty hours of undergraduate course work, a cumulative GPA of 2.75 in undergraduate chemistry courses, and a C or better in each of the following courses and their accompanying labs: general chemistry, organic chemistry (two semesters), analytical chemistry (one semester), and physical chemistry (one semester). Students lacking any of these courses may be admitted to the program conditionally, with full acceptance being granted after all undergraduate prerequisites are completed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Required Courses: CHM 536 Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 576 Physical Chemistry II 3 hrs; CHM 580 Literature Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; CHM 599 Research 8 total hrs; CHM 680 Research Seminar in Chemistry and Biochemistry 1 hr; CHM 699 Thesis 1 hr; Electives: CHM 500 Chemical Topics 1-3 hrs; CHM 512 Molecular Modeling 1 hr; CHM 514 Chemical Group Theory 1 hr; CHM 516 Environmental Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 520 Instrumental Analysis 4 hrs; CHM 526 Advanced Analytical Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 528 Topics in Analytical Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 532 Descriptive Inorganic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 537 Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 538 Topics in Inorganic Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 540 Materials Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 541 Materials Chemistry Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 548 Topics in Materials Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 550 Industrial Organic Chemistry 1 hr; CHM 552 Physical Organic Chemistry 3 hrs; CHM 554 Organic Spectroscopy 3 hrs; CHM 555 Organic Spectroscopy Laboratory 1 hr; CHM 558 Topics in Organic Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 562 Protein Structure and Function 3 hrs; CHM 566 Intermediary Metabolism 3 hrs; CHM 568 Topics in Biochemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 577 Physical Chemistry Laboratory II 1 hr; CHM 578 Topics in Physical Chemistry 1-3 hrs; CHM 584 Readings in Chemistry 1-3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 3030 | At Bradley University, the discipline of Chemistry has a long tradition of excellence. The department has been accredited by the American Chemical Society for the professional education of chemists since 1948 when accreditation began. Since Chemistry can serve as a basis for a wide variety of job opportunities, the Chemistry Department offers six programs in Chemistry; Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemistry-Premedicine, Chemistry-Secondary Education, Chemistry-Business, and Environmental Science-Chemistry. The objective is to provide the student with a solid foundation in each of these areas. Thus, each program is built upon a solid core of Chemistry, with additional science courses that provide the special knowledge needed in a particular program | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Civil Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $680 per semester hour | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction | This program prepares graduates for thriving engineering careers characterized by continued professional growth. The graduates have the talents and skills needed in a highly technical society facing serious problems in the environment and infrastructure. This program will provide the students with opportunities and challenges necessary for a fruitful and successful career in the practice of civil engineering and construction management. The faculties are renowned worldwide and have published more textbooks (25) than any other civil engineering or construction department of similar size in the United States. Faculty and graduate students have received research grants from Caterpillar Inc., state agencies, the National Science Foundation, and other private and government sources. | Applicants must hold a bachelor's degree in civil engineering. Qualified graduates from other engineering or related fields may be admitted conditionally. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include CE 508 Advanced Soil Mechanics (3 hours); CE 515 Advanced Foundation Engineering (3 hours); CE 520 Advanced Numerical Methods (3 hours); CE 541 Pollution Modeling (3 hours); CE 542 Advanced Water Treatment (3 hours); CE 543 Advanced Wastewater Treatment (3 hours); CE 546 Groundwater Hydrology (3 hours); CE 555 Sustainability and Environmental Regulations (3 hours); CE 558 Solid Waste Management (3 hours); CE 560 Advanced Structural Analysis (3 hours); CE 562 Advanced Steel Design (3 hours); CE 565 Advanced Concrete Design (3 hours); CE 567 Prestressed Concrete Design (3 hours); CE 570 Advanced Mechanics of Materials (3 hours); CE 575 Structural Dynamics (3 hours); CE 577 Seismic Design (3 hours); CE 580 Highway Safety (3 hours); CE 583 Geometric Highway Design (3 hours); CE 587 Traffic Signal Design (3 hours); CE 588 Transportation Economics (3 hours); CE 591 Advanced Topics I (1-3 hours); CE 592 Advanced Topics II (1-3 hours); CE 593 Advanced Project I (1-3 hours); CE 594 Advanced Project II (1-3 hours); CE 650 Site Remediation (3 hours); CE 655 Environmental Management Modeling (3 hours); CE 670 Theory of Elasticity (3 hours); CE 691 Advanced Topics I (3 hours); CE 692 Advanced Topics II (3 hours); CE 693 Advanced Graduate Project I (1-3 hours); CE 694 Advanced Graduate Project II (1-3 hours); CE 699 Thesis (0-6 hours); Construction: CON 520 Advanced Construction Practice (3 hours); CON 522 Advanced CADD (3 hours); CON 524 Building Information Modeling (3 hours); CON 526 Advanced Construction Estimating (3 hours); CON 528 Advanced Construction Scheduling (3 hours); CON 529 Advanced Construction Contracts (3 hours); CON 536 TQM Principles (3 hours); CON 537 Construction Simulation (3 hours); CON 540 Project and Company Management (3 hours). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil Engineering and Construction, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2942 | This department leads the university in terms of the number of students sent abroad each year. One of the most significant aspects of the department is the uniqueness of the curriculum it offers. The latest concepts in emerging technologies along with microcomputers are employed in most courses, to insure that our graduates are exposed to the latest technological advances in engineering. The faculties are dedicated professionals with a genuine desire to share their knowledge and experience with students. The diverse backgrounds of the faculty members, outstanding facilities, and small class size, will help the students develop the skills they need to succeed in practice or pursue higher education. Over the years, the seniors have been involved in the analysis and design of many practical projects. The students helped design a recreation facility in southern Indiana involving the construction of two large earth dams, two lakes, and several roads. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Computer Game Technology Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to prepare students for professional careers in the field of computing and information processing. CIS professionals manage and use technology to solve information-related problems, working with software professionals to ensure that these problems are solved. Bradley's program thus balances the need for advanced knowledge within an application area. Common application areas are business, manufacturing, and education. The computer game technology concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of computer game technology and software design and development. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study including 6 semester hours of required courses and 3 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed one semester of calculus, one semester of calculus-based statistics, two semesters of accounting, one semester of finance, two semesters of programming and data structures in a structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, and one semester of data communications. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 semester hours required must be earned in courses labeled as CIS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CIS 530, CIS 575, CIS 580, CS 591; one of the following courses: CIS 697, CIS 698, or CS 690; Required courses: CIS 551 Computer Game Design 3 hrs; CIS 552 Computer Game Modification 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose one from the following): CIS 553 Concepting and Storytelling 3 hrs; CIS 555 Computer Graphics 3 hrs; CIS 556 Game Engine Programming 3 hrs; CIS 557 Digital Animation 3 hrs; CIS 558 Sound Design 3 hrs; CIS 559 Computer Game Capstone Project 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Emerging Topics in Computer Information Systems Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to prepare students for professional careers in the field of computing and information processing. CIS professionals manage and use technology to solve information-related problems, working with software professionals to ensure that these problems are solved. Bradley's program thus balances the need for advanced knowledge within an application area. Common application areas are business, manufacturing, and education. This concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, in-depth knowledge, and unique skills in the practice of selected emerging topics in computer information systems area. The concentration is comprised of 6 required and 3 elective semester hours of study. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed one semester of calculus, one semester of calculus-based statistics, two semesters of accounting, one semester of finance, two semesters of programming and data structures in a structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, and one semester of data communications. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 semester hours required must be earned in courses labeled as CIS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CIS 530, CIS 575, CIS 580, CS 591; one of the following courses: CIS 697, CIS 698, or CS 690; Required courses: CIS 699 Thesis in Computer Information Systems (6 s.h.); Elective courses (choose one from the following): CIS 697 Advanced Topics in Computer Information Systems (3 s.h.); CIS 698 Directed Individual Studies in Computer Information Systems (3 s.h.). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Emerging Topics in Computer Science Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to prepare students for professional careers in the field of computing and information processing. CIS professionals manage and use technology to solve information-related problems, working with software professionals to ensure that these problems are solved. Bradley's program thus balances the need for advanced knowledge within an application area. Common application areas are business, manufacturing, and education. This concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, in-depth knowledge, and unique skills in the practice of selected emerging topics in computer science area. The concentration is comprised of 6 required and 3 elective semester hours of study. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed one semester of calculus, one semester of calculus-based statistics, two semesters of accounting, one semester of finance, two semesters of programming and data structures in a structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, and one semester of data communications. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 semester hours required must be earned in courses labeled as CIS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CIS 530, CIS 575, CIS 580, CS 591; one of the following courses: CIS 697, CIS 698, or CS 690; Required courses: CS 699 Thesis in Computer Science 6 hrs; Elective courses (choose one from the following): CS 697 Advanced Topics in Computer Science 3 hrs; CS 698 Directed Individual Studies in Computer Science 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Intelligent Systems, Databases and Data Mining Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to prepare students for professional careers in the field of computing and information processing. CIS professionals manage and use technology to solve information-related problems, working with software professionals to ensure that these problems are solved. Bradley's program thus balances the need for advanced knowledge within an application area. Common application areas are business, manufacturing, and education. The intelligent systems, databases and data mining concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of analysis, design and development of intelligent systems and applications, database management systems, knowledge discovery and data mining technologies. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study including 3 semester hours of required courses and 6 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed one semester of calculus, one semester of calculus-based statistics, two semesters of accounting, one semester of finance, two semesters of programming and data structures in a structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, and one semester of data communications. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 semester hours required must be earned in courses labeled as CIS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CIS 530, CIS 575, CIS 580, CS 591; one of the following courses: CIS 697, CIS 698, or CS 690; Required courses (choose one from the following): CS 561 Artificial Intelligence 3 hrs; CS 571 Database Management Systems 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose two from the following): CS 562 Intelligent Systems and Applications 3 hrs; CS 563 Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining 3 hrs; CS 572 Advanced Topics in Databases 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Software Engineering Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to prepare students for professional careers in the field of computing and information processing. CIS professionals manage and use technology to solve information-related problems, working with software professionals to ensure that these problems are solved. Bradley's program thus balances the need for advanced knowledge within an application area. Common application areas are business, manufacturing, and education. The software engineering concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of software engineering concepts, models, methods, technology, tools and techniques. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study including 3 semester hours of required courses and 6 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed one semester of calculus, one semester of calculus-based statistics, two semesters of accounting, one semester of finance, two semesters of programming and data structures in a structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, and one semester of data communications. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 semester hours required must be earned in courses labeled as CIS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CIS 530, CIS 575, CIS 580, CS 591; one of the following courses: CIS 697, CIS 698, or CS 690; Required courses (choose one from the following): CS 590 Fundamentals of Software Engineering 3 hrs; CS 591 Software Project Management 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose two from the following): CS 592 Requirements Engineering 3 hrs; CS 593 Software Engineering of Web-Based Applications 3 hrs; CS 690 Advanced Topics on Software Engineering 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Software, Web, and Computer Security Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to prepare students for professional careers in the field of computing and information processing. CIS professionals manage and use technology to solve information-related problems, working with software professionals to ensure that these problems are solved. Bradley's program thus balances the need for advanced knowledge within an application area. Common application areas are business, manufacturing, and education. The software, web, and computer security concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of software, web, computer networks and computer systems security technology, and secure software and web applications design and development. The concentration is comprised of 9 required semester hours of study. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed one semester of calculus, one semester of calculus-based statistics, two semesters of accounting, one semester of finance, two semesters of programming and data structures in a structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, and one semester of data communications. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 semester hours required must be earned in courses labeled as CIS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CIS 530, CIS 575, CIS 580, CS 591; one of the following courses: CIS 697, CIS 698, or CS 690; Required courses: CIS 515 Applied Cryptography 3 hrs; CIS 535 Computer Networks and System Security 3 hrs; CIS 595 Software and Web Applications Security 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Theoretical Computer Science Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to prepare students for professional careers in the field of computing and information processing. CIS professionals manage and use technology to solve information-related problems, working with software professionals to ensure that these problems are solved. Bradley's program thus balances the need for advanced knowledge within an application area. Common application areas are business, manufacturing, and education. The theoretical computer science concentration provides students with essential theoretical background and deep understanding of theory of computer science. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study, including 3 semester hours of required courses and 6 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed one semester of calculus, one semester of calculus-based statistics, two semesters of accounting, one semester of finance, two semesters of programming and data structures in a structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, and one semester of data communications. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 semester hours required must be earned in courses labeled as CIS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CIS 530, CIS 575, CIS 580, CS 591; one of the following courses: CIS 697, CIS 698, or CS 690; Required courses (choose one from the following): CS 514 Algorithms 3 hrs; CS 612 Automata, Computation, and Complexity 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose two from the following): CS 503 Programming Methodology 3 hrs; CS 516 Programming Languages 3 hrs; CS 614 Parallel Algorithms 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Information Systems - Web Technologies and Systems Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to prepare students for professional careers in the field of computing and information processing. CIS professionals manage and use technology to solve information-related problems, working with software professionals to ensure that these problems are solved. Bradley's program thus balances the need for advanced knowledge within an application area. Common application areas are business, manufacturing, and education. The web technologies and systems concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of design and development of web technologies and integrated web-based systems and applications. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study including 3 semester hours of required courses and 6 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed one semester of calculus, one semester of calculus-based statistics, two semesters of accounting, one semester of finance, two semesters of programming and data structures in a structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, and one semester of data communications. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 semester hours required must be earned in courses labeled as CIS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CIS 530, CIS 575, CIS 580, CS 591; one of the following courses: CIS 697, CIS 698, or CS 690; Required course: CS 531 Web Development Technologies 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose two from the following): CS 520 Advanced Computer Architecture 3 hrs; CS 532 Advanced Java Computing 3 hrs; CIS 545 Integrative Programming and Technology 3 hrs; CS 593 Software Engineering of Web-Based Applications 3 hrs; CS 625 Operating Systems Design 3 hrs; CS 635 Data Communications and Networks 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Science - Computer Game Technology Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to produce highly skilled software professionals. The program is structured to ensure that all students have a firm grip of the basic principles of the discipline of computing and depth of knowledge in several fields of computing. The program is able to take students from other disciplines, provide them with a core background, and then prepare them for entry into the profession. The computer game technology concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of computer game technology and software design and development. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study including 6 semester hours of required courses and 3 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed discrete mathematics, at least two semesters of calculus, matrix or linear algebra, and at least one semester of calculus-based statistics. Additional requirements include 15 hours of computer science coursework including knowledge of one structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, elementary data structures, assembly language, advanced data structures, and introductory computer architecture. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 required hours must be earned in courses labeled CS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CS 520 or CS 625; CS 590 or CS 591; CS 514 or CS 612; CS 561 or CS 571; Required courses: CIS 551 Computer Game Design 3 hrs; CIS 552 Computer Game Modification 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose one from the following): CIS 553 Concepting and Storytelling 3 hrs; CIS 555 Computer Graphics 3 hrs; CIS 556 Game Engine Programming 3 hrs; CIS 557 Digital Animation 3 hrs; CIS 558 Sound Design 3 hrs; CIS 559 Computer Game Capstone Project 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Science - Emerging Topics in Computer Information Systems Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to produce highly skilled software professionals. The program is structured to ensure that all students have a firm grip of the basic principles of the discipline of computing and depth of knowledge in several fields of computing. The program is able to take students from other disciplines, provide them with a core background, and then prepare them for entry into the profession. This concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, in-depth knowledge, and unique skills in the practice of selected emerging topics in computer information systems area. The concentration is comprised of 6 required and 3 elective semester hours of study. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed discrete mathematics, at least two semesters of calculus, matrix or linear algebra, and at least one semester of calculus-based statistics. Additional requirements include 15 hours of computer science coursework including knowledge of one structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, elementary data structures, assembly language, advanced data structures, and introductory computer architecture. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 required hours must be earned in courses labeled CS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CS 520 or CS 625; CS 590 or CS 591; CS 514 or CS 612; CS 561 or CS 571; Required courses: CIS 699 Thesis in Computer Information Systems (6 s.h.); Elective courses (choose one from the following): CIS 697 Advanced Topics in Computer Information Systems (3 s.h.); CIS 698 Directed Individual Studies in Computer Information Systems (3 s.h.). | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Science - Emerging Topics in Computer Science Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to produce highly skilled software professionals. The program is structured to ensure that all students have a firm grip of the basic principles of the discipline of computing and depth of knowledge in several fields of computing. The program is able to take students from other disciplines, provide them with a core background, and then prepare them for entry into the profession. This concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, in-depth knowledge, and unique skills in the practice of selected emerging topics in computer science area. The concentration is comprised of 6 required and 3 elective semester hours of study. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed discrete mathematics, at least two semesters of calculus, matrix or linear algebra, and at least one semester of calculus-based statistics. Additional requirements include 15 hours of computer science coursework including knowledge of one structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, elementary data structures, assembly language, advanced data structures, and introductory computer architecture. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 required hours must be earned in courses labeled CS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CS 520 or CS 625; CS 590 or CS 591; CS 514 or CS 612; CS 561 or CS 571; Required courses: CS 699 Thesis in Computer Science 6 hrs; Elective courses (choose one from the following): CS 697 Advanced Topics in Computer Science 3 hrs; CS 698 Directed Individual Studies in Computer Science 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Science - Intelligent Systems, Databases and Data Mining Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to produce highly skilled software professionals. The program is structured to ensure that all students have a firm grip of the basic principles of the discipline of computing and depth of knowledge in several fields of computing. The program is able to take students from other disciplines, provide them with a core background, and then prepare them for entry into the profession. The intelligent systems, databases and data mining concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of analysis, design and development of intelligent systems and applications, database management systems, knowledge discovery and data mining technologies. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study including 3 semester hours of required courses and 6 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed discrete mathematics, at least two semesters of calculus, matrix or linear algebra, and at least one semester of calculus-based statistics. Additional requirements include 15 hours of computer science coursework including knowledge of one structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, elementary data structures, assembly language, advanced data structures, and introductory computer architecture. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 required hours must be earned in courses labeled CS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CS 520 or CS 625; CS 590 or CS 591; CS 514 or CS 612; CS 561 or CS 571; Required courses (choose one from the following): CS 561 Artificial Intelligence 3 hrs; CS 571 Database Management Systems 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose two from the following): CS 562 Intelligent Systems and Applications 3 hrs; CS 563 Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining 3 hrs; CS 572 Advanced Topics in Databases 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Science - Software Engineering Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to produce highly skilled software professionals. The program is structured to ensure that all students have a firm grip of the basic principles of the discipline of computing and depth of knowledge in several fields of computing. The program is able to take students from other disciplines, provide them with a core background, and then prepare them for entry into the profession. The software engineering concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of software engineering concepts, models, methods, technology, tools and techniques. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study including 3 semester hours of required courses and 6 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed discrete mathematics, at least two semesters of calculus, matrix or linear algebra, and at least one semester of calculus-based statistics. Additional requirements include 15 hours of computer science coursework including knowledge of one structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, elementary data structures, assembly language, advanced data structures, and introductory computer architecture. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 required hours must be earned in courses labeled CS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CS 520 or CS 625; CS 590 or CS 591; CS 514 or CS 612; CS 561 or CS 571; Required courses (choose one from the following): CS 590 Fundamentals of Software Engineering 3 hrs; CS 591 Software Project Management 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose two from the following): CS 592 Requirements Engineering 3 hrs; CS 593 Software Engineering of Web-Based Applications 3 hrs; CS 690 Advanced Topics on Software Engineering 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Science - Software, Web, and Computer Security Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to produce highly skilled software professionals. The program is structured to ensure that all students have a firm grip of the basic principles of the discipline of computing and depth of knowledge in several fields of computing. The program is able to take students from other disciplines, provide them with a core background, and then prepare them for entry into the profession. The software, web, and computer security concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of software, web, computer networks and computer systems security technology, and secure software and web applications design and development. The concentration is comprised of 9 required semester hours of study. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed discrete mathematics, at least two semesters of calculus, matrix or linear algebra, and at least one semester of calculus-based statistics. Additional requirements include 15 hours of computer science coursework including knowledge of one structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, elementary data structures, assembly language, advanced data structures, and introductory computer architecture. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 required hours must be earned in courses labeled CS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CS 520 or CS 625; CS 590 or CS 591; CS 514 or CS 612; CS 561 or CS 571; Required courses: CIS 515 Applied Cryptography 3 hrs; CIS 535 Computer Networks and System Security 3 hrs; CIS 595 Software and Web Applications Security 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Science - Theoretical Computer Science Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to produce highly skilled software professionals. The program is structured to ensure that all students have a firm grip of the basic principles of the discipline of computing and depth of knowledge in several fields of computing. The program is able to take students from other disciplines, provide them with a core background, and then prepare them for entry into the profession. The theoretical computer science concentration provides students with essential theoretical background and deep understanding of theory of computer science. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study, including 3 semester hours of required courses and 6 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed discrete mathematics, at least two semesters of calculus, matrix or linear algebra, and at least one semester of calculus-based statistics. Additional requirements include 15 hours of computer science coursework including knowledge of one structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, elementary data structures, assembly language, advanced data structures, and introductory computer architecture. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 required hours must be earned in courses labeled CS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CS 520 or CS 625; CS 590 or CS 591; CS 514 or CS 612; CS 561 or CS 571; Required courses (choose one from the following): CS 514 Algorithms 3 hrs; CS 612 Automata, Computation, and Complexity 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose two from the following): CS 503 Programming Methodology 3 hrs; CS 516 Programming Languages 3 hrs; CS 614 Parallel Algorithms 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Computer Science - Web Technologies and Systems Concentration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | This program is designed to produce highly skilled software professionals. The program is structured to ensure that all students have a firm grip of the basic principles of the discipline of computing and depth of knowledge in several fields of computing. The program is able to take students from other disciplines, provide them with a core background, and then prepare them for entry into the profession. The web technologies and systems concentration provides students with essential background, understanding, knowledge, and skills in the practice of design and development of web technologies and integrated web-based systems and applications. The concentration is comprised of 9 semester hours of study including 3 semester hours of required courses and 6 semester hours of elective courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. They must have completed discrete mathematics, at least two semesters of calculus, matrix or linear algebra, and at least one semester of calculus-based statistics. Additional requirements include 15 hours of computer science coursework including knowledge of one structured or object-oriented programming language such as C/C++, elementary data structures, assembly language, advanced data structures, and introductory computer architecture. GRE score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include 21 of the 33 required hours must be earned in courses labeled CS; six hours may be earned in approved courses other than those labeled CS or CIS; core (breadth) requirement: CS 520 or CS 625; CS 590 or CS 591; CS 514 or CS 612; CS 561 or CS 571; Required course: CS 531 Web Development Technologies 3 hrs; Elective courses (choose two from the following): CS 520 Advanced Computer Architecture 3 hrs; CS 532 Advanced Java Computing 3 hrs; CIS 545 Integrative Programming and Technology 3 hrs; CS 593 Software Engineering of Web-Based Applications 3 hrs; CS 625 Operating Systems Design 3 hrs; CS 635 Data Communications and Networks 3 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2460 | The mission of the department is to provide the highest quality education, training, and research environment for students, which will prepare them for successful careers in academia, industry, and government. The department offers baccalaureate degree programs in computer science (CS) and in computer information systems (CIS), with concentrations available in a) computer game technology (CGT) and b) software, Web, and computer security (Security). | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Industrial Engineering | Full Time | 1.5 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | This program offers students the opportunity to customize a plan of study, beyond an IE core, based on the student’s educational background and career objectives. Courses will be drawn from such disciplines as engineering, science, mathematics, and business administration. The mission is to educate leaders and managers with the knowledge and tools to enable them to assist any organization to continuously improve its system and processes. Their training will allow them to benefit organizations by reducing operational cost while providing superior quality services and products. This program not only provides a self-constructed program of study for each student based on their career interests, but also encourages graduate students to conduct research projects to expand their knowledge in a specific field. The independent research and project management skills gained through this type of training are considered key core competencies of engineers in any organization. MSIE students will be encouraged to begin research projects early in their academic training in order to foster interactions between faculty and students and increase chances for industry or federal agency funded projects. The program offers students three options: thesis, research project, and a courses only option. The thesis option and the research-project option each require a total of 30 credit hours. The all-course option requires a total of 33 credit hours. This program allows students to select from one of the following concentrations: Industrial Engineering Concentration, Engineering Finance Concentration. | Applicants must hold an undergraduate degree in engineering, science or mathematics. Students without an IE undergraduate degree may be required to make up undergraduate deficiencies. Those who do not have an engineering degree should have worked in an engineering environment for at least three years. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE general test score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Core courses - 9 credit hours: IME 511 Engineering Statistical Methods 3; IME 512 Design and Analysis of Experiments 3; IME 514 Introduction to Operations Research 3; Thesis (6 credit hours), research project (3 credit hours)-not required for all-course option: IME 600 Seminar; Periodic research presentations; all graduate students are required to enroll for this class; Thesis Option: IME 699 Thesis Work 6; Research-Project Option: IME 691 Research 3; Concentration courses (Min of 12 credit hours from any one of the concentrations): Systems Engineering Concentration: IME 515 Linear Programming 3; IME 522 Manufacturing Quality Control 3; IME 526 Reliability Engineering 3; IME 561 Simulation of Man-Machine Systems 3; IME 566 Advanced Facility Planning 3; IME 583 Production Planning Control 3; IME 585 Human Factors Engineering 3; IME 587 Occupational Safety and Health 3; Engineering Finance Concentration: IME 500 Engineering Economy and Costs 3; IME 505 Financial Engineering 3; IME 515 Linear Programming and Network Analysis 3; FIN 522 Introduction to Finance 2; FIN 622 Financial Management 3; FIN 624 Capital Budgeting 3; Elective courses: Remainder of the credit hours should come from the list below any 500-600 level course(s) offered in the IMET Department and any other graduate level course(s) in the university with consent of the project/thesis adviser. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology, Morgan Hall, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2740 | The Bradley IMET Department, located in the Morgan Hall, houses some of the most current computing labs and manufacturing facilities. There are three computer labs with over 50 networked computers that include high-speed Internet and advanced software. IMET at Bradley is also home to a working manufacturing facility where students not only learn traditional manufacturing processes but also become familiarized with automated, high-tech computer-integrated machines, etc. IMET at Bradley offers B.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, and Manufacturing Engineering Technology; M.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering and Manufacturing Engineering. Students at all levels are given the opportunity to participate in co-op programs, study abroad programs, research projects and professional societies that further student development. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Manufacturing Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $680 per semester hour | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | This program provides students with professional robust design and continuous improvement principles. The program gives students the ability to improve integrated systems, optimize manufacturing processes, adopt state-of-the-art materials, and produce superior quality products at minimal cost. By working closely with both constituencies and students, the department combines theoretical learning with hands-on application to keep students and the organizations they benefit globally competitive in today’s economy. This program is designed to broaden the career paths of the students in manufacturing sectors. This sector is comprised of all organizations engaged in the mechanical, physical, or chemical transformation of materials, substances, or components into new products. This program not only provides a self-constructed program of study for each student based on their career interests, but also encourages graduate students to conduct research projects to expand their knowledge in a specific field. The independent research and project management skills gained through this type of training are key core competencies of engineers in any organization. MSMfE students will be encouraged to begin research projects early in their academic training in order to foster interactions between faculty and students and increase chances for industry or federal agency funded projects. The program offers students three options: thesis, research project, and a courses only option. The thesis option and the research-project option each require a total of 30 credit hours. The all-course option requires a total of 33 credit hours. This program allows students to select from one of the following concentrations: Manufacturing Engineering Concentration, Manufacturing Management Concentration. | Applicants must hold an undergraduate degree in engineering, science or mathematics. Students without an IE undergraduate degree may be required to make up undergraduate deficiencies. Those who do not have an engineering degree should have worked in an engineering environment for at least three years. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE general test score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Core Courses - 3 Credit hours (one from the following list): IME 511 Engineering Statistical Methods 3; IME 512 Design and Analysis of Experiments 3; Thesis (6 credit hrs), Research project (3 credit hrs) - not required for all-course option: IME 600 Seminar; Periodic research presentations - all graduate students are required to enroll for this class; Thesis Option: IME 699 Thesis Work 6; Research-Project Option: IME 691 Research 3; Concentration courses (min. 15 credit hours): Product Engineering Concentration: IME 531 Polymer and Ceramic Materials and Manufacturing or IME 533 Composite Materials and Manufacturing 3; IME 541 Advanced Forming Processes 3; IME 543 Advanced Material Removals Processes or IME 547 Advanced Joining and Fabrication 3; IME 545 Advanced CAM 3; IME 555 Computer Integrated Manufacturing System 3; IME 590 Geometric Modeling or IME 592 Tribology 3; IME 591 DFM and Tool Design 3; Manufacturing Management Concentration: IME 501 Engineering Economy and Cost Engineering 3; IME 522 Manufacturing Quality Control 3; IME 524 Six Sigma Theory and Methodologies 3; 555 Computer Integrated Manufacturing Systems 3; IME 584 Lean Manufacturing System Design 3; IME 586 Advanced Logistical Supply Chain Systems 3; IME 566 Advanced Facility Planning 3; BMA 602 Organizational Behavior 3; Elective courses: The remainder of credits must be taken from the list below: any 500-600 level course(s) offered in the IMET Department and any other graduate level course(s) in the University with consent of the project/thesis adviser. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering and Technology, Morgan Hall, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2740 | The Bradley IMET Department, located in the Morgan Hall, houses some of the most current computing labs and manufacturing facilities. There are three computer labs with over 50 networked computers that include high-speed Internet and advanced software. IMET at Bradley is also home to a working manufacturing facility where students not only learn traditional manufacturing processes but also become familiarized with automated, high-tech computer-integrated machines, etc. IMET at Bradley offers B.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, and Manufacturing Engineering Technology; M.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering and Manufacturing Engineering. Students at all levels are given the opportunity to participate in co-op programs, study abroad programs, research projects and professional societies that further student development. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering - Applied Science | Full Time | 30 Credit-hour(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | This program is designed to strengthen the ability of students to solve complex technological problems in a creative way by broadening students' knowledge, providing in-depth study in an area of concentration, and complementing theoretical study with relevant and significant research and/or design. The student will ordinarily concentrate in either the mechanical systems design area or in the area of energy systems/thermosciences. A total of 30 graduate credit hours are required to complete the mechanical engineering program. Students who choose the courses-only option will be required to complete the 30 graduate credit hours through coursework only. Students who choose one of the two research options must complete the 30 graduate credit hours with at least 24 graduate credit hours of coursework and up to 6 graduate credit hours of research. For all students, the total graduate credit hours must include one graduate mathematics course that must be approved by the student’s advisor. Courses in statistics, numerical methods, and engineering analysis are applicable to this requirement. | Applicants must hold an undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering with a minimum undergraduate last-60-hour grade point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. Students with undergraduate degrees in related fields of science and engineering or those who do not meet the minimum grade point requirement can be admitted conditionally at the discretion of the department. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include ME 503 Internal Combustion Engines; ME 507 Nuclear Energy; ME 509 Solar Engineering; ME 533 Propulsion Systems; ME 534 Environmental Engineering - Air Conditioning; ME 535 Environmental Engineering - Refrigeration; ME 536 Industrial Pollution Prevention; ME 537 Building Energy Management; ME 547 Fluid Power Control Systems; ME 549 Microprocessor Interfacing in Mechanical Systems; ME 560 Principles of Robotic Programming; ME 577 Finite Element Methods in Engineering; ME 604 Design of Internal Combustion Engines; ME 648 Advanced Computer Aided Design. Students must take at least four of the above core courses plus one core graduate course in either Mechanical Systems Design or Thermal Sciences. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2711 | At Bradley, class sizes are small and faculty and students become closely associated during the educational process. Accordingly, professional guidance and mentoring is assured and lasting friendships develop. Standards are high, the atmosphere is intimate, and students are challenged to achieve their full potential as engineers and citizens. Through this hands-on experience they can develop into engineers able to enjoy and contribute to the enhancement of the quality of life. The department supports an array of Mechanical Engineering laboratories including dedicated laboratories for robotic, a material science, microprocessors, fluid dynamics, a thermal sciences, solar energy, a computers, and the Burke's Design Center These labs are well equipped with modern instrumentation, data acquisition, and computing facilities. These labs also include specialized equipment to support student and faculty classroom and project needs, such as subsonic and supersonic wind tunnels, a water table, an air conditioner trainer, a heat exchanger trainer, robots, lasers, rapid prototyping, and microprocessor prototyping boards. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering - Mechanical Systems Design | Full Time | 30 Credit-hour(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | This program is designed to strengthen the ability of students to solve complex technological problems in a creative way by broadening students' knowledge, providing in-depth study in an area of concentration, and complementing theoretical study with relevant and significant research and/or design. The student will ordinarily concentrate in either the mechanical systems design area or in the area of energy systems/thermosciences. A total of 30 graduate credit hours are required to complete the mechanical engineering program. Students who choose the courses-only option will be required to complete the 30 graduate credit hours through coursework only. Students who choose one of the two research options must complete the 30 graduate credit hours with at least 24 graduate credit hours of coursework and up to 6 graduate credit hours of research. For all students, the total graduate credit hours must include one graduate mathematics course that must be approved by the student’s advisor. Courses in statistics, numerical methods, and engineering analysis are applicable to this requirement. | Applicants must hold an undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering with a minimum undergraduate last-60-hour grade point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. Students with undergraduate degrees in related fields of science and engineering or those who do not meet the minimum grade point requirement can be admitted conditionally at the discretion of the department. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Systems (Vibration ME 540, Systems ME 544, or Advanced Controls); Dynamics (ME 502); Advanced Design of Machine Elements (ME 557); One fundamental graduate course in Thermal Sciences chosen from: ME 501, ME 515, ME 521. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2711 | At Bradley, class sizes are small and faculty and students become closely associated during the educational process. Accordingly, professional guidance and mentoring is assured and lasting friendships develop. Standards are high, the atmosphere is intimate, and students are challenged to achieve their full potential as engineers and citizens. Through this hands-on experience they can develop into engineers able to enjoy and contribute to the enhancement of the quality of life. The department supports an array of Mechanical Engineering laboratories including dedicated laboratories for robotic, a material science, microprocessors, fluid dynamics, a thermal sciences, solar energy, a computers, and the Burke's Design Center These labs are well equipped with modern instrumentation, data acquisition, and computing facilities. These labs also include specialized equipment to support student and faculty classroom and project needs, such as subsonic and supersonic wind tunnels, a water table, an air conditioner trainer, a heat exchanger trainer, robots, lasers, rapid prototyping, and microprocessor prototyping boards. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering - Thermal Science | Full Time | 30 Credit-hour(s) | $680 per semester hour | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | This program is designed to strengthen the ability of students to solve complex technological problems in a creative way by broadening students' knowledge, providing in-depth study in an area of concentration, and complementing theoretical study with relevant and significant research and/or design. The student will ordinarily concentrate in either the mechanical systems design area or in the area of energy systems/thermosciences. A total of 30 graduate credit hours are required to complete the mechanical engineering program. Students who choose the courses-only option will be required to complete the 30 graduate credit hours through coursework only. Students who choose one of the two research options must complete the 30 graduate credit hours with at least 24 graduate credit hours of coursework and up to 6 graduate credit hours of research. For all students, the total graduate credit hours must include one graduate mathematics course that must be approved by the student’s advisor. Courses in statistics, numerical methods, and engineering analysis are applicable to this requirement. | Applicants must hold an undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering with a minimum undergraduate last-60-hour grade point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. Students with undergraduate degrees in related fields of science and engineering or those who do not meet the minimum grade point requirement can be admitted conditionally at the discretion of the department. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Thermodynamics (ME 501); Heat Transfer (ME 515); Fluids (ME 521); One fundamental graduate course in Mechanical Systems Design chosen from: ME 540, ME 544, Advanced Control, ME 502, ME 557. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2711 | At Bradley, class sizes are small and faculty and students become closely associated during the educational process. Accordingly, professional guidance and mentoring is assured and lasting friendships develop. Standards are high, the atmosphere is intimate, and students are challenged to achieve their full potential as engineers and citizens. Through this hands-on experience they can develop into engineers able to enjoy and contribute to the enhancement of the quality of life. The department supports an array of Mechanical Engineering laboratories including dedicated laboratories for robotic, a material science, microprocessors, fluid dynamics, a thermal sciences, solar energy, a computers, and the Burke's Design Center These labs are well equipped with modern instrumentation, data acquisition, and computing facilities. These labs also include specialized equipment to support student and faculty classroom and project needs, such as subsonic and supersonic wind tunnels, a water table, an air conditioner trainer, a heat exchanger trainer, robots, lasers, rapid prototyping, and microprocessor prototyping boards. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Nursing - General (MSN) | Full Time | 1.5 - 2 years | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | This is a three semester program that has been developed to address the need of advanced practice nurses who hold a certificate/diploma of advanced practice, but do not have a master's degree in nursing. Examples of these advanced practice nurses include (but are not limited to) pediatric nurse practitioners, family nurse practitioners, or clinical nurse specialists. Additionally, the Board of Nursing of the Illinois Department of Professional Regulations has identified the Master's Degree in Nursing as the minimum requirement for nursing instructors/faculty members. The MSN General major students achieve a blend of theoretical, philosophical, and ethical components from foundational to graduate level education. These students enroll in courses with MSN nursing administration and nurse-administered anesthesia majors. The MSN General major program is accredited by the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test or the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants must have completed a statistics course with a grade of C or better and completed an undergraduate nursing research course. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Core Component 8hrs: NUR 501 Nursing Theories: Analysis and Development (3); NUR 505 Leadership in the Health Care System (3); NUR 510 Legal Issues in Nursing (2); Research Component 7-9 hrs: NUR 520 Research Methods in Nursing (3); NUR 525 Nursing Research Seminar(2); NUR 699 Thesis (4) or NUR 698 Directed Research (2) or NUR 697 Capstone Project in Nursing (2); MSN General 13-15 hrs: NUR 683 Advance Practice Nurse Internship (6); Electives 7-9 hrs. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Nursing - Nursing Administration (MSN) | Full Time | 1.5 - 2 years | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | prepares professional nurses for first line management or administrative positions in a variety of health care settings. Students participate in practicum experiences in diverse health care settings. Through the combination of classroom and practicum experiences, students develop the knowledge and skills required for advanced practice as manager and nurse executives. The program is accredited by the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission. The MSN - Nursing Administration program has a minimum requirement of 36 semester hours. Students must complete either a thesis (4 semester hours) or directed research (2 semester hours). A written comprehensive examination is administered during the last semester of administrative theory. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test or the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants must have completed a statistics course with a grade of C or better and completed an undergraduate nursing research course. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include NUR 501 Nursing Theories: Analysis and Development 3; NUR 505 Leadership in the Health Care System 3; NUR 520 Research Methods in Nursing 3; NUR 525 Nursing Research Seminar 2; NUR 630 Nursing Administration I Theory 3; NUR 631 Nursing Administration I Practicum 4; NUR 632 Nursing Administration II Theory 3; NUR 633 Nursing Administration II Practicum 4; Elective 1-3; NUR 510 Legal Issues in Nursing 2; NUR 698 Directed Research (2) or NUR 699 Thesis (4); Elective 2-4. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Nursing - Nursing Education (MSN) | Full Time | 1.5 - 2 years | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | This program prepares nurse educators at the master’s level to meet the minimum State of Illinois Nurse Practice Act requirements and to prepare nurse educators for future doctoral study. This program is designed to synthesize knowledge from the humanities, the social sciences, the sciences, and mathematics and internalize advanced concepts, principles, and nursing theories to implement the nursing process as the base for advanced professional nursing and utilize advanced leadership skills to improve the profession of nursing. The program is accredited by the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission. The MSN - Nursing Education program has a minimum requirement of 36 semester hours. Students must complete either a thesis (4 semester hours) or directed research (2 semester hours). Students will have to demonstrate mastery of knowledge and skills for the Nurse Educator through formative evaluation and final comprehensive examination. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test or the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants must have completed a statistics course with a grade of C or better and completed an undergraduate nursing research course. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include NUR 501 Nursing Theories: Analysis and Development 3; NUR 520 Research in Nursing 3; ETE 651 Curriculum Theory and Development or ETE 655 Instructional Theory 3; NUR 505 Leadership in the Health Care System 3; NUR 525 Research Seminar 2; NUR 660 Seminar in Nursing Education 3; Electives 3-5 hrs; NUR 510 Legal Issues in Nursing 2; NUR 661 Nursing Education I (P) 4; NUR 697, 698 OR 699 1-2; NUR 662 Nursing Education II (P) 4; NUR 697, 698 or 699 1-2; Electives if needed 2. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Nursing: RN-MSN | Full Time | Variable | $680 per semester hour | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | This program is an option for the RN student to complete the MSN. Students would choose either the nursing administration or the nursing education master’s program. The goal of the RN to MSN Program is to prepare nurse administrators and nurse educators at the master’s level to meet the minimum State of Illinois Nurse Practice Act requirements and to prepare nurse educators for future doctoral study. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE General Test or the Miller's Analogies Test (MAT) is also needed. Applicants must have completed a statistics course with a grade of C or better and completed an undergraduate nursing research course. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include NUR 300 Bases for Professional Nursing Practice 3; NUR 310 Health Assessment 1; NUR 303 Nursing Research 3; NUR 404 Community Health Nursing 2; NUR 520 Research Methods in Nursing 3; Electives 6; NUR 417 Adult Health IV (P) 5; NUR 510 Legal Issues in Nursing 2; NUR 525 Nursing Research Seminar 2; Electives 3; NUR 522 Health policy 3; NUR 630 Nursing Administration I (T) 3; NUR 698/699 Directed Research in Nursing/Thesis 1; NUR 501 Nursing Theories: Analysis and Development 3; NUR 505 Leadership in the Health Care System 3; NUR 631 Nursing Administration I (P) 4; NUR 632 Nursing Administration II (T) 3; NUR 633 Nursing Administration II (P) 4; NUR 698/699 Directed Research in Nursing/Thesis 1; Electives 4. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing | College of Education and Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Burgess Hall 302, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2528 | The Department of Nursing offers undergraduate and graduate education in the preparation of registered nurses and master’s prepared nurses. Innovative curricular opportunities exist for both undergraduate and graduate students. The mission of the Department of Nursing is to prepare baccalaureate and advanced practice nurses. Through faculty and student collaboration, dynamic learning environments, and mentoring, nursing graduates are prepared to be the next generation of nursing leaders and lifelong learners that will meet a global society's health care needs. The Department of Nursing is committed to excellence in the preparation of professional nurses for a changing global society. Within the comprehensive university setting, the Department of Nursing provides a dynamic personalized nursing education. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science in Quantitative Finance (MSQF) | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | $680 per semester hour | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | This program prepares students to meet professional finance challenges in public, private, and not-for-profit organizations. The program is interdisciplinary and is designed for students with very strong quantitative backgrounds who have objectives of understanding, modeling, and determining solutions to complex financial problems such as uncertainty (risk) management and derivatives. The MSQF program consists of 30 semester hours for students with appropriate mathematical and finance undergraduate backgrounds. Of these hours 15 semester hours consist of specified preparatory courses in mathematics and computer science. The remaining 15 credit hours consist of financial modeling using these preparatory courses. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. Official score for the GMAT is also needed. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include Foster College of Business Administration Courses: FIN 633 Quantitative Methods in Finance 3 hrs; FIN 636 Fixed Income 3 hrs; FIN 637 Advanced Financial Derivatives 3 hrs; FIN 639 Uncertainty Analysis and Measurement 3 hrs; FIN 649 Quantitative Finance Capstone 3; Courses outside the Foster College of Business Administration: MTH 510/CS 510 Numerical Methods I 3 hrs; MTH 511/CIS 511 Numerical Methods II 3 hrs; MTH 514 Partial Differential Equations 3 hrs; CS 514 Algorithms 3 hrs; CIS 588 Expert Systems 3 hrs; Completion of MS in Quantitative Finance undergraduate track or equivalent; Capstone Course: Students must complete FIN 649 Quantitative Finance Capstone, the capstone course, with a B or better to demonstrate their capacity to draw upon and integrate their knowledge from all courses in the program. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods | Foster College of Business Administration, Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods, 227 Baker Hall, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2313 | The Department of Finance and Quantitative Methods consists of nine full-time faculties, including a Financial Executive-in-Residence. Professors in the department possess a wide array of expertise and teach finance, quantitative methods, risk management and actuarial science courses at the undergraduate level, conduct a Finance Concentration in the MBA program, participate in the Executive MBA Program, the Caterpillar Management for the 21st Century program and other executive and professional development programs. Faculty research has been published in many scholarly journals and the department publishes the Journal of Economic and Financial Practice. The Bradley Investment Organization student group develops a mock equity portfolio to practice tracking and analyzing securities. The department sponsors additional student organizations: Financial Management Association, Acclaimed Intellectual Property Association, and Gamma Iota Sigma, the national association for risk management students. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Master of Science of Electrical Engineering | Full Time | 33 semester hours | $680 per semester hour | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | The goal of the program is to enhance the student’s understanding of advanced concepts in core areas of modern electrical and computer engineering and to enrich the student’s design and/or research skills in a specialization of their choice. Students work closely with the graduate program coordinator in tailoring an overall program best suited to their background and interests. Course sequences, design projects, and research are available in applied electromagnetics, communication theory, control theory, digital systems and computers, microprocessor applications, signal processing, and wireless components and systems. A total of 33 semester hours is required for the degree and students may do either a thesis (thesis option), design project (design option), or a coursework only option (course option). | Applicants must hold an undergraduate electrical or computer engineering program. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. GRE general test score is also required. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules for Thesis Option include 21 hours of approved EE courses meeting the following conditions: two 9-hour specializations, 6 hours of approved courses containing advanced math, 6 hours of approved 600-level courses; 6 hours of approved EE or technical electives; 6 hours of thesis in one of the student's specializations. The modules for Project Option include 24 hours of approved EE courses meeting the following conditions: two 9-hour specializations, 6 hours of approved courses containing advanced math, 6 hours of approved 600-level courses; 6 hours of approved EE or technical electives; 3-hour project in one of the student's specializations. The modules for Course Option include 27 hours of approved EE courses meeting the following conditions: one 12-hour specialization, one 9-hour specialization, 6 hours of approved courses containing advanced math, 6 hours of approved 600-level courses; 6 hours of approved EE or technical electives. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2732 | The Department offers degree programs in Electrical Engineering (B.S.E.E. and M.S.E.E.), and Electrical Engineering with Computer option (B.S.E.E.). It takes special pride in the particularly close student-faculty relationships it has developed over the years. Despite the current economic downturn, the job market for Bradley Electrical and Computer Engineers has been very good with recent graduates receiving excellent starting salaries from companies large and small. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Professional Master of Arts in Elementary Math, Science, and Technology Education | Full Time | 33 Month(s) | US $340 per credit / unit | Graduate School | This is a professional master's degree for elementary (K-8) teachers. The program offers teachers learning experiences that will allow them to enhance their competence as teachers of mathematics, science, and technology. The program's goal is to prepare teachers who are leaders in Math, Science, and Technology Education who are committed to providing all students the best educational opportunities possible. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. they must hold current teacher certification. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include MST 600, 601, or 609 Science Through Inquiry 3 hrs; MST 610 Math Through Inquiry 3 hrs; MST 611 Directed Research in Science and Math Internship 1 hr; MST 612 Introduction to Teacher Leadership 1 hr; Elective 3 hrs; MST 650 Inquiry-based Curriculum: Development and Analysis 3 hrs; MST 620, 621, or 629 Science Through Inquiry II 3 hrs; MST 660 Research in Math and Science 2 hrs; MST 670 Action Research: Methods and Practice 3 hrs; Elective 3 hrs; MST 680 Nature of Inquiry and Innovation 3 hrs; MST 681 Advanced Teacher Leadership 2 hrs; MST 685 STEM Education Project 1 hr; MST 685 STEM Education Project 2 hrs; Electives: MST 630 Teaching Science Using Robotic Platforms; MST 631 The Science of Foods and Nutrition; MST 632 The Science of Matter; MST 633 Pharmacology and the Human Brain; MST 634 Crime Scene Science; MST 635 The Science of Global Climate Change; MST 636 The Science of Computer Games; MST 637 Scientific Myths and Misconceptions; MST 639 Special Topics. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Graduate School | Graduate School, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Bradley University is an independent, privately endowed, coeducational institution. Located on an 85-acre campus in Peoria, Illinois, Bradley was founded in 1897 as Bradley Polytechnic Institute by Lydia Moss Bradley as a memorial to her children and husband, Tobias. It became a four-year college in 1920 and in 1946 became a university and began offering graduate programs. Bradley is accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. With approximately 5,300 undergraduate and 800 graduate students, Bradley is the ideal size for living and learning. Bradley provides a broad choice of academic and pre-professional programs with more than 100 programs of study in five colleges: the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, College of Education and Health Sciences, College of Engineering and Technology, Foster College of Business Administration, and Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts. Through its Graduate School, Bradley awards 14 degrees in over 30 academic areas, including a doctor of physical therapy degree. Programs offered through Continuing Education extend the resources of the university to promote lifelong learning. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 143358 | Bradley University | Professional Master of Arts in Environmental Science Education | Full Time | 36 Month(s) | $680 per semester hour | Graduate School | This program is designed to enhance the student’s knowledge of science, math, and technology with a focus on environmental science. Environmental science examples span all science disciplines and mathematical approaches, and provide students with concrete, real-world examples of societal problems, enabling teachers to connect students to material taught across the science and math curricula in meaningful and lasting ways. The program provides opportunities to build additional expertise with research-based pedagogy and assessment that supports inquiry learning and to further develop leadership skills. Courses and other experiences will respond to the individual needs of the participants as regards each participant’s current expertise in these areas. The program has been developed in partnership with educational experts at NASA and at the International Society for Technology in Education, and the curriculum is aligned with Illinois Learning Standards in science, mathematics, and technology. The program is comprised of 35 hours of graduate (600 level) courses to be completed in 36 months, the majority of which will be in environmental sciences, including related work in mathematics and technology, content and in STEM education. | Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or the international equivalent. At the undergraduate level the student must have achieved a 3.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in the last 60 hours of undergraduate coursework. Applicant must be a certified teacher working in middle or secondary schools. They must have the ability to pass an algebra skills placement test and commitment to complete the program. Applicants whose native language is not English must have obtained Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a minimum score of 550 (paper-based test), 213 (computer-based test), 79 (internet-based test) or a score of 6.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). | Masters | Bradley University | The modules include MST 615 Introduction to the Interdisciplinary Nature of Environmental Science 3; MST 616 The Mathematics of Environmental Science 3; MST 62x Science through Inquiry II 3; MST 612 Introduction to Teacher Leadership 1; MST 650 Inquiry Based Curriculum Development and Analysis 3; MST 661 Directed Research in Environmental Science 1; MST 662 Research in Environmental Science 2; MST 665 Environmental Systems A 2; MST 666 Environmental Systems B 2; MST 670 Action Research: Methods and Practice 1; MST 680 Nature of Inquiry and Innovation 3; MST 681 Advanced Teacher Leadership 2; MST 685 STEM Education Project OR MST 686 Environmental Sciences Research Project 3; 3 Electives in Environmental Science Education 6. | Bradley University | 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Graduate School | Graduate School, Bradley University, 1501 West Bradley Avenue, PEORIA, Illinois, 61625, +1 309 677 2375 | Bradley University is an independent, privately endowed, coeducational institution. Located on an 85-acre campus in Peoria, Illinois, Bradley was founded in 1897 as Bradley Polytechnic Institute by Lydia Moss Bradley as a memorial to her children and husband, Tobias. It became a four-year college in 1920 and in 1946 became a university and began offering graduate programs. Bradley is accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. With approximately 5,300 undergraduate and 800 graduate students, Bradley is the ideal size for living and learning. Bradley provides a broad choice of academic and pre-professional programs with more than 100 programs of study in five colleges: the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, College of Education and Health Sciences, College of Engineering and Technology, Foster College of Business Administration, and Slane College of Communications and Fine Arts. Through its Graduate School, Bradley awards 14 degrees in over 30 academic areas, including a doctor of physical therapy degree. Programs offered through Continuing Education extend the resources of the university to promote lifelong learning. | Yes | The university owns and operates 12 residence halls with a total capacity of 2,140 beds for male and female students. The experience in group living that students who reside in these halls enjoy is a valuable part of their total educational experience. The university also owns the student apartment complex located behind the caterpillar global communication center. Each of the 100 units is unfurnished and has its own living room, bedroom, bath, and kitchenette and can be rented by two students. All non-veteran, single freshman and sophomore students shall reside in residence halls provided by Bradley University unless, as a sophomore, they live in a sorority or fraternity house. The following exceptions may be made: students who are 21 by September 1 of the current school year; students who desire to live with near relatives. Furnished houses and apartments for families with children are available in the Peoria area. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | B.A./M.S. in Biotechnology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology | This combined degree program allows Brandeis students to complete the full professional science master's program with one additional year of graduate study after a BA or BS degree at Brandeis University. Requirements for the bachelor's degree, defined by the College of Arts and Sciences, remain unaffected by participation in this program. Students who successfully complete the five-year program must receive their bachelor's degrees by the end of their fourth years and will matriculate in the Graduate School in the fifth years. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology, Bassine BuildingMS 008, PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 4952 | No | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | B.S. / M. S. Program in Biochemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $36,122 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biochemistry | This program is designed to equip students with a broad understanding of the chemical and molecular events involved in biological processes. The biochemistry major provides a foundation for careers in medicine, biotechnology, or research in all branches of the biological sciences. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include BCSC 1a Designer Genes, BCHM 93a Research Internship and Analysis, BCHM 98a Readings in Biochemistry, BCHM 99a Research for Undergraduates, BCHM 99b Research for Undergraduates, BCHM 99e Research for Undergraduates, BCHM 100a Introductory Biochemistry, BCHM 101a Advanced Biochemistry: Enzyme Mechanisms, BCHM 102a Quantitative Approaches to Biochemical Systems, BCHM 103b Advanced Biochemistry: Information Transfer Mechanisms. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biochemistry, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2322 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | B.S. / M. S. Program in Biology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $36,122 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed to give students an understanding of fundamental and current biological knowledge in a variety of fields. The program provides excellent preparation for students intent on careers in biological research who want to go to graduate school, for those seeking careers in medicine, veterinary medicine, and dentistry, and for those interested in the allied health professions such as public health, genetic counseling, physical therapy, or physician assistant. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include BISC 2a Human Reproduction, Population Explosion, Global Consequences, BISC 2b Genes, Culture, History: A Case Study, BISC 3a Paradigms of Biological Investigation, BISC 3b Humans and the Environment, BISC 4a Heredity, BISC 4b Food, Nutrition, and Health, BISC 5a Pathogens and Human Disease, BISC 5b Diseases of the Mind, BISC 6b Environmental Health, BISC 7a The Biology and Culture of Deafness, BISC 7b Exercise Physiology, BIOL 15b Biology: Human Implications. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2450 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | B.S. / M. S. Program in Neuroscience | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $36,122 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | Candidates for honors in neuroscience may be admitted to a special four-year BS/MS program upon recommendation of the neuroscience program and approval by the Graduate School. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include NPSY 11b Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience, NPSY 12a Sensory Processes, NPSY 16a Motor Control, NPSY 22b Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience, NEUR 90a Field Study: Neuroscience, NEUR 98a Readings in Neuroscience, NEUR 98b Readings in Neuroscience, NEUR 99a Neuroscience Senior Research, NEUR 99b Neuroscience Senior Research, NEUR 99e Senior Research, NPHY 115a Dynamical Systems, Chaos, and Fractals, NPSY 120b Man in Space, NPSY 125a Advanced Topics in Perception and Adaptation. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program, Brandeis University Volen 206, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2890 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | B.S./M.S. in Biotechnology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology | This combined degree program allows Brandeis students to complete the full professional science master's program with one additional year of graduate study after a BA or BS degree at Brandeis University. Requirements for the bachelor's degree, defined by the College of Arts and Sciences, remain unaffected by participation in this program. Students who successfully complete the five-year program must receive their bachelor's degrees by the end of their fourth years and will matriculate in the Graduate School in the fifth years. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology, Bassine BuildingMS 008, PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 4952 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | No | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | BA/MA Program in Chemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | The chemistry major offers a broad training in modern chemistry, covering the major subfields - biochemistry, inorganic, organic, and physical and allowing students to pursue their special interest(s). | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include CHSC 3b Solving Environmental Challenges: The Role of Chemistry, CHSC 5a The Magnitude of Things and How on Earth They Matter, CHSC 6a Forensic Science, CHSC 8b Chemistry and Art, CHEM 11a General Chemistry, CHEM 11b General Chemistry, CHEM 15a Honors General Chemistry: Principles of Material Evolution, CHEM 15b Honors General Chemistry: Principles of Material Evolution, CHEM 18a General Chemistry Laboratory I. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Brandeis University, MS 015 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2500 | Chemistry at Brandeis combines the power of a University research program with the personality of a small teaching college. Both undergraduate and graduate programs are research-based, and supported by coursework in the major subfields of biochemistry, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Chemistry graduates are well-prepared to go on to professional work in chemistry and allied fields such as environmental science, polymer and materials science, biochemistry and biotechnology, or to continue their education in graduate school, or medical or other professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | BA/MA in Anthropology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | The four-year BA/MA degree program in anthropology is designed to enable exceptional undergraduates to earn two degrees simultaneously during their period of study at Brandeis University. The program provides a strong academic grounding for students who aspire to a professional career in anthropology. Applications are normally considered after six semesters of undergraduate study. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include ANTH 1a Introduction to the Comparative Study of Human Societies, ANTH 5a Human Origins, ANTH 26a Communication and Media, ANTH 33b Crossing Cultural Boundaries, ANTH 55a Anthropology of Development, ANTH 60a Archaeological Methods, ANTH 60b Archaeological Analysis, ANTH 61b Language in American Life, ANTH 80a Anthropology of Religion, ANTH 83a Anthropological Inquiry, ANTH 92a Internship and Analysis, ANTH 98a Individual Readings and Research in Anthropology, ANTH 98b Individual Readings and Research in Anthropology, ANTH 99a Senior Research, ANTH 99b Senior Thesis. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Brandeis University, P O Box 549110 MS 006, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2210 | Anthropology Department at Brandeis University offers a wide range of courses covering the discipline's four major subfields: sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and archaeology. The Department also has available for students a number of special resources, including the Anthropology Colloquium Series; Working Group in Economic Anthropology; Material Culture Study Center, Archaeology laboratory; the Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology (CMRAE); the Boston Library Consortium; cross registration at certain Boston-area institutions; and opportunities for supplemental coursework in other Brandeis departments and programs. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | BA/MA in Computational Linguistics | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program is designed for outstanding undergraduate students who will have completed all requirements for the undergraduate BA or BS degree within four years, with a major preferably in either language and linguistics or computer science. Eligibility for the program is normally limited to students who have maintained a minimum 3.500 GPA in all linguistics and computer science courses taken. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Brandeis University, MS 018, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02254, +1 781 736 2700 | Computer Science Department offers students the unique opportunity to explore the fundamentals of both theoretical and practical aspects of computing in preparation for creative jobs in the computer industry or higher education. In addition the curriculum provides a stimulating and useful preparation for a number of related fields such as law, medicine and economics. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | BA/MA in Computer Science | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program is designed for Brandeis undergraduate who are interested in taking additional Computer Science courses their senior year and completing an MA the year after they obtain their undergraduate degree. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Brandeis University, MS 018, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02254, +1 781 736 2700 | Computer Science Department offers students the unique opportunity to explore the fundamentals of both theoretical and practical aspects of computing in preparation for creative jobs in the computer industry or higher education. In addition the curriculum provides a stimulating and useful preparation for a number of related fields such as law, medicine and economics. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | BA/MA in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Undergraduate students enrolled at Brandeis are eligible for the B.A./M.A. program in mathematics if they have completed MATH 101a and b; 110a; 111a and b; and 121 a and b with a grade of B- or better and demonstrated a reading knowledge of mathematical French, German or Russian. In addition, students must fulfill a minimum of three years' residence on campus. A student must make formal written application for admission to this program on forms available at the Graduate School office. This must be done no later than May 1 preceding his/her final year of study on campus. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 050, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3050 | Brandeis Department of Mathematics combines the informality, flexibility, and general friendliness of a small department with the intellectual vigor of a faculty whose research accomplishments have placed it among the top departments in the country. Courses and seminars range from introductory classes to the frontiers of current research. In many, especially at advanced levels, faculty members will often be in the audience with students lecturing. The result is an active dialogue among all members of the department and a general air of living, creative mathematics. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | BA/MA in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies - Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include IMES 98a Independent Study, IMES 98b Independent Study, IMES 99d Senior Research, IMES 104a Islam: Civilization and Institutions, AAAS 60a Economics of Third World Hunger, AAAS 80a Economy and Society in Africa, AAAS 123a Third World Ideologies, AAAS 126b Political Economy of the Third World, AAAS 163b Africa in World Politics, AAAS 175a Comparative Politics of North Africa, ANTH 80a Anthropology of Religion. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mailstop 054 Mailstop 054, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 783 736 2950 | Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies (NEJS) bears a proud tradition of scholarly excellence in the fields that it embraces: The study of the Jewish people, including their history, religion, literature and place in civilization. The history, languages and culture of the Bible and ancient Near East. The modern Middle East. The department offers a variety of degrees at the undergraduate (major and minor), master's (independent and jointly with other programs), and doctoral levels. | Yes | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | BA/MS in Physics | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $36,122 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include PHSC 2b Introductory Astronomy, PHSC 8b Concept and Theories in Physics, PHYS 10a Introduction to Physical Laws and Phenomena I, PHYS 10b Introduction to Physical Laws and Phenomena II, PHYS 11a Introductory Physics I, PHYS 11b Introductory Physics II, PHYS 15a Advanced Introductory Physics I, PHYS 15b Advanced Introductory Physics II, PHYS 18a Introductory Laboratory I, PHYS 18b Introductory Laboratory II, PHYS 19a Physics Laboratory I. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics, Abelson Bass Yalem 210, MS 057, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2800 | Martin Fisher School of Physics at Brandeis University offers rigorous training of high quality to the aspiring research physicist in an academically stimulating environment. The limited enrollment and informal atmosphere of the department encourage friendly relations of students among themselves and with members of the faculty and provide for close personal attention to the individual needs of each student. The research areas range from the very practical to the very theoretical and include some of the most exciting frontiers of knowledge in today's world. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in African and Afro-American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of African and Afro-American Studies | A major or minor in African and Afro-American studies allows the students to explore intellectual, cultural, economic, religious, social and historical issues related to Africans and people of African descent. After graduation, most of the majors go on to work in public policy, social activism, teaching (at all levels), law, administration, the arts and many other fields. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include AAAS 5a Introduction to African and Afro-American Studies, AAAS 18b Africa and the West, AAAS 60a Economics of Third World Hunger, AAAS 70a Introduction to Afro-American History, AAAS 79b Afro-American Literature of the Twentieth Century, AAAS 80a Economy and Society in Africa, AAAS 81b Religion in African-American History, AAAS 82a Urban Politics, AAAS 85a Survey of Southern African History. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of African and Afro-American Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of African and Afro-American Studies, Mandel Center2nd Floor, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2090 | The African and Afro-American Studies Department offers opportunities to explore cultural expressions, economic issues, religious practices, social arrangements, intellectual developments, and political trends among Africans and people of African descent. The Department is multi-disciplinary and interdisciplinary in its approach to the broad range of issues and experiences that comprise this field. They offer courses in the humanities and social sciences using the methods of several disciplines, including anthropology, cultural studies, economics, history, literature, politics, and sociology. Specific courses focus on people and developments in Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies | This program is designed to provide students with an educated awareness of the way of the United States, viewed as a civilization, frames the lives, aspirations and self-perceptions of its citizens, and how Americans are seen by people around the world. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include AMST 92A sec. 1 Internship in American Studies, AMST 92A sec. 2 Internship in American Studies, AMST 92A sec. 3 Internship in American Studies, AMST 92A sec. 4 Internship in American Studies, AMST 92A sec. 5 Internship in American Studies, AMST 92A sec. 6 Internship in American Studies, AMST 92A sec. 7 Internship in American Studies, AMST 92A sec. 8 Internship in American Studies, AMST 92A sec. 9 Internship in American Studies, AMST 97A sec. 1 Readings in American Studies, AMST 97A sec.2 Readings in American Studies | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies, MS 005 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3030 | American studies is an interdisciplinary field devoted to the study of all things American. An inquiry into the many varieties of American culture, past and present, the major seeks to provide students with a historical perspective on the United States and an educated awareness of the ways in which the nation has shaped the lives of its citizens as well as people around the world. The curriculum embraces a wide range of cultural expressions, including literature, film, music, art, architecture and digital media. Typically, students who enroll anticipate careers in fields such as law, business, public service, education, journalism and the entertainment industry. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrees, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.S in Electrical and Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | The BYU Electrical and Computer Engineering Program prepares graduates to: 1. Apply knowledge in service to community and family and engage in lifelong learning through personal study and continuing education. 2. Develop a fulfilling profession which may include employment in industry or academia, technology-based entrepreneurship, and postgraduate study in engineering or other disciplines. 3. Make innovative contributions to science and technology and serve in responsible positions of leadership. 4. Be examples of faith, character, and high professional ethics. | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah's. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 459 Clyde Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4012 | Professor James Archibald was presented with the Outstanding Faculty Award in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering for demonstrating outstanding devotion to undergraduate education. The citation noted his exemplary mentoring of undergraduate and graduate students via research activities and senior design projects. Dr. Archibald currently serves as the departments Undergraduate Coordinator. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology - Physical Anthropology Track | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program is structured to provide an introduction to the concepts, methodologies, and theoretical issues of anthropology, while permitting each student sufficient latitude to pursue their own special interests. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | Brandeis University | The modules include ANTH 1a Introduction to the Comparative Study of Human Societies, ANTH 5a Human Origins, ANTH 26a Communication and Media, ANTH 33b Crossing Cultural Boundaries, ANTH 55a Anthropology of Development, ANTH 60a Archaeological Methods, ANTH 60b Archaeological Analysis, ANTH 61b Language in American Life, ANTH 80a Anthropology of Religion, ANTH 83a Anthropological Inquiry, ANTH 92a Internship and Analysis, ANTH 98a Individual Readings and Research in Anthropology, ANTH 98b Individual Readings and Research in Anthropology, ANTH 99a Senior Research, ANTH 99b Senior Thesis. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Brandeis University, P O Box 549110 MS 006, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2210 | Anthropology Department at Brandeis University offers a wide range of courses covering the discipline's four major subfields: sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and archaeology. The Department also has available for students a number of special resources, including the Anthropology Colloquium Series; Working Group in Economic Anthropology; Material Culture Study Center, Archaeology laboratory; the Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology (CMRAE); the Boston Library Consortium; cross registration at certain Boston-area institutions; and opportunities for supplemental coursework in other Brandeis departments and programs. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.S in Civil Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | These objectives are intended to develop the following outcomes in students graduating from the program: understand fundamental principles of mathematics and science, Understand fundamental engineering science. Understand geotechnical engineering , Understand structural engineering, Understand transportation engineering .Understand water resources and environmental engineering, Be able to design civil engineering systems and solve constrained problems with innovation, Be able to use modern engineering tools, conduct experiments, and analyze uncertain data, Be able to communicate ideas effectively, work in teams and lead others, Be familiar with professional practice, business management, and public administration, Be aware of cultural, societal, contemporary, historical, global and sustainability issues , Be committed to life-long learning as licensed engineers of integrity and faith. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 368 Clyde Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2811 | There are 19 full-time faculty in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department. They have a broad spectrum of experience in industry and government, and most are professionally registered. The department has developed a strong research base that is currently funded at about $1 million per year. Over half of the faculty presently hold externally supported research grants and contracts, and several are also funded through the Engineering Computer Graphics Laboratory. Areas of instruction include engineering mechanics, hydraulics, environmental engineering, soil mechanics, structures, structural composites, transportation, and water resources. Most department research is associated with one or more of these areas plus applications for engineering computer graphics. Department research varies with many projects related to water resources--quality, remote sensing, distribution systems, and as part of environmental hazardous waste studies. In the geotechnical area, the department has several active research grants for exploring soil mechanics, earthquake liquefaction, and geologic modeling. Faculty expertise encompasses structures, structural mechanics (including research into structures made of modern composite materials), applications of computer graphics to structural analysis, construction of high-strength dome structures, and improvement of optimization techniques. In recent years there has been a significant increase in the amount of transportation engineering research in the department, much of which is associated with the Utah Department of Transportation. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.S in Chemical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | The M.S. and Ph.D. degrees are research oriented, requiring an original thesis. The focus of the program is on development of the student's ability to conduct independent, creative, scientific research. Graduate students are expected to assume a major responsibility for their own progress and to develop habits of inquiry that will ensure continuing intellectual development throughout their careers. Emphasis is generally placed first on a full understanding of the principles of math, engineering, and science, and then on the application of those principles to present-day engineering problems. | Complete admissions procedures and meet the entrance requirements of the University Graduate School. b. Provide evidence of successful teaching experience as a certified teacher in a self-contained elementary school classroom for a minimum of one year. c. Have a grade point average of 3.25 or above for the last 60 semester hours of university course work. d. Obtain acceptable scores on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Scores (not more than five years old) must be submitted to the office of Graduate Studies before the application deadline. To meet deadlines, take the GRE at least 3 months prior to application for graduate work. (Available at major university testing centers.) e. Applications for acceptance are evaluated by the Teacher Education Graduate Faculty Admissions Committee. Admission is based on faculty approval and available departmental resources. Official notification of acceptance or denial is given by the University Graduate Office. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering, 350 CB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 5286 | The Department of Chemical Engineering exists to support the mission of BYU by preparing students for: lives of scholarship and continued learning founded upon principles of science, engineering, and mathematics, lives of service to family as educated parents, to church as faithful Latter-day Saints, and to community as moral, disciplined, practicing engineers and leaders, lives of contribution to society and humanity by producing products, processes, and policies that improve the quality of life. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Business | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Brandeis International Business School | The new business major is a combination of studies in Business and in Liberal Arts is distinctive and offers a broad foundation for graduates entering the job market as well as those pursuing further studies in business. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | Brandeis University | The modules include BUS 6a Financial Accounting, BUS 10a Functions of the Capitalist Enterprise, BUS 14a Managerial Accounting, BUS 20a Organizational Behavior in Business, BUS 30a Entrepreneurship and Innovation, BUS 35a Real Estate and Society, BUS 60a Marketing Management, BUS 70a Business in the Global Economy, BUS 71a Introduction to Finance, BUS 75a Financial Analysis for Management, BUS 89a Work in the Global Business Environment: Internship and Seminar and BUS 98a Independent Study. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Brandeis International Business School | Brandeis International Business School, Mailstop 032, P O Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2252 | The Brandeis International Business School is a pioneering professional school dedicated to teaching and research in global finance, management and economic policy. They respond to the growing need for international vision and expertise by preparing exceptional individuals from around the world to become principled leaders of global companies and public institutions. They teach cutting-edge theory, immerse students in international experiences, and connect them to best practice in business and policy. This learning experience transforms the way their graduates view the world, and helps them develop skills and insights to chart its future. The Brandeis Advantage: Located on a wooded campus in suburban Boston, Brandeis has 3200 undergraduate and 1100 graduates students, offering programs in more than 40 fields. International to the Core: More than half of their students come from Europe, Asia and Latin America, and international experiences are built into their programs in partnership with major foreign schools and companies. World-class Faculty: Their faculty includes not only distinguished researchers in international finance, business and economics, but also leading practitioners in banking, investments and consulting. Boston:-an academic capital: Seven major universities and 250,000 students are located in the greater Boston area. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.S in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | The Psychology Masters program provides an advanced education in preparation for application to doctoral programs, community college, junior college, or high school teaching positions, and a greater expertise in psychology. The Psychology MS is not intended as a terminal professional degree. | Bachelors degree (Psychology degree preferred but not required) GPA of at least 3.0 for the last sixty semester hours General area GRE The following undergraduate courses, or their equivalents, should have been completed: General Psychology (111), Elementary Psychological Statistics (301), Experimental Psychology (302), and three 300-level psychology courses. Average entrance GPA - 3.65 , The Masters Program admits approximately 8 - 10 students per year at an acceptance rate of approximately 30%., Average GRE scores - Verbal 555; Quantitative 590. All applications are taken electronically. To apply for any graduate program at BYU, fill out the online application . If you find it impossible to apply online, please contact the Office of Graduate Studies in B-356 ASB or by phone at 801-422-4091. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology, 1001 Kimball Tower P.O. Box 25543, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 6002 | Among the many majors at BYU, there is one that delves into the depths of the human mind: the psychology major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.S in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Program graduates will develop an advanced understanding of the governing principles which serve as the basis for the practice of mechanical engineering and have the ability to apply these principles in the design and analysis of a system or process to meet specified needs. 2. Program graduates will participate in the creation of new knowledge and/or will advance the state-of-the-art in a specific sub-discipline of mechanical engineering through the completion of a thesis project. The thesis project will contain elements of design, experimentation, and analysis and will require innovation and creativity. 3. Program graduates will develop technical writing and oral presentation skills. 4. Program graduates will demonstrate a pattern of living consistent with high ethical and moral standards. | All applicants must take the general GRE exam. The expected GRE score ranges are: V (460-480), Q (710-730), AW (3.5-4.5). Students with scores below these numbers must show strength and aptitude through other means to be admitted. If English is not the student’s native language, and a four-year bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution within the United States has not been earned, the student must also take the TOEFL or IELTS. University minimum scores are required. Scores for the entrance exams must be sent directly to Brigham Young University. Applicants should sit for the GRE exam and the TOEFL or IELTS exams, at least 6 weeks prior to the application deadline. Students with a BS in disciplines other than ME may be admitted provisionally to the graduate program. These students will be required to take some or all of the following courses. The applicant should work with the potential Graduate Committee Chair and the Graduate Coordinator to determine exactly which courses will be required. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 435 Crabtree Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2625 | The mission of the Department of Mechanical Engineering is to:Educate mechanical engineering students to contribute and lead in society. Offer mentoring opportunities for faculty and students to discover, apply and disseminate new knowledge of real consequence. Provide an educational atmosphere enlightened by the Gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Literature | This program engages the study of literatures and cultures within and across national boundaries. It comprises the comparative analysis of literary texts not only in relation to genres, forms, and movements but within the larger context of social discourse and cultural practices. Because cultural practices are not static but continually changing, comparative literature is sensitive not only to historical context, but also to how cultural forms adapt to new conditions. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include COML 97a Senior Essay, COML 98a Independent Study, COML 98b Independent Study, COML 99d Senior Thesis, COML 100a Comparing Literatures: Theory and Practice, COML 102a Love in the Middle Ages, COML 103b Madness and Folly in Renaissance Literature, COML 108a Creating New Histories and Identities beyond the Nation: Transnational Female Voices in the U.S., COML 117a Magical Realism and Modern Myth, COML 120b Dangerous Writers and Writers in Danger, COML 122b Writing Home and Abroad: Literature by Women of Color, COML 123a Perfect Love, COML 130a Poetic Voices of Protest. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Literature, MS 024 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3232 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA French Studies | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of French and Italian | This program offers, as a terminal degree, preparation to students seeking careers in foreign language education, business, the legal profession, or the Foreign Service. The degree can also serve as a step towards studies at the doctoral level. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of French and Italian | College of Humanities, Department of French and Italian, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The study of French or Italian language and literature sharpens analytical and communicative skills. Students develop proficiency in listening, reading, writing, and speaking, and they learn to use literature as a means to discover and broaden their understanding of culturally specific as well as universal issues and values. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.S. Special Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE) | The BYU M.S. in Special Education program prepares special educators to provide collaborative leadership to foster the moral development and improve learning and social competence of exceptional children with challenging behaviors. The program is innovative both for faculty and students in Special Education, and for those in School Psychology. In order to prepare special educators to work collaboratively with multidisciplinary teams in their schools, the masters program will model cooperative teaming and teaching with related disciplines. The program is designed to serve currently employed special educators in cohorts of up to 15 students. These students will be expected to take and complete a set program of study together. New cohorts are admitted every two years. |
International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE), 340 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3857 | We facilitate positive growth for children, youth, and adults by preparing professionals to work with students, clients, and colleagues in complex and varied educational settings. In particular, we embrace a collaborative, evidence-based approach to serving individuals with diverse strengths and needs. We support the mission and aims of a BYU education as we integrate teaching, research, and service. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in East Asian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, East Asian Studies | East Asian Studies is an interdisciplinary program that seeks to give the student broad yet intimate knowledge of the history, politics, economics, art and language of the major areas of East Asia. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include EAS 98a Independent Study, EAS 98b Independent Study, EAS 99d Senior Research, EAS 99d Senior Research, CHIN 10a Beginning Chinese I, CHIN 20b Continuing Chinese, CHIN 30a Intermediate Chinese, CHIN 40b Advanced Intermediate Chinese, JAPN 10a Beginning Japanese, JAPN 20b Continuing Japanese, JAPN 30a Intermediate Japanese, JAPN 40b Advanced Intermediate Japanese. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, East Asian Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, East Asian Studies, Mail Stop 055, Brandeis University P O Box 9110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2670 | East Asian Studies is an interdisciplinary program that seeks to give the student broad yet intimate knowledge of the history, politics, economics, art, and language of the major areas of East Asia. It allows the student to concentrate in a single program while at the same time enlarging his or her knowledge of East Asian civilization by taking related courses in other disciplines. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.S in Sociology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Sociology | The coursework is designed to teach students to understand and utilize the primary methods of sociological research, employ statistical models to test hypotheses, engage sociological theory to inform their understanding of key social issues, and specialize in particular areas of sociology. The culmination of the program is a Master’s thesis that demonstrates the student’s ability to conduct high quality, independent research. We are proud of our success in placing graduate students in top PhD programs and positions with research organizations and government agencies. If you would like more information about the graduate program, please click the links in the Graduate Program menu above. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Sociology, 2008 Joseph F. Smith Building, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 0625 | The Mexico Sociology program learns about community organization, development, and poverty by working on projects that have been planned by residents in indigenous villages. Most projects are designed to improve access to water and agricultural production. Here you see the group taking a break from their work for a great photo op. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Education Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Education Program | Education Studies is designed for students seeking an understanding of these and other issues. Students explore educational history and policy, human learning and development, and the place of education and schooling in families and societies, from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. This interdisciplinary approach enables students to examine the impact of political, historical, psychological, cultural, economic, and social forces on education and on the public expectations for schools. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | Brandeis University | The core courses include AMST 150a History of Childhood and Youth in American, AMST 180b Topics in the History of American Education, COML 165a Reading, Writing, and Teaching across Cultures, ECON 59b Introduction to the Economics of Education, ED 158b Looking with the Learner: Practice and Inquiry, ED 159b Philosophy of Education and SOC 104a The Sociology of Education. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Education Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Education Program, Abraham Shapiro Academic Complex, MS 022, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2002 | East Asian Studies is an interdisciplinary program that seeks to give the student broad yet intimate knowledge of the history, politics, economics, art, and language of the major areas of East Asia. It allows the student to concentrate in a single program while at the same time enlarging his or her knowledge of East Asian civilization by taking related courses in other disciplines. | No | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in English | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | English has been an essential component of Brandeis from the outset. The department has three key goals in educating its students. Students with a wide range of interests take the courses to learn about the various literary and cultural traditions that influence creative work in the English language. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include COMP 1a Composition, ENG 1a Reading Literature, ENG 4a The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century, ENG 5a British Literature in the Age of Darwin and Dickens, ENG 6a American Literature in the Age of Lincoln, ENG 7a American Literature from 1900 to 2000, ENG 8a Twenty-First-Century American Literature, ENG 10a Canonical Precursors: Genesis, Homer, Sappho, Ovid, Virgil, ENG 10b Poetry: A Basic Course, ENG 11a Introduction to Literary Method, ENG 16a Nineteenth-Century African-American Literature: Texts and Contexts, ENG 17a The Alternative Press in the United States: 1910-2000. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature, Brandeis University MS 023 Rabb 144, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2130 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | The environmental studies program prepares students to tackle the critical environmental issues in the world today from global warming and pandemics to toxic exposure and conflicts over shrinking natural resources through a broad interdisciplinary approach that integrates course work across the natural and social sciences and humanities. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include ENVS 11b Water Resources Management and Policy, ENVS 12b Introduction to Marine Mammals, ENVS 13b Coastal Zone Management, ENVS 14b The Maritime History of New England, ENVS 15a Reason to Hope: Managing the Global Commons for Peace, ENVS 17b Global Warming and Nuclear Winter, ENVS 18b International Environmental Conflict and Collaboration, ENVS 19a Climate Change and Conservation, ENVS 28a Wetlands: Hydrology, Ecology, Restoration, ENVS 89a Environmental Internship. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2631 | Environmental Studies at Brandeis University prepares students to tackle the critical environmental issues that face our world today -- from global warming and pandemics, to toxic exposure and conflicts over shrinking natural resources -- through a broad interdisciplinary approach that integrates course work across the natural and social sciences and humanities. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in European Cultural Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature | The European cultural studies program (ecs) offers students the opportunity to study English and continental literature in translation in conjunction with one or more related disciplines: fine arts, history, music, philosophy, politics, sociology, and theater arts. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include ECS 98a Independent Study, ECS 98b Independent Study, ECS 99d Senior Thesis, ECS 100a European Cultural Studies Proseminar: Modernism, ECS 100b European Cultural Studies Proseminar: Making of European Modernity, FECS 147a Jewish Identities in France since 1945, GECS 118a Seduction and Enlightenment, GECS 150a From Rapunzel to Riefenstahl: Real and Imaginary Women in German Culture, GECS 155a Modern German Jewish History, GECS 160a In the Shadow of the Holocaust: Global Encounters. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature, Brandeis University, 415 South StreetMS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3200 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Film, Television and Interactive Media | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Film, Television and Interactive Media Program | The film, television and interactive media curriculum is designed to provide a broad overview of the history of the moving image, to develop expertise in cinematic style and cultural meaning, to lend theoretical sophistication to an understanding of the moving image and to ensure some appreciation of the practical and technical side of motion picture production. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | Brandeis University | The courses include FILM 92a Internship in Film Studies, FILM 98a Independent Study, FILM 98b Independent Study and FILM 99d Senior Thesis. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Film, Television and Interactive Media Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Film, Television and Interactive Media Program, Brandeis University, 415 South StreetMS 036, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 8270 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | No | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in French and Francophone studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | The French and francophone studies program at Brandeis offers students a chance to study the francophone world from a historical as well as a more contemporary perspective. By combining courses that span the geographical and cultural diversity of the modern francophone world with more historically determined courses that plumb the earliest reaches of French cultural history, students can achieve a unique understanding of these rich and politically significant cultures. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The courses include FREN 10a Beginning French, FREN 20b Continuing French, FREN 32a Intermediate French: Conversation, FREN 34a Intermediate French: Topics in French and Francophone Cultures, FREN 92a Internship, FREN 97a Senior Essay, FREN 98a Independent Study, FREN 98b Independent Study and FREN 99b Senior Thesis. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3232 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in German Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature | Brandeis has strong historical links to the German world. Many of its earliest professors in a variety of disciplines fled Europe and World War II to find a home at Brandeis. Many were German or Austrian. Consequently, the study of German literature and culture has always been an area of particular strength. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include GER 10a Beginning German, GER 20b Continuing German, GER 30a Intermediate German, GER 98a Independent Study, GER 98b Independent Study, GER 99d Senior Thesis, GER 103a What You Always Wanted to Know, GER 104a Let's Talk! Shall We, GER 105a Learning Language through Literature/Learning Literature through Language, GER 109b Meisterwerke Deutscher Kurzprosa, GER 110a Goethe. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature, Brandeis University, 415 South StreetMS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3200 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Health: Science, Society and Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy | This program is designed to provide interdisciplinary study of health and health care. The program has three objectives: to expand student’s understanding of the biological, behavioral, social, and environmental factors that promote health or cause illness; to introduce students to the political, economic, legal, public health, and organizational dimensions of health care systems in the United States and throughout the world; to provide students with hands-on experience in either an internship, a laboratory, or a field-based research project. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HSSP 89a Internship and Analysis, HSSP 92a Internship and Analysis, HSSP 98a Independent Research in Health: Science, Society, and Policy, HSSP 98b Readings in Health: Science, Society, and Policy, HSSP 99d Senior Research, HSSP 100b Introduction to Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Population Health, HSSP 102a Global Perspectives on Health, HSSP 104b Health Economics, HSSP 106a Managing Medicine. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy, Mailstop 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3498 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Hebrew Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | This program allows students to acquire an advanced level of proficiency and a strong background in Hebrew culture and literature. Courses are taught by faculty whose fields of specialization include biblical studies, post-biblical and Talmudic literature, modern Hebrew literature and culture, Hebrew language, and Hebrew language education. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HBRW 10a Beginning Hebrew, HBRW 19a Beginning Hebrew: Honors, HBRW 20b Intermediate Hebrew, HBRW 29b Intermediate Hebrew I: Honors, HBRW 34a Intermediate Hebrew II: Aspects of Israeli Culture, HBRW 35a Conversation and Writing Skills, HBRW 39a Intermediate Hebrew II: Honors, HBRW 41a Intensive Conversational Hebrew I, HBRW 44b Israeli Culture and Media, HBRW 49b Hebrew Culture and Media: Honors, HBRW 97a Senior Essay, HBRW 102a Hebrew Reading Proficiency, HBRW 102b Advanced Reading Proficiency and Comprehension, HBRW 121a Let's converse in Hebrew, I. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mailstop 054 Mailstop 054, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 783 736 2950 | Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies (NEJS) bears a proud tradition of scholarly excellence in the fields that it embraces: The study of the Jewish people, including their history, religion, literature and place in civilization. The history, languages and culture of the Bible and ancient Near East. The modern Middle East. The department offers a variety of degrees at the undergraduate (major and minor), master's (independent and jointly with other programs), and doctoral levels. | Yes | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Hispanic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program explores Hispanic and Latino studies. Courses promote not only communication skills, but also an understanding of the various cultural contexts through interdisciplinary explorations of texts. Literature, film, history, politics, gender studies lead to some depth of understanding of issues facing Hispanic communities at home and abroad. Increasingly, technology (uses of the Internet, Web page design, PowerPoint presentations, and others) plays a part in these explorations. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HISP 10a Beginning Spanish, HISP 20b Continuing Spanish, HISP 31a Intermediate Spanish: Composition and Grammar, HISP 32a Intermediate Spanish: Conversation, HISP 33a Intermediate Spanish: Reading, HISP 34a Intermediate Spanish: Topics in Hispanic Culture, HISP 98a Independent Study, HISP 98b Independent Study, HISP 99b Senior Thesis, HISP 104b Peoples, Ideas, and Language of the Hispanic World, HISP 105a Spanish Conversation and Grammar, HISP 106b Spanish Composition, Grammar, and Stylistics, HISP 108a Spanish for Bilingual Students. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3232 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in History | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program seeks to provide students with a broad introduction to the historical origins of the modern world. The program is flexible, enabling students to devise individual programs tailored to their own specific needs and interests. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HIST 51a History of the United States: 1607-1865, HIST 51b History of the United States: 1865 to the Present, HIST 52b Europe from 1789 to the Present, HIST 55b The History of the Family, HIST 56b World History to 1960, HIST 61a Cultures in Conflict since 1300, HIST 71a Latin American History, Pre-Conquest to 1870, HIST 71b Latin American History, 1870 to the Present, HIST 80a Introduction to East Asian Civilization. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Olin-Sang 215 MS 036, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2270 | Department of History offers Brandeis students a comprehensive education in the study of the past, both on the undergraduate (major, minor, and a combined B.A./M.A.) and on the graduate level (M.A. and Ph.D.). Indeed, its two Ph.D. programs, in comparative history and American history, respectively, have consistently received high marks in national surveys and rankings, and can boast an outstanding placement record. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in International and Global Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, International and Global Studies | This is an interdisciplinary program that provides students with an opportunity to understand the complex processes of globalization that have so profoundly affected politics, economics, culture, society, the environment and many other facets of the lives. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The core courses include IGS 10a (Introduction to International and Global Studies), ANTH 1a (Introduction to the Comparative Study of Human Societies), ECON 8b (Global Economy) or IGS 8a (Economic Principles and Globalization) and POL 15a (Introduction to International Relations). | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, International and Global Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, International and Global Studies, Brandeis University MS 006 Brown 229, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2759 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | This is an interdisciplinary curriculum sponsored by the department of near eastern and Judaic studies in conjunction with the faculty from several other departments. It is designed to provide a strong foundation in Middle Eastern studies with a specialized knowledge of Islam. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include IMES 98a Independent Study, IMES 98b Independent Study, IMES 99d Senior Research, IMES 104a Islam: Civilization and Institutions, AAAS 60a Economics of Third World Hunger, AAAS 80a Economy and Society in Africa, AAAS 123a Third World Ideologies, AAAS 126b Political Economy of the Third World, AAAS 163b Africa in World Politics, AAAS 175a Comparative Politics of North Africa, ANTH 80a Anthropology of Religion. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mailstop 054 Mailstop 054, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 783 736 2950 | Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies (NEJS) bears a proud tradition of scholarly excellence in the fields that it embraces: The study of the Jewish people, including their history, religion, literature and place in civilization. The history, languages and culture of the Bible and ancient Near East. The modern Middle East. The department offers a variety of degrees at the undergraduate (major and minor), master's (independent and jointly with other programs), and doctoral levels. | Yes | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Italian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | This program offers students the opportunity to focus on the cultural heritage of Italy from the inception of the Italian language to the present day. The study of Italy’s language and creative achievements enables a student to explore another culture in depth in preparation for study abroad and eventual graduate work or related opportunities in the workplace. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include ITAL 10a Beginning Italian, ITAL 20b Continuing Italian, ITAL 30a Intermediate Italian, ITAL 97a Senior Essay, ITAL 97b Senior Essay, ITAL 98a Independent Study, ITAL 98b Independent Study, ITAL 99d Senior Thesis, IECS 140a Dante's Divine Comedy, ITAL 105a Italian Conversation and Composition, ITAL 106a Advanced Readings in Italian, ITAL 110a Introduction to Italian Literature, ITAL 120b Modern Italian Literature, ITAL 128a Mapping Modern Italian Culture: Inherited Conflicts. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3232 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Language and Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Language and Linguistics | The major in language and linguistics is designed to offer students multiple perspectives on the study of language: as a universal cognitive faculty, as an interactive mechanism for human development and for constructing social identities, as a spoken and written medium for cultural expression, and as an object and means of philosophical reflection. All these perspectives require training in the formal properties of language, including phonology, morphology, semantics, syntax, and pragmatics. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include LING 8b Structure of the English Language, LING 98a Readings in Linguistics, LING 98b Readings in Linguistics, LING 99d Senior Research, LING 100a Introduction to Linguistics, LING 110a Phonological Theory, LING 112b Historical Linguistics, LING 120b Syntactic Theory, LING 125b Universal Grammar, LING 128a Investigations in an Unfamiliar Language, LING 130a Formal Semantics: Truth, Meaning, and Language, LING 131a Algorithms for Computational Linguistics, LING 140a Architecture of Conversation: Discourse and Pragmatics. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Language and Linguistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Language and Linguistics, Brandeis University, 415 South Street Mailstop 013, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2700 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Latin American and Latino Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American and Latino Studies | This program offers an interdisciplinary approach to understanding Mexico, Central America, South America, the Caribbean, and the Latin American Diaspora in the United States. Students with widely ranging interests are welcome. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include LALS 92a Internship, LALS 98a Independent Study, LALS 98b Independent Study, LALS 99d Senior Research, LALS 100a Seminar: Topics in Latin American and Latino Studies, AAAS 125b Caribbean Women and Globalization: Sexuality, Citizenship, Work, AAAS 133b The Literature of the Caribbean, ANTH 131b Latin America in Ethnographic Perspective, ANTH 147b The Rise of Mesoamerican Civilization, ANTH 168a The Maya. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American and Latino Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American and Latino Studies, Brandeis University 415 South Street, Mailstop 036, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2293 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Mathematics is a subject of the greatest depth and beauty with a history extending from antiquity. The department attempts to make this depth and beauty manifest. The undergraduate major introduces students to some fundamental fields like algebra, real and complex analysis, geometry and topology - and to the habit of mathematical thought. Mathematics majors may go on to graduate school, scientific research, finance, actuarial science or mathematics teaching, but many choose the major for its inherent interest. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include MATH 1a Introduction to Mathematical Concepts, MATH 3a Mathematics for Elementary and Middle School Teachers, MATH 5a Precalculus Mathematics, MATH 8a Introduction to Probability and Statistics, MATH 10a Techniques of Calculus, MATH 10b Techniques of Calculus, MATH 15a Applied Linear Algebra, MATH 20a Techniques of Calculus: Calculus of Several Variables, MATH 22a Linear Algebra and Intermediate Calculus, Part I, MATH 22b Linear Algebra and Intermediate Calculus, Part II. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 050, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3050 | Brandeis Department of Mathematics combines the informality, flexibility, and general friendliness of a small department with the intellectual vigor of a faculty whose research accomplishments have placed it among the top departments in the country. Courses and seminars range from introductory classes to the frontiers of current research. In many, especially at advanced levels, faculty members will often be in the audience with students lecturing. The result is an active dialogue among all members of the department and a general air of living, creative mathematics. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics - Teacher Preparation Track | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students who complete the Brandeis program for Massachusetts High School Teacher Licensure may earn a bachelor's degree in mathematics by satisfying the required course requirements. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The required courses: One of the following: MATH 15a Applied Linear Algebra, MATH 22a Linear Algebra and Intermediate Calculus, Part I, One of the following: MATH 20a Techniques of Calculus: Calculus of Several Variables, MATH 22b Linear Algebra and Intermediate Calculus, Part II, One of the following: MATH 23bIntroduction to Proofs (or exemption), One of the following: MATH 35a Advanced Calculus, MATH 40a Introduction to Real Analysis, Part I, MATH 45a Introduction to Complex Analysis, One of the following: MATH 28a Introduction to Groups, MATH 28b Introduction to Rings and Fields, MATH 30a Introduction to Algebra, Part I, Two of the following: MATH courses numbered 27 or higher or cross-listed courses - One of the following: MATH 8a Introduction to Probability and Statistics, MATH 36a Probability; One of the following: A computer science course numbered 10 or higher; Completion of the following: High School Teacher Licensure Program. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 050, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3050 | Brandeis Department of Mathematics combines the informality, flexibility, and general friendliness of a small department with the intellectual vigor of a faculty whose research accomplishments have placed it among the top departments in the country. Courses and seminars range from introductory classes to the frontiers of current research. In many, especially at advanced levels, faculty members will often be in the audience with students lecturing. The result is an active dialogue among all members of the department and a general air of living, creative mathematics. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program develops skills in composition and analysis through courses in composition selected in consultation with the faculty advisor. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include MUS 1a Introduction to Music, MUS 2a The Western Tradition as Seen through Chamber Music, MUS 3b Introduction to World Music, MUS 4a Introduction to Chinese Music, MUS 5a Fundamentals of Music, MUS 6b A Cappella Arranging, MUS 7b Broadway Bound: The Craft of Composing Songs for Musical Theater, MUS 10a Early Music Ensemble, MUS 10b Early Music Ensemble, MUS 11a Chamber Choir, MUS 11b Chamber Choir, MUS 12a University Chorus, MUS 12b University Chorus, MUS 13a Jazz Ensemble, MUS 13b Jazz Ensemble, MUS 14a Orchestra. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | Brandeis Department of Music offers students the opportunity to experience music as both scholarship and a process of creation and performance. They believe in uniting musical excellence with intellectual inquiry. At Brandeis, they help their students to awaken their creative identity within the context of one of the country's most progressive universities. Founded by preeminent American composer Irving Fine, their department features a distinguished faculty of world-renowned composers, award-winning authors and scholars, instrumentalists, vocalists and conductors. They offer broad-based undergraduate majors and minors that combine the study of history, theory, composition and performance. Their nationally acclaimed graduate programs focus specifically on composition and theory, and musicology. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Cultural Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program encourages students to develop an understanding of music of various traditions in their cultural and social contexts. Students in this interdisciplinary track select courses in cultural studies from offerings in the schools of creative arts, social sciences and humanities. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include MUS 1a Introduction to Music, MUS 2a The Western Tradition as Seen through Chamber Music, MUS 3b Introduction to World Music, MUS 4a Introduction to Chinese Music, MUS 5a Fundamentals of Music, MUS 6b A Cappella Arranging, MUS 7b Broadway Bound: The Craft of Composing Songs for Musical Theater, MUS 10a Early Music Ensemble, MUS 10b Early Music Ensemble, MUS 11a Chamber Choir, MUS 11b Chamber Choir, MUS 12a University Chorus, MUS 12b University Chorus, MUS 13a Jazz Ensemble, MUS 13b Jazz Ensemble, MUS 14a Orchestra. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | Brandeis Department of Music offers students the opportunity to experience music as both scholarship and a process of creation and performance. They believe in uniting musical excellence with intellectual inquiry. At Brandeis, they help their students to awaken their creative identity within the context of one of the country's most progressive universities. Founded by preeminent American composer Irving Fine, their department features a distinguished faculty of world-renowned composers, award-winning authors and scholars, instrumentalists, vocalists and conductors. They offer broad-based undergraduate majors and minors that combine the study of history, theory, composition and performance. Their nationally acclaimed graduate programs focus specifically on composition and theory, and musicology. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - History | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This program allows students to focus on the place of music in history through elective courses on historical topics chosen in consultation with the faculty advisor. Students are encouraged to select these courses from related disciplines to focus on a particular time or place. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include MUS 1a Introduction to Music, MUS 2a The Western Tradition as Seen through Chamber Music, MUS 3b Introduction to World Music, MUS 4a Introduction to Chinese Music, MUS 5a Fundamentals of Music, MUS 6b A Cappella Arranging, MUS 7b Broadway Bound: The Craft of Composing Songs for Musical Theater, MUS 10a Early Music Ensemble, MUS 10b Early Music Ensemble, MUS 11a Chamber Choir, MUS 11b Chamber Choir, MUS 12a University Chorus, MUS 12b University Chorus, MUS 13a Jazz Ensemble, MUS 13b Jazz Ensemble, MUS 14a Orchestra. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | Brandeis Department of Music offers students the opportunity to experience music as both scholarship and a process of creation and performance. They believe in uniting musical excellence with intellectual inquiry. At Brandeis, they help their students to awaken their creative identity within the context of one of the country's most progressive universities. Founded by preeminent American composer Irving Fine, their department features a distinguished faculty of world-renowned composers, award-winning authors and scholars, instrumentalists, vocalists and conductors. They offer broad-based undergraduate majors and minors that combine the study of history, theory, composition and performance. Their nationally acclaimed graduate programs focus specifically on composition and theory, and musicology. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | The track in performance, open to highly qualified students by audition, develops skill in performance through private study as well as through elective courses selected in consultation with the faculty advisor. Students also present junior and senior recitals. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include MUS 1a Introduction to Music, MUS 2a The Western Tradition as Seen through Chamber Music, MUS 3b Introduction to World Music, MUS 4a Introduction to Chinese Music, MUS 5a Fundamentals of Music, MUS 6b A Cappella Arranging, MUS 7b Broadway Bound: The Craft of Composing Songs for Musical Theater, MUS 10a Early Music Ensemble, MUS 10b Early Music Ensemble, MUS 11a Chamber Choir, MUS 11b Chamber Choir, MUS 12a University Chorus, MUS 12b University Chorus, MUS 13a Jazz Ensemble, MUS 13b Jazz Ensemble, MUS 14a Orchestra. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | Brandeis Department of Music offers students the opportunity to experience music as both scholarship and a process of creation and performance. They believe in uniting musical excellence with intellectual inquiry. At Brandeis, they help their students to awaken their creative identity within the context of one of the country's most progressive universities. Founded by preeminent American composer Irving Fine, their department features a distinguished faculty of world-renowned composers, award-winning authors and scholars, instrumentalists, vocalists and conductors. They offer broad-based undergraduate majors and minors that combine the study of history, theory, composition and performance. Their nationally acclaimed graduate programs focus specifically on composition and theory, and musicology. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies - Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies Track | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | This program is designed to combine a broad education in the various disciplines and periods that constitute this field, with a degree of specialization in one specific area. It is the intent of the major also to introduce students to the critical study of Near Eastern and Judaic sources, classical and modern, within the academic context. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include NEJS 2a Introduction to the Jewish Experience, NEJS 3a Introduction to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, NEJS 5a Foundational Course in Judaic Studies, NEJS 8a The Bible in Its Near Eastern Context, NEJS 9a The World of the Ancient Near East, NEJS 10a Biblical Hebrew Grammar and Texts, NEJS 25a Introduction to Talmud, NEJS 29a Feminist Sexual Ethics in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, NEJS 35a History of the Jews from 1492 to the Present, NEJS 55a Ethics and the Jewish Political Tradition, NEJS 59b The Philosophy of Jewish Law, NEJS 75a Yiddish Literature: From Myth to Modernism, NEJS 75b Classic Yiddish Fiction, NEJS 92a Internship and Analysis in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, NEJS 98a Independent Study, NEJS 98b Independent Study, NEJS 99d Senior Research. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mailstop 054 Mailstop 054, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 783 736 2950 | Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies (NEJS) bears a proud tradition of scholarly excellence in the fields that it embraces: The study of the Jewish people, including their history, religion, literature and place in civilization. The history, languages and culture of the Bible and ancient Near East. The modern Middle East. The department offers a variety of degrees at the undergraduate (major and minor), master's (independent and jointly with other programs), and doctoral levels. | Yes | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.S Technology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. The projects included, Family Tree, Media Capture, Gears System Management, Gamers Club, ReligLaw.org, and Lockdown. | GRE (must be above 55th percentile in all sections) TOEFL (score of 580 paper-based, 237 CBT, or 85 iBT -- minimum 22 in speaking and 21 in all other sections) GMAT (must be above the 55th percentile in all sections) -- CM and IPD applicants. Additional requirements are 3.0 overall GPA, Baccalaureate degree in information technology, construction management, technology teacher education or related field, Basic sciences background, along with engineering mathematics, computers or electronics, management, architecture, and manufacturing methods. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | This program is designed to provide an interdisciplinary program of study of the neural mechanisms involved in the control of human or animal behavior. The major combines a strong foundation in basic science with more specialized courses in biology and psychology. This program is especially appropriate for students wishing to pursue further study in medicine, experimental psychology, or neuroscience. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include NPSY 11b Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience, NPSY 12a Sensory Processes, NPSY 16a Motor Control, NPSY 22b Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience, NEUR 90a Field Study: Neuroscience, NEUR 98a Readings in Neuroscience, NEUR 98b Readings in Neuroscience, NEUR 99a Neuroscience Senior Research, NEUR 99b Neuroscience Senior Research, NEUR 99e Senior Research, NPHY 115a Dynamical Systems, Chaos, and Fractals, NPSY 120b Man in Space, NPSY 125a Advanced Topics in Perception and Adaptation. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program, Brandeis University Volen 206, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2890 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy - Epistemology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include PHIL 1a Introduction to Philosophy, PHIL 6a Introduction to Symbolic Logic, PHIL 12b Social Justice, PHIL 13b The Idea of the Market: Economic Philosophies, PHIL 17a Introduction to Ethics, PHIL 18a Philosophy of Race and Gender, PHIL 19a Human Rights, PHIL 20a Social and Political Philosophy: Democracy and Disobedience, PHIL 21a Environmental Ethics, PHIL 22b Philosophy of Law, PHIL 23b Biomedical Ethics, PHIL 24a Philosophy of Religion, PHIL 35a Philosophy of Science, PHIL 36b Mind, Meaning, and Language, PHIL 37a Philosophy of Language. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2788 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy - Ethics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | Ethics addresses the meanings of the moral concepts such as right action, obligation, and justice and formulates principles to guide moral decisions, whether in private or public life. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include PHIL 1a Introduction to Philosophy, PHIL 6a Introduction to Symbolic Logic, PHIL 12b Social Justice, PHIL 13b The Idea of the Market: Economic Philosophies, PHIL 17a Introduction to Ethics, PHIL 18a Philosophy of Race and Gender, PHIL 19a Human Rights, PHIL 20a Social and Political Philosophy: Democracy and Disobedience, PHIL 21a Environmental Ethics, PHIL 22b Philosophy of Law, PHIL 23b Biomedical Ethics, PHIL 24a Philosophy of Religion, PHIL 35a Philosophy of Science, PHIL 36b Mind, Meaning, and Language, PHIL 37a Philosophy of Language. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2788 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy - Logic | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | Logic is the practice of using sound methods to distinguish good from bad reasoning. It helps to assess how well the premises support the conclusions, see what people are committed to accepting when they take a view, and avoid adopting beliefs for which they lack adequate reasons. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include PHIL 1a Introduction to Philosophy, PHIL 6a Introduction to Symbolic Logic, PHIL 12b Social Justice, PHIL 13b The Idea of the Market: Economic Philosophies, PHIL 17a Introduction to Ethics, PHIL 18a Philosophy of Race and Gender, PHIL 19a Human Rights, PHIL 20a Social and Political Philosophy: Democracy and Disobedience, PHIL 21a Environmental Ethics, PHIL 22b Philosophy of Law, PHIL 23b Biomedical Ethics, PHIL 24a Philosophy of Religion, PHIL 35a Philosophy of Science, PHIL 36b Mind, Meaning, and Language, PHIL 37a Philosophy of Language. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2788 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy - Metaphysics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | Metaphysics seeks basic criteria for determining what sorts of things are real. For instance, are there mental, physical, and abstract things (such as numbers), or is there just the physical and the spiritual, or merely matter and energy? Are people physical beings through and through or do they have properties that cannot be reduced to anything physical? | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include PHIL 1a Introduction to Philosophy, PHIL 6a Introduction to Symbolic Logic, PHIL 12b Social Justice, PHIL 13b The Idea of the Market: Economic Philosophies, PHIL 17a Introduction to Ethics, PHIL 18a Philosophy of Race and Gender, PHIL 19a Human Rights, PHIL 20a Social and Political Philosophy: Democracy and Disobedience, PHIL 21a Environmental Ethics, PHIL 22b Philosophy of Law, PHIL 23b Biomedical Ethics, PHIL 24a Philosophy of Religion, PHIL 35a Philosophy of Science, PHIL 36b Mind, Meaning, and Language, PHIL 37a Philosophy of Language. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2788 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | This curriculum gives ample time for joint majors in a broad range of fields, including mathematics, computer science, chemistry, biology, biological physics or neuroscience, but also economics, music, philosophy and creative writing, among others. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include PHSC 2b Introductory Astronomy, PHSC 8b Concept and Theories in Physics, PHYS 10a Introduction to Physical Laws and Phenomena I, PHYS 10b Introduction to Physical Laws and Phenomena II, PHYS 11a Introductory Physics I, PHYS 11b Introductory Physics II, PHYS 15a Advanced Introductory Physics I, PHYS 15b Advanced Introductory Physics II, PHYS 18a Introductory Laboratory I, PHYS 18b Introductory Laboratory II, PHYS 19a Physics Laboratory I. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics, Abelson Bass Yalem 210, MS 057, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2800 | Martin Fisher School of Physics at Brandeis University offers rigorous training of high quality to the aspiring research physicist in an academically stimulating environment. The limited enrollment and informal atmosphere of the department encourage friendly relations of students among themselves and with members of the faculty and provide for close personal attention to the individual needs of each student. The research areas range from the very practical to the very theoretical and include some of the most exciting frontiers of knowledge in today's world. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Politics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics | Politics courses are designed to develop an understanding of the various ways societies organize themselves to manage conflict and cooperation, and to make and implement public policy. This program is designed to prepare students for careers in governmental and nongovernmental service, policy analysis, journalism, law, and business, as well as for postgraduate work in political science. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include POL 10a Introduction to Political Theory, POL 11b Introduction to Comparative Government: Europe, POL 14b Introduction to American Government, POL 15a Introduction to International Relations, POL 98a Independent Study, POL 98b Independent Study, POL 99a Senior Research: Honors Thesis, POL 99b Senior Research: Honors Thesis, POL 99d Senior Research: Honors Thesis, POL 100b Political Science Methods: Research, Design, and Modes of Analysis, POL 101a Parties, Interest Groups, and Public Opinion. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics, Brandeis University, Mail Stop 058, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 781 736 2750 | Department of Politics supports the scholarly research of its faculty, and their effort to integrate their research into their teaching, and into the program of graduate training in Political Science. The undergraduate curriculum prepares students for careers in governmental and non-governmental public service, policy analysis, journalism, law and business, as well as for post-graduate work in Political Science. Graduate training emphasizes the study of developed and developing democratic systems, and the international political, economic and military-security relations among them. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The objective of the program is to help students develop a solid background in the scientific method and a strong foundation in the fundamentals of psychology, making them highly competitive candidates for postgraduate study and also preparing them to be thoughtful, analytic, and discerning problem solvers. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include PSYC 1a Introduction to Psychology, NPSY 11b Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience, NPSY 12a Sensory Processes, PSYC 13b Perception, PSYC 14a Comparative Psychology, PSYC 15a Biological Bases of Motivation, NPSY 16a Motor Control, PSYC 21a Learning and Behavior, NPSY 22b Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience, PSYC 31a Personality, PSYC 32a Abnormal Psychology, PSYC 33a Developmental Psychology. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Brandeis University, MS 062 PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3300 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Russian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature | This program offers students the opportunity to develop an understanding of the language, culture, and history of Russia and the former Soviet Union. The Russian language serves as the gateway to the study of Russian literature and history. A diverse selection of courses offered both within and beyond the department allows students to focus their studies on a variety of cultural, literary, social and political aspects of Russia and other post-Soviet states. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include RUS 10a Beginning Russian I, RUS 20b Beginning Russian II, RUS 30a Intermediate Russian I, RUS 40b Intermediate Russian II, RUS 98a Independent Study, RUS 98b Independent Study, RUS 99d Senior Thesis, RUS 105a Russia Today: Advanced Language Skills through Contemporary Culture, RUS 106b Advanced Russian Language through Film, RUS 110a Russian Language for Russian Speakers, RECS 130a The Russian Novel, RECS 131a Nature, Man, and Machine: Twentieth-Century Russian Literature. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature, Brandeis University, 415 South StreetMS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3200 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology - Gender and Family | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The undergraduate curriculum provides students with the tools for understanding and critical analysis of a broad array of institutions and cultures, from the everyday level of interpersonal and community interaction to large-scale political and social systems and public policies. Students are engaged as active learners and encouraged to develop knowledge that can make a difference in the world, including the potential for leadership development and action for social justice. The gender and family concentration includes courses on gender, families, sexuality, women’s biography, gender and race, women’s leadership, women’s intellectual work, women and development | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include SOC 105a Feminist Critiques of Sexuality and Work in America, SOC 112b Social Class and Social Change, SOC 115a Masculinities, SOC 117a Sociology of Work and Gender, SOC 117b Sociology of Science, Technology, and Medicine, SOC 130a Families, Care giving and Kinship, SOC 131b Biography, Gender, and Society, SOC 138a Sociology of Gender and Race, AMST 118a Gender and the Professions, AMST 125a History of United States Feminisms and POL 125a Women in American Politics. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, MS 071, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2630 | Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred Ph.Ds. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s. Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often pathbreaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology - Health, Illness, and the Life Course | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The undergraduate curriculum provides students with the tools for understanding and critical analysis of a broad array of institutions and cultures, from the everyday level of interpersonal and community interaction to large-scale political and social systems and public policies. Students are engaged as active learners and encouraged to develop knowledge that can make a difference in the world, including the potential for leadership development and action for social justice. The health, illness, and the life course includes courses on body and health, health care systems, medicalization of social problems, aging, disability, genetics, and policy. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include SOC 169b Issues in Sexuality, SOC 176a Nature, Nurture, and Public Policy, SOC 188a The Politics of Reproduction, SOC 189a Sociology of Body and Health, SOC 190b Caring in the Health Care System, SOC 191a Health, Community, and Society, SOC 196a The Medicalization of Society, ANTH 111a Aging in Cross-Cultural Perspective, HSSP 114b Racial/Ethnic and Gender Inequalities in Health and Health Care and HSSP 192b Sociology of Disability. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, MS 071, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2630 | Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred Ph.Ds. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s. Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often pathbreaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology - Institutions, Communities, and Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The undergraduate curriculum provides students with the tools for understanding and critical analysis of a broad array of institutions and cultures, from the everyday level of interpersonal and community interaction to large-scale political and social systems and public policies. Students are engaged as active learners and encouraged to develop knowledge that can make a difference in the world, including the potential for leadership development and action for social justice. The institutions, communities, and culture includes courses on law, mass communications, consumption, culture, religion, human services, youth, popular music, work, science and technology, education, environment, and professions. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include SOC 104a Sociology of Education, SOC 106a Issues in Law and Society, SOC 117b Sociology of Science, Technology, and Medicine, SOC 120b Globalization and the Media, SOC 121a Ethnic Relations in Comparative Perspectives, SOC 122a The Sociology of American Immigration, SOC 124b Israeli Society, SOC 126a Sociology of Deviance, SOC 127a Gods and Nations: Identity in Global Relations, SOC 128a Religion and Globalization, SOC 129a Sociology of Religion, SOC 147a Organizations and Social Change, SOC 150b Culture of Consumption, SOC 152a Urban Life and Culture, SOC 152b Suburbia: Refuge, Fortress, or Prison, SOC 154a Community Structure and Youth Subcultures and SOC 156a Social Change in American Communities. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, MS 071, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2630 | Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred Ph.Ds. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s. Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often pathbreaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology - Politics and Social Change | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The undergraduate curriculum provides students with the tools for understanding and critical analysis of a broad array of institutions and cultures, from the everyday level of interpersonal and community interaction to large-scale political and social systems and public policies. Students are engaged as active learners and encouraged to develop knowledge that can make a difference in the world, including the potential for leadership development and action for social justice. The politics and social change concentration includes courses on political sociology, welfare state, social movements, community power, globalization, war and peace, and social policy. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include SOC 108a Youth and Democracy, SOC 111a Political Sociology, SOC 112b Social Class and Social Change, SOC 113b Race and Power in Intergroup Relations, SOC 119a War and Possibilities of Peace, SOC 148b Sociology of Information, SOC 151a Biography, Community, and Political Contention, SOC 153a The Sociology of Empowerment, SOC 155b Protest, Politics, and Change: Social Movements, SOC 157a Sociology of the Israeli-Palestinian Confrontation, SOC 162a Intellectuals and Revolutionary Politics and SOC 175b Environmental Organizations, Networks, and Partnerships. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, MS 071, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2630 | Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred Ph.Ds. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s. Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often pathbreaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Arts in Sociology - Theory and Methods | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The undergraduate curriculum provides students with the tools for understanding and critical analysis of a broad array of institutions and cultures, from the everyday level of interpersonal and community interaction to large-scale political and social systems and public policies. Students are engaged as active learners and encouraged to develop knowledge that can make a difference in the world, including the potential for leadership development and action for social justice. The theory and methods includes courses on classical, critical, psychoanalytic, existential, and cultural theory, as well as qualitative, quantitative, comparative, and historical methods. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include SOC 10b Introduction to Sociological Theory, SOC 118a Observing the Social World: Doing Qualitative Sociology, SOC 136b Historical and Comparative Sociology, SOC 141a Marx and Freud, SOC 164a Existential Sociology, SOC 181a Methods of Social Inquiry, SOC 182a Applied Research Methods, SOC 183a Evaluation of Evidence, ANTH 181aj Designing and Conducting Ethnographic Research and HIST 183b Community and Alienation: Social Theory from Hegel to Freud. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, MS 071, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2630 | Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred Ph.Ds. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s. Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often pathbreaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA TESOL | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of Linguistics and English Language | BYU's TESOL Graduate Certificate and TESOL MA programs provide professional level preparation for careers teaching English to speakers of other languages in any of the following areas: Intensive English programs at universities ESL/EFL courses for private companies, Community college and university level ESL courses, Adult education ESL programs for immigrants and refugees, English as a foreign language (in non-English speaking countries) Supervision/Administration of ESL/EFL programs , ESL/EFL teacher preparation , Other TESOL Teacher Preparation Options Our graduate programs do not focus on K-12 teacher preparation. That is the purpose of our undergraduate TESOL K-12 minor program. Graduate students who desire Utah state ESL endorsement, or graduate-level training focusing on K-12, may wish to investigate the University of Utah's new program. Information is available on the web at www.acs.utah.edu/gencatalog/deptdesc/ling.html. | Prerequisites : Ling 330 Introduction to Linguistics (Modern), or equivalent, should be completed before or during the first semester of coursework. Competency in three languages: English (ESL 404 Advanced Composition is prerequisite for all nonnative English speakers; ESL 301 Advanced Academic English, 302 Advanced English Pronunciation if indicated by OPI results. ESL 404 and OPI should be completed before or during the first semester.) Competency in one language other than English* (300 level) At least 12 credit hours (200-level competency) in a second non-English language* or 12 credit hours of approved computer science (C S) or Computers and the Humanities (Chum) courses *One of the non-English languages must be a non-Germanic and non-Romance language. For a list of Germanic and Romance languages see http://linguistics.byu.edu/langlist.html. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of Linguistics and English Language | College of Humanities, Department of Linguistics and English Language, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | Within the past decade several large, freely-available online corpora of Spanish and Portuguese have become available. With these new corpora, researchers of Spanish and Portuguese can now carry out the same type of corpus-based research that has been done for other languages (such as English) for years. This includes advanced research on morphological and syntactic variation (thanks to full functionality with substring searches, part of speech tagging, and lemmatization), semantics and pragmatics (via collocates, synonyms, customized word lists, and word comparisons), and historical changes and synchronic register variation (via architectures and interfaces that allow easy comparisons of frequency in different sections of the corpus). Prof. Davies' article provides an overview of recent corpus development and corpus-based research in Spanish and Portuguese. In Section 2, there's a very brief discussion of the methodology of corpus-based linguistics, and the interplay of this paradigm with the formalist or Chomskyan paradigm during the past three or four decades. Sections 3 and 4 provide an overview of what type of data one might obtain from a corpus, and how a corpus should be designed to answer research questions in the fields of lexical research, morphology, syntax, semantics, and historical linguistics. Sections 5-9 provide an overview of corpora and corpus-like resources that are currently available for Spanish and Portuguese, including offline resources, large online text archives, and online corpora. Finally, in Section 10 there is a brief overview of recent corpus based research in Spanish and Portuguese. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of Linguistics and English Language | The purpose of the linguistics MA program is closely related to the department’s definition of linguistics, which is the scientific study of language. The program aims to prepare the student to become a language professional, prepare to go on to a PhD program if desired, or to go into the world as a competent practitioner of the skills expected of a linguist. A more applied, but popular emphasis in the department is a track that combines linguistics with computer skills. The linguistics curriculum develops such skills as analyzing language in its phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics. It also introduces the student to such fields as sociolinguistics, anthropological linguistics, and especially computers and language if the student chooses to take that track. | Prerequisites : Ling 330 Introduction to Linguistics (Modern), or equivalent, should be completed before or during the first semester of coursework. Competency in three languages: English (ESL 404 Advanced Composition is prerequisite for all nonnative English speakers; ESL 301 Advanced Academic English, 302 Advanced English Pronunciation if indicated by OPI results. ESL 404 and OPI should be completed before or during the first semester.) Competency in one language other than English* (300 level) At least 12 credit hours (200-level competency) in a second non-English language* or 12 credit hours of approved computer science (C S) or Computers and the Humanities (Chum) courses *One of the non-English languages must be a non-Germanic and non-Romance language. For a list of Germanic and Romance languages see http://linguistics.byu.edu/langlist.html. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of Linguistics and English Language | College of Humanities, Department of Linguistics and English Language, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | Within the past decade several large, freely-available online corpora of Spanish and Portuguese have become available. With these new corpora, researchers of Spanish and Portuguese can now carry out the same type of corpus-based research that has been done for other languages (such as English) for years. This includes advanced research on morphological and syntactic variation (thanks to full functionality with substring searches, part of speech tagging, and lemmatization), semantics and pragmatics (via collocates, synonyms, customized word lists, and word comparisons), and historical changes and synchronic register variation (via architectures and interfaces that allow easy comparisons of frequency in different sections of the corpus). Prof. Davies' article provides an overview of recent corpus development and corpus-based research in Spanish and Portuguese. In Section 2, there's a very brief discussion of the methodology of corpus-based linguistics, and the interplay of this paradigm with the formalist or Chomskyan paradigm during the past three or four decades. Sections 3 and 4 provide an overview of what type of data one might obtain from a corpus, and how a corpus should be designed to answer research questions in the fields of lexical research, morphology, syntax, semantics, and historical linguistics. Sections 5-9 provide an overview of corpora and corpus-like resources that are currently available for Spanish and Portuguese, including offline resources, large online text archives, and online corpora. Finally, in Section 10 there is a brief overview of recent corpus based research in Spanish and Portuguese. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA Language Acquisition | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages | The Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages strongly recommends that Steve 317, a 1-credit-hour course, be taken at the end of the sophomore year or the beginning of the junior year. Because liberal arts degrees provide preparation in a variety of useful fields rather than a single career track, this course is recommended to help liberal arts students focus on specific educational and occupational goals and to identify the career options or educational opportunities available to them. The course will introduce them to the resources needed for accessing information about graduate schools, internships, careers, and career development. Students will learn basic employment strategies, including the steps necessary for obtaining employment related to their own specialty. | Admission Requirements: The university core, consisting of requirements in general and religious education. (See the University Core section of this catalog for details. For a complete listing of courses that meet university core requirements, see the current class schedule.) A minimum of 30 credit hours in residence, A minimum of 120 credit hours, A cumulative GPA of at least 2.0. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages | College of Humanities, Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages, 3112 JFSB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4923 | The German Section offers a German Literature MA degree. An additional MA in language acquisition is offered as part of the college wide program in Language Acquisition. Four to six students are admitted to the literature program each year. Most students complete the degree within two years. Explanations of the various steps required in achieving the degree can be found by clicking on the links below. The complete Graduate Student Handbook can be accessed by clicking the link. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA German Literature | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages | The Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages strongly recommends that Steve 317, a 1-credit-hour course, be taken at the end of the sophomore year or the beginning of the junior year. Because liberal arts degrees provide preparation in a variety of useful fields rather than a single career track, this course is recommended to help liberal arts students focus on specific educational and occupational goals and to identify the career options or educational opportunities available to them. The course will introduce them to the resources needed for accessing information about graduate schools, internships, careers, and career development. Students will learn basic employment strategies, including the steps necessary for obtaining employment related to their own specialty. | Admission Requirements: The university core, consisting of requirements in general and religious education. (See the University Core section of this catalog for details. For a complete listing of courses that meet university core requirements, see the current class schedule.) A minimum of 30 credit hours in residence, A minimum of 120 credit hours, A cumulative GPA of at least 2.0. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages | College of Humanities, Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages, 3112 JFSB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4923 | The German Section offers a German Literature MA degree. An additional MA in language acquisition is offered as part of the college wide program in Language Acquisition. Four to six students are admitted to the literature program each year. Most students complete the degree within two years. Explanations of the various steps required in achieving the degree can be found by clicking on the links below. The complete Graduate Student Handbook can be accessed by clicking the link. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.Ed in Teacher Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | The Masters programs in Teacher Education prepare individuals to become education specialists. The MEd program emphasizes school practices in the educational process while the MA program emphasizes educational research. The MA culminates in the writing of a research thesis suitable for publication. The MEd culminates in the writing of an action research project. | Complete admissions procedures and meet the entrance requirements of the University Graduate School. b. Provide evidence of successful teaching experience as a certified teacher in a self-contained elementary school classroom for a minimum of one year. c. Have a grade point average of 3.25 or above for the last 60 semester hours of university course work. d. Obtain acceptable scores on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Scores (not more than five years old) must be submitted to the office of Graduate Studies before the application deadline. To meet deadlines, take the GRE at least 3 months prior to application for graduate work. (Available at major university testing centers.) e. Applications for acceptance are evaluated by the Teacher Education Graduate Faculty Admissions Committee. Admission is based on faculty approval and available departmental resources. Official notification of acceptance or denial is given by the University Graduate Office. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, 201 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4077 | We believe that our most important responsibility as teacher educators is the growth and development of children and youth. We contribute to their development by preparing competent caring, and reflective teachers. This is our primary mission in Teacher Education at Brigham Young University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A. in Mass Communications | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $20000 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Communications | The Department of Communications offers a broad-based master’s program designed to promote critical thinking and research with a particular focus on the interface between media and society. The program of study prepares students with the theoretical background, methodological expertise, and critical thinking skills needed both for continued studies at the doctoral level and informed professional practice by emphasizing communications theory and research. Specialized topical areas include literature and philosophy of communications; communications history and historical research methods; media, religion, and family; international media and communications; communications law and legal research methods; media ethics; persuasion and public opinion; critical approaches to media; mass communications and gender; and media and current societal issues. | There are no set GRE scores required for entrance into the Master’s Program. However as a general rule, a score of at least 1,000 is advised for consideration.Students applying to the program should have completed a degree at a traditional four-year institution. In addition to this they should have taken the GRE, include at least three letters of recommendation from outside sources that may include faculty or business administrators, and have received an ecclesiastical endorsement from their religious leader.All students should have completed a basic course in Statistics with a grade of B- or higher before registering in Communications 611. The department recommends Statistics 105 or 221. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Communications | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Communications, 360 BRMB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2997 | Mentored by experienced faculty and staff, and armed with some of the industry's finest equipment, broadcast students working for the Daily News put together half-hour daily student television newscasts broadcast on campus and community cable. And students' experience is not going unnoticed. BYU's broadcast journalism program recently finished first in the Hearst Journalism Awards Program’s Intercollegiate Broadcast News Competition—a competition widely considered the most prestigious for student broadcasters. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Science in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This program is designed to give students an understanding of fundamental and current biological knowledge in a variety of fields. The program provides excellent preparation for students intent on careers in biological research who want to go to graduate school, for those seeking careers in medicine, veterinary medicine, and dentistry, and for those interested in the allied health professions such as public health, genetic counseling, physical therapy, or physician assistant. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include BISC 2a Human Reproduction, Population Explosion, Global Consequences, BISC 2b Genes, Culture, History: A Case Study, BISC 3a Paradigms of Biological Investigation, BISC 3b Humans and the Environment, BISC 4a Heredity, BISC 4b Food, Nutrition, and Health, BISC 5a Pathogens and Human Disease, BISC 5b Diseases of the Mind, BISC 6b Environmental Health, BISC 7a The Biology and Culture of Deafness, BISC 7b Exercise Physiology, BIOL 15b Biology: Human Implications. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2450 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Science in Health: Science, Society and Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy | This program is designed to provide interdisciplinary study of health and health care. The program has three objectives: to expand student’s understanding of the biological, behavioral, social, and environmental factors that promote health or cause illness; to introduce students to the political, economic, legal, public health, and organizational dimensions of health care systems in the United States and throughout the world; to provide students with hands-on experience in either an internship, a laboratory, or a field-based research project. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HSSP 89a Internship and Analysis, HSSP 92a Internship and Analysis, HSSP 98a Independent Research in Health: Science, Society, and Policy, HSSP 98b Readings in Health: Science, Society, and Policy, HSSP 99d Senior Research, HSSP 100b Introduction to Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Population Health, HSSP 102a Global Perspectives on Health, HSSP 104b Health Economics, HSSP 106a Managing Medicine. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy, Mailstop 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3498 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A with Emphasis on Rhetoric and Composition | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of English | The study of rhetoric, or human communication, has theoretical, philosophical, literary, practical and pedagogical dimensions, enabling students to prepare themselves for careers in composition teaching, technical and professional communications, and further graduate work in rhetorical and/or literary studies. BYU's M.A. program offers core courses in rhetorical history, theory and criticism, research methods, and special topics, along with elective courses in technical and professional communications. A teaching practicum prepares graduate students chosen to teach freshman composition, and an internship is available to prepare graduate instructors for teaching advanced composition. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of English | College of Humanities, Department of English, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | Prof. Doug Thayer reached the remarkable milestone of 50 years of teaching at BYU. He began his career here in 1957. Professor Thayer will deliver the 7th annual Eugene England Memorial Lecture at UVSC, "Does Anybody Need Serious Realistic Mormon Fiction?" Tuesday, April 15, 2008, at 7:00 p.m. in the UVSC Liberal Arts Building, Room 101.Jill Rudy to head American Studies Program Professor Jill Rudy of the English Department was recently named the new coordinator of BYU's American Studies program. Her three-year term begins in September 2008. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Bachelor of Science in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | The bachelor of science degree requires more courses in physics, math and other sciences, encouraging students to broaden their preparation for interdisciplinary studies or to strengthen their preparation in physics. Most students preparing for graduate studies pursue the bachelor of science degree. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include PHSC 2b Introductory Astronomy, PHSC 8b Concept and Theories in Physics, PHYS 10a Introduction to Physical Laws and Phenomena I, PHYS 10b Introduction to Physical Laws and Phenomena II, PHYS 11a Introductory Physics I, PHYS 11b Introductory Physics II, PHYS 15a Advanced Introductory Physics I, PHYS 15b Advanced Introductory Physics II, PHYS 18a Introductory Laboratory I, PHYS 18b Introductory Laboratory II, PHYS 19a Physics Laboratory I. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | College of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics, Abelson Bass Yalem 210, MS 057, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2800 | Martin Fisher School of Physics at Brandeis University offers rigorous training of high quality to the aspiring research physicist in an academically stimulating environment. The limited enrollment and informal atmosphere of the department encourage friendly relations of students among themselves and with members of the faculty and provide for close personal attention to the individual needs of each student. The research areas range from the very practical to the very theoretical and include some of the most exciting frontiers of knowledge in today's world. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A with Creative Writing Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of English | Students in the creative writing emphasis will learn and develop the techniques of established writers. The program includes writing workshops along with coursework in theory and literature. Faculty members are widely published and specialize in poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction. Students work closely with faculty members and are mentored through the process of completing a creative thesis: a book-length volume of their creative writing. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of English | College of Humanities, Department of English, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | Prof. Doug Thayer reached the remarkable milestone of 50 years of teaching at BYU. He began his career here in 1957. Professor Thayer will deliver the 7th annual Eugene England Memorial Lecture at UVSC, "Does Anybody Need Serious Realistic Mormon Fiction?" Tuesday, April 15, 2008, at 7:00 p.m. in the UVSC Liberal Arts Building, Room 101.Jill Rudy to head American Studies Program Professor Jill Rudy of the English Department was recently named the new coordinator of BYU's American Studies program. Her three-year term begins in September 2008. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Double Major in English/Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | This major may be declared upon the completion of three courses in directed writing and of ENG 1a (Introduction to Literary Studies) or ENG 11a (Introduction to Literary Method). Fourteen semester courses are required; fifteen if pursuing honors in literature or the poetry or fiction thesis option. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Major | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature, Brandeis University MS 023 Rabb 144, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2130 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Dual BA/MA in Jewish Professional Leadership | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Hornstein Jewish Professional Leadership Program | This is a five-year program in partnership with Brandeis near eastern and Judaic studies department, supplements undergraduate study in NEJS, Hebrew, or Yiddish with a master’s degree in Jewish professional leadership. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Dual MA in Jewish Professional Leadership and Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Hornstein Jewish Professional Leadership Program | This rigorous program prepares future Jewish leaders to understand contemporary Jewish issues within the context of Jewish history, culture and tradition. The program is designed to provide the tools necessary to articulate a leadership vision for the Jewish community. Students have the opportunity to study with some of the foremost Judaic scholars in the world and to consider how what they learn can be put to practical use in shaping 21st century Jewish life. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Dual MA in Sustainable International Development and Coexistence and Conflict | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | Contact provider | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | The dual Master of Arts program in Sustainable International Development and Coexistence and Conflict is a program created especially for those people working or planning to work on development issues in situations in conflict. Successful applicants have an average of eight years of experience working in their fields. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 100 (600 on the paper-based test) and for the IELTS is 6.5. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Dual MBA - Master of Business Administration and MA in Sustainable International Development | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | Contact provider | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | The MA/MBA is an intensive two‐year program, encompassing five consecutive semesters. Students develop the skills and judgment to mobilize people from diverse backgrounds, deliver quality services while using resources efficiently, and achieve organizational financial health and accountability while examining models of development to reduce poverty, hunger, environmental degradation and human in equality. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 100 (600 on the paper-based test) and for the IELTS is 6.5. GMAT score is also required. | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Dual MBA - Master of Business Administration and MS in International Health Policy and Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | Contact provider | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | The MS/MBA is an intensive two year program encompassing five consecutive semesters. Students develop the skills and judgment to mobilize people from diverse backgrounds and deliver quality services while using resources efficiently. Students learn to achieve organizational financial health and accountability while studying health policy with an international community of students from over 50 countries around the world. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 100 (600 on the paper-based test) and for the IELTS is 6.5. GMAT score is also required. | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Dual MBA - Master of Business Administration/MA in Jewish Professional Leadership | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Hornstein Jewish Professional Leadership Program | This innovative program prepares future Jewish community executives with the full complement of MBA/non-profit skills and specialized knowledge of Judaic studies and contemporary Jewish life. This program is specially designed to provide a strong foundation in management practices and Jewish professional studies. In addition to courses with scholars throughout the university, students will take management courses focused on non-profit organizations, as well as courses specific to the Jewish community. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. GMAT is also required for admission. | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Dual MPP-MA in Jewish Professional Leadership | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Hornstein Jewish Professional Leadership Program | This program prepares future Jewish professional leaders with a wide spectrum of policy analysis and development skills, as well as specialized knowledge of Judaic studies and contemporary Jewish life. The program blends the Heller School's public policy curriculum and faculty with the Hornstein program's integrated approach to Jewish leadership training. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors Program in American Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies | As a work both of scholarship and interpretation, a thesis undertakes extensive research into a given subject and makes a critical argument about that subject. It aims to master the relevant background and thinking in an area of inquiry while making a fresh contribution to ongoing scholarship. Ideally, the thesis serves as a capstone experience to their undergraduate education in American studies. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of American Studies, MS 005 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3030 | American studies is an interdisciplinary field devoted to the study of all things American. An inquiry into the many varieties of American culture, past and present, the major seeks to provide students with a historical perspective on the United States and an educated awareness of the ways in which the nation has shaped the lives of its citizens as well as people around the world. The curriculum embraces a wide range of cultural expressions, including literature, film, music, art, architecture and digital media. Typically, students who enroll anticipate careers in fields such as law, business, public service, education, journalism and the entertainment industry. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrees, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors Program in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program is structured to provide an introduction to the concepts, methodologies, and theoretical issues of anthropology, while permitting each student sufficient latitude to pursue their own special interests. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Brandeis University, P O Box 549110 MS 006, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2210 | Anthropology Department at Brandeis University offers a wide range of courses covering the discipline's four major subfields: sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and archaeology. The Department also has available for students a number of special resources, including the Anthropology Colloquium Series; Working Group in Economic Anthropology; Material Culture Study Center, Archaeology laboratory; the Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology (CMRAE); the Boston Library Consortium; cross registration at certain Boston-area institutions; and opportunities for supplemental coursework in other Brandeis departments and programs. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Biological Physics | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Biological Physics Program | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Biological Physics Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Biological Physics Program, Abelson Bass Yalem 210 MS 057, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2800 | The biological physics program at Brandeis combines mathematics, physics and biology in an unusual and exciting opportunity for undergraduates. Here, early in their college career, students will be involved in significant research, working directly with world-class faculty at the forefront of this field. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Chemical Biology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Brandeis University, MS 015 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2500 | Chemistry at Brandeis combines the power of a University research program with the personality of a small teaching college. Both undergraduate and graduate programs are research-based, and supported by coursework in the major subfields of biochemistry, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Chemistry graduates are well-prepared to go on to professional work in chemistry and allied fields such as environmental science, polymer and materials science, biochemistry and biotechnology, or to continue their education in graduate school, or medical or other professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Brandeis University, MS 015 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2500 | Chemistry at Brandeis combines the power of a University research program with the personality of a small teaching college. Both undergraduate and graduate programs are research-based, and supported by coursework in the major subfields of biochemistry, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Chemistry graduates are well-prepared to go on to professional work in chemistry and allied fields such as environmental science, polymer and materials science, biochemistry and biotechnology, or to continue their education in graduate school, or medical or other professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Classical Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | Graduation with honors in classical studies may be achieved by completing a senior essay in one semester (CLAS 97a or b; LAT 97a or b; or GRK 97a or b) or by taking a year-long course (CLAS 99d or LAT 99d or GRK 99d) culminating in a senior thesis. One semester course credit from this year-long two-semester course may be counted toward the nine required courses with the consent of the thesis adviser. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, Brandeis University MS 016, Rabb 140 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2180 | Department of Classical Studies offers courses in the languages, literatures, history, and archaeology of ancient Greece and ancient Rome, two cultures that are the intellectual, social, political, legal, scientific, and artistic origin of Western civilization. Along with the Hebrew Bible, the scholarly study of these cultures, which goes back to the death of Alexander the Great in the 4th century B.C.E., is the original subject of university study. Their brilliance and beauty have not ceased to beguile and inform students for more than 2,000 years. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Literature | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Literature, MS 024 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3232 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Creative Writing - Poetry or Fiction Thesis Option | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature, Brandeis University MS 023 Rabb 144, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2130 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Creative Writing - Senior Creative Writing Honors Project Option | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | One semester of ENG 96a or 96b, as an eleventh course required for the major. Normally, all four workshop requirements (including two from the 19a/109/119 categories) will have been completed prior to the start of the project, and all but two of the literature/studio art requirements. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature, Brandeis University MS 023 Rabb 144, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2130 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Education Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Education Program | Students who wish to be considered for honors in education studies will be required to complete a senior thesis. Students who intend to do an honors thesis must discuss their potential thesis topic with a faculty adviser in education studies during their junior year. These students will have an opportunity to begin their research in ED 165a and will then enroll in ED 99b to complete their thesis. | Bachelor degree | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Education Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Education Program, Abraham Shapiro Academic Complex, MS 022, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2002 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | No | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in English | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature, Brandeis University MS 023 Rabb 144, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2130 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in French and Francophone studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3232 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in German Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature, Brandeis University, 415 South StreetMS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3200 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Health: Science, Society and Policy | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy | College of Arts and Sciences, Health Science, Society and Policy, Mailstop 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3498 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Hispanic Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3232 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in History of Art | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 028, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2655 | Founded in 1951 by Social Realist painter Mitchell Siporin, the Department of Fine Arts features a distinguished faculty of acclaimed artists and noted art historians. Classes are taught in Goldman-Schwarz Studios, Pollack Lecture Hall and off campus at a converted urban warehouse/studio. Department exhibits are held four times each year in the Dreitzer Gallery. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in International and Global Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, International and Global Studies | An honors thesis is a highly challenging and rewarding undertaking. It allows a student to study a single topic in great depth, and integrate knowledge gained in previous courses. A thesis requires a considerable commitment of time and attention, but it also provides a unique opportunity to conduct original research or explore new ways of thinking about a subject. It can also be a means to reflect on their experiences abroad in an academically rigorous way. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, International and Global Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, International and Global Studies, Brandeis University MS 006 Brown 229, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2759 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Italian Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Romance Studies, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 024, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3232 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Language and Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Language and Linguistics | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Language and Linguistics | College of Arts and Sciences, Language and Linguistics, Brandeis University, 415 South Street Mailstop 013, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2700 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The required courses: One of the following: MATH 15a Applied Linear Algebra, MATH 22a Linear Algebra and Intermediate Calculus, Part I; One of the following: MATH 20a Techniques of Calculus: Calculus of Several Variables, MATH 22b Linear Algebra and Intermediate Calculus, Part II; One of the following: MATH 23b Introduction to Proofs (or exemption), One of the following: MATH 35a Advanced Calculus, MATH 40a Introduction to Real Analysis, Part I, MATH 45a Introduction to Complex Analysis; One of the following: MATH 28a Introduction to Groups, MATH 28b Introduction to Rings and Fields and MATH 30a Introduction to Algebra, Part I. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 050, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3050 | Brandeis Department of Mathematics combines the informality, flexibility, and general friendliness of a small department with the intellectual vigor of a faculty whose research accomplishments have placed it among the top departments in the country. Courses and seminars range from introductory classes to the frontiers of current research. In many, especially at advanced levels, faculty members will often be in the audience with students lecturing. The result is an active dialogue among all members of the department and a general air of living, creative mathematics. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | Students who wish to pursue Honors in Philosophy must register for two semesters of senior research (PHIL 99A in the fall and PHIL 99 B in the spring). Only one semester of PHIL 99 may be counted toward the degree in philosophy. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2788 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Politics | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics, Brandeis University, Mail Stop 058, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 781 736 2750 | Department of Politics supports the scholarly research of its faculty, and their effort to integrate their research into their teaching, and into the program of graduate training in Political Science. The undergraduate curriculum prepares students for careers in governmental and non-governmental public service, policy analysis, journalism, law and business, as well as for post-graduate work in Political Science. Graduate training emphasizes the study of developed and developing democratic systems, and the international political, economic and military-security relations among them. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Honors in Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Fine Arts, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 028, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2655 | Founded in 1951 by Social Realist painter Mitchell Siporin, the Department of Fine Arts features a distinguished faculty of acclaimed artists and noted art historians. Classes are taught in Goldman-Schwarz Studios, Pollack Lecture Hall and off campus at a converted urban warehouse/studio. Department exhibits are held four times each year in the Dreitzer Gallery. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Joint BA/MA in Womens and Gender Studies and Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Brandeis undergraduates who are NEJS or IMES majors with either a second major in WMGS or a minor in WMGS are invited in their junior year to apply for admission to the BA/MA joint degree in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies and Women's and Gender Studies. Students must complete all requirements and earn the BA, including the successful completion of the major in NEJS or IMES prior to the start of the one-year master's program. The joint MA is awarded in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies and Women's and Gender Studies. | Students should have a high school diploma, G.E.D or an equivalent qualification. International applicants, whose native language is not English, are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System examination (IELTS) exam. Admission also requires scores from the SAT Reasoning Test or the ACT with Writing. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mail Stop 054 Brandeis University, P O Box 9110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2950 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Joint M.A. in English with Women's and Gender Studies | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | This program integrates the study of women's experiences and gender roles with the English department course of study. Students will be expected to complete the course work in three semesters, and may take another semester to complete a master's project. This joint program may be a terminal degree or may be earned as part of the Ph.D. program. The joint M.A. is for full-time students only. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature, Brandeis University, MS 023 - Rabb 144 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2130 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Joint M.A. in Music and Women's and Gender Studies | Full Time | Contact provider | Contact provider | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | The program integrates the study of women’s experiences and gender roles with the music course of study. Topics include feminist theory, gender studies, cultural history, and the investigation of work by and about women. This joint program may be a terminal degree or may be earned as part of the Ph.D. program. The joint M.A. is for full-time students only. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Joint M.A. in Sociology and Women's and Gender Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | A terminal M.A. in women's and gender studies is offered in conjunction Sociology department. This degree can be earned in one year; also students may benefit from the rich array of course offerings by extending their studies into a second year. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Brandeis University, 415 South Street M S 071, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2631 | The Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred PhDs. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s (see selected listing for each substantive area). Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often path breaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Joint M.A. in Women’s and Gender Studies and Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Students interested in the joint two-year terminal MA degree program must first be admitted to the MA degree program in NEJS in the regular manner. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mail Stop 054 Brandeis University, P O Box 9110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2950 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Joint MA in Anthropology and Women's and Gender Studies | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | The master of arts degree in anthropology and women's and gender studies offers students the opportunity to pursue inquiry into anthropology with a particular emphasis on women, gender and/or sexuality. The program provides theoretical grounding in both anthropology and gender studies and emphasizes cross-cultural investigation, intensive training for independent research and ethnographic fieldwork. The joint master's degree may be pursued independently or in conjunction with a Ph.D. in anthropology. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Brandeis University, P O Box 549110 MS 006, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2210 | The Anthropology Department at Brandeis University offers a wide range of courses covering the discipline's four major subfields: sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and archaeology. The Department also has available for students a number of special resources, including the Anthropology Colloquium Series; Symbolic Form Study Group, Working Group in Economic Anthropology; Material Culture Study Center, Archaeology laboratory; the Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology (CMRAE); the Boston Library Consortium; cross registration at certain Boston-area institutions; and opportunities for supplemental coursework in other Brandeis departments and programs. The department is a member of the Greater Boston Anthropology Consortium (GBAC), which consists of the anthropologists on the faculties of Brandeis University, Tufts University, Olin College and Wellesley College. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Joint Ph.D. in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies and Sociology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | This program affords the students a unique opportunity to master a field of knowledge as well as make an original contribution to that field. Attaining the doctoral degree signifies the acquisition of scholarly expertise in an area of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, and acknowledges the training and credentials as a full participant in the world of research and scholarship. The Ph.D. is the requirement for any permanent academic position in higher education. The NEJS department trains scholars for academic positions in the three distinct areas of Jewish studies, Bible and ancient Near East, and modern Middle East. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mail Stop 054 Brandeis University, P O Box 9110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2950 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Joint Ph.D. in Social Policy and Sociology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Students can apply to the joint program leading to the Ph.D. in social policy and sociology only after having completed at least one year of graduate study at The Heller School for Social Policy and Management or in the Department of Sociology's Ph.D. program. The joint program combines nine courses in sociology (at least one of which must be in sociology theory) with nine Heller School courses (including research methods). | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Brandeis University, 415 South Street M S 071, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2631 | The Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred PhDs. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s (see selected listing for each substantive area). Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often path breaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | M.S. in Genetic Counseling | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $29,244 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This is a two-year course of study integrating coursework with clinical experience in an environment that encourages close student/faculty interaction. Ordinarily the program is completed in two academic years and the intervening summer. The program places a strong emphasis on human molecular genetics, while providing in-depth course work in counseling theory and technique as well as extensive clinical training. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include BIOL 101a Molecular Biotechnology, BIOL 128a Human Genetics, BIOL 160b Human Reproductive and Developmental Biology, BIOL 202d Introduction to Genetic Counseling, BIOL 203a Proseminar: The Molecular Basis of Genetic Diseases, BIOL 204b Clinical Genetics I, BIOL 205b Counseling Theory and Technique, BIOL 206d Genetic Counseling Journal Club, BIOL 207a Genetic Counseling: Case Conferences and Family Counseling, BIOL 211a Genetic Counseling Fieldwork Placement: Part I, BIOL 211b Genetic Counseling Fieldwork Placement: Part II, BIOL 212a Genetic Counseling Internship I, BIOL 212b Genetic Counseling Internship II, BIOL 213a Genetic Counseling Research I, BIOL 213b Genetic Counseling Research II. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | M.S. in Molecular and Cell Biology | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The program is designed to guide each student toward realizing her or his potential as an independent research biologist. Students are encouraged to become experts in the theory and practice of their chosen area of research, as well as to obtain breadth in other areas strongly represented in the program. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | M.S. in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Students entering the Neuroscience Program at Brandeis have the opportunity to work in a variety of fields, ranging from the structure and function of ion channels to systems and cognitive neuroscience. This program is designed to equip students with the advanced knowledge and training necessary to conduct research in this interdisciplinary field. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | M.S. in Physics | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | The graduate program includes the maximum flexibility and opportunity to make a well-informed choice of research field. The Boston area is one of the world's major centers of research in physics. During the academic year, there are several colloquia and specialized seminars daily at area universities, including Boston University, Harvard University, MIT, Northeastern University, and Tufts University. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics, Mailstop 057 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2800 | The Martin Fisher School of Physics at Brandeis University has an international reputation for excellence in research; it is among the highest ranked in the USA on the basis of publication citations. Three of their faculty are members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and two are also in the National Academy of Arts and Sciences. Graduate students find a wide variety of research programs ranging from fundamental theoretical studies in elementary particle physics to the application of laser tweezers in studies of polymers; from major experiments at National accelerator laboratories to studies of liquid crystals, complex fluids, and theories of biological and disordered systems; from biophysics to astrophysics and cosmology; from micro fluidics to string theory. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Ancient Greek and Roman Studies - Ancient Greek and Latin Languages and Literatures | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program focuses on Greek and Latin philology, languages, and literatures. This track is designed specifically for students with a BA degree that already comprises serious undergraduate training in the classical languages (ancient Greek and Latin). MA students in this track receive a high level of sophisticated philological training from a faculty distinguished in teaching both Greek and Latin language and literature courses. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, Brandeis University MS 016, Rabb 140 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2180 | Department of Classical Studies offers courses in the languages, literatures, history, and archaeology of ancient Greece and ancient Rome, two cultures that are the intellectual, social, political, legal, scientific, and artistic origin of Western civilization. Along with the Hebrew Bible, the scholarly study of these cultures, which goes back to the death of Alexander the Great in the 4th century B.C.E., is the original subject of university study. Their brilliance and beauty have not ceased to beguile and inform students for more than 2,000 years. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Ancient Greek and Roman Studies - Ancient Greek and Roman Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | This program focuses more on classical art and archaeology, Greek and Roman history, courses in classical literature in translation, and classical mythology, and less on the languages and literatures of ancient Greek and Latin in the original. It is designed for students already enrolled in the certificate program at Brandeis who want to achieve the MA degree either for professional development or in preparation for Ph.D. programs in Classical Art and Archaeology or Ancient History that encourage an MA for admission. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classical Studies, Brandeis University MS 016, Rabb 140 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2180 | Department of Classical Studies offers courses in the languages, literatures, history, and archaeology of ancient Greece and ancient Rome, two cultures that are the intellectual, social, political, legal, scientific, and artistic origin of Western civilization. Along with the Hebrew Bible, the scholarly study of these cultures, which goes back to the death of Alexander the Great in the 4th century B.C.E., is the original subject of university study. Their brilliance and beauty have not ceased to beguile and inform students for more than 2,000 years. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Anthropology | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | The graduate program in anthropology is designed to provide an organized course of study for students who wish to pursue inquiry into anthropology beyond the baccalaureate level and to become acquainted with professional work in anthropology. Intensive training for independent research is stressed, with particular emphasis on comparative studies, theoretical grounding and ethnographic and archaeological fieldwork. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Brandeis University, P O Box 549110 MS 006, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2210 | The Anthropology Department at Brandeis University offers a wide range of courses covering the discipline's four major subfields: sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and archaeology. The Department also has available for students a number of special resources, including the Anthropology Colloquium Series; Symbolic Form Study Group, Working Group in Economic Anthropology; Material Culture Study Center, Archaeology laboratory; the Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology (CMRAE); the Boston Library Consortium; cross registration at certain Boston-area institutions; and opportunities for supplemental coursework in other Brandeis departments and programs. The department is a member of the Greater Boston Anthropology Consortium (GBAC), which consists of the anthropologists on the faculties of Brandeis University, Tufts University, Olin College and Wellesley College. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Each candidate is required to successfully complete one year of study at the graduate level in chemistry, or, with prior permission of the Graduate Studies Committee, in related fields. The program will include laboratory work and, normally, six term courses at the graduate level. The detailed program of study will be chosen jointly by the candidate and the Graduate Studies Committee to reflect the candidate's area of interest as well as a perspective of other areas. Library Training Requirement: All graduate students are required to complete a designated library training program in their first year. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Brandeis University, MS 015 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2500 | Chemistry at Brandeis combines the power of a University research program with the personality of a small teaching college. Both undergraduate and graduate programs are research-based, and supported by coursework in the major subfields of biochemistry, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Chemistry graduates are well-prepared to go on to professional work in chemistry and allied fields such as environmental science, polymer and materials science, biochemistry and biotechnology, or to continue their education in graduate school, or medical or other professional schools. Chemistry graduates are sought after by industrial, government, and academic recruiters for their solid grounding in physical sciences and technology. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Computational Linguistics | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | The two-year MA program in computational linguistics is designed for outstanding students, preferably with an undergraduate degree in linguistics, computer science, or the study of language. The MA provides a solid foundation for professional work in the field of computational linguistics, or pursuit of a PhD in computational linguistics or theoretical linguistics. | Students should have successfully completed a pre-university program (the duration of which was at least twelve years) with strong results on nationally administered examinations where applicable. Students should have minimum 3.5 GPA in all linguistics and computer science courses taken. Undergraduate applicants whose native language is English are required to take the SAT at centers throughout the world. Students may submit results from the American College Testing Program (ACT) in lieu of College Board testing. The TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) is required of applicants who are not native speakers of English. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Brandeis University, MS 018, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02254, +1 781 736 2700 | Computer Science Department offers students the unique opportunity to explore the fundamentals of both theoretical and practical aspects of computing in preparation for creative jobs in the computer industry or higher education. In addition the curriculum provides a stimulating and useful preparation for a number of related fields such as law, medicine and economics. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science | This program offers courses and research opportunities in many of the core areas of computer science: databases, programming languages, artificial intelligence, networks and distributed and parallel computing, data compression, human computer interaction and collaborative technology. Students will have the opportunity to take courses and conduct research in many of the emerging interdisciplinary fields associated with computer science, such as neural nets and dynamical systems, computational linguistics, computational biology, and educational technology. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science, Volen Center for Complex Systems, Room 261, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2700 | Computer Science Department offers students the unique opportunity to explore the fundamentals of both theoretical and practical aspects of computing in preparation for creative jobs in the computer industry or higher education. In addition the curriculum provides a stimulating and useful preparation for a number of related fields such as law, medicine and economics. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Computer Science and IT Entrepreneurship | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science | This program goes beyond a traditional graduate technology degree where the students are taught how to form a business around their ideas in the IT sector, from IT research to software development. It combines graduate level Computer Science coursework with electives that emphasize cutting-edge research and the special skills required for launching a successful business in IT. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science, Volen Center for Complex Systems, Room 261, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2700 | Computer Science Department offers students the unique opportunity to explore the fundamentals of both theoretical and practical aspects of computing in preparation for creative jobs in the computer industry or higher education. In addition the curriculum provides a stimulating and useful preparation for a number of related fields such as law, medicine and economics. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in General Psychology | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program provides students with an understanding of the scientific foundations of psychology, as well as direct experience in research methods. The program provides excellent preparation for further training in clinical and in other areas of psychology to be pursued at other institutions. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, MS 062 PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3300 | The faculty in the psychology department believe that a strong scientific and research foundation in psychology best prepares students to make use of psychological research in everyday life. Such preparation also enables students to continue with graduate training in psychology, whether one's career choice is clinical, applied, or research oriented. The psychology department at Brandeis therefore emphasizes a rigorous, scientific approach to the understanding of human behavior. The program examines the most up-to-date and comprehensive psychological research and theory and provides opportunities for direct involvement in psychological research and application. Faculty conduct research in diverse areas that include cognitive science, normal and abnormal development, social interaction, spatial orientation, linguistics, perception, memory, emotion, life span development, and effects of brain damage. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The program's goal has been to oblige students to formulate questions of social and analytical importance in "big picture" terms and submit these questions to the test of rigorous qualitative research. It strives to promote conceptual vitality, autonomous thinking, engagement with the empirical world, and critical analysis. The program boasts four pillars of expertise: Gender and Feminist Studies, Medical Sociology, Politics and Social Change, and Theory and Methods. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Brandeis University, 415 South Street M S 071, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2631 | The Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred PhDs. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s (see selected listing for each substantive area). Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often path breaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MA in Sustainable International Development | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This program has an innovative professional curriculum that includes a year-in-residence studying with senior researchers and development practitioners and a second-year project that includes either an internship or advanced study applying and evaluating methods and models of development. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MBA - Master of Business Administration | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | International Business School | This is a two-year program that provides grounding in the international dimension of every business function, incorporates international experience through study or an internship abroad, and exposes students to the best practices of the world's leading companies. The program integrates global theory and practice into every course, developing skills in all major business functions, and offers opportunities for acquiring international experience and advanced expertise in finance and other fields. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 on IBT exam is usually required. Applicants to the MBA Program must submit test results of either the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) or the Graduate Record Exam (GRE.) | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Brandeis International Business School | Brandeis International Business School, Mailstop 032, P O Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2252 | The Brandeis International Business School is a pioneering professional school dedicated to teaching and research in global finance, management and economic policy. They respond to the growing need for international vision and expertise by preparing exceptional individuals from around the world to become principled leaders of global companies and public institutions. They teach cutting-edge theory, immerse students in international experiences, and connect them to best practice in business and policy. This learning experience transforms the way their graduates view the world, and helps them develop skills and insights to chart its future. The Brandeis Advantage: Located on a wooded campus in suburban Boston, Brandeis has 3200 undergraduate and 1100 graduates students, offering programs in more than 40 fields. International to the Core: More than half of their students come from Europe, Asia and Latin America, and international experiences are built into their programs in partnership with major foreign schools and companies. World-class Faculty: Their faculty includes not only distinguished researchers in international finance, business and economics, but also leading practitioners in banking, investments and consulting. Boston:-an academic capital: Seven major universities and 250,000 students are located in the greater Boston area. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Child, Youth and Family Services Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This concentration prepares graduates for a wide variety of leadership and management roles in organizations whose mission it is to foster healthy development of children, youth, and families. Students acquire technical skills through rigorous preparation in core management concepts, tools, and applications for use in government, not-for-profit, and private sector organizations. The curriculum combines theory and practice to ensure that graduates bring scholarly knowledge to bear on real-world problems. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Applicants to the MBA Program must submit test results of either the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) or the Graduate Record Exam (GRE.) | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HS 253b, Leadership and Organizational Behavior 4, HS 250a, Financial Accounting 4, HS 245f, Economics 2, HS 246f, Statistics 2, HS 252b, Strategic Management 4, HS 258a, Operations Management for Service Organizations 4, HS 248b, Financial Management 4, HS 251b, Managerial Accounting 4, HS 285a, Marketing 4, HS 215b, Corporate Finance 4, HS 249f, Social Justice, Management, and Policy 2, HS 299b, Team Consulting Project 6, HS 254a, Human Resource Management 4, HS 247f, Evaluation for Managers 2 and HS 355f, Social Policy Frameworks 2 . | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Health Care Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This concentration trains students to lead in the changing landscape and infrastructure of health care, a system which is complex in its structure, processes, and outcomes. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Applicants to the MBA Program must submit test results of either the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) or the Graduate Record Exam (GRE.) | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HS 253b, Leadership and Organizational Behavior 4, HS 250a, Financial Accounting 4, HS 245f, Economics 2, HS 246f, Statistics 2, HS 252b, Strategic Management 4, HS 258a, Operations Management for Service Organizations 4, HS 248b, Financial Management 4, HS 251b, Managerial Accounting 4, HS 285a, Marketing 4, HS 215b, Corporate Finance 4, HS 249f, Social Justice, Management, and Policy 2, HS 299b, Team Consulting Project 6, HS 254a, Human Resource Management 4, HS 247f, Evaluation for Managers 2 and HS 355f, Social Policy Frameworks 2 . | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Social Impact Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | A growing number of corporations are seeking to improve their social and environmental impact, while meeting their economic bottom line. This concentration will prepare the students to identify opportunities for improving social impact and to lead successful social impact initiatives. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Applicants to the MBA Program must submit test results of either the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) or the Graduate Record Exam (GRE.) | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HS 253b, Leadership and Organizational Behavior 4, HS 250a, Financial Accounting 4, HS 245f, Economics 2, HS 246f, Statistics 2, HS 252b, Strategic Management 4, HS 258a, Operations Management for Service Organizations 4, HS 248b, Financial Management 4, HS 251b, Managerial Accounting 4, HS 285a, Marketing 4, HS 215b, Corporate Finance 4, HS 249f, Social Justice, Management, and Policy 2, HS 299b, Team Consulting Project 6, HS 254a, Human Resource Management 4, HS 247f, Evaluation for Managers 2 and HS 355f, Social Policy Frameworks 2 . | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Social Policy and Management | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This concentration prepares students with a broad set of management skills to work successfully in a wide range of organizations with social missions, aware of and responsive to the social policy context in which they work. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Applicants to the MBA Program must submit test results of either the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) or the Graduate Record Exam (GRE.) | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HS 253b, Leadership and Organizational Behavior 4, HS 250a, Financial Accounting 4, HS 245f, Economics 2, HS 246f, Statistics 2, HS 252b, Strategic Management 4, HS 258a, Operations Management for Service Organizations 4, HS 248b, Financial Management 4, HS 251b, Managerial Accounting 4, HS 285a, Marketing 4, HS 215b, Corporate Finance 4, HS 249f, Social Justice, Management, and Policy 2, HS 299b, Team Consulting Project 6, HS 254a, Human Resource Management 4, HS 247f, Evaluation for Managers 2 and HS 355f, Social Policy Frameworks 2 . | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MBA - Master of Business Administration in Sustainable Development | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This concentration helps students gain an understanding of the current state of global development and engages students in critical thinking about reducing poverty, hunger and human inequality, and in conserving the environment. Sustainable Development concentrators will study a rights-based approach to social change and have the opportunity to take courses in project planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Applicants to the MBA Program must submit test results of either the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) or the Graduate Record Exam (GRE.) | MBA | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The modules include HS 253b, Leadership and Organizational Behavior 4, HS 250a, Financial Accounting 4, HS 245f, Economics 2, HS 246f, Statistics 2, HS 252b, Strategic Management 4, HS 258a, Operations Management for Service Organizations 4, HS 248b, Financial Management 4, HS 251b, Managerial Accounting 4, HS 285a, Marketing 4, HS 215b, Corporate Finance 4, HS 249f, Social Justice, Management, and Policy 2, HS 299b, Team Consulting Project 6, HS 254a, Human Resource Management 4, HS 247f, Evaluation for Managers 2 and HS 355f, Social Policy Frameworks 2 . | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MS in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Each candidate is required to successfully complete one year of study at the graduate level in chemistry, or, with prior permission of the Graduate Studies Committee, in related fields. The program will include laboratory work and, normally, six term courses at the graduate level. The detailed program of study will be chosen jointly by the candidate and the Graduate Studies Committee to reflect the candidate's area of interest as well as a perspective of other areas. Library Training Requirement: All graduate students are required to complete a designated library training program in their first year. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Brandeis University, MS 015 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2500 | Chemistry at Brandeis combines the power of a University research program with the personality of a small teaching college. Both undergraduate and graduate programs are research-based, and supported by coursework in the major subfields of biochemistry, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Chemistry graduates are well-prepared to go on to professional work in chemistry and allied fields such as environmental science, polymer and materials science, biochemistry and biotechnology, or to continue their education in graduate school, or medical or other professional schools. Chemistry graduates are sought after by industrial, government, and academic recruiters for their solid grounding in physical sciences and technology. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | MS in International Health Policy and Management | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This program is designed to tackle solutions to these problems and teach skills necessary to design and implement effective programs. Further, the program addresses the need to align policies, organizations, and health outcomes. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts (Terminal Degree) in English | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | This program will sharpen the students analytical skills, develop an advanced writing style, and improve their close-reading ability. These communication skills are in great demand by employers. The knowledge they gain from the program will benefit their career in education, whether as a teacher or a doctoral student, and will allow them to explore critical, theoretical and historical themes in literature, films and other cultural texts. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature, Brandeis University, MS 023 - Rabb 144 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2130 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Composition and Theory | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts | This one-year program provides an opportunity for students to engage in beginning graduate study without making a multi-year commitment. It offers composers the time and means to develop a secure command of the craft of composition. Students in the program acquire greater facility with the structure and syntax of tonal music by studying it in analysis seminars and by writing it in pro-seminars. They study a wide variety of contemporary music in theory and analysis seminars. Individual creative work is undertaken in Composition seminars with guidance from the faculty in composition. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts, MS 072 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3340 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in History | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This one-year full-time program is designed to provide students with a graduate-level understanding of the discipline of history and to enhance their mastery of historical research and writing. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Olin-Sang 213 MS 036, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2270 | Despite its relatively small size, the History Department offers Brandeis students a comprehensive education in the study of the past, both on the undergraduate (major, minor, and a combined BA/MA) and on the graduate level (MA and PhD). Indeed, its two PhD programs, in Comparative History and American History, respectively, have consistently received high marks in national surveys and rankings, and can boast an outstanding placement record. The History Department takes pride in having among its faculty members and among its graduate program alumni several award-winning historians. It thus combines the best of both worlds: the intimacy of a small liberal-arts college department and the intellectual strength of a major research institution. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in International Economics and Finance | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | International Business School | The IBS MA is an innovative, two-year degree. It is timely and practical and designed to help the students succeed. Compared to an MBA, it provides depth in finance and economics. And unlike an economics degree, it's applied rather than theoretical. The MA hones technical skills, provides international experience, and connects the students to real challenges in firms, economies, and financial markets. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based) or 250 (computer-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | International Business School | International Business School, Mailstop 032, P O Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2250 | Despite its relatively small size, the History Department offers Brandeis students a comprehensive education in the study of the past, both on the undergraduate (major, minor, and a combined BA/MA) and on the graduate level (MA and PhD). Indeed, its two PhD programs, in Comparative History and American History, respectively, have consistently received high marks in national surveys and rankings, and can boast an outstanding placement record. The History Department takes pride in having among its faculty members and among its graduate program alumni several award-winning historians. It thus combines the best of both worlds: the intimacy of a small liberal-arts college department and the intellectual strength of a major research institution. | No | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts: A. One year academic residency as a full-time student. B. Successful completion of an approved schedule of courses: MATH 101a and b, MATH 110a, MATH 111a and b, and MATH 121a and b. C. Proficiency in reading French, German, or Russian. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 050, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3050 | The Brandeis Department of Mathematics combines the informality, flexibility, and general friendliness of a small department with the intellectual vigor of a faculty whose research accomplishments have placed it among the top departments in the country. Courses and seminars range from introductory classes to the frontiers of current research. In many, especially at advanced levels, faculty members will often be in the audience with students lecturing. The result is an active dialogue among all members of the department and a general air of living, creative mathematics. The student at Brandeis is fortunate to be in an area containing many first-rate universities. The students will find a wealth of lectures, seminars, colloquia, and opportunities for contact with mathematicians at Harvard, M.I.T., Tufts, Boston University, Northeastern, and the many other local schools. This unusual concentration creates a mathematical community of unparalleled diversity and depth. In addition to mathematics, the Boston area is well known for its lively cultural and social life. The large academic population has created an active intellectual environment that provides many social and recreational opportunities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Musicology | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | The one-year M.A. program provides an opportunity for students who want to engage in beginning graduate study without making a multi-year commitment, or who may be contemplating a career in performance or in a music-related field (library science, arts administration, program annotation, for example) and wish to develop some advanced research and writing skills. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | The Brandeis Department of Mathematics combines the informality, flexibility, and general friendliness of a small department with the intellectual vigor of a faculty whose research accomplishments have placed it among the top departments in the country. Courses and seminars range from introductory classes to the frontiers of current research. In many, especially at advanced levels, faculty members will often be in the audience with students lecturing. The result is an active dialogue among all members of the department and a general air of living, creative mathematics. The student at Brandeis is fortunate to be in an area containing many first-rate universities. The students will find a wealth of lectures, seminars, colloquia, and opportunities for contact with mathematicians at Harvard, M.I.T., Tufts, Boston University, Northeastern, and the many other local schools. This unusual concentration creates a mathematical community of unparalleled diversity and depth. In addition to mathematics, the Boston area is well known for its lively cultural and social life. The large academic population has created an active intellectual environment that provides many social and recreational opportunities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Full Time | Contact provider | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Students pursuing the Master of Arts in near eastern and Judaic studies are able to enhance opportunities to work in a wide range of settings, including schools, museums and communal organizations as well as the diplomatic corps. it may also serve as a stepping stone to a professional degree or the PhD. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mail Stop 054 Brandeis University, P O Box 9110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2950 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Philosophy | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | The one-year master's degree program in philosophy has two main goals: (1) to provide students further grounding in the discipline and thereby enable them to apply to top-ranked doctoral programs in philosophy; and (2) to offer students the opportunity to obtain a Master of Arts degree in philosophy to advance their chosen careers. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philosophy, Brandeis University, 415 South StreetMS 055, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 2788 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | No | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Politics | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics | This program emphasizes linkages among the patterns of American political development, contemporary American politics, and the politics of other developed and developing democratic systems. The graduate curriculum also addresses the advanced industrial democracies of Western Europe, the democratizing states of Eastern Europe, and the international political, economic, and military-security relations among these states. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics, Brandeis University, Mail Stop 058, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 781 736 2750 | The Department of Politics supports the scholarly research of its faculty, and their effort to integrate their research into their teaching, and into the program of graduate training in Political Science. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Teaching Hebrew | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | This is a first-of-its-kind program in the United States, providing teachers and students with the knowledge and training to become professional teachers of Hebrew at all levels: elementary, secondary, post-secondary and adult education. This program addresses the urgent need for qualified Hebrew teachers in Jewish education. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mail Stop 054 Brandeis University, P O Box 9110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2950 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Teaching in Elementary Education: Jewish Day School/ DeLeT | Full Time | 12 Month(s) | $7125 per term | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The Jewish Day Schools/DeLeT concentration of the MAT opens a door to day schooling teaching. DeLeT (Day School Leadership through Teaching; the Hebrew word for door) prepares recent college graduates and midcareer changers to teach general and Judaic studies in the elementary grades in Jewish day school. Generous financial assistance is awarded to DeLeT students. DeLeT is a joint initiative of the Mandel Center for Studies in Jewish Education and the Brandeis Education Program. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Teaching in Elementary Education: Public Education | Full Time | 12 Month(s) | $7125 per term | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program prepares beginning teachers for active and effective commitment to the democratic mission of public education. The MAT is a full-time, 12-month (June to July) program of professional education for teaching. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Teaching in Secondary Education | Full Time | 12 Month(s) | $7125 per term | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In the secondary education concentration, students are asked to investigate what others take for granted and to view themselves as important contributors to creating a better world through thoughtful interventions. In addition to coursework in educational foundations and in pedagogy, middle school and high school MAT students take four courses in a discipline appropriate to their teaching specialty, thus gaining exceptional depth of subject matter knowledge and enjoying the opportunity of working with outstanding disciplinary scholars on the Brandeis faculty. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Women's and Gender Studies | Full Time | 2 Semester(s) | US $38,994 a year | Women's and Gender Studies Program | The M.A. program is a full-time, two semester program (8 courses) that offers students grounding in feminist and gender theory, knowledge, and methodologies. Although the program does not offer specific tracks, students may choose to specialize in the particular strengths of the program, which include gender and legal studies, sexuality studies, social and public policy, comparative literature and culture, or any of the disciplines in the terminal joint M.A. programs (anthropology, English, music, Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, public policy, sociology, and sustainable international development). | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Women's and Gender Studies Program | Women's and Gender Studies Program, Brandeis University, MS 082415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3045 | No | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts program in Global Studies | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program, which combines interdisciplinary study and intensive training in research and writing, not only provides a solid foundation in the theories and issues of globalization, but also directly supports multiple career paths. The goal is to prepare students to think, speak and write knowledgeably about specific problems and general theories and to become familiar with the research methods and conclusions of practitioners currently working on global issues. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Fine Arts in Acting | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts | This program is designed to provide the highest level of theatrical investigation and practice. It prepares talented students for a professional life in the theater in the areas of acting and design. With an intention to create young theater artists who will shape the future of American and world theater, Brandeis theater arts is dedicated to the transmission of technique-based knowledge, as well as providing professional-level performance and design experiences in the various venues with the Brandeis Theater Company in the Spingold Center for the Performing Arts. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts, MS 072 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3340 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Fine Arts in Composition and Theory | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts | The two-year M.F.A. program offers more in-depth study, including the writing of a master’s thesis in the form of an original composition. Students are given the opportunity to have their compositions performed and recorded on the graduate student composer’s concert series New Music Brandeis. They may also have their compositions read by the Lydian String Quartet, whose members are Professors of the Practice in the music department, and by ensembles-in-residence that are invited to Brandeis by the music department. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theater Arts, MS 072 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3340 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Fine Arts in Musicology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | The M.F.A. program involves further in-depth study, including demonstration of a high degree of competence in research writing by completion of a master’s thesis or submission of two expanded seminar papers. The M.F.A. program requires competency in both German and French. Students who are successful in the one-year M.A. program often choose to continue for a second year to complete the M.F.A. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Public Policy in Social Policy | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This program prepares students for policy roles within community agencies, state and federal government, and think tanks. Heller’s high standards for rigorous and unbiased analysis are important assets to students headed for careers that will use their skills in advocacy, policy research, policy implementation and community work. The MPP program provides students with the skills necessary to design, implement, reform, analyze, and promote innovative solutions to society’s most critical problems. The MPP is a two-year degree program that follows the traditional academic year from late August to May. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based exam), 250 (computer-based exam), or 100 (internet-based exam). The IELTS score must be a minimum of 7.0. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Science in Biotechnology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology | The program provides interdisciplinary, professionally-oriented training in biotechnology, stressing both science and business concepts. Mastery of the field of biotechnology will be taught both in the classroom and through hands-on laboratory work. In addition, students will build professional skills in data analysis, searching and reading the scientific literature, scientific writing, oral presentation and team project management. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, PSM Program in Biotechnology, Bassine BuildingMS 008, PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 4952 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | No | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Science in Finance | Full Time | 1 Year(s) | US $38,994 a year | International Business School | This program is designed to help financial professionals advance their careers through comprehensive training in global financial markets, financial theory, analysis and strategy. Full-time students take four classes per semester and two during summer school, completing the program in one year. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based) or 250 (computer-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) general test is also required for admission. | Masters | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | International Business School | International Business School, Mailstop 032, P O Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2250 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | No | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program offers advanced education in the principles and practice of macromolecular chemistry, mechanism, and structure. This highly multidisciplinary program draws students from two types of undergraduate backgrounds: those with more chemically based training (Chemistry, Biochemistry, Biology majors) and those from Physics, Engineering, or Mathematics, who wish to bring quantitative skills to bear upon biological problems. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The core modules include BCHM 101a Advanced Biochemistry: Enzyme Mechanisms, BCHM 102a Quantitative Approaches to Biochemical Systems, BCHM 300a,b Biochemical Techniques (laboratory rotations course), BIOP 200b Readings in Macromolecular Structure-Function Analysis and CONT 300b Ethical Practices in Health-Related Sciences. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Biochemistry with Specialization in Bio-organic Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In order to receive a Ph.D. in biochemistry with a specialization in bioorganic chemistry, students must complete the requirements defined above for the biochemistry Ph.D. degree, with the following restrictions: A. As one of their four elective courses, students must complete one course in synthetic organic chemistry, chosen from the following: CHEM 134b Advanced Organic Chemistry: Synthesis and CHEM 135a Advanced Organic Chemistry: Synthesis II. B. As one of their four elective courses, students must complete one other advanced chemistry course approved in advance by the graduate program chair. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Biochemistry with Specialization in Quantitative Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | In order to receive a Ph.D. in biochemistry with a specialization in quantitative biology, students must complete the requirements defined above for the biochemistry Ph.D. degree and in addition must satisfy the course requirements for the quantitative biology specialization that are described in the quantitative biology section of the Bulletin. Any alteration to the quantitative biology course requirements must be approved by the quantitative biology program faculty advisory committee. With the approval of the biochemistry graduate program chair, courses taken to satisfy the quantitative biology specialization requirements can be used to satisfy course requirements of the biochemistry Ph.D. degree. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Biophysics and Structural Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program trains Ph.D. students to carry out independent research using quantitative approaches to the structures, dynamics, and mechanisms of biological macromolecules. This flexible, individualized graduate program is specifically designed for students with strong quantitative undergraduate backgrounds (e.g., in physics, chemistry, engineering, biophysics, mathematics) who desire to bring these skills to bear on biological problems. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Brain, Body and Behavior | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is for students who wish to pursue research at the interface of current biomedical domains and the traditional domains of the Cognitive Neuroscience or Social-Developmental programs. Students in this program will be united by their common biomedical training and will have common training with students in either the Cognitive Neuroscience or Social-Developmental program. This common biomedical training will enhance research interactions between traditionally disparate sub-disciplines within psychology as well as interactions with between psychological and biomedical domains, both during residence in the graduate program and in the students' later careers. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, MS 062 PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3300 | The faculty in the psychology department believe that a strong scientific and research foundation in psychology best prepares students to make use of psychological research in everyday life. Such preparation also enables students to continue with graduate training in psychology, whether one's career choice is clinical, applied, or research oriented. The psychology department at Brandeis therefore emphasizes a rigorous, scientific approach to the understanding of human behavior. The program examines the most up-to-date and comprehensive psychological research and theory and provides opportunities for direct involvement in psychological research and application. Faculty conduct research in diverse areas that include cognitive science, normal and abnormal development, social interaction, spatial orientation, linguistics, perception, memory, emotion, life span development, and effects of brain damage. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | The graduate program in chemistry includes course work, seminar participation, and research, and is designed to lead to a broad understanding of the subject. The doctoral program will normally include a basic set of courses in the student's own area of interest, supplemented by advanced courses in chemistry and, when appropriate, biochemistry, biology, mathematics, and physics. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Brandeis University, MS 015 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2500 | Chemistry at Brandeis combines the power of a University research program with the personality of a small teaching college. Both undergraduate and graduate programs are research-based, and supported by coursework in the major subfields of biochemistry, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Chemistry graduates are well-prepared to go on to professional work in chemistry and allied fields such as environmental science, polymer and materials science, biochemistry and biotechnology, or to continue their education in graduate school, or medical or other professional schools. Chemistry graduates are sought after by industrial, government, and academic recruiters for their solid grounding in physical sciences and technology. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Cognitive Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program is designed to train researchers who will contribute to knowledge in several major areas: visual perception including the perception of motion in 3D space, visual information processing, and related cognitive processes; human spatial orientation and movement control, including adaptation to unusual force environments; and human memory including the construction of mathematical models and study of the effects of aging. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, MS 062 PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3300 | The faculty in the psychology department believe that a strong scientific and research foundation in psychology best prepares students to make use of psychological research in everyday life. Such preparation also enables students to continue with graduate training in psychology, whether one's career choice is clinical, applied, or research oriented. The psychology department at Brandeis therefore emphasizes a rigorous, scientific approach to the understanding of human behavior. The program examines the most up-to-date and comprehensive psychological research and theory and provides opportunities for direct involvement in psychological research and application. Faculty conduct research in diverse areas that include cognitive science, normal and abnormal development, social interaction, spatial orientation, linguistics, perception, memory, emotion, life span development, and effects of brain damage. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science | This program offers courses and research opportunities in many of the core areas of Computer Science: databases, programming languages, artificial intelligence, networks and distributed and parallel computing, data compression, human computer interaction and collaborative technology. Students will have the opportunity to take courses and conduct research in many of the emerging interdisciplinary fields associated with Computer Science, such as neural nets and dynamical systems, computational linguistics, computational biology, and educational technology. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Michtom School of Computer Science, Volen Center for Complex Systems, Room 261, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2700 | The faculty in the psychology department believe that a strong scientific and research foundation in psychology best prepares students to make use of psychological research in everyday life. Such preparation also enables students to continue with graduate training in psychology, whether one's career choice is clinical, applied, or research oriented. The psychology department at Brandeis therefore emphasizes a rigorous, scientific approach to the understanding of human behavior. The program examines the most up-to-date and comprehensive psychological research and theory and provides opportunities for direct involvement in psychological research and application. Faculty conduct research in diverse areas that include cognitive science, normal and abnormal development, social interaction, spatial orientation, linguistics, perception, memory, emotion, life span development, and effects of brain damage. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in English | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | The Ph.D. program in English emphasizes individual scholarship; offers training in research, teaching methods, and other professional development skills; and encourages graduate student innovation and initiative. Recent graduates have attained tenure-track positions at such institutions as Connecticut College, San Francisco State University, Rider University, Bentley University, and the University of Toledo. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and American Literature, Brandeis University, MS 023 - Rabb 144 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2130 | The faculty in the psychology department believe that a strong scientific and research foundation in psychology best prepares students to make use of psychological research in everyday life. Such preparation also enables students to continue with graduate training in psychology, whether one's career choice is clinical, applied, or research oriented. The psychology department at Brandeis therefore emphasizes a rigorous, scientific approach to the understanding of human behavior. The program examines the most up-to-date and comprehensive psychological research and theory and provides opportunities for direct involvement in psychological research and application. Faculty conduct research in diverse areas that include cognitive science, normal and abnormal development, social interaction, spatial orientation, linguistics, perception, memory, emotion, life span development, and effects of brain damage. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in History | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program offers opportunities for students to study many areas of world history, building on the department's special strengths in American and European history. Students take a mix of thematic seminars covering broad historical questions as well as colloquia providing intensive study of regional and national histories. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | Brandeis University | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, Olin-Sang 213 MS 036, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2270 | Despite its relatively small size, the History Department offers Brandeis students a comprehensive education in the study of the past, both on the undergraduate (major, minor, and a combined BA/MA) and on the graduate level (MA and PhD). Indeed, its two PhD programs, in Comparative History and American History, respectively, have consistently received high marks in national surveys and rankings, and can boast an outstanding placement record. The History Department takes pride in having among its faculty members and among its graduate program alumni several award-winning historians. It thus combines the best of both worlds: the intimacy of a small liberal-arts college department and the intellectual strength of a major research institution. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | The coursework of the program gives students a broad foundation in modern pure mathematics. An essential part of the program consists of seminars on a variety of topics of current interest in which mathematicians from greater Boston often participate. In addition, the Brandeis-Harvard-MIT-Northeastern Mathematics Colloquium gives the student an opportunity to hear the current work of eminent mathematicians from all over the world. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, Brandeis University, 415 South Street MS 050, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3050 | The Brandeis Department of Mathematics combines the informality, flexibility, and general friendliness of a small department with the intellectual vigor of a faculty whose research accomplishments have placed it among the top departments in the country. Courses and seminars range from introductory classes to the frontiers of current research. In many, especially at advanced levels, faculty members will often be in the audience with students lecturing. The result is an active dialogue among all members of the department and a general air of living, creative mathematics. The student at Brandeis is fortunate to be in an area containing many first-rate universities. The students will find a wealth of lectures, seminars, colloquia, and opportunities for contact with mathematicians at Harvard, M.I.T., Tufts, Boston University, Northeastern, and the many other local schools. This unusual concentration creates a mathematical community of unparalleled diversity and depth. In addition to mathematics, the Boston area is well known for its lively cultural and social life. The large academic population has created an active intellectual environment that provides many social and recreational opportunities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Molecular and Cell Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The goal of the molecular and cell biology graduate program is to train aspiring scientists interested in solving these questions. Students acquire a broad knowledge about current developments in molecular and cell biology, learn to be effective scientific communicators, and are trained to perform independent scientific research. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Music: Composition and Theory | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | This program is designed to help students develop a command of the craft of composition. That objective is supported by studies in theory and analysis and in electro-acoustic music. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Music: Musicology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | This program offers an integrated approach to the understanding of the nature, structural basis, and historical development of music. Students may elect to emphasize or concentrate in music history or in theory and analysis. In the music history program, a variety of techniques and methodologies, including style development, source studies, and historiography, are applied to different repertories and historical problems. The theory and analysis program features work in the history of theory as well as analytic work in the context of theory construction involving the evaluation of pretonal, tonal, and contemporary analytic models. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music | School of Creative Arts, Department of Music, Slosberg Music Center MS 051, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3310 | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | This program affords the students a unique opportunity to master a field of knowledge as well as make an original contribution to that field. Attaining the doctoral degree signifies the acquisition of scholarly expertise in an area of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, and acknowledges the training and credentials as a full participant in the world of research and scholarship. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Mail Stop 054 Brandeis University, P O Box 9110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2950 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | This program is designed to equip students with the advanced knowledge and training necessary to conduct research in this interdisciplinary field. The program comprises three broadly defined areas: (1) behavioral neuroscience involves work with humans in neuropsychology, with experimental cognitive neuroscience and sensory psychophysics, and with animal behavior and electrophysiology; (2) cellular and molecular neuroscience provides training in electrophysiology, molecular biology, biophysics, and biochemistry appropriate to neurobiology; and (3) computational and integrative neuroscience trains students in the use of experimental and theoretical methods for the analysis of brain function. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2000 | Graduate study at Brandeis combines advanced academic study with preparation for a professional career, in academia or in other domains. Doctoral programs train students to become both scholars and teachers. Master’s programs are a steppingstone to further graduate study or to professional pursuits. Whether at the doctoral or master’s level, GSAS programs place a high priority on mentorship — the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty in mastering a field and conducting important, original research. The excellence of the graduate programs is rooted in the quality of the faculty and the students. The programs are small and highly selective in admissions. The faculty are leading scholars and scientists, including seven members of the National Academy of Science, 10 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, two Pulitzer Prize winners, two members of the Institute of Medicine, three McArthur Fellows and four Howard Hughes Medical Investigators. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | Graduate students in the department are engaged in a wide variety of research programs, ranging from biophysics to particle physics, from microfluidics to radio astronomy to string theory. The graduate program is built with the maximum flexibility and opportunity to make a well-informed choice of research field. The Martin A. Fisher School of Physics at Brandeis University has an international reputation for excellence in research and is one of the highest-ranked of its size in the country. The department was recently awarded a major grant from the National Science Foundation to establish a Materials Research Science and Engineering Center. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Martin A Fisher School of Physics, Mailstop 057 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2800 | The Martin Fisher School of Physics at Brandeis University has an international reputation for excellence in research; it is among the highest ranked in the USA on the basis of publication citations. Three of their faculty are members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and two are also in the National Academy of Arts and Sciences. Graduate students find a wide variety of research programs ranging from fundamental theoretical studies in elementary particle physics to the application of laser tweezers in studies of polymers; from major experiments at National accelerator laboratories to studies of liquid crystals, complex fluids, and theories of biological and disordered systems; from biophysics to astrophysics and cosmology; from micro fluidics to string theory. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Politics | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics | This program emphasizes linkages among the patterns of American political development, contemporary American politics, and the politics of other developed and developing democratic systems. The graduate curriculum also addresses the advanced industrial democracies of Western Europe, the democratizing states of Eastern Europe, and the international political, economic, and military-security relations among these states. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Politics, Brandeis University, Mail Stop 058, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02459, +1 781 736 2750 | The Department of Politics supports the scholarly research of its faculty, and their effort to integrate their research into their teaching, and into the program of graduate training in Political Science. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Social Developmental Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | Students who are interested in either social or developmental psychology or in an integration of the two fields enter through the combined Ph.D. program in social-developmental psychology. The philosophy of the program is that research in social and in developmental psychology will be enriched by an integration of the two areas. The program consists of a life-span developmental focus from early childhood to old age. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, MS 062 PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3300 | The faculty in the psychology department believe that a strong scientific and research foundation in psychology best prepares students to make use of psychological research in everyday life. Such preparation also enables students to continue with graduate training in psychology, whether one's career choice is clinical, applied, or research oriented. The psychology department at Brandeis therefore emphasizes a rigorous, scientific approach to the understanding of human behavior. The program examines the most up-to-date and comprehensive psychological research and theory and provides opportunities for direct involvement in psychological research and application. Faculty conduct research in diverse areas that include cognitive science, normal and abnormal development, social interaction, spatial orientation, linguistics, perception, memory, emotion, life span development, and effects of brain damage. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Social Policy - Assets and Inequalities Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This concentration prepares students for challenging careers developing research and policy that maximize the potential of children, youth, and families. The concentration in Children, Youth, and Families addresses the broad spectrum of American policies that affect human development. Graduates of the program assume roles as policy analysts, researchers, educators, program planners, and advocates. The concentration helps students achieve their goals through mentoring and advising, formal courses, colloquia, research responsibilities, and interaction with faculty. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The required courses are HS 534b, Assets and Social Policy and Elective Courses: HS 300a, Theories of Social Policy, Social Justice, and Social Change, HS 322b, Sociological Inquiry, HS 515a, Race, Ethnicity and Gender in Health and Human Services Research, HS 527f, Law and Society: Gender Equality, HS 528f, Law and Society: Race and Class and HS 529a, Inequalities, Social Policy, and Population Groups. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Social Policy - Children, Youth, and Families Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This concentration prepares students for challenging careers developing research and policy that maximize the potential of children, youth, and families. The concentration in Children, Youth, and Families addresses the broad spectrum of American policies that affect human development. Graduates of the program assume roles as policy analysts, researchers, educators, program planners, and advocates. The concentration helps students achieve their goals through mentoring and advising, formal courses, colloquia, research responsibilities, and interaction with faculty. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The required courses are HS 317b, Children, Youth, and Families: Problems, Policies, and Programs and Elective courses: HS 312f, National and International Perspectives on Youth Policies and Programs, HS 330b, Child-Related Policies in the United States and HS 544f, Vulnerable Youth: Policy and Programmatic Responses. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Social Policy - Global Health and Development Policy Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This concentration prepares graduates for challenging careers developing and implementing research and policy that address the problems of poverty and ill health in low-income countries and throughout the developing world. There is a severe shortage of health and development economists and social policy analysts and managers who are positioned to work across sectors and make the connections between health and development policy design and implementation. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The required courses are HS 236a, International Health Systems and Elective Courses: HS 228f, Social Theory Seminar: The Thought of Paulo Freire, HS 239b, International Health Economics, HS 259f, Topics in Sustainable Development: Cost-Effectiveness of Renewable Energy Projects in International Development, HS 261a, Threats to Development: Climate Change, HS 279a, Planning and Implementation, HS 285f, Rights-Based Approach to Development, HS 422f, Cost-Effectiveness, HS 426f, Advanced Techniques of Cost-Effectiveness and Cost-Benefit Analysis, HS 505f, Quality and Performance Measurement in Health Care, HS 513a, Issues in National Health Policy, HS 518a, Management of Health Care Organizations, HS 520a, Payment and Financing of Health Care. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Social Policy - Health and Behavioral Health Concentration | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | This program prepares graduates for challenging careers developing research and policy that influence the quality, accessibility, and delivery of health care in the United States. It focus on topics such as factors in the causation of ill health, the structure and processes of health care organizations and service delivery systems, approaches to financing health care, the delivery of substance abuse and mental health services, racial/ethnic and socioeconomic disparities, and health care and its role in social change. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | The required courses are HS 513a, Issues in National Health Policy; Elective Courses: HS 412b, Substance Abuse and Societal Consequences, HS 422f, Cost-Effectiveness, HS 426f, Advanced Techniques of Cost-Effectiveness and Cost-Benefit Analysis, HS 505f, Quality and Performance Measurement in Health care, HS 518a, Management of Health Care Organizations, HS 519a, Health Economics, HS 520a, Payment and Financing of Health Care, HS 521a, Approaches to Political and Organizational Analysis, HS 523a, Economics of Aging and Disability, HS 524a, Long-Term Care: A Policy Perspective, HS 572a, Economics of Behavioral Health and HS 586a, Issues in Substance Abuse Treatment. | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Heller School for Social Policy and Management | Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3820 | Since its founding as Brandeis University's first professional school in 1959, the Heller School has been committed to developing new knowledge and insights in the field of social policy and in health and human services management. Through the graduate education of students, pursuit of applied interdisciplinary research and active public engagement in both the public and private sectors, the Heller School is constantly examining policies and programs that respond to the changing needs of vulnerable individuals and social groups in our society. As a graduate school and research institution, the Heller School has pioneered in a variety of policy areas, including health; mental health; substance abuse; children, youth, and families; aging; international and community development; mental retardation and developmental disabilities; poverty and hunger; and work and inequalities. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Ph.D. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | The Ph.D. in sociology is a six-year program consisting of three years for course work, one year for qualifying exams and two years for research and finishing the dissertation. Students entering the Ph.D. program in sociology are expected to complete six semesters of the program's Approaches to Social Research pro-seminar (SOC 240a), as well as 15 additional courses. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, Brandeis University, 415 South Street M S 071, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2631 | The Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred PhDs. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s (see selected listing for each substantive area). Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often path breaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | PhD in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | This program is designed to train students as professional anthropologists and archaeologists both within and outside the academy. Intensive training for independent research is stressed, with particular emphasis on comparative studies, theoretical grounding and ethnographic and archaeological fieldwork. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Brandeis University, P O Box 549110 MS 006, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2210 | The Anthropology Department at Brandeis University offers a wide range of courses covering the discipline's four major subfields: sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology, and archaeology. The Department also has available for students a number of special resources, including the Anthropology Colloquium Series; Symbolic Form Study Group, Working Group in Economic Anthropology; Material Culture Study Center, Archaeology laboratory; the Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology (CMRAE); the Boston Library Consortium; cross registration at certain Boston-area institutions; and opportunities for supplemental coursework in other Brandeis departments and programs. The department is a member of the Greater Boston Anthropology Consortium (GBAC), which consists of the anthropologists on the faculties of Brandeis University, Tufts University, Olin College and Wellesley College. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | PhD in International Economics and Finance | Full Time | Variable | US $38,994 a year | Brandeis International Business School | Research, consulting, teaching, and high-level policy making require the advanced skills developed through a PhD. The Brandeis PhD is distinguished by its international economics and finance orientation and its focus on policy and business applications in these fields. Its core courses are similar to those of a rigorous economics degree, but its electives target applications rather than theory. Students have opportunities to study and conduct research abroad, and to participate in seminars and research projects at Brandeis and other institutions in the Boston area. The IBS PhD program is highly selective. It requires a strong background in economics and mathematics and takes 4-6 years to complete. Students who successfully finish the first two years of the PhD program receive a Master of Science degree. Students may also apply directly for a Master of Science degree rather than the PhD. This track delivers PhD-level training in economics and finance in two years, without the additional thesis requirements of the PhD. Students who successfully complete the MS may apply to enter the PhD program without loss of time. However, admission to the PhD program is not automatic and requires excellent academic performance and recommendations from faculty. Financial support in the MS program is more limited than in the PhD program. | Applicants should have earned a baccalaureate or masters degree in the related discipline from an accredited institution for admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 100 (internet-based). | Doctoral | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Brandeis International Business School | Brandeis International Business School, Mailstop 032, P O Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2252 | The Brandeis International Business School is a pioneering professional school dedicated to teaching and research in global finance, management and economic policy. They respond to the growing need for international vision and expertise by preparing exceptional individuals from around the world to become principled leaders of global companies and public institutions. They teach cutting-edge theory, immerse students in international experiences, and connect them to best practice in business and policy. This learning experience transforms the way their graduates view the world, and helps them develop skills and insights to chart its future. The Brandeis Advantage: Located on a wooded campus in suburban Boston, Brandeis has 3200 undergraduate and 1100 graduates students, offering programs in more than 40 fields. International to the Core: More than half of their students come from Europe, Asia and Latin America, and international experiences are built into their programs in partnership with major foreign schools and companies. World-class Faculty: Their faculty includes not only distinguished researchers in international finance, business and economics, but also leading practitioners in banking, investments and consulting. Boston:-an academic capital: Seven major universities and 250,000 students are located in the greater Boston area. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Senior Honors Program in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biochemistry | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biochemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biochemistry, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2322 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Senior Honors Program in Biology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2450 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A in English in Literature | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of English | The BYU Master of Arts in English is a two-year program including 26 hours of coursework and 6 hours of thesis writing. It is designed to prepare students for doctoral work or careers in teaching, writing, or editing. The 55 graduate faculty members provide a well-rounded program with depth in Literature, Rhetoric and Composition, and Creative Writing. This highly affordable program includes tuition benefits and competitive teaching and research assistantships. Credit hours: 32 minimum, consisting of 26 course work hours plus 6 thesis hours (Engl 699R). Introductory course (2 hours): Engl 600. Required courses (15 hours): Engl 630; four additional courses in a coherent plan of study from British literature, American literature, other literatures in English, folklore, or literary theory and criticism. Electives (9 hours): three courses. Thesis: 6 hours of 699R on a topic demanding research, analysis, interpretation, and theoretical or methodological expertise. Examination: oral examination on thesis, related course work in emphasis, and an approved reading list of writers or topics. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of English | College of Humanities, Department of English, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | Prof. Doug Thayer reached the remarkable milestone of 50 years of teaching at BYU. He began his career here in 1957. Professor Thayer will deliver the 7th annual Eugene England Memorial Lecture at UVSC, "Does Anybody Need Serious Realistic Mormon Fiction?" Tuesday, April 15, 2008, at 7:00 p.m. in the UVSC Liberal Arts Building, Room 101.Jill Rudy to head American Studies Program Professor Jill Rudy of the English Department was recently named the new coordinator of BYU's American Studies program. Her three-year term begins in September 2008. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Senior Honors in Economics | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, Mail Stop 021 Brandeis University, P O Box 9110 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2259 | Department of Economics offers a wide range of undergraduate courses and several undergraduate programs. Members of the faculty engage in applied economic research in a variety of areas. Current fields of teaching and research include international economics and finance, industrial organization, macroeconomics and monetary economics, technological change and innovation, and economic development. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Senior Honors in Latin American and Latino Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American and Latino Studies | An honors thesis is a highly challenging and rewarding undertaking. It allows a student to study a single topic in great depth and integrate knowledge gained in previous courses. A thesis requires a considerable commitment of time and attention and is normally undertaken by only a small number of graduating seniors. For the highly motivated student it does, however, provide a unique opportunity to conduct original research or explore new ways of thinking about a subject. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American and Latino Studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American and Latino Studies, Brandeis University 415 South Street, Mailstop 036, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2293 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Senior Honors in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, Brandeis University, MS 062 PO Box 549110, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 3300 | Founded in 1948, Brandeis University is named for the late Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the distinguished associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and reflects the ideals of academic excellence and social justice he personified. Coeducational classes began on the site of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts, with 107 students and 13 faculty members. The university is located in Waltham, Mass., on 235 attractive suburban acres, Brandeis is in an ideal location just nine miles west of Boston. Brandeis is ranked in the top tier of the nation's universities. Their graduates depart to pursue careers in a wide array of fields, and advanced studies in the nation's leading graduate and professional schools. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Senior Honors in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Sociology, MS 071, Brandeis University, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02454, +1 781 736 2630 | Brandeis Department of Sociology is a distinguished small department that has nurtured a distinctive culture and has produced nearly two hundred Ph.Ds. since the founding of the graduate program in the early 1960s. Its faculty and graduates over the years have done innovative, often pathbreaking work in the discipline, and their engaged scholarship has influenced the formation of significant movements and policies for democratic change. Its founding traditions of European theorizing and "Chicago School" field studies have been continually enriched with feminist and other critical theoretical approaches, as well as through comparative institutional analyses in a globalizing world. While the department offers a range of methods, including historical, quantitative and comparative, the program has specialized in qualitative analysis. In addition to theory and methods, the department currently focuses especially on three substantive areas: Gender and Feminist Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness, and Politics and Social Change. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | ||||
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Senior Honors in Womens and Gender Studies | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Womens and Gender Studies Program | The honors program is a two-semester sequence during which select women’s and gender studies students independently research and write a senior thesis. Only WGS majors in the honors program can graduate with Honors, High Honors or Highest Honors in WGS. | Bachelor degree | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | College of Arts and Sciences, Womens and Gender Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Womens and Gender Studies Program, MS 082 Brandeis University, 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3045 | From its beginnings with a single course offering in 1975, women’s studies at Brandeis has grown dramatically in curriculum, degree offerings and accomplishments as the field itself has burgeoned. In 1978, their undergraduate minor was established. In 1992, they added a graduate program that offers the M.A. jointly with ten fields encompassing fine arts, humanities and social sciences. In 2003, a major was established, and in 2005, the program changed its name and expanded its reach from Women’s Studies to Women’s and Gender Studies. Their curriculum includes interdisciplinary core courses and more than 80 cross-listed electives. In any given semester, about 20 courses are offered that could fulfill requirements for the major, the minor or the Joint M.A. degree. | Yes | Students typically live in double rooms or lofted triple rooms in one of the eight halls comprising the North and Massell quadrangles. Each residence hall in the North and Massell quads features: Lounges to foster socialization, study-group opportunities and programming, A large community space with a big-screen TV and billiards and foosball tables, Kitchen facilities equipped with community refrigerator, stove/oven, microwave and counter space and Laundry facilities. Meal plans at Brandeis give students ample choices, from meat and potatoes to vegeterian, from Tex-Mex to kosher. Students can even eat your dessert first!The recently renovated Stein, located above the Sherman Dining Hall, is a cozy pub serving lunch and dinner entrées, as well as sandwiches, soups, salads and homemade desserts. The cost of 21 - meal plan is $4694 per year. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in Anthropology - Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Anthr: 101, 110, 150, 215, 300, 305, 306, 309, Anthr: 351, 378, 385, 390R, 580, 590R, Anthr: 350, 355, 365, 372, 374, 380, 390R, 530, 535, 540, 562, 564, 565, 566, 572, 574, 590R, Anthr: 402, 430, 431, 432, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 440, 441, 450, 490R, 511, 512, 575, Anthr: 454R, Anthr: 455R, Anthr: 456R. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 800 SWKT, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3058 | Anthropology's central aims are to describe, interpret and make meaningful human behavior in socio-cultural systems. It also seeks to explain the similarities and differences in human behavior patterns among all peoples and cultures both in present and in the past. social-cultural anthropology studies human society in the present using participant observation interviewing and other techniques to understand life in a single culture, a subculture or a multicultural system. Archaeology explores deep human history and attempts to document and understand the range of cultural patterns practiced by peoples no longer living. Archaeology accomplishes this through methods unique to the field and with techniques borrowed from other disciplines. These goals make archaeology an important part of the anthropological family special skills and interests. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in Anthropology - Sociocultural | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Anthr: 101, 110, 150, 247, 300, 305, 306, 309, Anthr: 317, 320, 326, 330, 335, 340, 343, 345, 346, 390R, Anthr: 402, 430, 431, 432, 435, 436, 438, 440, 490R, Anthr: 434, 437, 441, 450, 511, Anthr: 442, 495, 499R. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 800 SWKT, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3058 | Anthropology's central aims are to describe, interpret and make meaningful human behavior in socio-cultural systems. It also seeks to explain the similarities and differences in human behavior patterns among all peoples and cultures both in present and in the past. social-cultural anthropology studies human society in the present using participant observation interviewing and other techniques to understand life in a single culture, a subculture or a multicultural system. Archaeology explores deep human history and attempts to document and understand the range of cultural patterns practiced by peoples no longer living. Archaeology accomplishes this through methods unique to the field and with techniques borrowed from other disciplines. These goals make archaeology an important part of the anthropological family special skills and interests. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in Anthropology - Sociocultural Double Major | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Anthr: 101, 110, 150, 247, 300, 305, 306, 309, Anthr: 101, 150, 305, 306, 309, 442, 495, 499R, Anthr: 317, 320, 326, 330, 340, 343, 345, 346, 390R, Anthr: 402, 430, 431, 432, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 440, 441, 450, 490R, 511. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 800 SWKT, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3058 | Anthropology's central aims are to describe, interpret and make meaningful human behavior in socio-cultural systems. It also seeks to explain the similarities and differences in human behavior patterns among all peoples and cultures both in present and in the past. social-cultural anthropology studies human society in the present using participant observation interviewing and other techniques to understand life in a single culture, a subculture or a multicultural system. Archaeology explores deep human history and attempts to document and understand the range of cultural patterns practiced by peoples no longer living. Archaeology accomplishes this through methods unique to the field and with techniques borrowed from other disciplines. These goals make archaeology an important part of the anthropological family special skills and interests. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Economics | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ECON 210 : Introduction to Agricultural Economics, ECON 210 : Introduction to Agricultural Economics, ECON 213R : Topics in Economic Analysis, ECON 213R : Topics in Economic Analysis, ECON 215 : History of Economic Thought, ECON 215 : History of Economic Thought, ECON 230 : Economic Development and Growth, ECON 230 : Economic Development and Growth, ECON 253 : Money and Banking, ECON 253 : Money and Banking, ECON 257 : International Trade and Finance, ECON 257 : International Trade and Finance, ECON 274 : American Economic History, ECON 274 : American Economic History, ECON 275 : Public Finance, ECON 275 : Public Finance, ECON 410 : Agricultural Economics, ECON 410 : Agricultural Economics, ECON 413R : Topics in Economic Theory, ECON 413R : Topics in Economic Theory, ECON 415 : History of Economic Thought, ECON 415 : History of Economic Thought, ECON 420 : Economics of Antitrust Law and Regulation, ECON 420 : Economics of Antitrust Law and Regulation, ECON 421 : Law and Economics, ECON 421 : Law and Economics, ECON 431 : Economic Development, ECON 431 : Economic Development, ECON 432 : Economic Growth, ECON 432 : Economic Growth, ECON 440 : Natural Resources and Environmental Economics, ECON 440 : Natural Resources and Environmental Economics, ECON 450 : Financial Economics, ECON 450 : Financial Economics, ECON 453 : Monetary Theory and Policy, ECON 453 : Monetary Theory and Policy, ECON 458 : International Trade Theory and Applications, ECON 458 : International Trade Theory and Applications, ECON 459 : International Monetary Theory, ECON 459 : International Monetary Theory, ECON 463 : Economics of the Labor Market, ECON 463 : Economics of the Labor Market, ECON 465 : Health Economics, ECON 465 : Health Economics, ECON 468 : Urban Economics, ECON 468 : Urban Economics, ECON 474 : Topics in Economic History, ECON 474 : Topics in Economic History, ECON 475 : Public Economics, ECON 475 : Public Economics, ECON 476 : Industrial Organization, ECON 478 : Game Theory and Economics, ECON 482 : Welfare Economics, ECON 486 : Mathematical Economics, ECON 580 : Advanced Price Theory, ECON 580 : Advanced Price Theory, ECON 581 : Advanced Macroeconomics, ECON 582 : Topics in Mathematical Economics, ECON 582 : Topics in Mathematical Economics, ECON 586 : Advanced Mathematics for Economists, ECON 588 : Econometrics. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Economics, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2859 | The Department of Economics at Brigham Young University focuses on providing a first-class undergraduate education in the discipline of economics. The core courses are taught using a calculus-based approach. Many of our students pursue graduate work in Business, Law, Medicine, and Economics. Economics examines how societies choose to allocate scarce resources among competing uses. A broad range of contemporary policy issues are studied in fields such as: food, agriculture, and natural resource economics; economic development and growth, international trade and finance, economic history, the organization of industries, the development and efficiency of law, business cycles, labor markets, and public and private finance. Business economists forecast and analyze various aspects of the economy for their employers. They often work for banks, insurance companies, investment firms, and large manufacturing firms. The career of business economics is increasingly recognized as one of the routes to top management (National Association of Business Economists, 1989). | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in Family History - Genealogy | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Engl 115, 200, Honrs 200, Phil 200, Honrs 250, Phil 305, Stat 221, Hist 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406R, 408R, 409R, 410R, 411R, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, Hist 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, Rel C 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, Hist 482, Hist 496R, Hist 251, 319, 320, 321, 357, 377, 378, 384, 387, Hist 252, 306, 322, 323, 324, 325, 328, 329, 330, 332, 355, 356. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History, 2130 JFSB, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4335 | Brigham Young University seeks to develop students of faith, intellect and character who have the skills and the desire to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives. Established in 1875, the university provides an outstanding education in an atmosphere consistent with the ideals and principles of its sponsor, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The university was known for its academically minded and internationally experienced student body, its world-class teaching and its beautiful mountain location, BYU is also recognized for its extensive language programs, talented performing arts ensembles, outstanding sports programs and devotion to combining solid scholarship with the principles of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in General Studies - Family History | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | The following course of study is proposed for the BGS Family History emphasis to strengthen the academic rigor of the emphasis and to bring it more in line with the objectives of the Family History department. Students are strongly encouraged to: complete Religion 261 (Introduction to LDS Family History) as part of the University religion requirement, in order to provide an initial foundation both in doctrine and basic research concepts. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Hist 400 The Family and the Law in American History, Hist 319 The Family in Europe, Hist 378 American Family History, Germ 490R Sec. 3 German for Family Historians and Genealogists (hopefully change course number to Hist 422), Hist 399R Sec. 1 Special Topics in History: Latin for Genealogists (hopefully change course number to Hist 420), Hist 421 English Language Handwriting and Documents, Hist 401 U.S.-New England Family History Research, Hist 402 U.S.-Eastern States Family History Research, Hist 403 U.S.-Midwest Family History Research, Hist 404 U.S.-Southern States Family History Research, Hist 409R Sec. 1 Germanic Family History Research, Hist 411 Hispanic Family History, Hist 413 England/Wales Since 1700 Family History Research, Hist 414 Scottish Family History Research, Hist 415 Irish Family History Research, Geog 450 United States and Canada, History 220 The United States through 1877, Hist 252 Modern Latin America, Hist 322 England to 1689, Hist 433 Writing Family Histories, Hist 482 Professional Paths and Credentials in Family History. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History, 2130 JFSB, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4335 | Brigham Young University seeks to develop students of faith, intellect and character who have the skills and the desire to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives. Established in 1875, the university provides an outstanding education in an atmosphere consistent with the ideals and principles of its sponsor, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The university was known for its academically minded and internationally experienced student body, its world-class teaching and its beautiful mountain location, BYU is also recognized for its extensive language programs, talented performing arts ensembles, outstanding sports programs and devotion to combining solid scholarship with the principles of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in History | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Engl 115 College Writing and Reading, Engl 200 Writing and Rhetoric, Honrs 200 Honors University Writing, Phil 200 Reasoning and Writing, Honrs 250 Honors Math Modeling, Phil 305 Predicate Logic, Stat 221 Principles of Statistics, Hist 201 World Civ to 1500, Hist 202 World Civ from 1500, Hist 220 The US Through 1877, Hist 221 The US Since 1877. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History, 2130 JFSB, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4335 | Brigham Young University seeks to develop students of faith, intellect and character who have the skills and the desire to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives. Established in 1875, the university provides an outstanding education in an atmosphere consistent with the ideals and principles of its sponsor, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The university was known for its academically minded and internationally experienced student body, its world-class teaching and its beautiful mountain location, BYU is also recognized for its extensive language programs, talented performing arts ensembles, outstanding sports programs and devotion to combining solid scholarship with the principles of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in History Teaching | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Engl 115 College Writing and Reading, Engl 200 Writing and Rhetoric, Honrs 200 Honors University Writing, Phil 200 Reasoning and Writing, Honrs 250 Honors Math Modeling, Phil 305 Predicate Logic, Stat 221 Principles of Statistics, Hist 201 World Civ to 1500, Hist 202 World Civ from 1500, Hist 220 The US Through 1877, Hist 221 The US Since 1877. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History, 2130 JFSB, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4335 | Brigham Young University seeks to develop students of faith, intellect and character who have the skills and the desire to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives. Established in 1875, the university provides an outstanding education in an atmosphere consistent with the ideals and principles of its sponsor, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The university was known for its academically minded and internationally experienced student body, its world-class teaching and its beautiful mountain location, BYU is also recognized for its extensive language programs, talented performing arts ensembles, outstanding sports programs and devotion to combining solid scholarship with the principles of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BA in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Political Science | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Econ 110 Economic Principles and Problems, Pl Sc 110 American Government and Politics, Pl Sc 150 Comparative Government and Politics, Pl Sc 170 Introduction to International Politics, Pl Sc 202 Western Political Heritage 2, Phil 202 History of Philosophy 2, Pl Sc 200 Political Inquiry, Pl Sc 328 Quantitative Political Methodology, Pl Sc 300 Contemporary Political Theory, Pl Sc 310 Theories of American Politics, Pl Sc 330 Theories of Public Policy, Pl Sc 350 Theories of Comparative Politics, Pl Sc 370 Theory of International Relations, Pl Sc 400 Capstone Seminar in Political Theory, Pl Sc 410 Capstone Seminar in American Politics, Pl Sc 430 Capstone Seminar in Public Policy, Pl Sc 450 Capstone Seminar in Comparative Politics, Pl Sc 470 Capstone Seminar in International elations. |
Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Political Science, 745 SWKT, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3423 | Brigham Young University seeks to develop students of faith, intellect and character who have the skills and the desire to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives. Established in 1875, the university provides an outstanding education in an atmosphere consistent with the ideals and principles of its sponsor, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The university was known for its academically minded and internationally experienced student body, its world-class teaching and its beautiful mountain location, BYU is also recognized for its extensive language programs, talented performing arts ensembles, outstanding sports programs and devotion to combining solid scholarship with the principles of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BFA in Animation | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BFA in Industrial Design | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BFA in Information Technology | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Information technology refers to the preparation of students to meet the computer technology needs of business, government, healthcare, schools, and other kinds of organizations. IT professionals possess the right combination of knowledge and practical, hands-on expertise to take care of both an organization’s information technology infrastructure and the people who use it. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Accountancy | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | Graduates who earn their degree in accounting are likely to work in public or private accounting directly usually in either tax or audit. They also enjoy successful careers in the executive’s office, finance department, and operations department, or as management consultants, tax and investment advisors, estate planners, and entrepreneurs. Accounting has been described as the “language of business.” Accounting is the study of how businesses track their income and assets over time. Accountants engage in a wide variety of activities besides preparing financial statements and recording business transactions including computing costs and efficiency gains from new technologies, participating in strategies for mergers and acquisitions, quality management, developing and using information systems to track financial performance, and tax strategy. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Acc 401 Accounting Information Systems, Acc 403 Intermediate Financial Accounting, Acc 406 Financial Statement Auditing, Acc 402 Intermediate Managerial Accounting, Acc 404 Intermediate Financial Accounting II, Acc 405 Fundamentals of Taxation. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Chemical Engineering - Bio-medical Track | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Biomedical Engineering (BME) is one of the many specialties of chemical engineering. The relationship between BME and ChE is a close one, because the body is essentially a complex chemical plant that operates according to the principles you learn as a chemical engineer. The applications of BME are numerous and varied, with such examples as artificial organs, drug-delivery systems, tissue engineering, orthopedic repair/replacement, artificial vision, diagnostics, etc., etc. Students with an interest in BME may prepare to enter the biomedical engineering industry; enter academia in biomedical engineering; and practice medicine. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Ch En 170, Chem 105, Math 112, B of M, Engl 150, Hepe 105, Ch En 291, Chem 106, Chem 107 (LAB), Math 113, Physics 121, B of M, GE, Ch En 263, Chem 351, Math 302, Physics 220, D and C, Phys Ed, Ch En 273, Chem 352, Chem 353 (Lab), Math 303, New Test, Bio 120, Ch E 374, Ch E 391, Chem 461, Physics 123, Econ 110, GE, Ch En 373, Stat 361, Bio 240, Bio 241, Engl 316, Chem 481, Ch En 311, Ch En 378, PDBio 305, Bio 340, Rel Elective, STDEV 439 (can audit), Ch En 376, Ch En 478, Bio 360, Rel Elective, PDBio 220, Phys Ed, Ch En 436, Ch En 476, Ch En 475, Eng. Elect, GE, Ch En 451, Ch En 477, Ch En 518 (Eng. Elect), GE, Rel Elect. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering, 350 CB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 5286 | The Department of Chemical Engineering exists to support the mission of BYU by preparing students for: lives of scholarship and continued learning founded upon principles of science, engineering, and mathematics, lives of service to family as educated parents, to church as faithful Latter-day Saints, and to community as moral, disciplined, practicing engineers and leaders, lives of contribution to society and humanity by producing products, processes, and policies that improve the quality of life. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Chemical Engineering - Bio-medical Track | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Biomedical Engineering (BME) is one of the many specialties of chemical engineering. The relationship between BME and ChE is a close one, because the body is essentially a complex chemical plant that operates according to the principles you learn as a chemical engineer. The applications of BME are numerous and varied, with such examples as artificial organs, drug-delivery systems, tissue engineering, orthopedic repair/replacement, artificial vision, diagnostics, etc., etc. Students with an interest in BME may prepare to enter the biomedical engineering industry; enter academia in biomedical engineering; and practice medicine. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Ch En 170, Chem 111, Math 112, B of M, Engl 150, GE, Ch En 291, Chem 112, Chem 213 (LAB), Math 113, Physics 121, B of M, Hepe 105, Physics 123, Ch En 263, GE, GE, Chem 351, Math 302, Physics 220, D and C, Engl 316, Phys Ed, Ch En 273, Chem 352, Chem 353 (Lab), Math 303, New Test, Bio 120, Stat 361, Bio 240, Bio 241, Econ 110, GE, Ch En 311, Ch En 374, Ch En 391, Chem 461, PDBio 305, Rel Elect, Phys Ed, Ch En 373, Ch En 376, Ch En 478, Bio 340, Chem 481, Rel Elect, STDEV 439 (can audit), Internship, Ch En 436, Ch en 476, Ch En 475, Ch En 378, Eng. Elect., Rel Elect, Ch En 451, Ch En 477, Ch En 518 (Eng. Elect), PDBio 220, Bio 360. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering, 350 CB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 5286 | The Department of Chemical Engineering exists to support the mission of BYU by preparing students for: lives of scholarship and continued learning founded upon principles of science, engineering, and mathematics, lives of service to family as educated parents, to church as faithful Latter-day Saints, and to community as moral, disciplined, practicing engineers and leaders, lives of contribution to society and humanity by producing products, processes, and policies that improve the quality of life. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Chemical Engineering - Pre-medical Track | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Ch En 170, Chem 111, Math 112, B of M, Engl 150, GE, Ch En 291, Chem 112, Chem 213 (LAB), Math 113, Physics 121, B of M, Hepe 105, Physics 123, Ch En 263, GE, GE, Chem 351, Math 302, Physics 220, D and C, Engl 316, Phys Ed, Ch En 273, Chem 352, Chem 353 (Lab), Math 303, New Test, Bio 120, Stat 361, Bio 240, Bio 241, Econ 110, GE, Ch En 311, Ch En 374, Ch En 391, Chem 461, PDBio 305, Rel Elect, Phys Ed, Ch En 373, Ch En 376, Ch En 478, Bio 340, Chem 481, Rel Elect, STDEV 439 (can audit), Internship, Ch En 436, Ch en 476, Ch En 475, Ch En 378, Eng. Elect., Rel Elect, Ch En 451, Ch En 477, Ch En 518 (Eng. Elect), PDBio 220, Bio 360. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering, 350 CB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 5286 | The Department of Chemical Engineering exists to support the mission of BYU by preparing students for: lives of scholarship and continued learning founded upon principles of science, engineering, and mathematics, lives of service to family as educated parents, to church as faithful Latter-day Saints, and to community as moral, disciplined, practicing engineers and leaders, lives of contribution to society and humanity by producing products, processes, and policies that improve the quality of life. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Chemical Engineering - Pre-medical Track | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Ch En 170, Chem 105, Math 112, B of M, Engl 150, Hepe 105, Ch En 291, Chem 106, Chem 107 (LAB), Math 113, Physics 121, B of M, GE, Ch En 263, Chem 351, Math 302, Physics 220, D and C, Phys Ed, Ch En 273, Chem 352, Chem 353 (Lab), Math 303, New Test, Bio 120, Ch E 374, Ch E 391, Chem 461, Physics 123, Econ 110, GE, Ch En 373, Stat 361, Bio 240, Bio 241, Engl 316, Chem 481, Ch En 311, Ch En 378, PDBio 305, Bio 340, Rel Elective, STDEV 439 (can audit), Ch En 376, Ch En 478, Bio 360, Rel Elective, PDBio 220, Phys Ed, Ch En 436, Ch En 476, Ch En 475, Eng. Elect, GE, Ch En 451, Ch En 477, Ch En 518 (Eng. Elect), GE, Rel Elect. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering, 350 CB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 5286 | The Department of Chemical Engineering exists to support the mission of BYU by preparing students for: lives of scholarship and continued learning founded upon principles of science, engineering, and mathematics, lives of service to family as educated parents, to church as faithful Latter-day Saints, and to community as moral, disciplined, practicing engineers and leaders, lives of contribution to society and humanity by producing products, processes, and policies that improve the quality of life. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Civil Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | Students in the BYU Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering work with nationally renowned professors, as they prepare for professional involvement in structural, water resources, environment, geotechnical (soils), and transportation engineering. There are a vast variety of careers and job opportunities within the field of Civil Engineering. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 368 Clyde Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2811 | There are 19 full-time faculty in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department. They have a broad spectrum of experience in industry and government, and most are professionally registered. The department has developed a strong research base that is currently funded at about $1 million per year. Over half of the faculty presently hold externally supported research grants and contracts, and several are also funded through the Engineering Computer Graphics Laboratory. Areas of instruction include engineering mechanics, hydraulics, environmental engineering, soil mechanics, structures, structural composites, transportation, and water resources. Most department research is associated with one or more of these areas plus applications for engineering computer graphics. Department research varies with many projects related to water resources--quality, remote sensing, distribution systems, and as part of environmental hazardous waste studies. In the geotechnical area, the department has several active research grants for exploring soil mechanics, earthquake liquefaction, and geologic modeling. Faculty expertise encompasses structures, structural mechanics (including research into structures made of modern composite materials), applications of computer graphics to structural analysis, construction of high-strength dome structures, and improvement of optimization techniques. In recent years there has been a significant increase in the amount of transportation engineering research in the department, much of which is associated with the Utah Department of Transportation. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Communication Disorders | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Communication Disorders | Audiology includes studying the nervous system to learn how we sense, perceive, and derive information from the sense organs. Audiology students also learn about the development of speech and language, the anatomy and physiology of the ear, a variety of electronic test instruments that reveal the function of the intricate processes involved in hearing, and disorders and diseases of hearing. Physicians use audiological findings to diagnose and treat hearing problems. This information is also used in counseling the hearing impaired and for prescribing hearing aids. Teachers use the knowledge to understand and help children with hearing impairments. The discipline of speech-language pathology emerged to help people who have lost or have never had the ability to speak normally. It serves persons with speech and language disorders such as stuttering, articulation problems, aphasia, voice problems, language delay, and similar disabilities. Students learn about speech and language development, the anatomy and physiology of the speech mechanism, the neurology of perception and production of speech and language, impairments that cause speech and language disorders, and communication disorders remediation. Professionals work in public schools, hospitals, private or community clinics, or private practice. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ASL 101, ComD 133, 230, 320, 330, 331, 334, 350, 351, 421, 438, 442, 450, Math 110 (or equivalent), Phscs 167, PDBio 220, Stat 221. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Communication Disorders | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Communication Disorders, 136 TLRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4318 | The mission of the Department of Communication Disorders is to advance knowledge and learning in science and clinical practice through research, teaching, and clinical service. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 459 Clyde Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4012 | Professor James Archibald was presented with the Outstanding Faculty Award in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering for demonstrating outstanding devotion to undergraduate education. The citation noted his exemplary mentoring of undergraduate and graduate students via research activities and senior design projects. Dr. Archibald currently serves as the departments Undergraduate Coordinator. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Construction Management | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | This program is designed to give men and women abilities in construction management by providing a broad background in construction technology, business, architecture, and engineering, with specific emphasis on management within the construction industry. Graduates fill middle-management positions such as superintendents, estimators, schedulers, field engineers, inspectors, general contractors, sales representatives, and construction insurance or bonding personnel. Many go on to graduate studies in architecture, law or business administration. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Early Childhood Education | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: SFL 210 Human Development, SFL 210 Human Development, SFL 221 Foundations of Developmentally Appropriate Practices in Programs for Young Children, SFL 221 Foundations of Developmentally Appropriate Practices in Programs for Young Children, SFL 240 Parenting and Child Guidance, ENGL 313 Expository Writing for Elementary Education Majors, ENGL 313 Expository Writing for Elementary Education Majors, HEPE 129 Fitness and Lifestyle Management, HEPE 129 Fitness and Lifestyle Management, MTHED 305 Basic Concepts of Mathematics, MTHED 305 Basic Concepts of Mathematics, MTHED 306 Concepts of Mathematics. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, 201 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4077 | We believe that our most important responsibility as teacher educators is the growth and development of children and youth. We contribute to their development by preparing competent caring, and reflective teachers. This is our primary mission in Teacher Education at Brigham Young University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Economics | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Economics | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ECON 210 : Introduction to Agricultural Economics, ECON 210 : Introduction to Agricultural Economics, ECON 213R : Topics in Economic Analysis, ECON 213R : Topics in Economic Analysis, ECON 215 : History of Economic Thought, ECON 215 : History of Economic Thought, ECON 230 : Economic Development and Growth, ECON 230 : Economic Development and Growth, ECON 253 : Money and Banking, ECON 253 : Money and Banking, ECON 257 : International Trade and Finance, ECON 257 : International Trade and Finance, ECON 274 : American Economic History, ECON 274 : American Economic History, ECON 275 : Public Finance, ECON 275 : Public Finance, ECON 410 : Agricultural Economics, ECON 410 : Agricultural Economics, ECON 413R : Topics in Economic Theory, ECON 413R : Topics in Economic Theory, ECON 415 : History of Economic Thought, ECON 415 : History of Economic Thought, ECON 420 : Economics of Antitrust Law and Regulation, ECON 420 : Economics of Antitrust Law and Regulation, ECON 421 : Law and Economics, ECON 421 : Law and Economics, ECON 431 : Economic Development, ECON 431 : Economic Development, ECON 432 : Economic Growth, ECON 432 : Economic Growth, ECON 440 : Natural Resources and Environmental Economics, ECON 440 : Natural Resources and Environmental Economics, ECON 450 : Financial Economics, ECON 450 : Financial Economics, ECON 453 : Monetary Theory and Policy, ECON 453 : Monetary Theory and Policy, ECON 458 : International Trade Theory and Applications, ECON 458 : International Trade Theory and Applications, ECON 459 : International Monetary Theory, ECON 459 : International Monetary Theory, ECON 463 : Economics of the Labor Market, ECON 463 : Economics of the Labor Market, ECON 465 : Health Economics, ECON 465 : Health Economics, ECON 468 : Urban Economics, ECON 468 : Urban Economics, ECON 474 : Topics in Economic History, ECON 474 : Topics in Economic History, ECON 475 : Public Economics, ECON 475 : Public Economics, ECON 476 : Industrial Organization, ECON 478 : Game Theory and Economics, ECON 482 : Welfare Economics, ECON 486 : Mathematical Economics, ECON 580 : Advanced Price Theory, ECON 580 : Advanced Price Theory, ECON 581 : Advanced Macroeconomics, ECON 582 : Topics in Mathematical Economics, ECON 582 : Topics in Mathematical Economics, ECON 586 : Advanced Mathematics for Economists, ECON 588 : Econometrics. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Economics, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2859 | The Department of Economics at Brigham Young University focuses on providing a first-class undergraduate education in the discipline of economics. The core courses are taught using a calculus-based approach. Many of our students pursue graduate work in Business, Law, Medicine, and Economics. Economics examines how societies choose to allocate scarce resources among competing uses. A broad range of contemporary policy issues are studied in fields such as: food, agriculture, and natural resource economics; economic development and growth, international trade and finance, economic history, the organization of industries, the development and efficiency of law, business cycles, labor markets, and public and private finance. Business economists forecast and analyze various aspects of the economy for their employers. They often work for banks, insurance companies, investment firms, and large manufacturing firms. The career of business economics is increasingly recognized as one of the routes to top management (National Association of Business Economists, 1989). | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | The BSEE degree offered by BYU is a traditional EE degree, recognized worldwide by employers of engineers and accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET). The electrical engineering field is quite broad and encompasses such areas as computer systems, radio frequency systems, integrated circuits, microwaves, lasers, antennas, signal processing systems, and others. Now that the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering offers a BS in Computer Engineering in addition to the BS in Electrical Engineering, the structure of each degree should be explained. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 459 Clyde Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4012 | Professor James Archibald was presented with the Outstanding Faculty Award in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering for demonstrating outstanding devotion to undergraduate education. The citation noted his exemplary mentoring of undergraduate and graduate students via research activities and senior design projects. Dr. Archibald currently serves as the departments Undergraduate Coordinator. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: EL ED 302 Planning and Management, EL ED 302 Planning and Management, EL ED 340 Children's Literature, EL ED 340 Children's Literature, EL ED 351 Multicultural Education, EL ED 351 Multicultural Education, EL ED 354 Assessing and Supporting Literacy Development: Practicum 1, EL ED 354 Assessing and Supporting Literacy Development: Practicum 1, EL ED 355 Assessing and Supporting Literacy Development: Practicum 2, EL ED 355 Assessing and Supporting Literacy Development: Practicum 2, EL ED 356 Teaching Reading and Language Arts in the Primary Grades, EL ED 356 Teaching Reading and Language Arts in the Primary Grades, EL ED 357 Teaching Reading and Language Arts in the Intermediate Grades, EL ED 357 Teaching Reading and Language Arts in the Intermediate Grades, EL ED 361 Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School, EL ED 361 Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School, EL ED 362 Practicum in Teaching Mathematics, EL ED 362 Practicum in Teaching Mathematics, EL ED 363 Teaching Science in the Elementary School, EL ED 363 Teaching Science in the Elementary School, EL ED 364 Practicum in Teaching Science, EL ED 364 Practicum in Teaching Science, EL ED 365 Teaching Social Studies in the Elementary School, EL ED 365 Teaching Social Studies in the Elementary School, EL ED 366 Social Studies Practicum, EL ED 366 Social Studies Practicum, EL ED 372 Instruction and Assessment. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, 201 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4077 | We believe that our most important responsibility as teacher educators is the growth and development of children and youth. We contribute to their development by preparing competent caring, and reflective teachers. This is our primary mission in Teacher Education at Brigham Young University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Elementary Education - Early Childhood Education | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: EL ED 302 Planning and Management, EL ED 302 Planning and Management, EL ED 340 Children's Literature, EL ED 340 Children's Literature, EL ED 351 Multicultural Education, EL ED 351 Multicultural Education, EL ED 354 Assessing and Supporting Literacy Development: Practicum 1, EL ED 354 Assessing and Supporting Literacy Development: Practicum 1, EL ED 355 Assessing and Supporting Literacy Development: Practicum 2, EL ED 355 Assessing and Supporting Literacy Development: Practicum 2, EL ED 356 Teaching Reading and Language Arts in the Primary Grades, EL ED 356 Teaching Reading and Language Arts in the Primary Grades, EL ED 357 Teaching Reading and Language Arts in the Intermediate Grades, EL ED 357 Teaching Reading and Language Arts in the Intermediate Grades, EL ED 361 Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School, EL ED 361 Teaching Mathematics in the Elementary School, EL ED 362 Practicum in Teaching Mathematics, EL ED 362 Practicum in Teaching Mathematics, EL ED 363 Teaching Science in the Elementary School, EL ED 363 Teaching Science in the Elementary School, EL ED 364 Practicum in Teaching Science, EL ED 364 Practicum in Teaching Science, EL ED 365 Teaching Social Studies in the Elementary School, EL ED 365 Teaching Social Studies in the Elementary School, EL ED 366 Social Studies Practicum, EL ED 366 Social Studies Practicum, EL ED 372 Instruction and Assessment. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, 201 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4077 | We believe that our most important responsibility as teacher educators is the growth and development of children and youth. We contribute to their development by preparing competent caring, and reflective teachers. This is our primary mission in Teacher Education at Brigham Young University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Engineering and Technology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Manufacturing Engineering Technology is a nationally-respected program in BYU's School of Technology that prepares students for technical and management careers in manufacturing. Faculty members in the BYU manufacturing program have provided national leadership in various aspects of manufacturing education and key areas of manufacturing related technology. Students are taught how to be leaders in the manufacturing industry. A large majority of graduates are offered management positions within 5 years of graduation, and these managers are best prepared by a combination of a technology background in manufacturing and a solid business education. This double emphasis is inherent in the manufacturing engineering technology program. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Facility and Property Management | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Family Life - Home and Family Living | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Brigham Young University | The marriage, family, and human development (MFHD) program centers on theories, research, and practices related to optimal human development within the context of family life. It provides a life-course perspective by which human development and family behavior can be understood and improved. Provided with critical and current information about the family and human development disciplines, students learn how children, youth, adults, and families develop, change, and face challenges throughout the life course (infancy, childhood, adolescence, adulthood). The teaching strategy of the Department of Marriage, Family, and Human Development reflects a strong commitment to better critical thinking and problem-solving skills as students become involved in mentored-learning research and outreach experiences. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: FAMLF 100 Strengthening Marriage and Family: Proclamation Principles and Scholarship, MFHD 160 Introduction to Family Processes, MFHD 210 Human Development, MFHD 290 Critical Inquiry and Research Methods, STAT 221 Principles of Statistics, MFHD 329 Marriage Formation, MFHD 331 Infant Dev. in the Family, MFHD 333 Adolescence Dev. in the Family, MFHD 334 Adult Development and Aging, MFHD 335 Family Adaptation and Resiliency, MFHD 351 Socialization Across Childhood. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4636 | Brigham Young University seeks to develop students of faith, intellect and character who have the skills and the desire to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives. Established in 1875, the university provides an outstanding education in an atmosphere consistent with the ideals and principles of its sponsor, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The university was known for its academically minded and internationally experienced student body, its world-class teaching and its beautiful mountain location, BYU is also recognized for its extensive language programs, talented performing arts ensembles, outstanding sports programs and devotion to combining solid scholarship with the principles of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Parkand Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Family Life - Marriage, Family and Human Development | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, School of Family Life Department of Marriage, Family and Human Development | The marriage, family, and human development (MFHD) program centers on theories, research, and practices related to optimal human development within the context of family life. It provides a life-course perspective by which human development and family behavior can be understood and improved. Provided with critical and current information about the family and human development disciplines, students learn how children, youth, adults, and families develop, change, and face challenges throughout the life course (infancy, childhood, adolescence, adulthood). The teaching strategy of the Department of Marriage, Family, and Human Development reflects a strong commitment to better critical thinking and problem-solving skills as students become involved in mentored-learning research and outreach experiences. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: FAMLF 100 Strengthening Marriage and Family: Proclamation Principles and Scholarship, MFHD 160 Introduction to Family Processes, MFHD 210 Human Development, MFHD 290 Critical Inquiry and Research Methods, STAT 221 Principles of Statistics, MFHD 329 Marriage Formation, MFHD 331 Infant Dev. in the Family, MFHD 333 Adolescence Dev. in the Family, MFHD 334 Adult Development and Aging, MFHD 335 Family Adaptation and Resiliency, MFHD 351 Socialization Across Childhood. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, School of Family Life Department of Marriage, Family and Human Development | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, School of Family Life Department of Marriage, Family and Human Development, 2086 JFSB, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2069 | The School is committed to enhancing individual and family development within the home and communities worldwide. Accordingly, the mission of the School of Family Life is to: provide instruction that fosters commitment to the principles in The Family: A Proclamation to the World; conduct research that contributes to the understanding and enhancement of human development, temporal well-being in the home, and marriage and family relationships; help students develop the attitudes, knowledge, and skills that characterize persons of positive influence - in their own marriages and families, in their professions, in church and public service, and other personal relationships. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Geography - Geographic Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | This program uses technological tools to solve a variety of geographic problems in fields as varied as city government, business, scientific research, and public land management. The U.S. Department of Labor recently identified GIS as one of the top three careers poised for explosive growth in the future. In the GIS program, students learn a variety of technical skills currently in demand in the job market, but it also focuses on the fundamental principles of geography and geographic information that will make students more able to solve difficult problems, and adapt to a constantly changing industry. Geospatial careers are very diverse, so this emphasis provides a basic education (and options for advanced specialization) in five areas: geographic information science, the study of the nature of geographic information; geographic information systems, the management and analysis of digital geographic information; remote sensing, the observation and analysis of geography from the air or space; cartography, the visual communication of geographic information via maps; application development, writing programs to automate geospatial tasks. This emphasis is ideal for students who enjoy: maps, computers, working in both the field and the office, solving difficult problems, and mixing their creative and technical talents. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Geog 100 The Geographic Approach, Geog 101 Global Environment, Geog 110 Landscapes of Disaster: An ntroduction to Natural Hazards, Geog 120 Geography and World Affairs, Geog 130 Introduction to Human Geography, Geog 211 Map Use and Interpretation, Geog 212 Introduction to GIS, Geog 250 United States and Canada, Geog 322 Statistics for Geographers, Geog 303 Biogeography, Geog 304 Geography of Climates, Geog 305 Geography of Landforms, Geog 307 Landscape Ecology, Geog 245 Geography of Utah, Geog 250 United States and Canada, Geog 255 Middle and South America, Geog 260 Europe, Geog 265 Russia and the Former Soviet Union, Geog 271 Middle East, Geog 272 East Asia, Geog 273 Southeast Asia, Geog 285 Africa South of the Sahara, Geog 306 Public Land Conservation, Geog 331 Economic Geography, Geog 336 Geography of Urban Environment, Geog 341 Political Geography, Geog 346 Population Geography, Geog 347 Tourism: A Conceptual Framework, Geog 213 Earth Observation and Image Interpre, Geog 217 Programming for Geographers, Geog 219 GPS and Geodesy, Geog 311 Geographic Data Management, Geog 312 Cartographic Design, Geog 313 Remote Sensing 1, Geog 317 Analytical Cartography, Geog 399R Academic Internship, Geog 411 Issues in Computer Cartography, Geog 412 Problem Solving with GIS, Geog 413 Remote Sensing 2, Geog 414 Appl Urban Environmental Modeling, Geog 495R Mentored Research, Geog 521R Geographic Information Practicum. |
Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography, 690 Spencer West Kimball Tower (SWKT), PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3851 | The department strengthens the geographic awareness, knowledge, and skills of our students, the University, and the community through the following activities: Providing a solid introduction to core geographic concepts and ways of creating knowledge; providing students with skills for generating and interpreting knowledge and to ensure that geography majors complete programs with adequate skills for competing successfully in the workplace or in graduate school; advancing the discipline of geography, especially in those areas which benefit the university, local/regional community and the worldwide church; developing research, education, and service relationships for students and faculty with others in the university, community and the discipline. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Geography - Geospatial Intelligence | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | Geospatial intelligence is a rapidly growing field that uses technology to gather spatial data, then analyze and interpret it to monitor and solve situations that impact our national security. The program therefore focuses on three areas: geospatial technology, the tools of analysis, including remote sensing, geographic information systems, cartography, and statistics; geography, the study of the natural, political, and cultural landscapes, and their relationship to each other and to world events, specifically focusing on sensitive regions of the world, such as the Middle East; intelligence processes, including both the broad picture of security policy and the specific procedures of intelligence analysis and reporting. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Geog 100 The Geographic Approach, Geog 101 Global Environ.: Undrst. Physical Geog., Geog 110 Intro to Natural Hazards, Geog 120 Geography and World Affairs, Geog 130 Introduction to Human Geography, Geog 211 Map Use and Interpretation, Geog 212 Introduction to GIS, Geog 213 Earth Observation and Image Interpreta, Geog 222 Quantitative Reasoning, Geog 271 Middle East, Geog 303 Biogeography, Geog 313 Remote Sensing 1, Geog 322 Statistics for Geographers, Geog 331 Economic Geography, Geog 341 Political Geography, Geog 217 Programming for Geographers, Geog 219 Global Positioning Systems and Geodesy, Geog 311 Geographic Data Management, Geog 312 Cartographic Design, Geog 317 Analytical Cartography, Geog 412 Problem Solving with GIS, Geog 413 Remote Sensing 2. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography, 690 Spencer West Kimball Tower (SWKT), PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3851 | The department strengthens the geographic awareness, knowledge, and skills of our students, the University, and the community through the following activities: Providing a solid introduction to core geographic concepts and ways of creating knowledge; providing students with skills for generating and interpreting knowledge and to ensure that geography majors complete programs with adequate skills for competing successfully in the workplace or in graduate school; advancing the discipline of geography, especially in those areas which benefit the university, local/regional community and the worldwide church; developing research, education, and service relationships for students and faculty with others in the university, community and the discipline. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Geography - Physical Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | This program gives students a spatial understanding of our natural landscape, and the skills to effectively manage human activities that impact the natural environment. It therefore focuses on three areas: physical geography, human-environmental interactions and environmental management. In each of these areas, students gain conceptual knowledge, as well as practical skills in primary data collection in the field, and data analysis (statistical and GIS). The program prepares students for graduate studies and careers in basic research, land management, conservation, environmental protection and education. This emphasis is ideal for students who: enjoy the outdoors, love to sit and contemplate a spectacular view, are concerned about environmental issues, and want a mix of field work and computer work. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Geog 100 The Geographical Approach, Geog 101 Global Environment, Geog 110 Landscapes of Disaster: An Introduction to Natural Hazards, Geog 120 Geography and World Affairs, Geog 130 Introduction to Human Geography, Geog 211 Map Use and Interpretation, Geog 212 Introduction to GIS, Geog 222 Quantitative Reasoning, Geog 322 Statistics for Geographers, Geog 303 Biogeography, Geog 304 Geography of Climates, Geog 306 Public Land Conservation, Geog 307 Landscape Ecology, Geog 313 Remote Sensing 1, PWS 150 Environmental Biology. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography, 690 Spencer West Kimball Tower (SWKT), PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3851 | The department strengthens the geographic awareness, knowledge, and skills of our students, the University, and the community through the following activities: Providing a solid introduction to core geographic concepts and ways of creating knowledge; providing students with skills for generating and interpreting knowledge and to ensure that geography majors complete programs with adequate skills for competing successfully in the workplace or in graduate school; advancing the discipline of geography, especially in those areas which benefit the university, local/regional community and the worldwide church; developing research, education, and service relationships for students and faculty with others in the university, community and the discipline. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Geography - Travel and Tourism Studies | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | The Travel and Tourism Studies emphasis within the Geography Department at BYU is a popular and challenging program of study that introduces students to the expanding world of tourism. A multi-disciplinary geographic perspective examines the history, structure, patterns, and research issues of the world's largest industry. By integrating concepts of location, place, environment, climate, landscape and economy, the geographic foundation of this emphasis helps students to understand where and why tourism sites are located, the movements of people created by tourism, and the changes tourism brings to the cultural and physical landscapes. Although the majority of students in this emphasis are more interested in an informative and enjoyable major than a career, there is a focus on professional skills, including tourism planning, management strategies, and geographic information systems, that equip students for a variety of careers in the travel and tourism industry as well as many other areas of employment. This emphasis is ideal for students who: love to travel, work well with people, and are looking for a fairly short but interesting major. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Geog 100 The Geographic Approach, Geog 101 Global Environment, Geog 110 Landscapes of Disaster: An ntroduction to Natural Hazards, Geog 120 Geography and World Affairs, Geog 130 Introduction to Human Geography, Geog 211 Map Use and Interpretation, Geog 212 Introduction to GIS, Geog 250 United States and Canada, Geog 322 Statistics for Geographers, Geog 245 Geography of Utah, Geog 255 Middle and South America, Geog 260 Europe, Geog 265 Russia and the Former Soviet Union, Geog 271 Middle East, Geog 272 East Asia, Geog 273 Southeast Asia, Geog 285 Environ & Development in Africa. |
Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography, 690 Spencer West Kimball Tower (SWKT), PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3851 | The department strengthens the geographic awareness, knowledge, and skills of our students, the University, and the community through the following activities: Providing a solid introduction to core geographic concepts and ways of creating knowledge; providing students with skills for generating and interpreting knowledge and to ensure that geography majors complete programs with adequate skills for competing successfully in the workplace or in graduate school; advancing the discipline of geography, especially in those areas which benefit the university, local/regional community and the worldwide church; developing research, education, and service relationships for students and faculty with others in the university, community and the discipline. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Geography - Urban, Rural, and Environmental Planning | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | This emphasis has a solid core of classes designed to give the student valuable understanding concerning the nature and importance of land use and resource planning. The focus is not only on conceptual knowledge, but on professional skills, including verbal and written communication, GIS and statistical analysis, creative and critical thinking, and working in teams with a variety of stakeholders. The final result is a graduate who will work successfully with people to help fashion their communities with the skill of a professional land use planner. Graduates of this program have also pursued advanced degrees in geography, public administration, and real estate law. This emphasis is ideal for students who: love cities and/or public lands, want to be involved in government without going into politics, have a talent for resolving conflict, are dismayed by the effects of bad policy on the urban and natural landscape, and want to make a difference in the world. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Geog 100 The Geographic Approach, Geog 101 Global Environment, Geog 110 Landscapes of Disaster: An ntroduction to Natural Hazards, Geog 120 Geography and World Affairs, Geog 130 Introduction to Human Geography, Geog 211 Map Use and Interpretation, Geog 212 Introduction to GIS, Geog 250 United States and Canada, Geog 322 Statistics for Geographers, Geog 250 United States and Canada, Geog 306 Public Land Conservation, Geog 310 Principles of Land Use Planning, Geog 336 Geography of Urban Environment, Geog 346 Population Geography, Geog 410 Practices of Land Use Planning. |
Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Geography, 690 Spencer West Kimball Tower (SWKT), PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3851 | The department strengthens the geographic awareness, knowledge, and skills of our students, the University, and the community through the following activities: Providing a solid introduction to core geographic concepts and ways of creating knowledge; providing students with skills for generating and interpreting knowledge and to ensure that geography majors complete programs with adequate skills for competing successfully in the workplace or in graduate school; advancing the discipline of geography, especially in those areas which benefit the university, local/regional community and the worldwide church; developing research, education, and service relationships for students and faculty with others in the university, community and the discipline. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The Information systems program allows graduate to embrace opportunities in business analysis, consulting, reengineering, IS design, IS management, programming, instruction, and administration. Information systems professionals define, develop, and maintain the information system infrastructure that supports the operations of all businesses, governments, and other institutions. These professionals use a wide variety of skills in carrying out this function. The BSIS degree develops your ability to function effectively as a professional, applying state-of-the-art technology in solving business problems. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: I Sys 401 Systems Analysis, I Sys 402 Database Systems, I Sys 403 Principles of Bus. Programming, I Sys 404 Data Communications, I Sys 411 Systems Design and Implementation, I Sys 413 Enterprise Application Development, I Sys 414 Enterprise Services and Security, I Sys 415 I Sys Capstone Project. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Management - Corporate Finance | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | Finance professionals are responsible for managing a business's money maximizing the value of the corporation while minimizing risk. Corporate finance refers to the more day-to-day accounting activities of a business, like accounts payable and accounts receivable, as well as the higher-level strategic financial analysis. Financial analysts create business plans, track annual budgets; make investment decisions, and do financial forecasting. Careers in finance require strong analytical and quantitative skills, a knack for using numbers to understand patterns that influence business, and strong attention to detail. Additionally, finance professionals need leadership, communication skills, and the ability to manage risks. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ACC 210 or ACC 202, I Sys 201, M Com 320, Bus M 301, Bus M 320, Bus M 321, Bus M 410, Bus M 401, ACC 440. Manec 453. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Management - Entrepreneurship | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The entrepreneurship emphasis is designed to acquaint students with the opportunities commonly encountered when starting, growing, and harvesting business ventures. Students will learn to create business plans that can be used to start their own business. Since entrepreneurship is the practice of starting new organizations in response to identified opportunities, it is often associated with risk. Entrepreneurs tend to be independent and driven to achieve. Entrepreneurship is often a difficult undertaking as a majority of new businesses fail. Entrepreneurial activities are substantially different depending on the type of organization that is being started. Entrepreneurship may involve creating many job opportunities. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ACC 210 or ACC 202, I Sys 201, M Com 320, Bus M 301, Bus M 320, Bus M 321. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Management - General Business | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The general business emphasis is for students wishing to meet specific career or educational goals, including working in a family business or preparing for a graduate program. To round out their management education, general management students have the ability to choose from courses in the areas of finance, marketing, supply chain/operations, and organizational behavior. Students in the general business emphasis are often going on to graduate school-many attend medical, dental, optometry, business or law school, or are seeking employment in smaller organizations in which they will have responsibilities covering multiple functional areas. They desire to gain a strong business background but don't want to specialize in one area. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ACC 210 or ACC 202, I Sys 201, M Com 320, Bus M 301, Bus M 320, Bus M 321, Bus M 410, Bus M 401, ACC 440. Manec 453. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Management - Global Supply Chain | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The supply chain consists of all the steps which lead to the production of goods and services, including suppliers and distribution channels. Supply Chain managers optimize all the steps so that the right amount of the right goods and services are delivered to customers at the right time. Effective managers must coordinate the links of the supply chain so as to maintain quality and customer satisfaction, while at the same time keeping costs under control. Students considering a career in supply chain management should have the ability to see the big picture of production, have good analytical skills, and be detail oriented. They must also be able to work in teams and have effective written and verbal communication skills. The coursework for this emphasis prepares students for positions in purchasing and supply management, inventory management, logistics/transportation management, and operations management. Career paths also lead to executive-level positions such as chief supply chain officer, chief purchasing officer, chief logistics officer, and chief operations officer. Since many supply chains are becoming global, there are particularly good opportunities for individuals with international exposure or interest in working for multinational firms. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ACC 210 or ACC 202, I Sys 201, M Com 320, Bus M 301, Bus M 320, Bus M 321, Bus M 410, Bus M 401, ACC 440. Manec 453. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Management - Marketing | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The marketing emphasis prepares students for marketing management responsibilities, e-marketing, high-tech marketing, database mining and analysis, product/brand management, industrial and consumer product sales, market analysis, and entrepreneurial activities. The role of the marketer is to anticipate the public's needs and position the organization to satisfy those needs. In this way, marketing is the necessary link between an organization and its target audience. Marketing appeals to creative thinkers as well as numbers-minded statisticians. A career in marketing requires a sharp, analytical mind; strong oral and written communication skills, and a keen interest in business and consumer behavior. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ACC 210 or ACC 202, I Sys 201, M Com 320, Bus M 301, Bus M 320, Bus M 321, Bus M 410, Bus M 401, ACC 440. Manec 453. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Management - Strategy | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The undergraduate business strategy emphasis and strategy minor are limited enrollment degrees for approximately (50) students each year. Preference is given to those with outstanding GPAs and ACT/SAT scores. The degree is designed to prepare students for initial jobs in professional service firms. Top recruiters from professional service firms at BYU include the following: Accenture, Aon Consulting, Audax Group, Bain and Co., Boston Consulting Group, CRA Associates, Deloitte Consulting, Duff and Phelps LLC, and KPMG. As the business environment becomes more complex, firms increasingly rely on strategy consultants to remain competitive. Strategy consultants effect change by collecting, reviewing, and analyzing information in order to make recommendations to management. Consultants may propose ways to improve an organization’s structure, efficiency, or profits. Strategy consultants need to be self-motivated and disciplined. They must possess analytical skills, the ability to get along with a wide range of people, strong oral and written communication skills, good judgment, time management skills, and creativity. The ability to work in teams is another important attribute as consulting teams become more common. Because they must spend a significant portion of their time with clients, strategy consultants may travel frequently. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ACC 210 or ACC 202, I Sys 201, M Com 320, Bus M 301, Bus M 320, Bus M 321, Bus M 410, Bus M 401, ACC 440. Manec 453. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Management -Organizational Behavior/ Human Resource Management | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | A career in organizational behavior or human resources may consist of entry level jobs such as human resource generalists or specialists who help design and manage compensation and benefits programs. A growing number of OB/HR graduates begin their careers as organization design and compensation analysts. This involves research and strategic implementation aimed at attracting, recruiting, training, and providing professional development for new hires. Later, OB/HR graduates may advance to managerial positions in compensation or training, which may lead to positions such as director of human resources, director of organizational development, or senior executive positions responsible for overseeing human capital. Those interested in more OB-focused careers often work doing internal consulting for firms and develop leadership rotation, leadership development, organizational development, strategic training, and performance management systems. OB/HR professionals may choose to join a consulting firm or open their own businesses. A growing number of students interested in OB/HR also pursue advanced degrees at the MBA and/or PhD level. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ACC 210 or ACC 202, I Sys 201, M Com 320, Bus M 301, Bus M 320, Bus M 321, Bus M 410, Bus M 401, ACC 440. Manec 453. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ME EN 500 (MeEn-CEEn) Design and Materials Applications, ME EN 500 (MeEn-CEEn) Design and Materials Applications, ME EN 501 (MeEn-CEEn) Stress Analysis and Design of Mechanical Structures, ME EN 501 (MeEn-CEEn) Stress Analysis and Design of Mechanical Structures, ME EN 503 (MeEn-CEEn) Plasticity and Fracture, ME EN 503 (MeEn-CEEn) Plasticity and Fracture, ME EN 504 (Me En-CE En) Computer Structural Analysis and Optimization, ME EN 504 (Me En-CE En) Computer Structural Analysis and Optimization, ME EN 506 (MeEn-CEEn) Continuum Mechanics and Finite Element Analysis, ME EN 506 (MeEn-CEEn) Continuum Mechanics and Finite Element Analysis, ME EN 508 (Me En-CE En) Structural Vibrations, ME EN 508 (Me En-CE En) Structural Vibrations, ME EN 510 Compressible Fluid Flow, ME EN 510 Compressible Fluid Flow, ME EN 512 Intermediate Fluid Dynamics, ME EN 512 Intermediate Fluid Dynamics, ME EN 521 Intermediate Thermodynamics. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 435 Crabtree Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2625 | The mission of the Department of Mechanical Engineering is to:Educate mechanical engineering students to contribute and lead in society. Offer mentoring opportunities for faculty and students to discover, apply and disseminate new knowledge of real consequence. Provide an educational atmosphere enlightened by the Gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Mechanical Engineering - Manufacturing | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | When combined with the manufacturing content of the existing ME program, the emphasis allows a student to take seven courses (21 hours) in manufacturing as part of a BS degree. This allows for a strong emphasis in manufacturing as well as for a solid ME degree. Room for the emphasis is made by 1) counting 9 hours of existing coursework, 2) using manufacturing courses for the 9 hours allotted for electives, and 3) adding three hours to the ME program for those electing the emphasis. To obtain the emphasis, a student would complete 21 hours of coursework taken from the following list of courses, where at least one course must be selected from each area: Materials and Manufacturing Processes; Process, Assembly and Product Engineering; Manufacturing Competitiveness; Manufacturing Systems Design. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: ME EN 500 (MeEn-CEEn) Design and Materials Applications, ME EN 500 (MeEn-CEEn) Design and Materials Applications, ME EN 501 (MeEn-CEEn) Stress Analysis and Design of Mechanical Structures, ME EN 501 (MeEn-CEEn) Stress Analysis and Design of Mechanical Structures, ME EN 503 (MeEn-CEEn) Plasticity and Fracture, ME EN 503 (MeEn-CEEn) Plasticity and Fracture, ME EN 504 (Me En-CE En) Computer Structural Analysis and Optimization, ME EN 504 (Me En-CE En) Computer Structural Analysis and Optimization, ME EN 506 (MeEn-CEEn) Continuum Mechanics and Finite Element Analysis, ME EN 506 (MeEn-CEEn) Continuum Mechanics and Finite Element Analysis, ME EN 508 (Me En-CE En) Structural Vibrations, ME EN 508 (Me En-CE En) Structural Vibrations, ME EN 510 Compressible Fluid Flow, ME EN 510 Compressible Fluid Flow, ME EN 512 Intermediate Fluid Dynamics, ME EN 512 Intermediate Fluid Dynamics, ME EN 521 Intermediate Thermodynamics. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 435 Crabtree Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2625 | The mission of the Department of Mechanical Engineering is to:Educate mechanical engineering students to contribute and lead in society. Offer mentoring opportunities for faculty and students to discover, apply and disseminate new knowledge of real consequence. Provide an educational atmosphere enlightened by the Gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | Psychology is a traditional discipline in the liberal arts and sciences, rooted in the Western intellectual tradition. Since its founding in the late nineteenth century, psychology has evolved into a science with a wide scope of interests. Many psychologists provide treatment for a broad range of disorders, while others work to solve pressing social issues. The diverse world community of academic and professional psychologists is devoted to expanding the understanding of individual and collective behavior and applying that understanding toward improving the human condition. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: Psych 101, 111, 210, Psych 301, 302, 304, Psych 341, Psych 311, 320, 321, 322, 342, 343, 348, Psych 350, Psych 306, 311, 330, 338, 341, 352, 353, 354, 356, 358, 359, 376, Psych 381, Psych 311, 361, 365, 370, 375, 382. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology, 1001 Kimball Tower P.O. Box 25543, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 6002 | Among the many majors at BYU, there is one that delves into the depths of the human mind: the psychology major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Special Education - Mild/Moderate Disabilities Track | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE) | The program focuses on the preparation of competent and moral educators who understand and respond to the needs of diverse students with disabilities and their families, with an emphasis on problem solving in collaborative relationships with educational professionals and paraprofessionals. The curriculum is both theory and practice based. Special Education courses in this major emphasize ways to assess abilities of students; plan instruction using appropriate curriculum; use appropriate behavior management strategies; and engage in collaborative problem solving with school and family systems. Knowledge is gained and skills developed via coursework and hands-on practical experiences. The program is rounded out with elective courses that meet the individual interests of each student. Students can choose from two tracks for their area of emphasis: mild/moderate disabilities or severe disabilities. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: CPSE 410 (3) Applied Behavior Analysis, CPSE 420 (3) Assessment, CPSE 452 (3) Teaching Strategies, IP and T 287 (2) Technology in Teaching, CPSE 425 (3) Foundations in Language Arts, CPSE 430 (3) Teaching Reading, CPSE 440 (2) Secondary Curriculum, CPSE 442 (3) Behavioral Strategies, CPSE 446R (1) Secondary Practicum, CPSE 462 (3) Teaching Math, CPSE 466R (4) Practicum Prep, CPSE 466R (4) Practicum, CPSE 470 (3) Legal Issues, CPSE 480 (3) Multicultural Issues, CPSE 490 (1) Capstone Seminar, CPSE 486R (12) Student Teaching or CPSE 496R (11) Internship (Continues for 1 credit through Winter). | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE), 340 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3857 | We facilitate positive growth for children, youth, and adults by preparing professionals to work with students, clients, and colleagues in complex and varied educational settings. In particular, we embrace a collaborative, evidence-based approach to serving individuals with diverse strengths and needs. We support the mission and aims of a BYU education as we integrate teaching, research, and service. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Special Education - Severe Disabilities Track | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE) | The program focuses on the preparation of competent and moral educators who understand and respond to the needs of diverse students with disabilities and their families, with an emphasis on problem solving in collaborative relationships with educational professionals and paraprofessionals. The curriculum is both theory and practice based. Special Education courses in this major emphasize ways to assess abilities of students; plan instruction using appropriate curriculum; use appropriate behavior management strategies; and engage in collaborative problem solving with school and family systems. Knowledge is gained and skills developed via coursework and hands-on practical experiences. The program is rounded out with elective courses that meet the individual interests of each student. Students can choose from two tracks for their area of emphasis: mild/moderate disabilities or severe disabilities. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: CPSE 410 (3) Applied Behavior Analysis, CPSE 420 (3) Assessment, CPSE 463 (3) Assistive Technology, IP and T 287 (2) Technology in Teaching, CPSE 430 (3) Teaching Reading, CPSE 440 (2) Secondary Curriculum, CPSE 443 (3) Behavioral Strategies, CPSE 447R (1) Secondary Practicum, ExSc 461 (3) Adapted Physical Education, CPSE 453 (3) Curriculum and Instruction, CPSE 467R (4) Practicum Prep, CPSE 467R (4) Practicum, CPSE 470 (3) Legal Issues, CPSE 480 (3) Multicultural Issues, CPSE 490 (1) Capstone Seminar, CPSE 487R (12) Student Teaching or CPSE 496R (11) Internship (Continues for 1 credit through Winter). | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE), 340 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3857 | We facilitate positive growth for children, youth, and adults by preparing professionals to work with students, clients, and colleagues in complex and varied educational settings. In particular, we embrace a collaborative, evidence-based approach to serving individuals with diverse strengths and needs. We support the mission and aims of a BYU education as we integrate teaching, research, and service. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Teaching Social Science | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: SC ED 326 Foundations of Teaching, SC ED 326 Foundations of Teaching, SC ED 350 Adolescent Development in an Education Context, SC ED 350 Adolescent Development in an Education Context, SC ED 353 Multicultural Education, SC ED 353 Multicultural Education, SC ED 375 Theory and Methods of Secondary Education, SC ED 375 Theory and Methods of Secondary Education, SC ED 377R Teaching Methods and Instruction, SC ED 377R Teaching Methods and Instruction, SC ED 378 Practicum in Secondary Education, SC ED 378 Practicum in Secondary Education, SC ED 379 Classroom Management, SC ED 379 Classroom Management, SC ED 380 Content-Area Literacy. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, 201 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4077 | We believe that our most important responsibility as teacher educators is the growth and development of children and youth. We contribute to their development by preparing competent caring, and reflective teachers. This is our primary mission in Teacher Education at Brigham Young University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Technology and Engineering Education - Construction | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: TEE 125- 3 Technological Systems, TEE 200 - 3 Fundamentals of Woodworking Design and Processes, TEE 225 - 3 Technological Systems 2, TEE 229 - 3 Materials Properties and Processes, TEE 255- 3 Visual Communication Design, TEE 276R - 4 Exploration of Teaching, TEE 291R - Undergraduate Seminar, TEE 330 - 3 Creativity, Engineering, and Problem Solving, TEE 340 - 3 Power and Energy Systems, TEE 377 - 2 Teaching Methods in Technology Education, TEE 378 - 2 Practicum in Technology Education, TEE 476R - 12 Secondary Student - Teaching Internship, InDes 133A - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingA, InDes 133B - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingB, InDes 214R - 3 Model Making and Prototyping, CM 105 - Const. Docs, CM 155 - Architectural Drafting, CM 210 - Light Framing, CM 211 - Finishing, CM 217 - Concrete, CM 241 - Electrical, CM 320 - Mechanical Sys. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Technology and Engineering Education - Design | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: TEE 125- 3 Technological Systems, TEE 200 - 3 Fundamentals of Woodworking Design and Processes, TEE 225 - 3 Technological Systems 2, TEE 229 - 3 Materials Properties and Processes, TEE 255- 3 Visual Communication Design, TEE 276R - 4 Exploration of Teaching, TEE 291R - Undergraduate Seminar, TEE 330 - 3 Creativity, Engineering, and Problem Solving, TEE 340 - 3 Power and Energy Systems, TEE 377 - 2 Teaching Methods in Technology Education, TEE 378 - 2 Practicum in Technology Education, TEE 476R - 12 Secondary Student - Teaching Internship, InDes 133A - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingA, InDes 133B - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingB, InDes 214R - 3 Model Making and Prototyping, CM 155 - Architectural Drafting, InDes 335 - Intro to Furniture Design, InDes 435 - Adv. Furniture Design. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Technology and Engineering Education - Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: TEE 125- 3 Technological Systems, TEE 200 - 3 Fundamentals of Woodworking Design and Processes, TEE 225 - 3 Technological Systems 2, TEE 229 - 3 Materials Properties and Processes, TEE 255- 3 Visual Communication Design, TEE 276R - 4 Exploration of Teaching, TEE 291R - Undergraduate Seminar, TEE 330 - 3 Creativity, Engineering, and Problem Solving, TEE 340 - 3 Power and Energy Systems, TEE 377 - 2 Teaching Methods in Technology Education, TEE 378 - 2 Practicum in Technology Education, TEE 476R - 12 Secondary Student - Teaching Internship, InDes 133A - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingA, InDes 133B - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingB, InDes 214R - 3 Model Making and Prototyping, IT 104 A and B - Digital Electronics, IT 251 A - Computer Arch and Org., IT 251 B - Computer Sys. and Org., Mfg 130 - Modern Manufacturing, MeEn 172 - Engineering Graphics, Mfg 220 - Material Removal, CE EN 112 - Eng Draw CAD Apps, Physics 313R - Special Topics physics. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Technology and Engineering Education - Information Systems | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: TEE 125- 3 Technological Systems, TEE 200 - 3 Fundamentals of Woodworking Design and Processes, TEE 225 - 3 Technological Systems 2, TEE 229 - 3 Materials Properties and Processes, TEE 255- 3 Visual Communication Design, TEE 276R - 4 Exploration of Teaching, TEE 291R - Undergraduate Seminar, TEE 330 - 3 Creativity, Engineering, and Problem Solving, TEE 340 - 3 Power and Energy Systems, TEE 377 - 2 Teaching Methods in Technology Education, TEE 378 - 2 Practicum in Technology Education, TEE 476R - 12 Secondary Student - Teaching Internship, InDes 133A - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingA, InDes 133B - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingB, InDes 214R - 3 Model Making and Prototyping, IT 104 A and B - Digital Electronics, IT 210 - Fund Web IT, IT 251 A - Computer Arch and Org., IT 251 B - Computer Sys. and Org., CS 142 - Intro to Programming. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Technology and Engineering Education - Manufacturing | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: TEE 125- 3 Technological Systems, TEE 200 - 3 Fundamentals of Woodworking Design and Processes, TEE 225 - 3 Technological Systems 2, TEE 229 - 3 Materials Properties and Processes, TEE 255- 3 Visual Communication Design, TEE 276R - 4 Exploration of Teaching, TEE 291R - Undergraduate Seminar, TEE 330 - 3 Creativity, Engineering, and Problem Solving, TEE 340 - 3 Power and Energy Systems, TEE 377 - 2 Teaching Methods in Technology Education, TEE 378 - 2 Practicum in Technology Education, TEE 476R - 12 Secondary Student - Teaching Internship, InDes 133A - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingA, InDes 133B - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingB, InDes 214R - 3 Model Making and Prototyping, Mfg 130 - Modern manufacturing, Mfg 220 - Material Removal, Mfg 230 - CAM, MeEn 250 - Materials Science, InDes 335 - Intro to Furniture Design, InDes 435 - Adv. Furniture Design. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS in Technology and Engineering Education - Multimedia | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | The courses are: TEE 125- 3 Technological Systems, TEE 200 - 3 Fundamentals of Woodworking Design and Processes, TEE 225 - 3 Technological Systems 2, TEE 229 - 3 Materials Properties and Processes, TEE 255- 3 Visual Communication Design, TEE 276R - 4 Exploration of Teaching, TEE 291R - Undergraduate Seminar, TEE 330 - 3 Creativity, Engineering, and Problem Solving, TEE 340 - 3 Power and Energy Systems, TEE 377 - 2 Teaching Methods in Technology Education, TEE 378 - 2 Practicum in Technology Education, TEE 476R - 12 Secondary Student - Teaching Internship, InDes 133A - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingA, InDes 133B - 1.5 Technical and Perspective DrawingB, InDes 214R - 3 Model Making and Prototyping, TMA 185 - Production basics, TMA 271 - Multimedia Literature, IP and T 560 - Material Production, InDes 410R - Animation, TTE 251 - Video Production and Editing, TTE 350 - Multimedia Authoring and Publishing, TTE 450 - Desktop Publishing, TTE 550 - Distance Learning. | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, School of Technology, CrabTree Building - 270, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 80 422 1818 | Brigham Young University students in the School of Technology's Information Technology program presented their senior capstone projects on Friday April 4th. Posters are on display on the third floor of the Crabtree Technology Building. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | BS/MS Integrated Program | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Students who desire to obtain a master's degree in engineering, and who have been accepted to a department professional program, may elect to enter the integrated master's program during the junior year by filling out the necessary forms obtained from the ME department graduate advisor. The purpose of the program is to afford greater flexibility in scheduling course work than is normally available through a traditional BS degree followed by an MS degree program. | Program of Study for both BS and MS programs must be filed at the beginning of junior year. 3.0 GPA is required. All applicants must take the general GRE exam. The expected GRE score ranges are: V (460-480), Q (710-730), AW (3.5-4.5). Students with scores below these numbers must show strength and aptitude through other means to be admitted. If English is not the student’s native language, and a four-year bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution within the United States has not been earned, the student must also take the TOEFL or IELTS. University minimum scores are required. Scores for the entrance exams must be sent directly to Brigham Young University. Applicants should sit for the GRE exam and the TOEFL or IELTS exams, at least 6 weeks prior to the application deadline. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 435 Crabtree Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2625 | The mission of the Department of Mechanical Engineering is to:Educate mechanical engineering students to contribute and lead in society. Offer mentoring opportunities for faculty and students to discover, apply and disseminate new knowledge of real consequence. Provide an educational atmosphere enlightened by the Gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership and Foundations | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah.F. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF), 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Doctor of Philosophy, Exercise Science with Exercise Physiology Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | Students with this degree are qualified to assume positions of leadership within their profession. Most students become university or college faculty, while some work in research settings or direct large health promotion programs. Graduates understand the scientific bases of health promotion, have an in-depth understanding of the scientific iterature, teach college courses, and do independent research. |
Academic Requirements: A. Fulfill all requirements for admission to the BYU graduate school. (See the current University Catalog.) B. NATABOC certified or be eligible to become certified. C. Have a minimum GPA of 3.0 for the last 60 semester hours of undergraduate academic work. D. Achieve satisfactory scores on the GRE. E. Submit a letter of intent which includes the following: NOTE: Place “LETTER OF INTENT” at the top of your letter. 1. Your preparation and background for the program to which you are applying. 2. The special emphasis which you hope to pursue in your program. 3. The basic reasons for your choice of career. 4. Special qualities and talents that would enhance success in your particular career. 5. Research interests, including faculty you would like to do research with. 6. Your professional goals. 7. Your particular reasons for applying to Brigham Young University. 8. The specific duration for accomplishing your graduate degree. 9. (Optional) Any specific circumstances or objectives you wish to have taken into consideration. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The mission of the Department of Exercise Sciences is to assist individualsin their quest for perfection and Eternal Life, emphasizing the truth that "the human body is sacred, the veritable tabernacle of the divine spirit."Department Goals : Nurture faith in God and the practice of Christian principles, Prepare leaders to serve in ways that foster dignity and respect for the body, mind and spirit, Provide experiences that stimulate the acquisition and enjoyment of activities that promote health and happiness, Encourage life-long learning and advance the body of knowledge unique to the disciplines. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Doctor of Philosophy, Exercise Science with Health Promotion Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | This program prepares students for leadership at the highest level of their profession. Most students become university or college faculty. Students are prepared in the scientific bases of exercise science, well acquainted with the scientific literature, able to teach college courses, and able to do independent research. | Academic Requirements: A. Fulfill all requirements for admission to the BYU graduate school. (See the current University Catalog.) B. NATABOC certified or be eligible to become certified. C. Have a minimum GPA of 3.0 for the last 60 semester hours of undergraduate academic work. D. Achieve satisfactory scores on the GRE. E. Submit a letter of intent which includes the following: NOTE: Place “LETTER OF INTENT” at the top of your letter. 1. Your preparation and background for the program to which you are applying. 2. The special emphasis which you hope to pursue in your program. 3. The basic reasons for your choice of career. 4. Special qualities and talents that would enhance success in your particular career. 5. Research interests, including faculty you would like to do research with. 6. Your professional goals. 7. Your particular reasons for applying to Brigham Young University. 8. The specific duration for accomplishing your graduate degree. 9. (Optional) Any specific circumstances or objectives you wish to have taken into consideration. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The mission of the Department of Exercise Sciences is to assist individualsin their quest for perfection and Eternal Life, emphasizing the truth that "the human body is sacred, the veritable tabernacle of the divine spirit."Department Goals : Nurture faith in God and the practice of Christian principles, Prepare leaders to serve in ways that foster dignity and respect for the body, mind and spirit, Provide experiences that stimulate the acquisition and enjoyment of activities that promote health and happiness, Encourage life-long learning and advance the body of knowledge unique to the disciplines. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Doctor of Philosophy, Exercise Science with Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Specialization | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | This program prepares students for leadership in their profession. Students are prepared in the scientific bases of exercise science, well acquainted with the scientific literature, able to teach college courses, and conduct independent research. Most students become university or college faculty. | Academic Requirements: A. Fulfill all requirements for admission to the BYU graduate school. (See the current University Catalog.) B. NATABOC certified or be eligible to become certified. C. Have a minimum GPA of 3.0 for the last 60 semester hours of undergraduate academic work. D. Achieve satisfactory scores on the GRE. E. Submit a letter of intent which includes the following: NOTE: Place “LETTER OF INTENT” at the top of your letter. 1. Your preparation and background for the program to which you are applying. 2. The special emphasis which you hope to pursue in your program. 3. The basic reasons for your choice of career. 4. Special qualities and talents that would enhance success in your particular career. 5. Research interests, including faculty you would like to do research with. 6. Your professional goals. 7. Your particular reasons for applying to Brigham Young University. 8. The specific duration for accomplishing your graduate degree. 9. (Optional) Any specific circumstances or objectives you wish to have taken into consideration. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The mission of the Department of Exercise Sciences is to assist individualsin their quest for perfection and Eternal Life, emphasizing the truth that "the human body is sacred, the veritable tabernacle of the divine spirit."Department Goals : Nurture faith in God and the practice of Christian principles, Prepare leaders to serve in ways that foster dignity and respect for the body, mind and spirit, Provide experiences that stimulate the acquisition and enjoyment of activities that promote health and happiness, Encourage life-long learning and advance the body of knowledge unique to the disciplines. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Honors in History | Full Time | Variable | $4080 per semester for Fall or winter, $2040 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | An Honors thesis is a significant scholarly project at the undergraduate level. The thesis should make a contribution to existing scholarly literature in your chosen area, although that contribution will generally be less substantial than is required for a graduate thesis. Student's thesis should be the most significant research effort of their undergraduate career. A thesis should reflect the standards of professional historical scholarship. An original article-length paper of publishable quality could qualify as could an expanded departmental capstone paper. The thesis might be related to a student’s capstone project but it should be an original interpretation offering fresh insight and not simply a revised 490 paper. | Students should complete a junior year of high school; to be most prepared for the ACT and SAT exams and for college-level work, it is recommended that high school class schedules include the following: 4+ years of mathematics, 4+ years of English or literature, 2-3 years of laboratory science, 2 years of history or government, 2+ years of foreign language. They should also take ACT/SAT, TOEFL/IELTS exams. The minimum TOEFL score of 550 or IELTS of 6.5 are required. | Bachelor degree | Brigham Young University | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of History, 2130 JFSB, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4335 | Brigham Young University seeks to develop students of faith, intellect and character who have the skills and the desire to continue learning and to serve others throughout their lives. Established in 1875, the university provides an outstanding education in an atmosphere consistent with the ideals and principles of its sponsor, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The university was known for its academically minded and internationally experienced student body, its world-class teaching and its beautiful mountain location, BYU is also recognized for its extensive language programs, talented performing arts ensembles, outstanding sports programs and devotion to combining solid scholarship with the principles of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | JD in Law | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | J. Reuben Clark Law School | One of the most important factors in determining the quality of any law school is the quality of its student body. The admissions policies of the J. Reuben Clark Law School are designed to enhance the diversity, vigor, and academic ability of our student body. | To be admitted to the J. Reuben Clark Law School, the applicant must meet the Law School's high academic and admissions criteria and hold at least a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university. Each applicant must also establish through the recommendation of his or her bishop, branch president, or mission president; a religious leader of another faith; or a judge of a court of general jurisdiction that he or she will live in accordance with the BYU Honor Code. Registration signifies a student's willingness to live according to these standards. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | J. Reuben Clark Law School | J. Reuben Clark Law School, P.O. Box 28000, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4274 | The mission of the J. Reuben Clark Law School is to teach the laws of men in the light of the laws of God. The Law School strives to be worthy in all respects of the name it bears, and to provide an education that is spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, and character building, thus leading to lifelong learning and service. The Law School’s goals are to: Teach the fundamental principles of law, using a predominantly theoretical approach, with appropriate attention to the basic skills involved in layering. Promote loyalty to and understanding of the Constitution of the United States. Foster an enlightened devotion to the rule of law. Teach the law from a scholarly and objective point of view, with the largest latitude in the matters being considered. Incorporate religious, ethical, and moral values in the instruction. Produce influential and enduring legal scholarship. Be part of Brigham Young University in all respects, fully participating and contributing in the intellectual and spiritual life of the University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Joint JD/M.ED. | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | The Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EDLF) has established a joint JD/M.Ed. program with the J. Reuben Clark Law School. The department will accept up to 9 hours of credit obtained in the Juris Doctorate program at the Law School toward the M.Ed.. However, to receive the full 9 hours of credit, the student’s program of study at the Law School must be approved by their advisory committee in EDLF. A crucial component of law students’ education and career preparation is summer clerkships. A certain amount of flexibility in scheduling core course work will be required from and for law students pursuing the JD./M.Ed. | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah.F. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF), 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | LLM Comparative Law | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | J. Reuben Clark Law School | One of the most important factors in determining the quality of any law school is the quality of its student body. The admissions policies of the J. Reuben Clark Law School are designed to enhance the diversity, vigor, and academic ability of our student body. | To be admitted to the J. Reuben Clark Law School, the applicant must meet the Law School's high academic and admissions criteria and hold at least a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university. Each applicant must also establish through the recommendation of his or her bishop, branch president, or mission president; a religious leader of another faith; or a judge of a court of general jurisdiction that he or she will live in accordance with the BYU Honor Code. Registration signifies a student's willingness to live according to these standards. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | J. Reuben Clark Law School | J. Reuben Clark Law School, P.O. Box 28000, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4274 | The mission of the J. Reuben Clark Law School is to teach the laws of men in the light of the laws of God. The Law School strives to be worthy in all respects of the name it bears, and to provide an education that is spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, and character building, thus leading to lifelong learning and service. The Law School’s goals are to: Teach the fundamental principles of law, using a predominantly theoretical approach, with appropriate attention to the basic skills involved in layering. Promote loyalty to and understanding of the Constitution of the United States. Foster an enlightened devotion to the rule of law. Teach the law from a scholarly and objective point of view, with the largest latitude in the matters being considered. Incorporate religious, ethical, and moral values in the instruction. Produce influential and enduring legal scholarship. Be part of Brigham Young University in all respects, fully participating and contributing in the intellectual and spiritual life of the University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M. ED.in Comparative And International Development Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | Graduate students are exposed to the role of the social, economic, scientific, political, and cultural sectors in educational development. The CIDE program blends theoretical foundations, methodological perspectives and practical experiences related to education, human development, and the sustainability of development initiatives. The program is designed so that with the help of an academic advisor, students take a required core curriculum that examines essential perspectives on education, select courses from those offered within/outside the program core, and supplement these with courses outside the program. The curriculum of CIDE program aims to: Build student’s technical competence in the basic tools of research, analysis, and effective design and implementation of educational policy. Provide academic and professional tract option for students to apply acquired skills and knowledge. Educate students about global educational transformation, including current thinking on educational reform, globalization and resource allocation. Develop their theoretical and practical understanding of key issues relating to education and development both in general terms and with respect to their chosen specialties. Enhance critical awareness of the dynamics of educational change at the local, national and/or international levels. Develop research and evaluation skills which could be applied in their future professional settings. The CIDE program curriculum revolves around the following areas of study: The professional education core; the social context of international education and development; methodology; comparative education and policy planning; electives; and the thesis or non-thesis option. Graduates of the CIDE program pursue careers in teaching, consulting, government and international agencies, such as the IMF, World Bank, bilateral aid agencies such as USAID, private and government foundations, and private non-profit organizations and education advocacy groups. Students will be encouraged and assisted to find relevant internships to advance the initial stages of their careers. The CIDE program is selective and is limited to ten part and full-time students each year. All new students begin the program as a cohort in the summer semester. A geographical balance of students will be sought. | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah's. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF), 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M. ED.in Education Policy and Social Foundations | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | EPSF aims to provide students with structured and principled ways of investigating education and schooling as a process that occurs within broader social, legal, political and cultural contexts. Many factors are: lack of adequate housing and health care, crime, racism, socioeconomic inequality, prejudicial language policies, lack of a viable educational philosophy at policy and implementation levels, family, cultural and religious issues. These and other factors not often considered in the creation of programs for educational reform affect the ability of children to learn, the quality of their education, and ultimately the society whose dynamics schooling both reflects and helps to shape. The EPSF program focuses on exploring the above-mentioned contextual issues in depth, for policy makers and educational leaders cannot responsibly ignore these broader determinants of the quality and equality of educational policies and practices. This is especially true because uninformed strategies for reforming public schools tend to have varying and inequitable, effects on students from differing racial, ethnic, gender, linguistic, economic, religious and ideological backgrounds. It is hoped that EPSF students who already are or will someday be parents, teachers, educational leaders, and policy makers will leave the program with the knowledge, skills and dispositions necessary to make a positive difference in addressing some of the above mentioned problems. With this charge to study education and educational communities and processes, students in EPSF will develop a critical understanding of reform movements. The program prepares students to analyze educational policies and laws to discover fundamental themes, truths, or values they may use to understand education and refine their own sense of mission to seek true educational reform that avoids unproductive fads, and produces lasting improvements in schools that serve all children well. The EPSF emphasis prepares students to utilize educational history as prologue to current issues and reforms and analyzes educational policies to discover both explicit and implicit agendas and intended and unintended consequences. Students will explore what counts as “knowledge”, and what political purposes (and contradictions) any given educational policy embodies. Armed with these approaches to the analysis of education, the EPSF student qua student, teacher and scholar is better able in classroom, school, and society to promote schooling and education that is intellectually, emotionally, and politically liberating for all children. To this end, the curriculum of the EPSF program aims to: Provide students with knowledge of the most important sociological, historical, and philosophical models for understanding how US education has evolved and how it presently operates. Develop research and evaluation skills which could be applied in students’ future professional settings. | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah.F. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF), 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M. ED.in Leadership Preparation Program (LPP) | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | This program has received national recognition for its effectiveness in preparing highly competent administrators. It is a 15-month, full-time program that includes three 12-week internships during which students serve as school administrators four days each week under the guidance of trained mentor principals in both elementary and secondary schools. This program requires candidates to obtain leaves from their school districts. Enrollment in the LPP is limited and is available only to students who live within a three-hour drive (approximately) of the BYU campus. At the completion of this emphasis, students will receive a M.Ed. degree and will be recommended to the State of Utah to receive their Administrative Endorsement. | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah.F. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF), 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M. ED.in School Leadership Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | The School Leadership emphasis is designed for those students who are interested in becoming educational leaders in schools or other settings. This emphasis may be completed through participation in the Leadership Preparation Program (LPP), or Executive School Leadership Program (ESLP). | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah's. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF), 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology | The aim of this program is to prepare students (1) for productive employment at a junior professional level upon receiving an MA degree or (2) for entry into PhD programs in anthropology elsewhere. Only a broad discussion of requirements is provided here. The department sends each prospective graduate student the “Graduate Program Description,” a detailed, step-by-step outline of expectations, requirements, and guidelines for progress through the program. The student must return a form indicating that he or she has read the detailed guidelines, understands them, and agrees to be governed by them. This is done because requirements sometimes change slightly in the interval between submission of catalog copy and publication of the finished catalog. By writing, calling, or visiting the department, prospective students will receive the most up-to-date and appropriate information. | Entrance examination: GRE general test score should be entered on line 11 of part D of the application form. Foreign students who do not have English as a native language must take the TOEFL exam and submit the score (580 minimum) with the application. Prerequisite: undergraduate degree in anthropology. If a student's bachelor's degree is not in anthropology, the student may be admitted provisionally while completing appropriate background course work. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology, 800 SWKT, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3058 | Anthropology's central aims are to describe, interpret and make meaningful human behavior in socio-cultural systems. It also seeks to explain the similarities and differences in human behavior patterns among all peoples and cultures both in present and in the past. social-cultural anthropology studies human society in the present using participant observation interviewing and other techniques to understand life in a single culture, a subculture or a multicultural system. Archaeology explores deep human history and attempts to document and understand the range of cultural patterns practiced by peoples no longer living. Archaeology accomplishes this through methods unique to the field and with techniques borrowed from other disciplines. These goals make archaeology an important part of the anthropological family special skills and interests. | Yes | The university offers resident halls for students for their on-campus housing. They are: Helaman Halls, Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence. High-speed BYU Ethernet connection is provided to each resident. Each room in the residence halls has local telephone and caller ID service included with the housing agreement, but residents are required to provide their own telephone and caller ID unit. Laundry facilities are for residents only. Machines in Helaman Halls, Wyview Park and Foreign Language Student Residence accept Signature Card at a discounted rate. No storage space outside the apartment is provided in Wyview Park. In all of the other housing areas, they can store their trunks or suitcases in the basement of their building, or in the storage rooms of their area. Pianos are located in the basement or lobbies of each hall or in the commons rooms at the Foreign Language Student Residence. Basketball and volleyball facilities are available in each of the On-Campus Housing areas. Sports equipment can be checked out from the central building front desk, or from the hall office. Recycling bins for aluminum, paper and newspaper can be found throughout the complexes. They do not have facilities to recycle glass and plastic at this time. A block of meal passes is allocated each semester/term. Each meal pass allows one entry into the new Cannon Commons. Helaman Halls residents start with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Residents of Heritage Halls, Wyview Park and the Foreign Language Student Residence may select either the partial meal plan option with 100 meal passes per semester (or 50 per term), or they may select the full meal plan option with 275 meal passes per semester (or 130 per term). Additional blocks of 25 meal passes may be purchased at any time for $125. If a student changes from or cancels the Cannon Block of Meals, $4.50 for each remaining meal pass will be credited back to the student's university account. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A in Language Acquisition and Teaching Arabic | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies | The Language Acquisition and Teaching MA program offers professional preparation to students seeking careers in applied linguistics, foreign language education, computer–assisted language learning and instruction, and other related areas. Students become familiar with current theories of second language acquisition and develop basic skills in applying that knowledge to teaching, testing, and classroom–oriented research in their language of specialization. | The program is flexible, with emphases varying according to students’ interests and faculty members’ expertise. It is ideally suited to the needs of the following types of students: Students who have completed undergraduate majors in foreign languages, applied linguistics, or related fields, and who are preparing for careers in academic ettings.Foreign language teachers who wish to further their professional education and acquire more specialized competency in their fields. Students seeking the necessary preparation for advanced research and work in the field of high–technology applications to language learning and instruction. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies, 3086 JFSB , Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2837 | The mission of the Center for Language Studies is to help learners acquire the advanced language and cultural skills they will need to pursue global careers in any of the University’s academic disciplines. Motivation In pursuing the CLS mission, we are motivated by a conviction that: Advanced language learning brings advanced cultural insights, increases global understanding, and reveals the limitations of any monolingual view of the world. Knowledge of more than one language increases language awareness and sensitivity, promotes life-long learning, and is a hallmark of the educated person. The second language skills of BYU’s faculty and students are a core BYU competency. (See "The Core Competence of the Corporation," C.K. Prahalad and Gary Hamel in Harvard Business Review. May-June 1990, p 83.) They provide students with "access to a wide variety of markets." They "make a significant contribution to the perceived customer benefits" of hiring BYU graduates. They would "be difficult for competitors [other universities] to imitate." | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A in Language Acquisition and Teaching Chinese | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies | The Language Acquisition and Teaching MA program offers professional preparation to students seeking careers in applied linguistics, foreign language education, computer–assisted language learning and instruction, and other related areas. Students become familiar with current theories of second language acquisition and develop basic skills in applying that knowledge to teaching, testing, and classroom–oriented research in their language of specialization. | The program is flexible, with emphases varying according to students’ interests and faculty members’ expertise. It is ideally suited to the needs of the following types of students: Students who have completed undergraduate majors in foreign languages, applied linguistics, or related fields, and who are preparing for careers in academic settings.Foreign language teachers who wish to further their professional education and acquire more specialized competency in their fields. Students seeking the necessary preparation for advanced research and work in the field of high–technology applications to language learning and instruction. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies, 3086 JFSB , Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2837 | The mission of the Center for Language Studies is to help learners acquire the advanced language and cultural skills they will need to pursue global careers in any of the University’s academic disciplines. Motivation In pursuing the CLS mission, we are motivated by a conviction that: Advanced language learning brings advanced cultural insights, increases global understanding, and reveals the limitations of any monolingual view of the world. Knowledge of more than one language increases language awareness and sensitivity, promotes life-long learning, and is a hallmark of the educated person. The second language skills of BYU’s faculty and students are a core BYU competency. (See "The Core Competence of the Corporation," C.K. Prahalad and Gary Hamel in Harvard Business Review. May-June 1990, p 83.) They provide students with "access to a wide variety of markets." They "make a significant contribution to the perceived customer benefits" of hiring BYU graduates. They would "be difficult for competitors [other universities] to imitate." | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A in Language Acquisition and Teaching German | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies | The Language Acquisition and Teaching MA program offers professional preparation to students seeking careers in applied linguistics, foreign language education, computer–assisted language learning and instruction, and other related areas. Students become familiar with current theories of second language acquisition and develop basic skills in applying that knowledge to teaching, testing, and classroom–oriented research in their language of specialization. | The program is flexible, with emphases varying according to students’ interests and faculty members’ expertise. It is ideally suited to the needs of the following types of students: Students who have completed undergraduate majors in foreign languages, applied linguistics, or related fields, and who are preparing for careers in academic settings.Foreign language teachers who wish to further their professional education and acquire more specialized competency in their fields. Students seeking the necessary preparation for advanced research and work in the field of high–technology applications to language learning and instruction. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies, 3086 JFSB , Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2837 | The mission of the Center for Language Studies is to help learners acquire the advanced language and cultural skills they will need to pursue global careers in any of the University’s academic disciplines. Motivation In pursuing the CLS mission, we are motivated by a conviction that: Advanced language learning brings advanced cultural insights, increases global understanding, and reveals the limitations of any monolingual view of the world. Knowledge of more than one language increases language awareness and sensitivity, promotes life-long learning, and is a hallmark of the educated person. The second language skills of BYU’s faculty and students are a core BYU competency. (See "The Core Competence of the Corporation," C.K. Prahalad and Gary Hamel in Harvard Business Review. May-June 1990, p 83.) They provide students with "access to a wide variety of markets." They "make a significant contribution to the perceived customer benefits" of hiring BYU graduates. They would "be difficult for competitors [other universities] to imitate." | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A in Language Acquisition and Teaching Japanese or Russian | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies | The Language Acquisition and Teaching MA program offers professional preparation to students seeking careers in applied linguistics, foreign language education, computer–assisted language learning and instruction, and other related areas. Students become familiar with current theories of second language acquisition and develop basic skills in applying that knowledge to teaching, testing, and classroom–oriented research in their language of specialization. | The program is flexible, with emphases varying according to students’ interests and faculty members’ expertise. It is ideally suited to the needs of the following types of students: Students who have completed undergraduate majors in foreign languages, applied linguistics, or related fields, and who are preparing for careers in academic settings.Foreign language teachers who wish to further their professional education and acquire more specialized competency in their fields. Students seeking the necessary preparation for advanced research and work in the field of high–technology applications to language learning and instruction | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies | College of Humanities, Center for Language Studies, 3086 JFSB , Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2837 | The mission of the Center for Language Studies is to help learners acquire the advanced language and cultural skills they will need to pursue global careers in any of the University’s academic disciplines. Motivation In pursuing the CLS mission, we are motivated by a conviction that: Advanced language learning brings advanced cultural insights, increases global understanding, and reveals the limitations of any monolingual view of the world. Knowledge of more than one language increases language awareness and sensitivity, promotes life-long learning, and is a hallmark of the educated person. The second language skills of BYU’s faculty and students are a core BYU competency. (See "The Core Competence of the Corporation," C.K. Prahalad and Gary Hamel in Harvard Business Review. May-June 1990, p 83.) They provide students with "access to a wide variety of markets." They "make a significant contribution to the perceived customer benefits" of hiring BYU graduates. They would "be difficult for competitors [other universities] to imitate." | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | M.A in Teacher Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | The Masters programs in Teacher Education prepare individuals to become education specialists. The MEd program emphasizes school practices in the educational process while the MA program emphasizes educational research. The MA culminates in the writing of a research thesis suitable for publication. The MEd culminates in the writing of an action research project. | Complete admissions procedures and meet the entrance requirements of the University Graduate School. b. Provide evidence of successful teaching experience as a certified teacher in a self-contained elementary school classroom for a minimum of one year. c. Have a grade point average of 3.25 or above for the last 60 semester hours of university course work. d. Obtain acceptable scores on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Scores (not more than five years old) must be submitted to the office of Graduate Studies before the application deadline. To meet deadlines, take the GRE at least 3 months prior to application for graduate work. (Available at major university testing centers.) e. Applications for acceptance are evaluated by the Teacher Education Graduate Faculty Admissions Committee. Admission is based on faculty approval and available departmental resources. Official notification of acceptance or denial is given by the University Graduate Office. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, 201 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4077 | We believe that our most important responsibility as teacher educators is the growth and development of children and youth. We contribute to their development by preparing competent caring, and reflective teachers. This is our primary mission in Teacher Education at Brigham Young University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA in Art Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Visual Arts | Additional requirements: Slide portfolio of recent work, One or two written papers , Baccalaureate degree from an accredited art institution , Certification to teach in public schools, Two years' teaching experience. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Visual Arts | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Visual Arts, E-509 HFAC , Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4266 | With a curriculum emphasizing both tradition and innovation, the Department of Visual Arts seeks to prepare students for professions in the visual arts and to enrich others with an appreciation of art and design. The student exposed to the visual arts moves closer to becoming a whole person. We know from long experience that no one can claim to be truly educated who lacks basic knowledge and skills in the arts . To better serve students, the Departments of Art and Design merged in 1995 to become the Department of Visual Arts. By joining faculties and resources, the department more effectively prepares its graduates for a technologically advanced environment. A common core of classes exposes freshman art and design majors to the department's 10 degree programs prior to their declaring a specific program major. The core curriculum accommodates the wide variety of artistic and scholarly skills of entering students and allows flexibility in choosing individual program direction. Moreover, it enables new students to acquire a basic and broad understanding of the visual arts before concentrating on a specific discipline. The visual arts programs encompass the rigorous academics of the university while maintaining small, intensive classes, each aligned with the best practices and most current philosophies in its field combination ensuring a strong preparation for its students. The Department of Visual Arts places great value on the spiritual aspects of creativity and prepares students to excel in their areas of emphasis in order to contribute to society as artists, designers, teachers, scholars, and inspired members of the Church. The department is looking for students who are caring, creative, and capable to relate eternal values to their finest professional practices. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA in Mathematics Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Through the experiences this program offers, graduate students will extend their own understanding of mathematics and deepen their understanding of learners’ mathematical thinking. Our department values close, detailed mentoring of each graduate student as an active member of the scholarly community—a community devoted to exploration and inquiry into the learning and teaching of mathematics. Our program emphasizes interactions with faculty in course work that (1) allows students to explore new mathematical understanding in both personal and social contexts; (2) immerses students deeply in exploration, inquiry, analysis and exposition; and (3) familiarizes students with the ever-expanding body of research literature on learning and teaching mathematics and with prevailing research methodologies. The cumulative experiences of our program prepare graduates to enter top mathematics education doctoral programs, to take on important leadership roles in school mathematics education communities, and to return to classrooms better equipped to teach lessons that are informed by students’ mathematical thinking. | Required Entrance Examinations: GRE general test. Every international applicant whose native language is not English is required to submit Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores. •Academic Prerequisite: BS or BA in Mathematics Education or academic credentials at least equivalent (as determined by the Department of Mathematics Education). •Certification Prerequisite: A recognized state teacher certification. (Note: Work required to meet the certification requirement may not be counted as part of the graduate program.) •Advisement: The graduate coordinator is an entering student’s academic sponsor (preliminary advisor). Entering students should contact the graduate coordinator early to discuss initial coursework and program plans. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 292 TMCB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2061 | Most people who train in mathematics do not end up as academic mathematicians, although many do end up in academics. Mathematics is possibly the ideal training for any career in science, medicine, law, or business. It teaches rigorous thought, problem solving, and creativity. The Department of Mathematics prepares the students to achieve the goals. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA in Theatre Arts Studies | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Theatre and Media Arts | The study of theatre and media arts has a long history here at Brigham Young University. It began as Elocutionary work in the late 1800s contributing eventually to the formation of the Dramatic Arts department in the newly established College of Fine Arts in 1925 under President Franklin S. Harris. Since its completion in 1964, the Harris Fine Arts Center has housed our department, honoring Franklin S. Harris for his love and devotion to the arts. Within the graduate program in Theatre and Media Arts we share that same love and devotion by seeking excellence in the study and practice of theatre and film. This MA degree stresses rigorous scholarship, high artistic standards, and Christ-like behavior. Students working towards a degree in Theatre and Media Arts will have numerous opportunities to gain experience in theatre and film performance and production in areas tailored to fit their desired career goals (see areas of interest below).With eight main-stage plays produced each academic year, students will have ample opportunity to gain hands-on experience with the production process. Perhaps most importantly, a degree in Theatre Arts Studies will give students the skills to more critically analyze play texts and texts in performance. | All students wishing to apply for an MA in Theatre and Media Arts must have an acceptable undergraduate background in theatre arts or media arts. Additionally, students will be expected to provide: GRE general test score (subject to review), samples of written work demonstrating graduate capacity to function at acceptable graduate student entry level. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Theatre and Media Arts | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Theatre and Media Arts, D-581 Harris Fine Arts Center (HFAC), Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 0654 | The two disciplines of Theatre and Media Arts have a rich history at Brigham Young University.Theatre has been taught at Brigham Young University since 1901, when Miriam Nelke first began teaching courses in literary interpretation, Shakespeare, and oral expression.Brigham Young was also one of the first universities to create a formal department for the production of motion pictures in 1953.In fact, BYU President Ernest L. Wilkinson boasted in 1963 that BYU was one of only two universities in the nation with a film production department (the other being the University of Southern California).In 1974, the Theatre and Media Arts departments were merged into one, forming a union which has fostered a healthy collaboration between these two artistic disciplines for over thirty years.Today, the department services more than 450 students and has 21 full-time and 54 part-time faculty members.Theatre students from our department have performed in Broadway casts of Mama Mia!, Les Miserable, Miss Saigon, Thoroughly Modern Millie and 42nd Street.Additionally, students have been with the Broadway national tours of Cats, Fosse, Footloose, Titanic, Sunset Boulevard, and Annie Get Your Gun.Graduates have also worked with the Boston Ballet, Milwaukee Repertory Theatre, and the Sacramento Ballet. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA with Specialization in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | MA with specialization in Music Education. This program offers the teacher/scholar in music education an opportunity to complete an experimental or descriptive research thesis that will add to music education theory or inform current pedagogical practice. Appropriate issues for controlled research investigation include—but are not limited to—learning theory, brain research as it applies to music education theory and practice, and issues arising from classroom and ensemble teaching. | The Master of Arts degree (MA) is offered with music education and musicology specializations. The prerequisite for a specialization in music, education is a bachelor’s degree in music education with competency, equivalent to requirements of that degree at Brigham Young University. The prerequisite for a specialization in musicology is either a BM or BA in music. A student who has academic deficiencies may be required to complete additional prerequisite courses during work for the MA. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music, C-550 HFAC, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 8903 | The Brigham Young University School of Music assists individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life through the study of music. We embrace the Aims of a BYU Education to be spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, and character building, leading students to lifelong learning and service. As faculty members, administrators, and staff, we help our students to think clearly about diverse kinds of music and to create, perform, and teach music with excellence. We explore music within the context of a broad liberal arts education and religious instruction, infusing the lives of students with scholarly and creative experience. We believe our voice is central in bringing the highest artistic and scholarly contributions to the world while reflecting the ideals of revealed truth. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MA with Specialization in Musicology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | MA with specialization in Musicology. This program develops those who, as teachers and scholars, will promote musical understanding and appreciation for the arts and add to the body of historical and analytical publication that has increased understanding of the history, practice, sociology, and aesthetics of the cultural heritage of Western, and to a lesser degree, non-Western music. Their work should also increase general awareness of the cultural and historical diversity represented in concert programs and recordings. | The Master of Arts degree (MA) is offered with music education and musicology specializations. The prerequisite for a specialization in music, education is a bachelor’s degree in music education with competency, equivalent to requirements of that degree at Brigham Young University. The prerequisite for a specialization in musicology is either a BM or BA in music. A student who has academic deficiencies may be required to complete additional prerequisite courses during work for the MA. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music, C-550 HFAC, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 8903 | The Brigham Young University School of Music assists individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life through the study of music. We embrace the Aims of a BYU Education to be spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, and character building, leading students to lifelong learning and service. As faculty members, administrators, and staff, we help our students to think clearly about diverse kinds of music and to create, perform, and teach music with excellence. We explore music within the context of a broad liberal arts education and religious instruction, infusing the lives of students with scholarly and creative experience. We believe our voice is central in bringing the highest artistic and scholarly contributions to the world while reflecting the ideals of revealed truth. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MFA in Production Design | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Theatre and Media Arts | The MFA degree in Production Design is tailored with a balance between theatre studies, costume history and applied costume design theory. This three-year program offers students rounded training in collaboration, garment construction, drawing/painting skills, computer technology and related hands-on education in patterning, crafts, historical styles, makeup and shop management options. The MFA degree stresses rigorous scholarship, creative excellence, high artistic standards, and Christ-like behavior. The BYU campus offers productions in theatre, film, television, dance and touring companies. This means that graduate students have the opportunity to design for varying venues as both assistant and full designers. There are also paid professional positions in costume construction, crafts and teaching available to candidates while in the program. With such a unique blend of design prospects, each student works through a personalized schedule of classes under the guidance of his or her MFA committee. | Prerequisites: acceptable undergraduate background in theatre or media arts competence in computer use---specifically in word processing and basic Internet usage skills in library research, including use of computer aided research resources TMA 112, 123, 267, 236, 201,202, 262, 265a, 265b, 362, 395, 396, 462 or equivalent courses. Recommended: 263, 264 or equivalent courses. Such equivalencies can be determined through interview and portfolio review. Students CAN be accepted into the degree program on PROBATIONAL status with a requirement to fulfill any deficiencies within the first two semesters on campus. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Theatre and Media Arts | College of Fine Arts and Communication, Department of Theatre and Media Arts, D-581 Harris Fine Arts Center (HFAC), Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 0654 | The two disciplines of Theatre and Media Arts have a rich history at Brigham Young University.Theatre has been taught at Brigham Young University since 1901, when Miriam Nelke first began teaching courses in literary interpretation, Shakespeare, and oral expression.Brigham Young was also one of the first universities to create a formal department for the production of motion pictures in 1953.In fact, BYU President Ernest L. Wilkinson boasted in 1963 that BYU was one of only two universities in the nation with a film production department (the other being the University of Southern California).In 1974, the Theatre and Media Arts departments were merged into one, forming a union which has fostered a healthy collaboration between these two artistic disciplines for over thirty years.Today, the department services more than 450 students and has 21 full-time and 54 part-time faculty members.Theatre students from our department have performed in Broadway casts of Mama Mia!, Les Miserable, Miss Saigon, Thoroughly Modern Millie and 42nd Street.Additionally, students have been with the Broadway national tours of Cats, Fosse, Footloose, Titanic, Sunset Boulevard, and Annie Get Your Gun.Graduates have also worked with the Boston Ballet, Milwaukee Repertory Theatre, and the Sacramento Ballet. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MM with Specialization in Composition | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | MM with specialization in Composition. The purpose of this specialization is to produce graduates who are prepared to make a significant contribution to the art form, both as composers and as teacher/scholars in composition and theory, providing aesthetic enrichment to those they will serve. Students who receive an MM in Composition should be able to: Demonstrate a basic knowledge of music library resource materials. Understand how aesthetics applies to their discipline. Articulate the historical aspects of music, particularly that of the modern era. Compose with advanced skill and techniques. Create a large-scale composition for their final project. Prepare a recital of their original works. | The Master of Music degree (MM) is offered with composition, conducting, music education, and performance specializations. A performance specialization is available in voice, piano, organ, or an orchestral instrument. The basic prerequisite for a specialization in composition, music education, conducting, or performance is a bachelor’s degree with an emphasis in the respective specialization equivalent to the same degree at Brigham Young University. A student who has academic deficiencies may be required to complete additional prerequisite courses during work for the MM. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music, C-550 HFAC, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 8903 | The Brigham Young University School of Music assists individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life through the study of music. We embrace the Aims of a BYU Education to be spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, and character building, leading students to lifelong learning and service. As faculty members, administrators, and staff, we help our students to think clearly about diverse kinds of music and to create, perform, and teach music with excellence. We explore music within the context of a broad liberal arts education and religious instruction, infusing the lives of students with scholarly and creative experience. We believe our voice is central in bringing the highest artistic and scholarly contributions to the world while reflecting the ideals of revealed truth. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MM with Specialization in Conducting | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | MM with specialization in Conducting - Students in this program develop advanced, personal conducting skills and techniques that are precise and suited to a variety of musical needs; attain confidence, poise and clarity with the baton; learn effective rehearsal techniques; and become familiar with a variety of instrumental and choral scores representing the repertoire of various stylistic periods, including sacred and secular genres. Students learn to convey through gesture music’s power, gentleness, directness, and subtlety to both the performer and audience. Students also select for and bring to the community the great masterpieces of the instrumental and choral literature. Students who complete the MM in Conducting will be able to: analyze a score in terms of phrasing structure, key centers, dynamics, articulation, and text. demonstrate the techniques required to lead an effective, efficient rehearsal, demonstrate the conducting techniques required for precision in rehearsal and performance of a score, conduct with convincing sense of dynamic, expressive line, explain the various genres of choral music and trace developments as genres pass through various stylistic periods in music history, give a substantial list of choral pieces or works by the major composers from each stylistic period, demonstrate skills for imaginative, convincing programming. | The Master of Music degree (MM) is offered with composition, conducting, music education, and performance specializations. A performance specialization is available in voice, piano, organ, or an orchestral instrument. The basic prerequisite for a specialization in composition, music education, conducting, or performance is a bachelor’s degree with an emphasis in the respective specialization equivalent to the same degree at Brigham Young University. A student who has academic deficiencies may be required to complete additional prerequisite courses during work for the MM. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music, C-550 HFAC, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 8903 | The Brigham Young University School of Music assists individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life through the study of music. We embrace the Aims of a BYU Education to be spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, and character building, leading students to lifelong learning and service. As faculty members, administrators, and staff, we help our students to think clearly about diverse kinds of music and to create, perform, and teach music with excellence. We explore music within the context of a broad liberal arts education and religious instruction, infusing the lives of students with scholarly and creative experience. We believe our voice is central in bringing the highest artistic and scholarly contributions to the world while reflecting the ideals of revealed truth. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MM with Specialization in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | MM with specialization in Music Education- The focus of this program is to expand the knowledge, skills, and vision of music educators. This will prepare them as champions of musical excellence, providing stimulating and satisfying musical experiences for their students, serving as exemplars to others in the profession, and being strong advocates for the arts in their communities. (Available to public school teachers who can enroll summers only.) Students receiving the MM in Music Education will be able to: Demonstrate competence as music practitioners, leaders, instructors, and creators in a manner grounded in gospel principles. Demonstrate mastery of a core of advanced level music literacy learning by way of authentic music performance applications. Continue their graduate education (if desired) at the doctoral level. Articulate their own education philosophy, and the historical, aesthetic, and spiritual foundations of music education. Apply music education research theories to their teaching. Show development in an area of personal professional improvement. | The Master of Music degree (MM) is offered with composition, conducting, music education, and performance specializations. A performance specialization is available in voice, piano, organ, or an orchestral instrument. The basic prerequisite for a specialization in composition, music education, conducting, or performance is a bachelor’s degree with an emphasis in the respective specialization equivalent to the same degree at Brigham Young University. A student who has academic deficiencies may be required to complete additional prerequisite courses during work for the MM. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music, C-550 HFAC, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 8903 | The Brigham Young University School of Music assists individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life through the study of music. We embrace the Aims of a BYU Education to be spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, and character building, leading students to lifelong learning and service. As faculty members, administrators, and staff, we help our students to think clearly about diverse kinds of music and to create, perform, and teach music with excellence. We explore music within the context of a broad liberal arts education and religious instruction, infusing the lives of students with scholarly and creative experience. We believe our voice is central in bringing the highest artistic and scholarly contributions to the world while reflecting the ideals of revealed truth. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MM with Specialization in Performance | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | MM with specialization in Performance- The intent of this specialization is to prepare students with outstanding performance potential to be competitive in performance and teaching careers and advocates for the arts in their communities. They will help meet the need for skilled performers of solo and small and large ensemble music, and the demand for excellent studio teachers in schools and communities. Students who receive an MM in Performance will be able to: Increase their skill level on their instrument as a soloist. Grow as a musician in chamber groups and large ensembles. Extend depth of teaching skills from further exposure to pedagogical study. Connect their performance experience to academic research that is directly related to their recital and other performance literature. | The Master of Music degree (MM) is offered with composition, conducting, music education, and performance specializations. A performance specialization is available in voice, piano, organ, or an orchestral instrument. The basic prerequisite for a specialization in composition, music education, conducting, or performance is a bachelor’s degree with an emphasis in the respective specialization equivalent to the same degree at Brigham Young University. A student who has academic deficiencies may be required to complete additional prerequisite courses during work for the MM. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music | College of Fine Arts and Communication, School of Music, C-550 HFAC, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 8903 | The Brigham Young University School of Music assists individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life through the study of music. We embrace the Aims of a BYU Education to be spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, and character building, leading students to lifelong learning and service. As faculty members, administrators, and staff, we help our students to think clearly about diverse kinds of music and to create, perform, and teach music with excellence. We explore music within the context of a broad liberal arts education and religious instruction, infusing the lives of students with scholarly and creative experience. We believe our voice is central in bringing the highest artistic and scholarly contributions to the world while reflecting the ideals of revealed truth. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MPH Master of Public Health | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Health Science | MPH Program Goals, Objectives and Targets: The MPH program aims to attain its mission through coordinated efforts to address five broad goals: Goal 1. Student Preparation: Prepare students to enter the public health workforce with relevant public health and health promotion knowledge, competencies, and skills. Goal 2. Quality Student body: Select and train a high quality, diverse MPH student body.Goal 3. Faculty Expertise: Ensure that the MPH faculty demonstrate appropriate expertise through their public health knowledge, academic performance, and public health experience and research interests. Goal 4. Advance Public Health Knowledge: Develop an academic public health program whose faculty conduct and publish peer-reviewed public health research reflecting the mission statement, and provide ample opportunity for student participation. Goal 5. Quality Curriculum: Ensure continuous curricular improvement based on internal and external stakeholder’s input. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Health Science | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Health Science, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The Department of Health Science was officially organized in 1955. Since then the Department has prepared students for professional careers in Health Science. The Department currently offers undergraduate degree programs in Community Health Education and School Health. The curricula of the undergraduate programs are guided primarily by three forces: (1) guidelines established by the Society for Public Health Education and the American School Health Association; (2) The National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education standards; and (3) The Competency-Based Framework for Professional Development of Certified Health Education Specialists. The Master of Public Health (MPH) program was instituted in 2002. Given the mission and resources of BYU, a solid MPH in community health education is available, with an emphasis in global health promotion. The program is currently accredited by the Council on Education of Public Health and is a recognized member of the Council of Accredited MPH Programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS Biological Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Biology | The focus of the Biological Science Education Master’s degree integrates advanced biological science study with research in teaching and learning. The students in our program have the opportunity to interact with biological researchers and education researchers to design a program of study that meets their individual goals. Research projects include in-depth studies on inquiry teaching practices, obstacles that inhibit science education for all students, improvements in curriculum and student. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Biology, 401 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 0090 | The Department of Biology is one of five departments in the College of Life Sciences. Within the department there are approximately 25 full-time faculty and staff members. Graduate degrees at the MS-level are offered in Biology and Biological Science Education. An extended MS program in Biological Science Education will allow students to graduate with teaching certification. A degree in Biology is offered at the PhD level. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS Communication Disorders | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Communication Disorders | The mission of the Department of Communication Disorders is to advance knowledge and learning in science and clinical practice through research, teaching, and clinical service. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Communication Disorders | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Communication Disorders, 136 TLRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4318 | The mission of the Department of Communication Disorders is to advance knowledge and learning in science and clinical practice through research, teaching, and clinical service. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS Exercise Science with Athletic Training Specialization | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | This program is designed to build upon the theoretical and clinical competencies developed as an undergraduate preparing for the NATABOC certification examination. It allows students to further develop theoretical knowledge and linical skills, become comfortable with and critically evaluate current athletic training-related literature, and conduct clinically relevant athletic training research. This is a two year program. |
Academic Requirements: A. Fulfill all requirements for admission to the BYU graduate school. (See the current University Catalog.) B. NATABOC certified or be eligible to become certified. C. Have a minimum GPA of 3.0 for the last 60 semester hours of undergraduate academic work. D. Achieve satisfactory scores on the GRE. E. Submit a letter of intent which includes the following: NOTE: Place “LETTER OF INTENT” at the top of your letter. 1. Your preparation and background for the program to which you are applying. 2. The special emphasis which you hope to pursue in your program. 3. The basic reasons for your choice of career. 4. Special qualities and talents that would enhance success in your particular career. 5. Research interests, including faculty you would like to do research with. 6. Your professional goals. 7. Your particular reasons for applying to Brigham Young University. 8. The specific duration for accomplishing your graduate degree. 9. (Optional) Any specific circumstances or objectives you wish to have taken into consideration. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The mission of the Department of Exercise Sciences is to assist individualsin their quest for perfection and Eternal Life, emphasizing the truth that "the human body is sacred, the veritable tabernacle of the divine spirit."Department Goals : Nurture faith in God and the practice of Christian principles, Prepare leaders to serve in ways that foster dignity and respect for the body, mind and spirit, Provide experiences that stimulate the acquisition and enjoyment of activities that promote health and happiness, Encourage life-long learning and advance the body of knowledge unique to the disciplines. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS Integrative Biology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Biology | The Integrative Biology Masters degree is designed to provide focused training in addressing biological problems in the context of advanced theory and research tools, such as phylogenetics, ecosystem dynamics, comparative DNA sequencing, and biostatistics, that are applicable to ecology and organismal biology. Many students will find this training ideal for competitive job placement. For example, public or private agencies and organizations seek individuals that approach problems. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Biology, 401 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 0090 | The Department of Biology is one of five departments in the College of Life Sciences. Within the department there are approximately 25 full-time faculty and staff members. Graduate degrees at the MS-level are offered in Biology and Biological Science Education. An extended MS program in Biological Science Education will allow students to graduate with teaching certification. A degree in Biology is offered at the PhD level. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Agronomy | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | Pursuit of the MS degree in agronomy provides students with research and education opportunities in environmental protection and remediation and in plant growth and physiology. Students will select graduate course work in soil science, biology, and environmentally related courses taught in departments across the campus. Those completing program requirements will be well prepared for employment in environmental and agricultural consulting, teaching at the junior college level, and continued graduate studies for the PhD. Their research and teaching interests include: plant growth under environmental stress, invasive species, plant physiology, urban landscape environments, bioremediation of contaminated soils and water, and both modern and ancient agricultural environments. | Acceptance should be based on a balanced consideration of several areas of information, with strong support in one area offsetting weaker support in other areas. Faculty are encouraged to review the files of potential graduate students and to communicate directly with candidates regarding research opportunities. Faculty should feel their opinions regarding a student’s candidacy will be welcomed by the Department’s Graduate Committee. Pursuant to this, a Graduate Student Review Sheet will be prepared for each candidate and space provided for comments by faculty. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, 275 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2760 | These guidelines have been prepared for the graduate student in Plant and Wildlife Sciences and must be used in conjunction with those contained in the BYU Graduate Handbook and the graduate section of the General Catalog. The graduate student must keep current on changes made each year in the graduate program at both the Department and the University level. The ultimate responsibility for complying with all Department and University requirements rests with the student. Forms for requesting exceptions to Graduate policy are available in the Graduate Secretary's office (271 WIDB). Petitions must be signed by the Chair of the Advisory Committee, Department Graduate Coordinator, Department Chair, and Dean and sent to the Office of Graduate Studies. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, with outstanding faculty, students, and support staff, is among the leading departments in research at BYU. It has had remarkable success in many areas including calorimetric, macro cycles, cancer therapy, and chromatography. One of the reasons for our research progress is highly qualified graduate students. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, C100 BNSN (Benson Science Building), Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3667 | Located in the heart of the Rocky Mountains, Brigham Young University has had a long tradition of excellence from its beginning in 1875 as Brigham Young Academy. The university has grown to an enrollment of 30,000 full-time students, one of the largest private universities in the United States. Students come to BYU from all 50 states and more than 100 foreign countries. The Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, with outstanding faculty, students, and support staff, is among the leading departments in research at BYU. It has had remarkable success in many areas including calorimetric, macro cycles, cancer therapy, and chromatography. One of the reasons for our research progress is highly qualified graduate students.BYU is sponsored and supported by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and welcomes students of all faiths who agree to live by the Church's high standards of moral integrity and excellence in academic scholarship and who will abstain from tobacco, alcohol, and other harmful substances. Admission to the university is nondiscriminatory, and students are admitted on a competitive basis without regard to sex, race, creed, religion, or disability, if they meet academic requirements and agree to abide by the university's standards of conduct. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, with outstanding faculty, students, and support staff, is among the leading departments in research at BYU. It has had remarkable success in many areas including calorimetric, macro cycles, cancer therapy, and chromatography. One of the reasons for our research progress is highly qualified graduate students. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, C100 BNSN (Benson Science Building), Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3667 | Located in the heart of the Rocky Mountains, Brigham Young University has had a long tradition of excellence from its beginning in 1875 as Brigham Young Academy. The university has grown to an enrollment of 30,000 full-time students, one of the largest private universities in the United States. Students come to BYU from all 50 states and more than 100 foreign countries. The Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, with outstanding faculty, students, and support staff, is among the leading departments in research at BYU. It has had remarkable success in many areas including calorimetric, macro cycles, cancer therapy, and chromatography. One of the reasons for our research progress is highly qualified graduate students.BYU is sponsored and supported by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and welcomes students of all faiths who agree to live by the Church's high standards of moral integrity and excellence in academic scholarship and who will abstain from tobacco, alcohol, and other harmful substances. Admission to the university is nondiscriminatory, and students are admitted on a competitive basis without regard to sex, race, creed, religion, or disability, if they meet academic requirements and agree to abide by the university's standards of conduct. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Computer Science | Students in the Master of Science program in the Computer Science Department are prepared to be technical problem solvers, are competent in the state of the art, and have mastered a particular aspect of Computer Science. All students are active in at least one of the Department’s research labs and work closely with a faculty advisor in the completion of their M.S. thesis. Consequently, they are able to engage in further research where computers will have a significant impact. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Computer Science, 3361 TMCB PO Box 26576, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3027 | Dr. Sean Warnick, (shown to the right with student Nigh Tran) Assistant Professor in the Computer Science Department at Brigham Young University, was selected as the 2008 Distinguished Visiting Professor (DVP) by the National Security Agency (NSA) this week. The position, administered by the NSA Enterprise Operations Research, Modeling, and Simulation (OR/MandS) Group, is highly competitive and is offered to a professor with a distinguished record in both decision science applications and student mentoring.“We first heard of Dr. Warnock's work from a colleague at MITRE Corporation who tipped us off to BYU and what they are doing there with student mentoring,” said Francine Goode, Director of the Summer Program for Operations Research Technology (SPORT). “Visiting Warnick’s research group, the Information and Decision Algorithms Laboratories (Idea Labs) last fall, I could tell it is an amazing environment where students from various disciplines come together to work on decision problems arising in a variety of areas, from microbiology to economics.” | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Earth Science Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology | This degree program is designed to prepare students for careers in secondary education, or to assist teachers to obtain additional training in the earth sciences. Required courses are: Geol 502, 697R (approved by graduate committee), ScEd 531; 6-9 hours from Geol 411, 435, 440, 445, 451, 460, 480; 6 hours from IS 551, 564, 620, 652, 661, ScEd 601. Any additional graduate courses in geology approved by graduate committee may be taken to satisfy remainder of 24 course work hours. | Application requirements: minimum required GPA is 3.0 overall and in all physical sciences (mathematics, chemistry, physics) as well as in geology courses. Entrance examination: GRE general test. GRE scores must be received in the Geology Department before application for admission will be considered. Prerequisite: Baccalaureate degree. Arrangements to satisfy undergraduate deficiencies will be made in consultation with graduate coordinator. Admission Forms: Admission forms may be requested from either the Department of Geology or from the Graduate School | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology, S-389 ESC, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3918 | Dr. Sean Warnick, (shown to the right with student Nigh Tran) Assistant Professor in the Computer Science Department at Brigham Young University, was selected as the 2008 Distinguished Visiting Professor (DVP) by the National Security Agency (NSA) this week. The position, administered by the NSA Enterprise Operations Research, Modeling, and Simulation (OR/MandS) Group, is highly competitive and is offered to a professor with a distinguished record in both decision science applications and student mentoring.“We first heard of Dr. Warnock's work from a colleague at MITRE Corporation who tipped us off to BYU and what they are doing there with student mentoring,” said Francine Goode, Director of the Summer Program for Operations Research Technology (SPORT). “Visiting Warnick’s research group, the Information and Decision Algorithms Laboratories (Idea Labs) last fall, I could tell it is an amazing environment where students from various disciplines come together to work on decision problems arising in a variety of areas, from microbiology to economics.” | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Environmental Geology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology | Graduates in this program mostly find careers with either government agencies or environmental consulting firms. The courses required are: Geol 635, 636, 637; 12 hours from Geol 411, 435, 436, 521, 559, 560, 590R (approved by graduate committee), AgHrt 511, ChEn 411, CEEn 545, 550, 555, 641, 654, Hlth 454. Recommended: Stat 501, 502. | Application requirements: minimum required GPA is 3.0 overall and in all physical sciences (mathematics, chemistry, physics) as well as in geology courses. Entrance examination: GRE general test. GRE scores must be received in the Geology Department before application for admission will be considered. Prerequisite: Baccalaureate degree. Arrangements to satisfy undergraduate deficiencies will be made in consultation with graduate coordinator. Admission Forms: Admission forms may be requested from either the Department of Geology or from the Graduate School | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology, S-389 ESC, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3918 | Dr. Sean Warnick, (shown to the right with student Nigh Tran) Assistant Professor in the Computer Science Department at Brigham Young University, was selected as the 2008 Distinguished Visiting Professor (DVP) by the National Security Agency (NSA) this week. The position, administered by the NSA Enterprise Operations Research, Modeling, and Simulation (OR/MandS) Group, is highly competitive and is offered to a professor with a distinguished record in both decision science applications and student mentoring.“We first heard of Dr. Warnock's work from a colleague at MITRE Corporation who tipped us off to BYU and what they are doing there with student mentoring,” said Francine Goode, Director of the Summer Program for Operations Research Technology (SPORT). “Visiting Warnick’s research group, the Information and Decision Algorithms Laboratories (Idea Labs) last fall, I could tell it is an amazing environment where students from various disciplines come together to work on decision problems arising in a variety of areas, from microbiology to economics.” | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Food Science | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, and Food Science | The Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science Department provides course work and research experience in the disciplines of food science and nutritional science. A commitment to excellence is expected and the realization of graduate potential is pursued. The graduate programs offered in the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science develop students' abilities to use scientific thought processes. Students are encouraged by precept and example to be firmly founded in the discipline and competent to enter the food industry, a health-related industry, or further graduate training. | Undergraduate major in nutrition, dietetics, biochemistry, or closely related field International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, andFood Science | College of Life Sciences, Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, andFood Science, S-221 ESC, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3912 | The Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science Department provides course work and research experience in the disciplines of food science and nutritional science. A commitment to excellence is expected and the realization of graduate potential is pursued. The department's research and instruction make a significant contribution to the balanced development of each student. Students receive excellent academic preparation, with opportunities to develop clear thinking, effective written and oral communication, and intellectual integrity. In this atmosphere they come to understand important concepts in their discipline through both didactic and applied experience. The graduate programs offered in the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science develop students' abilities to use scientific thought processes. Students are encouraged by precept and example to be firmly founded in the discipline and competent to enter the food industry, a health-related industry, or further graduate training. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Genetics and Biotechnology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | The genetic resources group at Brigham Young University is focused on providing the highest quality mentoring experiences for our undergraduate and graduate students while developing solutions to world food problems using cutting edge technologies in genomics and biotechnology. Were developing a hands-on laboratory environment where students are trained on state-of-the-art technology by expert researchers and then challenged with pertinent research projects in plant genetics. We want to empower students to be innovators, to think critically and to participate in the scientific method. Current projects in the laboratory include genetic (microsatellite) marker development, bacterial artificial chromosome development, resistance gene identification, seed protein expression and cytogenetic analysis. Major funding for our projects is provided via a Collaborative Crop Research Program grant from the McKnight Foundation and the Benson Agriculture and Food Institute. | Acceptance should be based on a balanced consideration of several areas of information, with strong support in one area offsetting weaker support in other areas. Faculty are encouraged to review the files of potential graduate students and to communicate directly with candidates regarding research opportunities. Faculty should feel their opinions regarding a student’s candidacy will be welcomed by the Department’s Graduate Committee. Pursuant to this, a Graduate Student Review Sheet will be prepared for each candidate and space provided for comments by faculty. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, 275 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2760 | These guidelines have been prepared for the graduate student in Plant and Wildlife Sciences and must be used in conjunction with those contained in the BYU Graduate Handbook and the graduate section of the General Catalog. The graduate student must keep current on changes made each year in the graduate program at both the Department and the University level. The ultimate responsibility for complying with all Department and University requirements rests with the student. Forms for requesting exceptions to Graduate policy are available in the Graduate Secretary's office (271 WIDB). Petitions must be signed by the Chair of the Advisory Committee, Department Graduate Coordinator, Department Chair, and Dean and sent to the Office of Graduate Studies. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Geology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology | The M.S. degree in Geology leads to employment in a wide variety of careers. Graduates work for mining and petroleum industries, government agencies, geological consulting firms, or some choose to continue their graduate work at another university. The course work for this M.S. degree is to be determined in consultation with advisor. | Application requirements: minimum required GPA is 3.0 overall and in all physical sciences (mathematics, chemistry, physics) as well as in geology courses. Entrance examination: GRE general test. GRE scores must be received in the Geology Department before application for admission will be considered. Prerequisite: Baccalaureate degree. Arrangements to satisfy undergraduate deficiencies will be made in consultation with graduate coordinator. Admission Forms: Admission forms may be requested from either the Department of Geology or from the Graduate School | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology, S-389 ESC, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3918 | These guidelines have been prepared for the graduate student in Plant and Wildlife Sciences and must be used in conjunction with those contained in the BYU Graduate Handbook and the graduate section of the General Catalog. The graduate student must keep current on changes made each year in the graduate program at both the Department and the University level. The ultimate responsibility for complying with all Department and University requirements rests with the student. Forms for requesting exceptions to Graduate policy are available in the Graduate Secretary's office (271 WIDB). Petitions must be signed by the Chair of the Advisory Committee, Department Graduate Coordinator, Department Chair, and Dean and sent to the Office of Graduate Studies. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Mathematics (Non-Thesis) | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics | There are three different options in the non-thesis program: Traditional Mathematics Option, Minor Option, and Applied Option. The requirements for each are as follows: Credit hours: Complete one of the following options. Traditional Mathematics Option (32): Minimum 30 course work hours in approved graduate mathematics with a grade of C+ or better in each, including 18 hours in courses numbered 600 or above and two hours for the project (698R). No credit is given for prerequisite courses such as Math 316 or Math 372. Minor Option (35): Minimum 24 course work hours in approved graduate mathematics with a grade of C+ or better in each, including 6 hours in courses numbered 600 or above, 9 hours in an approved minor and two hours for the project (698R). Applied Option (38): Minimum 24 course work hours in approved graduate mathematics with a grade of C+ or better in each, including 6 hours in courses numbered 600 or above, 12 hours in areas related to applications of mathematics and two hours for the project (698R). The 12 hours of applications must be approved by the graduate coordinator. Examination: Pass a written master's examination. The first attempt at the examination should be made by the end of the student's first semester of the second year after which one more attempt at the examination is allowed. Students are encouraged to take the exam as early in their program as possible and early attempts count only if the exam is passed. Project, Paper and Presentation: Complete a project (Math 698R) focused on an area of advanced mathematics, write a paper about the project, and present a 45-minute talk based on the paper. | Required Entrance Examinations: GRE general test. Every international applicant whose native language is not English is required to submit Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores. •Academic Prerequisite: BS or BA in Mathematics Education or academic credentials at least equivalent (as determined by the Department of Mathematics Education). •Certification Prerequisite: A recognized state teacher certification. (Note: Work required to meet the certification requirement may not be counted as part of the graduate program.) •Advisement: The graduate coordinator is an entering student’s academic sponsor (preliminary advisor). Entering students should contact the graduate coordinator early to discuss initial coursework and program plans. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 292 TMCB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2061 | Most people who train in mathematics do not end up as academic mathematicians, although many do end up in academics. Mathematics is possibly the ideal training for any career in science, medicine, law, or business. It teaches rigorous thought, problem solving, and creativity. The Department of Mathematics prepares the students to achieve the goals. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Mathematics (Thesis) | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology | Thesis Program Requirements: Credit hours (30): Minimum 24 course work hours in approved graduate mathematics with a grade of C+ or better in each, including 12 hours in courses numbered 600 or above and 6 thesis hours (Math 699R). Examination: Pass a written master's examination. The first attempt at the examination should be made by the end of the student's first semester of the second year after which one more attempt at the examination is allowed. Students are encouraged to take the exam as early in their program as possible and early attempts count only if the exam is passed. | Application requirements: minimum required GPA is 3.0 overall and in all physical sciences (mathematics, chemistry, physics) as well as in geology courses. Entrance examination: GRE general test. GRE scores must be received in the Geology Department before application for admission will be considered. Prerequisite: Baccalaureate degree. Arrangements to satisfy undergraduate deficiencies will be made in consultation with graduate coordinator. Admission Forms: Admission forms may be requested from either the Department of Geology or from the Graduate School | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Geology, S-389 ESC, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3918 | Most people who train in mathematics do not end up as academic mathematicians, although many do end up in academics. Mathematics is possibly the ideal training for any career in science, medicine, law, or business. It teaches rigorous thought, problem solving, and creativity. The Department of Mathematics prepares the students to achieve the goals. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology and Developmental Biology | Physiology is the study of the functions of the body systems. Developmental biology is the study of how specific genes govern differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs with unique structure and functions. Neuroscience is the study of the development and function of the central nervous system and its connection to influencing/ regulating behavior. Graduate programs in the department offer research training and classroom instruction in a wide range of areas pertaining to these disciplines. A biophysics research group is also part of the department. Areas of research include neuroendocrinology and reproduction, endocrine and immune interactions, development of the central nervous system, hereditary connective tissue disorders, mouse and chick models of development, exercise physiology and glucose metabolism, membrane transport and channel structure, synaptic vesicle recycling, and blood pressure control by the autonomic nervous system. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology andDevelopmental Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology andDevelopmental Biology, 574 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2006 | Physiology is the study of the functions of the body systems. Developmental biology is the study of how specific genes govern differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs with unique structure and functions. Both disciplines require a firm foundation of mathematics, chemistry, physics, and cellular biology. The related area of biophysics uses the methods of physics, chemistry, mathematics and biology to investigate the physical basis of life. Upper division courses require synthesis and integration of information from many areas of science to allow understanding of such remarkable processes of how the heart pumps blood, how neurons communicate with one another, how insulin regulates blood sugar, or how specific gene products determine the morphology and functional capacity of the nervous system. Knowledge in these areas is expanding rapidly due to application of new techniques in molecular biology. Hence, significant exposure to concepts and techniques of molecular biology is an important component of the major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Nursing | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Nursing | Critically evaluate, synthesize, and integrate theory and research from nursing and related fields into practice.2. Demonstrate leadership and competence in advanced practice roles. 3. Participate as an informed advanced practice nurse regarding health care policy and resource accountability in the context of social, political, ethical, and legal considerations of health care. 4. Provide competent evidence-based advanced-practice nursing care to diverse individuals, families, and groups; manage health and illness across the continuum of care and across the lifespan. 5. Provide care in a compassionate manner that respects, protects, and enhances spiritual integrity, human dignity, cultural diversity, and demonstrates the Healer's art. | Acceptance by the graduate school of the university. A baccalaureate degree in nursing. Current R.N. licensure in Utah (or application in process). Basic statistics course. Undergraduate path physiology course.. A grade point average of B (3.0) or better for the last 60 semester hours of credit in college course work. Three letters of recommendation from former teachers or employers. Statement of applicant's purposes and goals for graduate education. A personal interview. Completion of the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Nursing | College of Nursing, 237 HRCB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | The mission of the Brigham Young University College of Nursing is to develop professional nurses who: Promote Health, Care for the Suffering, Engage in the Scholarship of the Discipline, Invite the Spirit in to Health and Healing, Lead with Faith and Integrity. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Nutritional Science | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, and Food Science | The Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science Department provides course work and research experience in the disciplines of food science and nutritional science. A commitment to excellence is expected and the realization of graduate potential is pursued. The graduate programs offered in the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science develop students' abilities to use scientific thought processes. Students are encouraged by precept and example to be firmly founded in the discipline and competent to enter the food industry, a health-related industry, or further graduate training. | Undergraduate major in nutrition, dietetics, biochemistry, or closely related field International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, andFood Science | College of Life Sciences, Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, andFood Science, S-221 ESC, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3912 | The Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science Department provides course work and research experience in the disciplines of food science and nutritional science. A commitment to excellence is expected and the realization of graduate potential is pursued. The department's research and instruction make a significant contribution to the balanced development of each student. Students receive excellent academic preparation, with opportunities to develop clear thinking, effective written and oral communication, and intellectual integrity. In this atmosphere they come to understand important concepts in their discipline through both didactic and applied experience. The graduate programs offered in the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science develop students' abilities to use scientific thought processes. Students are encouraged by precept and example to be firmly founded in the discipline and competent to enter the food industry, a health-related industry, or further graduate training. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | The purpose of the Physics MS program is to train students in the discipline of physics research to prepare them for careers in governmental research, industrial research, or teaching. Students gain breadth by attending a weekly colloquium and by visiting several of the research group meetings held in the department. Students will also develop the habits of integrity required by scientific research and will develop spiritual strength by working closely with faculty members and fellow students of faith. Expected Learning Outcomes: 1. Each student will master scientific communication skills, both oral and written. 2. Each student will pursue research of significance, including mastery of the literature in a research area, and report these results orally and in writing. 3. Each student will master the material in a coherent set of courses approved by his, or her, graduate committee. 4. Each student will learn and be able to articulate the principles of ethics in science. 5. Each student will become active in the professional life of their research area. | Required Entrance Examinations: GRE general test. Every international applicant whose native language is not English is required to submit Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores. •Academic Prerequisite: BS or BA in Mathematics Education or academic credentials at least equivalent (as determined by the Department of Mathematics Education). •Certification Prerequisite: A recognized state teacher certification. (Note: Work required to meet the certification requirement may not be counted as part of the graduate program.) •Advisement: The graduate coordinator is an entering student’s academic sponsor (preliminary advisor). Entering students should contact the graduate coordinator early to discuss initial coursework and program plans. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, N283 ESC, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4361 | Brigham Young University has an excellent tradition in physics and astronomy research and education. We are consistently among the top 5 programs in the United States in numbers of undergraduate BS physics degrees granted. Our graduate program, although smaller, maintains the same level of excellence and commitment to success. Our graduates are among the best in the world. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Physiology and Development Biology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology and Developmental Biology | Physiology is the study of the functions of the body systems. Developmental biology is the study of how specific genes govern differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs with unique structure and functions. Neuroscience is the study of the development and function of the central nervous system and its connection to influencing/ regulating behavior. Graduate programs in the department offer research training and classroom instruction in a wide range of areas pertaining to these disciplines. A biophysics research group is also part of the department. Areas of research include neuroendocrinology and reproduction, endocrine and immune interactions, development of the central nervous system, hereditary connective tissue disorders, mouse and chick models of development, exercise physiology and glucose metabolism, membrane transport and channel structure, synaptic vesicle recycling, and blood pressure control by the autonomic nervous system. | Academic Requirements: A. Fulfill all requirements for admission to the BYU graduate school. (See the current University Catalog.) B. NATABOC certified or be eligible to become certified. C. Have a minimum GPA of 3.0 for the last 60 semester hours of undergraduate academic work. D. Achieve satisfactory scores on the GRE. E. Submit a letter of intent which includes the following: NOTE: Place “LETTER OF INTENT” at the top of your letter. 1. Your preparation and background for the program to which you are applying. 2. The special emphasis which you hope to pursue in your program. 3. The basic reasons for your choice of career. 4. Special qualities and talents that would enhance success in your particular career. 5. Research interests, including faculty you would like to do research with. 6. Your professional goals. 7. Your particular reasons for applying to Brigham Young University. 8. The specific duration for accomplishing your graduate degree. 9. (Optional) Any specific circumstances or objectives you wish to have taken into consideration. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology andDevelopmental Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology andDevelopmental Biology, 574 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2006 | Physiology is the study of the functions of the body systems. Developmental biology is the study of how specific genes govern differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs with unique structure and functions. Both disciplines require a firm foundation of mathematics, chemistry, physics, and cellular biology. The related area of biophysics uses the methods of physics, chemistry, mathematics and biology to investigate the physical basis of life. Upper division courses require synthesis and integration of information from many areas of science to allow understanding of such remarkable processes of how the heart pumps blood, how neurons communicate with one another, how insulin regulates blood sugar, or how specific gene products determine the morphology and functional capacity of the nervous system. Knowledge in these areas is expanding rapidly due to application of new techniques in molecular biology. Hence, significant exposure to concepts and techniques of molecular biology is an important component of the major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Wild land Conservation | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | Upon completion of the MS Degree in Wildlife and Wild lands Conservation our students will be able to: Demonstrate ability to relate and synthesize literature relevant to a research project including historical and ecological context, basic mechanisms underlying results, and natural resource management applicability of the research. Demonstrate application of the scientific and analytical methods to conduct designed field or laboratory research. This includes development of testable questions and statistically-testable experimental design in wild land plant, soil, or wildlife problems and expected scope of inference in naturally-variable wildland environments. Demonstrate oral and written scientific communications skills including presentation of the environmental and management context, research approach and both ecological and management inferences developed from a research project. | Acceptance should be based on a balanced consideration of several areas of information, with strong support in one area offsetting weaker support in other areas. Faculty are encouraged to review the files of potential graduate students and to communicate directly with candidates regarding research opportunities. Faculty should feel their opinions regarding a student’s candidacy will be welcomed by the Department’s Graduate Committee. Pursuant to this, a Graduate Student Review Sheet will be prepared for each candidate and space provided for comments by faculty. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, 275 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2760 | These guidelines have been prepared for the graduate student in Plant and Wildlife Sciences and must be used in conjunction with those contained in the BYU Graduate Handbook and the graduate section of the General Catalog. The graduate student must keep current on changes made each year in the graduate program at both the Department and the University level. The ultimate responsibility for complying with all Department and University requirements rests with the student. Forms for requesting exceptions to Graduate policy are available in the Graduate Secretary's office (271 WIDB). Petitions must be signed by the Chair of the Advisory Committee, Department Graduate Coordinator, Department Chair, and Dean and sent to the Office of Graduate Studies. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Wildlife Conservation | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | Upon completion of the MS Degree in Wildlife and Wild lands Conservation our students will be able to: Demonstrate ability to relate and synthesize literature relevant to a research project including historical and ecological context, basic mechanisms underlying results, and natural resource management applicability of the research. Demonstrate application of the scientific and analytical methods to conduct designed field or laboratory research. This includes development of testable questions and statistically-testable experimental design in wild land plant, soil, or wildlife problems and expected scope of inference in naturally-variable wild land environments. Demonstrate oral and written scientific communications skills including presentation of the environmental and management context, research approach and both ecological and management inferences developed from a research project. | Acceptance should be based on a balanced consideration of several areas of information, with strong support in one area offsetting weaker support in other areas. Faculty are encouraged to review the files of potential graduate students and to communicate directly with candidates regarding research opportunities. Faculty should feel their opinions regarding a student’s candidacy will be welcomed by the Department’s Graduate Committee. Pursuant to this, a Graduate Student Review Sheet will be prepared for each candidate and space provided for comments by faculty. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, 275 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2760 | These guidelines have been prepared for the graduate student in Plant and Wildlife Sciences and must be used in conjunction with those contained in the BYU Graduate Handbook and the graduate section of the General Catalog. The graduate student must keep current on changes made each year in the graduate program at both the Department and the University level. The ultimate responsibility for complying with all Department and University requirements rests with the student. Forms for requesting exceptions to Graduate policy are available in the Graduate Secretary's office (271 WIDB). Petitions must be signed by the Chair of the Advisory Committee, Department Graduate Coordinator, Department Chair, and Dean and sent to the Office of Graduate Studies. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS in Youth and Family Recreation | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Recreation and Youth Leadership | The Youth and Family Recreation Masters program serves students by providing a spiritually enriching, stimulating and rigorous educational environment that fosters analytical problem solving and writing skills related to strengthening youth and families through wholesome recreation. Enrollment in this two-year program is limited and competitive. The scholarly focus of the program requires students to work closely with graduate faculty in a mentored environment in designing and conducting and disseminating quality research that contributes to the body of knowledge in Family Leisure and other related disciplines. After completing coursework, students conduct original research that culminates in a master's thesis. Students will then submit their thesis work to professional journals for publication consideration. Program graduates are well equipped to pursue further advanced studies or positively impact their chosen professions working with youth and families. | Requirements for Admission : Fulfill all requirements for admission to the graduate school (See University Catalog ). GPA: minimum 3.0 for last 60 semester hours of undergraduate work. Prerequisite: Stat 510, 220 or equivalent. Applicants with undergraduate degrees from other disciplines may be admitted, but must complete 6-9 hours of approved prerequisite courses (RMYL 304, 486, 487; Statistics 510 or equivalent). | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Recreation and Youth Leadership | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Recreation and Youth Leadership, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The Youth and Family Recreation Masters program serves students by providing a spiritually enriching, stimulating and rigorous educational environment that fosters analytical problem solving and writing skills related to strengthening youth and families through wholesome recreation. Enrollment in this two-year program is limited and competitive. The scholarly focus of the program requires students to work closely with graduate faculty in a mentored environment in designing and conducting and disseminating quality research that contributes to the body of knowledge in Family Leisure and other related disciplines. After completing coursework, students conduct original research that culminates in a master's thesis. Students will then submit their thesis work to professional journals for publication consideration.Program graduates are well equipped to pursue further advanced studies or positively impact their chosen professions working with youth and families. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MS/MBA - Master of Business Administration Product Development | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | The Mechanical Engineering Department and the Marriott School of Management program in interdisciplinary product development (PD) leads to a Masters of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering and a Masters of Business Administration (MBA) degree. The program takes an average of three years to complete. The degrees are approved and conferred separately by the two departments, but since course work for the two degrees may overlap and similarities between the two programs may be emphasized, the PD program offers students advantages to separate programs in these two fields. The PD program addresses important needs for engineers, designers, and managers who excel in world-class product development, which is a cross-functional process requiring both technical and managerial skills. The program provides students who have undergraduate training in engineering, with the management skills of the MBA program along with advanced training in engineering. Courses teach specific expertise in product and process development through projects, industrial interaction, and research in development and interdisciplinary methods. hen admitted to the joint program, the student starts the first year in the Mechanical Engineering program. During this time the student will make major strides in thesis or project work prior to beginning MBA course work in the second year. A total of 64 credit hours are required to complete the MBA degree, and 30 hours (MS-Thesis) or 39 hours (MS-Project) for the ME degree. Both programs jointly count 12 credit hours. |
All applicants must take the general GRE exam. The expected GRE score ranges are: V (460-480), Q (710-730), AW (3.5-4.5). Students with scores below these numbers must show strength and aptitude through other means to be admitted. If English is not the student’s native language, and a four-year bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution within the United States has not been earned, the student must also take the TOEFL or IELTS. University minimum scores are required. Scores for the entrance exams must be sent directly to Brigham Young University. Applicants should sit for the GRE exam and the TOEFL or IELTS exams, at least 6 weeks prior to the application deadline. | MBA | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 435 Crabtree Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2625 | The mission of the Department of Mechanical Engineering is to:Educate mechanical engineering students to contribute and lead in society. Offer mentoring opportunities for faculty and students to discover, apply and disseminate new knowledge of real consequence. Provide an educational atmosphere enlightened by the Gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | MSW (Master of Social Work) | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences | The mission of the School of Social Work at Brigham Young University is to support the overall mission of BYU and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by generating new knowledge and by educating and training students to use the appropriate knowledge, skills, and abilities of the social work profession to serve children and families within their environment and the context of their specific cultures. | Students should have all the basic requirements which is applied for Graduate studies. Moreover additional requirements are 4- to 6-page statement of intent under 5 distinct headings (contact department for details) Statement of student standards with witness signature, Resume, Completion of several social work courses. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, 2190 Joseph F. Smith Building (JFSB), Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3282 | The mission of the School of Social Work at Brigham Young University is to support the overall mission of BYU and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by generating new knowledge and by educating and training students to use the appropriate knowledge, skills, and abilities of the social work profession to serve children and families within their environment and the context of their specific cultures. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Master of Accountancy (MAcc) | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The School of Accountancy is nationally recognized for its top-ranked accounting program. It has been recognized as one of the top accounting schools in the nation, ranked #2 in the most recent Public Accounting Report poll. Part of the Marriott School, the SOA offers a graduate and an undergraduate program: Master of Accountancy (MAcc) and Bachelor of Science in Accountancy. The SOA is a member of the Federation of Schools of Accountancy (FSA) and is separately accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Master of Business Administration | Full Time | Variable | US $9,240 per semester | Marriott School of Management | Admission requirements: TOEFL minimum scores for MBA program:94-IBT (internet-based test), Minimum score of 22 in speaking and minimum score of 21 in listening, reading, and writing, 240-CBT (computer-based test), 590-PBT (paper-based test), IELTS minimum scores for MBA program: 7.0 overall band score, 6.0 band score in each module. | MBA | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Master of Business Administration - Executive option | Full Time | Variable | US $9,240 per semester | Marriott School of Management | Admission requirements: TOEFL minimum scores for MBA program:94-IBT (internet-based test), Minimum score of 22 in speaking and minimum score of 21 in listening, reading, and writing, 240-CBT (computer-based test), 590-PBT (paper-based test), IELTS minimum scores for MBA program: 7.0 overall band score, 6.0 band score in each module. | MBA | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Master of Public Administration | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Master of Public Administration- Executive option | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Master of Science in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Statistics | Statistics is a scientific discipline by which statisticians assist other scientists and researchers in making informed decisions in the face of uncertainty. Statisticians use skills in a variety of areas to solve problems. The application of statistics is the embodiment of the scientific method. The Statistics MS is an applied statistics degree that prepares outstanding students for successful and productive careers. The graduate curriculum is designed to equip students with decision-making skills necessary for successful careers as professional statisticians. Although a firm foundation in theoretical statistics is provided, most of the courses are applied in nature, offering approaches to the solution of important real-world problems. The BYU Master of Science in Statistics includes 30-33 hours of coursework and 6 hours of thesis or 3 hours of project work. Full-time students should complete the master's program in two years. This very affordable graduate program includes tuition benefits for students with notable academic advancement as well as teaching and research assistantships. | Required Entrance Examinations: GRE general test. Every international applicant whose native language is not English is required to submit Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores. •Academic Prerequisite: BS or BA in Mathematics Education or academic credentials at least equivalent (as determined by the Department of Mathematics Education). •Certification Prerequisite: A recognized state teacher certification. (Note: Work required to meet the certification requirement may not be counted as part of the graduate program.) •Advisement: The graduate coordinator is an entering student’s academic sponsor (preliminary advisor). Entering students should contact the graduate coordinator early to discuss initial coursework and program plans. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Statistics | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Statistics, 223 TMCB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4505 | The mission of the Statistics Department is to help students develop their intellect and faith, expand their understanding of the role of science in the objective, systematic pursuit of truth, demonstrate how sound statistical methodology strengthens scientific conclusions, cultivate the ability to understand and communicate the results from empirical research in an ethical manner, and develop and apply methods of modern statistical science. To succeed in this mission, we will: Offer the premier undergraduate educational experience to statistics and actuarial science majors that prepares them to pursue satisfying and productive careers and qualifies them to enter competitive graduate programs. Offer an applied statistics graduate program that prepares outstanding students for successful and productive careers. Provide superb teaching in general education and service courses to cultivate an understanding of the role of the scientific method in performing empirical research. Contribute to the advancement of statistical science through peer-reviewed research, and collaborate on the pursuit of knowledge across scientific disciplines. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Master of Science, Exercise Science with Exercise Physiology Specialization | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | This program is designed to build upon the theoretical and clinical competencies developed as an undergraduate preparing for the NATABOC certification examination. It allows students to further develop theoretical knowledge and linical skills, become comfortable with and critically evaluate current athletic training-related literature, and conduct clinically relevant athletic training research. This is a two year program. |
Academic Requirements: A. Fulfill all requirements for admission to the BYU graduate school. (See the current University Catalog.) B. NATABOC certified or be eligible to become certified. C. Have a minimum GPA of 3.0 for the last 60 semester hours of undergraduate academic work. D. Achieve satisfactory scores on the GRE. E. Submit a letter of intent which includes the following: NOTE: Place “LETTER OF INTENT” at the top of your letter. 1. Your preparation and background for the program to which you are applying. 2. The special emphasis which you hope to pursue in your program. 3. The basic reasons for your choice of career. 4. Special qualities and talents that would enhance success in your particular career. 5. Research interests, including faculty you would like to do research with. 6. Your professional goals. 7. Your particular reasons for applying to Brigham Young University. 8. The specific duration for accomplishing your graduate degree. 9. (Optional) Any specific circumstances or objectives you wish to have taken into consideration. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The mission of the Department of Exercise Sciences is to assist individualsin their quest for perfection and Eternal Life, emphasizing the truth that "the human body is sacred, the veritable tabernacle of the divine spirit."Department Goals : Nurture faith in God and the practice of Christian principles, Prepare leaders to serve in ways that foster dignity and respect for the body, mind and spirit, Provide experiences that stimulate the acquisition and enjoyment of activities that promote health and happiness, Encourage life-long learning and advance the body of knowledge unique to the disciplines. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Master of Science, Exercise Science with Health Promotion Specialization | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | This program is designed to build upon the theoretical and clinical competencies developed as an undergraduate preparing for the NATABOC certification examination. It allows students to further develop theoretical knowledge and linical skills, become comfortable with and critically evaluate current athletic training-related literature, and conduct clinically relevant athletic training research. This is a two year program. |
Academic Requirements: A. Fulfill all requirements for admission to the BYU graduate school. (See the current University Catalog.) B. NATABOC certified or be eligible to become certified. C. Have a minimum GPA of 3.0 for the last 60 semester hours of undergraduate academic work. D. Achieve satisfactory scores on the GRE. E. Submit a letter of intent which includes the following: NOTE: Place “LETTER OF INTENT” at the top of your letter. 1. Your preparation and background for the program to which you are applying. 2. The special emphasis which you hope to pursue in your program. 3. The basic reasons for your choice of career. 4. Special qualities and talents that would enhance success in your particular career. 5. Research interests, including faculty you would like to do research with. 6. Your professional goals. 7. Your particular reasons for applying to Brigham Young University. 8. The specific duration for accomplishing your graduate degree. 9. (Optional) Any specific circumstances or objectives you wish to have taken into consideration. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences | College of Health and Human Performance, Department of Exercise Sciences, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 7535 | The mission of the Department of Exercise Sciences is to assist individualsin their quest for perfection and Eternal Life, emphasizing the truth that "the human body is sacred, the veritable tabernacle of the divine spirit."Department Goals : Nurture faith in God and the practice of Christian principles, Prepare leaders to serve in ways that foster dignity and respect for the body, mind and spirit, Provide experiences that stimulate the acquisition and enjoyment of activities that promote health and happiness, Encourage life-long learning and advance the body of knowledge unique to the disciplines. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Masters in Instructional Psychology and Technology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE) | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education (CPSE), 340 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3857 | We facilitate positive growth for children, youth, and adults by preparing professionals to work with students, clients, and colleagues in complex and varied educational settings. In particular, we embrace a collaborative, evidence-based approach to serving individuals with diverse strengths and needs. We support the mission and aims of a BYU education as we integrate teaching, research, and service. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | |||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Masters in Microbiology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | Microbiology graduate programs emphasize a combination of research experience and interdisciplinary course work. Research emphasis includes cancer biology, immunobiology, medical microbiology, microbial ecology, microbial genetics and physiology, and virology. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 775 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2889 | Department Functions and Activities: Throughout the year, the department will hold activities or meetings in which graduate students are invited and expected to attend. Among these are: • Fall Faculty/Grad Student Pot-Luck Picnic • The MMBIO-690R seminars held during the fall and winter semesters • Fall Turkey Fest • Spring Fling • Graduate Retreat. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Masters in Molecular Biology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | Molecular Biology graduate programs offer a comprehensive and interdisciplinary degree program, supported by faculty and courses from other departments within the College of Biology and Agriculture as well as the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry in the College of Physical and Mathematical Science. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 775 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2889 | Department Functions and Activities: Throughout the year, the department will hold activities or meetings in which graduate students are invited and expected to attend. Among these are: • Fall Faculty/Grad Student Pot-Luck Picnic • The MMBIO-690R seminars held during the fall and winter semesters • Fall Turkey Fest • Spring Fling • Graduate Retreat. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Masters of Arts in Portuguese | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of Spanish and Portuguese | Applicants to the Spanish and Portuguese MA programs must indicate an area of emphasis and are admitted into that particular field. Prospective students are encouraged to consult with faculty about this important decision. The areas of emphasis of the Portuguese MA Program are as follows: Portuguese MA Program: Portuguese Linguistics (555460), Portuguese Literature (555461). | Prerequisites: A bachelor's degree in Portuguese, or equivalent Reading knowledge of a second foreign language (for example, French 121/122, German 201). A candidate may work on second foreign language while completing work for the MA). Minimum (last 60 hours) GPA of 3.3 Minimum GPA of 3.5 in Portuguese. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of Spanish and Portuguese | College of Humanities, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, 3190 JFSB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2837 | The Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Brigham Young University offers a Summer-Only Program designed to assist public school teachers who are currently employed full-time, to complete the required course work over a four-year period. In addition to the course work, the required specialty exam and thesis must also be completed to fill the requirements for the degree. Preparation for the exam and work on the thesis can be accomplished during the regular school year. When necessary, additional time may be allowed beyond the four years for completion of the degree. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Masters of Arts in Religious Education | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Religious Education, Department of Ancient Scripture | The purpose of the Masters of Arts in Religious Education is to assist individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life (BYU Mission Statement) through educational experiences that are spiritually strengthening, intellectuality enlarging, and character building (BYU Aims Document). Specifically this degree program is designed to help full-time teachers in the LDS Church Educational System (CES) better serve the Lord in carrying out His work of bringing eternal life to His children by providing them with advanced training and preparation for teaching in the Church Educational System. Emphasis is placed primarily on five areas of study: Old Testament, New Testament, Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and Church History. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Religious Education, Department of Ancient Scripture | College of Religious Education, Department of Ancient Scripture, 375A JSB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2102 | As an integral part of Brigham Young University and Religious Education, the Department of Ancient Scripture exists to "assist individuals in their quest for perfection and eternal life" by teaching the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. In this context we seek to help students reach the aims of a BYU education through providing instruction and experiences that are spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging, character building, and leading to a commitment of lifelong learning and service. The central means utilized by the faculty and staff of the department to help students obtain these goals is teaching and research concerning the doctrines, covenants, ordinances and history found in the scriptures of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Masters of Arts in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Humanities, Department of Spanish and Portuguese | Applicants to the Spanish MA program must indicate an area of emphasis and are admitted into that particular field. Prospective students are encouraged to consult with faculty about this important decision. The areas of emphasis of the Spanish MA Program are as follows: Spanish MA Program: Spanish Linguistics (555462), Pedagogy (555466), Spanish American Literature (555468), Peninsular Literature (555464). | Prerequisites: A bachelor's degree in Spanish, or equivalent Reading knowledge of a second foreign language (for example, French 121/122, German 201). A candidate may work on second foreign language while completing work for the MA). Minimum (last 60 hours) GPA of 3.3 Minimum GPA of 3.5 in Spanish. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Humanities, Department of Spanish and Portuguese | College of Humanities, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, 3190 JFSB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2837 | The Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Brigham Young University offers a Summer-Only Program designed to assist public school teachers who are currently employed full-time, to complete the required course work over a four-year period. In addition to the course work, the required specialty exam and thesis must also be completed to fill the requirements for the degree. Preparation for the exam and work on the thesis can be accomplished during the regular school year. When necessary, additional time may be allowed beyond the four years for completion of the degree. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Masters of Information Systems Management (MISM) | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The Masters of Information Systems Management (MISM) degree is designed for students seeking professional careers in information systems. The MISM blends information systems theory with a "hands on" approach to learning information systems design and implementation skills. Management topics are particularly emphasized. The MISM degree features a newly revised curriculum allowing students to develop a foundation of key Information Systems topics including management and strategy, people and organizations, IT architecture, and systems development. Additionally, 18 hours of elective courses are required, giving students the flexibility to further study information systems and/or management topics of their choice. All MISM classes contain the underpinning themes of ethics, communication, professionalism, team dynamics, controls, risk management, project management, flexibility, and adaptability. The MISM program is a five-year integrated option for BYU students in the Bachelors of Information Systems program, as well as an option for students who have already completed a bachelors degree. The completion time for students with a bachelors degree is dependent on their undergraduate major and the amount of prior information technology training. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Masters | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Ph.D. Counseling Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Instructional Psychology and Technology | The Ph.D. program is a full-time, day school program. Prior to the final internship year, students must be available to attend day school classes full-time (minimum of 8.5 academic credits per semester). Because of heavy academic demands, students are not permitted to enroll in more than 15 academic credits per semester without written permission from their advisory committee. To ensure success in their academic course work, it is also strongly recommended that students restrict employment commitments to no more than 20 hours per week. Doctoral students must register for at least two consecutive 6-hour semesters on the BYU campus to fulfill the university residency requirements. Students seeking a Ph.D. must complete a minimum of 82 semester hours (some of which may be transferred from a master’s program) of academic course work in psychological foundations, quantitative/research skills, psychological and educational assessment, counseling psychology core, and religion/psychology integration. Requirements also include 24 semester hours of practicum and clerkship credit, 18 hours of dissertation credit, and 8 hours of pre-doctoral internship credit. With the approval of the student’s advisory committee, up to 36 hours of masters credit may apply toward the total credit-hour requirements. The required courses are intended to meet State licensing requirements. Requests for exceptions or alternatives to courses listed below should not be made without careful discussion with the State Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing. Students enrolled in the Ph.D. program will complete required courses, comprehensive examinations, a dissertation, and a 2000 hour pre-doctoral internship prior to graduation. All requirements for the Ph.D. from the first semester of course work until graduation, must be completed within eight years. Continuous and appropriate progress is required and monitored by the department, and students are notified if their continuation in the program is in jeopardy. Students are responsible for meeting university deadlines and requirements. | Students admitted to the doctoral program typically have completed either a bachelor’s degree in the social/behavioral sciences or a master’s degree in counseling or closely related area. Students who are otherwise qualified but lack specific background course work may be admitted provisionally to the Ph.D. program, but will be required to take the classes in which they are deficient during the first year of their Ph.D. program. The opportunity to continue in the Ph.D. program beyond the first year will be granted if the student successfully completes the required background course work and if end-of-semester evaluations are satisfactory during his/her first year. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Instructional Psychology and Technology | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Instructional Psychology and Technology, 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Ph.D. Preparation Program | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Marriott School of Management | The Information Systems Department offers a specialized program as part of the MISM degree to prepare students to earn their Doctorate degrees after finishing their Masters Degree. Students in both of the five-year integrated programs and the two-year programs are eligible to enroll in the program. This program has students take a couple of PhD-level seminars to learn about research and academic work. Students are also able to take additional graduate-level courses, in place of their normal Master's electives, to prepare for earning a Ph.D. This program does not require additional credits. Students who have participated in this program in the past have been highly successful in placing at top Ph.D. programs. Those who complete their PhD's in Information Systems are able to enter fields where there is high demand. Starting salaries for PhDs in Information Systems tend to be two to four times higher than starting salaries for MISM graduates. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Marriott School of Management | Marriott School of Management, 730 TNRB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3377 | To attract, develop, and place men and women of faith, character, and professional ability who will become outstanding leaders capable of dealing with change in a global environment. ESEARCH: To advance knowledge using strong conceptual foundations to identify and solve management problems--focusing on global, technological, and entrepreneurial drivers. OUTREACH; To extend the blessings of management education to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints worldwide. FRIENDSHIP:To develop friends for the university and church by serving in professional organizations and collaborating in the development of Management-education programs. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Ph.D. in Educational Leadership and Foundations | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | Educational Leadership and Foundations will be accepting applications for the Ph.D. Summer 2008 program. Please note that the focus of the Ph.D. program will be on leadership issues facing public K-12 education in the United States. Students from other backgrounds will be considered for admission, but the main focus and laboratory for our doctoral studies will be focused upon public K-12 education. The Ph.D. will be the only degree granted in the near future in EDLF. | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah.F. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF) | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Foundations (EdLF), 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD Clinical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | The Psychology doctoral program offers a rigorous educational experience. The first four semesters provide broad coverage of the discipline of psychology and scientific research skills, and introduce students to the particular areas of emphasis offered in the program. During the last two years of the program, students pursue specialized coursework and training in one of three emphasis areas: Applied Social Psychology, Behavioral Neurobiology, or Theoretical/ Philosophical Psychology. During the first semester students select a faculty advisor and a dissertation committee. By the end of the second year in the program, all students complete a masters degree, including a thesis. Following the completion of these requirements, under the direction of the dissertation committee, students concentrate on coursework and research in their emphasis area. | While many APA programs currently prefer students to apply at the baccalaureate degree level, we welcome students with either a bachelors or masters degree. Prerequisites : Bachelors degree (Psychology degree preferred but not required), GPA of at least 3.0 for the last sixty semester hours, General area GRE. The following courses, or their equivalents, should have been completed: General Psychology (111), Elementary Psychological Statistics (301), Experimental Psychology (302), and three 300-level psychology courses. The doctoral program requires the completion of a masters degree as part of the program. Students are expected to complete a masters thesis by the end of their second year. Refer to the Graduate Catalog for further information. Barring unexpected circumstances such as prolonged severe illness, the Psychology PhD program should be completed within four years from the date of entry into the program. Even if a rare time allowance is made for an extreme circumstance, credits will become outdated after eight years. Students must register for a minimum of 6 semester hours per academic year (September-August) to stay in the program. Full-time graduate student status requires registration for 4.5 credits per term or 8.5 credits per semester (9 credits for international students). | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology, 1001 Kimball Tower P.O. Box 25543, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 6002 | Among the many majors at BYU, there is one that delves into the depths of the human mind: the psychology major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD Integrative Biology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | The primary goal of the doctoral program in the Biology Department is to provide advanced training in ecological and evolutionary biology and in biology teaching. The program features an exciting range of sub disciplines, including systematic and phylogenetics, experimental evolutionary ecology, population biology, and conservation. We emphasize original and creative research and teaching that prepares students for careers in academic, government, or industrial settings. Faculty members do. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 775 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2889 | Department Functions and Activities: Throughout the year, the department will hold activities or meetings in which graduate students are invited and expected to attend. Among these are: • Fall Faculty/Grad Student Pot-Luck Picnic • The MMBIO-690R seminars held during the fall and winter semesters • Fall Turkey Fest • Spring Fling • Graduate Retreat. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Applied Social Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | This specialty focuses on the individual and his or her social context and how they relate to it. Topics include motivation, traits, sense of self, psychological adjustment, behavior change, socialization, pro-social behavior, attitudes and attitude change, person perception, and group processes. Applied Social Psychology students specialize in organizational behavior or other such areas. Student graduating with a Ph.D. from this program area usually find employment in colleges, universities, businesses, and research organizations. Social psychology can also be applied to many other areas such as law, medicine (clinical assessment), and mass media (advertising and marketing). | While many APA programs currently prefer students to apply at the baccalaureate degree level, we welcome students with either a bachelors or masters degree. Prerequisites : Bachelors degree (Psychology degree preferred but not required), GPA of at least 3.0 for the last sixty semester hours, General area GRE. The following courses, or their equivalents, should have been completed: General Psychology (111), Elementary Psychological Statistics (301), Experimental Psychology (302), and three 300-level psychology courses. The doctoral program requires the completion of a masters degree as part of the program. Students are expected to complete a masters thesis by the end of their second year. Refer to the Graduate Catalog for further information. Barring unexpected circumstances such as prolonged severe illness, the Psychology PhD program should be completed within four years from the date of entry into the program. Even if a rare time allowance is made for an extreme circumstance, credits will become outdated after eight years. Students must register for a minimum of 6 semester hours per academic year (September-August) to stay in the program. Full-time graduate student status requires registration for 4.5 credits per term or 8.5 credits per semester (9 credits for international students). | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology, 1001 Kimball Tower P.O. Box 25543, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 6002 | Among the many majors at BYU, there is one that delves into the depths of the human mind: the psychology major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Behavioral Neurobiology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | Students in this specialty area study and examine the biological factors that control behavior. Instruction often focuses on brain function but may include any biological system. | While many APA programs currently prefer students to apply at the baccalaureate degree level, we welcome students with either a bachelors or masters degree. Prerequisites : Bachelors degree (Psychology degree preferred but not required), GPA of at least 3.0 for the last sixty semester hours, General area GRE. The following courses, or their equivalents, should have been completed: General Psychology (111), Elementary Psychological Statistics (301), Experimental Psychology (302), and three 300-level psychology courses. The doctoral program requires the completion of a masters degree as part of the program. Students are expected to complete a masters thesis by the end of their second year. Refer to the Graduate Catalog for further information. Barring unexpected circumstances such as prolonged severe illness, the Psychology PhD program should be completed within four years from the date of entry into the program. Even if a rare time allowance is made for an extreme circumstance, credits will become outdated after eight years. Students must register for a minimum of 6 semester hours per academic year (September-August) to stay in the program. Full-time graduate student status requires registration for 4.5 credits per term or 8.5 credits per semester (9 credits for international students). | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology, 1001 Kimball Tower P.O. Box 25543, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 6002 | Among the many majors at BYU, there is one that delves into the depths of the human mind: the psychology major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, with outstanding faculty, students, and support staff, is among the leading departments in research at BYU. It has had remarkable success in many areas including calorimetric, macro cycles, cancer therapy, and chromatography. One of the reasons for our research progress is highly qualified graduate students. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, C100 BNSN (Benson Science Building), Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3667 | Located in the heart of the Rocky Mountains, Brigham Young University has had a long tradition of excellence from its beginning in 1875 as Brigham Young Academy. The university has grown to an enrollment of 30,000 full-time students, one of the largest private universities in the United States. Students come to BYU from all 50 states and more than 100 foreign countries. The Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, with outstanding faculty, students, and support staff, is among the leading departments in research at BYU. It has had remarkable success in many areas including calorimetric, macro cycles, cancer therapy, and chromatography. One of the reasons for our research progress is highly qualified graduate students.BYU is sponsored and supported by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and welcomes students of all faiths who agree to live by the Church's high standards of moral integrity and excellence in academic scholarship and who will abstain from tobacco, alcohol, and other harmful substances. Admission to the university is nondiscriminatory, and students are admitted on a competitive basis without regard to sex, race, creed, religion, or disability, if they meet academic requirements and agree to abide by the university's standards of conduct. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Chemical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | The M.S. and Ph.D. degrees are research oriented, requiring an original thesis. The focus of the program is on development of the student's ability to conduct independent, creative, scientific research. Graduate students are expected to assume a major responsibility for their own progress and to develop habits of inquiry that will ensure continuing intellectual development throughout their careers. Emphasis is generally placed first on a full understanding of the principles of math, engineering, and science, and then on the application of those principles to present-day engineering problems. | Complete admissions procedures and meet the entrance requirements of the University Graduate School. b. Provide evidence of successful teaching experience as a certified teacher in a self-contained elementary school classroom for a minimum of one year. c. Have a grade point average of 3.25 or above for the last 60 semester hours of university course work. d. Obtain acceptable scores on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Scores (not more than five years old) must be submitted to the office of Graduate Studies before the application deadline. To meet deadlines, take the GRE at least 3 months prior to application for graduate work. (Available at major university testing centers.) e. Applications for acceptance are evaluated by the Teacher Education Graduate Faculty Admissions Committee. Admission is based on faculty approval and available departmental resources. Official notification of acceptance or denial is given by the University Graduate Office. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering, 350 CB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 5286 | The Department of Chemical Engineering exists to support the mission of BYU by preparing students for: lives of scholarship and continued learning founded upon principles of science, engineering, and mathematics, lives of service to family as educated parents, to church as faithful Latter-day Saints, and to community as moral, disciplined, practicing engineers and leaders, lives of contribution to society and humanity by producing products, processes, and policies that improve the quality of life. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | The Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, with outstanding faculty, students, and support staff, is among the leading departments in research at BYU. It has had remarkable success in many areas including calorimetric, macro cycles, cancer therapy, and chromatography. One of the reasons for our research progress is highly qualified graduate students. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, C100 BNSN (Benson Science Building), Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3667 | Located in the heart of the Rocky Mountains, Brigham Young University has had a long tradition of excellence from its beginning in 1875 as Brigham Young Academy. The university has grown to an enrollment of 30,000 full-time students, one of the largest private universities in the United States. Students come to BYU from all 50 states and more than 100 foreign countries. The Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, with outstanding faculty, students, and support staff, is among the leading departments in research at BYU. It has had remarkable success in many areas including calorimetric, macro cycles, cancer therapy, and chromatography. One of the reasons for our research progress is highly qualified graduate students.BYU is sponsored and supported by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and welcomes students of all faiths who agree to live by the Church's high standards of moral integrity and excellence in academic scholarship and who will abstain from tobacco, alcohol, and other harmful substances. Admission to the university is nondiscriminatory, and students are admitted on a competitive basis without regard to sex, race, creed, religion, or disability, if they meet academic requirements and agree to abide by the university's standards of conduct. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Civil Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | These objectives are intended to develop the following outcomes in students graduating from the program: understand fundamental principles of mathematics and science, Understand fundamental engineering science Understand geotechnical engineering , Understand structural engineering, Understand transportation engineering Understand water resources and environmental engineering, Be able to design civil engineering systems and solve constrained problems with innovation, Be able to use modern engineering tools, conduct experiments, and analyze uncertain data, Be able to communicate ideas effectively, work in teams and lead others, Be familiar with professional practice, business management, and public administration, Be aware of cultural, societal, contemporary, historical, global and sustainability issues , Be committed to life-long learning as licensed engineers of integrity and faith. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 368 Clyde Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2811 | There are 19 full-time faculty in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department. They have a broad spectrum of experience in industry and government, and most are professionally registered. The department has developed a strong research base that is currently funded at about $1 million per year. Over half of the faculty presently hold externally supported research grants and contracts, and several are also funded through the Engineering Computer Graphics Laboratory. Areas of instruction include engineering mechanics, hydraulics, environmental engineering, soil mechanics, structures, structural composites, transportation, and water resources. Most department research is associated with one or more of these areas plus applications for engineering computer graphics. Department research varies with many projects related to water resources--quality, remote sensing, distribution systems, and as part of environmental hazardous waste studies. In the geotechnical area, the department has several active research grants for exploring soil mechanics, earthquake liquefaction, and geologic modeling. Faculty expertise encompasses structures, structural mechanics (including research into structures made of modern composite materials), applications of computer graphics to structural analysis, construction of high-strength dome structures, and improvement of optimization techniques. In recent years there has been a significant increase in the amount of transportation engineering research in the department, much of which is associated with the Utah Department of Transportation. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Computer Science | Ph.D. students in the Computer Science Department are prepared to be technical problem solvers, are competent in the state of the art, and have mastered a particular aspect of Computer Science. They are trained to identify and clearly formulate problems, to develop and analyze algorithmic solutions, and to direct research. All Ph.D. students are active in one of the Department’s research labs, working closely with a faculty advisor. Ph.D. graduates make a novel contribution to Computer Science. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Computer Science, 3361 TMCB PO Box 26576, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 3027 | Dr. Sean Warnick, (shown to the right with student Nigh Tran) Assistant Professor in the Computer Science Department at Brigham Young University, was selected as the 2008 Distinguished Visiting Professor (DVP) by the National Security Agency (NSA) this week. The position, administered by the NSA Enterprise Operations Research, Modeling, and Simulation (OR/MandS) Group, is highly competitive and is offered to a professor with a distinguished record in both decision science applications and student mentoring.“We first heard of Dr. Warnock's work from a colleague at MITRE Corporation who tipped us off to BYU and what they are doing there with student mentoring,” said Francine Goode, Director of the Summer Program for Operations Research Technology (SPORT). “Visiting Warnick’s research group, the Information and Decision Algorithms Laboratories (Idea Labs) last fall, I could tell it is an amazing environment where students from various disciplines come together to work on decision problems arising in a variety of areas, from microbiology to economics.” | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | The BYU Electrical and Computer Engineering Program prepares graduates to: 1. Apply knowledge in service to community and family and engage in lifelong learning through personal study and continuing education. 2. Develop a fulfilling profession which may include employment in industry or academia, technology-based entrepreneurship, and postgraduate study in engineering or other disciplines. 3. Make innovative contributions to science and technology and serve in responsible positions of leadership. 4. Be examples of faith, character, and high professional ethics. | Multiple qualifications are considered for admission to Master’s degree study in the department. No single factor guarantees success or failure in the admission process. Therefore, students who feel that their overall qualifications are indicative of adequate and appropriate preparation for graduate study in EDLF are encouraged to apply. The requirements for application are as follows: A. Completed Baccalaureate degree B. Acceptable score on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or LSAT for applicants for the JD/M.Ed.. (Note: The exam must be taken early enough for the scores to arrive at the Graduate Office before the applicable deadline). C. In addition to the GRE or LSAT, a TOEFL score of at least 580 or equivalent is required for students for whom English is a second language. D. GPA of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) for the last 60 semester hours of coursework. E. Any student who does not hold a Utah teaching Endorsement must have a Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and FBI background check involving finger printing before fulfilling an administrative internship in the State of Utah's. Additional entrance evaluations may be required. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 459 Clyde Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4012 | Professor James Archibald was presented with the Outstanding Faculty Award in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering for demonstrating outstanding devotion to undergraduate education. The citation noted his exemplary mentoring of undergraduate and graduate students via research activities and senior design projects. Dr. Archibald currently serves as the departments Undergraduate Coordinator. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Instructional Psychology and Technology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Instructional Psychology and Technology | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Instructional Psychology and Technology | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Instructional Psychology and Technology, 306 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4291 | Our vision is to improve life conditions and opportunities for individuals, families and communities worldwide. As educational leaders our mission is to improve the equity and quality of teaching and learning environments throughout the world. We accomplish this mission through the integration of research, teaching, and service to strengthen educational opportunities for all people worldwide. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Requirements for Doctoral Degree: Credit Hours (54): Minimum 36 coursework hours in mathematics courses numbered 600 or above with a grade of B or better in each plus 18 dissertation hours (Math 799R). No credit is given for mathematics courses with numbers lower than 510. Examinations: Written Examinations: At the beginning of the second year after admission to the Ph.D. program, the student is required to pass examinations in three of the four areas of algebra, analysis, applied mathematics, and geometry/topology. Four hours are allotted to each examination. Defense of Dissertation: A final oral defense of the dissertation is conducted by a faculty committee consisting of the student's research advisor, two other readers of the dissertation (one of whom may be an outside examiner), and two other members of the faculty. Language Requirement: Demonstrate proficiency in an approved foreign language that is currently in major use in the mathematical literature. In certain cases another language may be substituted for one of these if the department graduate committee approves. The examinations are prepared and offered by the Mathematics Department on a by request basis. They are designed to test a student's ability to translate foreign mathematical literature into scientifically correct English. Dissertation. | Required Entrance Examinations: GRE general test. Every international applicant whose native language is not English is required to submit Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores. •Academic Prerequisite: BS or BA in Mathematics Education or academic credentials at least equivalent (as determined by the Department of Mathematics Education). •Certification Prerequisite: A recognized state teacher certification. (Note: Work required to meet the certification requirement may not be counted as part of the graduate program.) •Advisement: The graduate coordinator is an entering student’s academic sponsor (preliminary advisor). Entering students should contact the graduate coordinator early to discuss initial coursework and program plans. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 292 TMCB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2061 | Most people who train in mathematics do not end up as academic mathematicians, although many do end up in academics. Mathematics is possibly the ideal training for any career in science, medicine, law, or business. It teaches rigorous thought, problem solving, and creativity. The Department of Mathematics prepares the students to achieve the goals. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | 1. Program graduates will develop an in-depth understanding of the fundamental principles related to a sub-discipline of mechanical engineering. 2. Program graduates will have demonstrated a mastery of a broad range of topics related to mechanical engineering, including applied mathematics, and an ability to study and learn independently. 3. Program graduates will have demonstrated the ability to perform independent research by completing a dissertation project which results in the creation of new knowledge and/or the advancement of the state-of-the-art in a specific sub-discipline of mechanical engineering. The dissertation project will contain elements of design, experimentation and/or analysis and will require innovation and creativity.4. Program graduates will develop technical writing and oral presentation skills.5. Program graduates. | All applicants must take the general GRE exam. The expected GRE score ranges are: V (460-480), Q (710-730), AW (3.5-4.5). Students with scores below these numbers must show strength and aptitude through other means to be admitted. If English is not the student’s native language, and a four-year bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution within the United States has not been earned, the student must also take the TOEFL or IELTS. University minimum scores are required. Scores for the entrance exams must be sent directly to Brigham Young University. Applicants should sit for the GRE exam and the TOEFL or IELTS exams, at least 6 weeks prior to the application deadline. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering | Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 435 Crabtree Building, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2625 | The mission of the Department of Mechanical Engineering is to:Educate mechanical engineering students to contribute and lead in society. Offer mentoring opportunities for faculty and students to discover, apply and disseminate new knowledge of real consequence. Provide an educational atmosphere enlightened by the Gospel of Jesus Christ. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Microbiology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | Microbiology graduate programs emphasize a combination of research experience and interdisciplinary course work. Research emphasis includes cancer biology, immunobiology, medical microbiology, microbial ecology, microbial genetics and physiology, and virology. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 775 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2889 | Department Functions and Activities: Throughout the year, the department will hold activities or meetings in which graduate students are invited and expected to attend. Among these are: • Fall Faculty/Grad Student Pot-Luck Picnic • The MMBIO-690R seminars held during the fall and winter semesters • Fall Turkey Fest • Spring Fling • Graduate Retreat. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Molecular Biology | Full Time | 5 Year(s) | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | Molecular Biology graduate programs offer a comprehensive and interdisciplinary degree program, supported by faculty and courses from other departments within the College of Biology and Agriculture as well as the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry in the College of Physical and Mathematical Science. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 775 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2889 | Department Functions and Activities: Throughout the year, the department will hold activities or meetings in which graduate students are invited and expected to attend. Among these are: • Fall Faculty/Grad Student Pot-Luck Picnic • The MMBIO-690R seminars held during the fall and winter semesters • Fall Turkey Fest • Spring Fling • Graduate Retreat. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology and Developmental Biology | Physiology is the study of the functions of the body systems. Developmental biology is the study of how specific genes govern differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs with unique structure and functions. Neuroscience is the study of the development and function of the central nervous system and its connection to influencing/ regulating behavior. Graduate programs in the department offer research training and classroom instruction in a wide range of areas pertaining to these disciplines. A biophysics research group is also part of the department. Areas of research include neuroendocrinology and reproduction, endocrine and immune interactions, development of the central nervous system, hereditary connective tissue disorders, mouse and chick models of development, exercise physiology and glucose metabolism, membrane transport and channel structure, synaptic vesicle recycling, and blood pressure control by the autonomic nervous system. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology andDevelopmental Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology andDevelopmental Biology, 574 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2006 | Physiology is the study of the functions of the body systems. Developmental biology is the study of how specific genes govern differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs with unique structure and functions. Both disciplines require a firm foundation of mathematics, chemistry, physics, and cellular biology. The related area of biophysics uses the methods of physics, chemistry, mathematics and biology to investigate the physical basis of life. Upper division courses require synthesis and integration of information from many areas of science to allow understanding of such remarkable processes of how the heart pumps blood, how neurons communicate with one another, how insulin regulates blood sugar, or how specific gene products determine the morphology and functional capacity of the nervous system. Knowledge in these areas is expanding rapidly due to application of new techniques in molecular biology. Hence, significant exposure to concepts and techniques of molecular biology is an important component of the major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Physics | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | The purpose of the Physics PhD program is to train students in the discipline of physics research to prepare them for careers in governmental research, industrial research, or academic research and teaching. Students gain breadth by attending a weekly colloquium and by visiting several of the research group meetings held in the department. Students gain depth in the field by taking a set of courses required for their sub-discipline. Students will also develop the habits of integrity required by scientific research and will develop spiritual strength by working closely with faculty members and fellow students of faith. Expected Learning Outcomes: 1. Each student will master scientific communication skills, both oral and written. 2. Each student will pursue research of significance, including mastery of the literature in a research area, and report these results orally and in writing. Each student will also demonstrate intellectual independence by designing and analyzing experiments, numerical computations, or theoretical calculations. 3. Each student will master the material in a broad range of graduate courses, including advanced graduate-level courses. Each student will also demonstrate mastery of basic physics (at the level required for college and university teaching). 4. Each student will learn and be able to articulate the principles of ethics in science. 5. Each student will become active in the professional life of their research area by presenting their work at national and regional meetings and by joining and participating in an appropriate professional society. | Required Entrance Examinations: GRE general test. Every international applicant whose native language is not English is required to submit Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores. •Academic Prerequisite: BS or BA in Mathematics Education or academic credentials at least equivalent (as determined by the Department of Mathematics Education). •Certification Prerequisite: A recognized state teacher certification. (Note: Work required to meet the certification requirement may not be counted as part of the graduate program.) •Advisement: The graduate coordinator is an entering student’s academic sponsor (preliminary advisor). Entering students should contact the graduate coordinator early to discuss initial coursework and program plans. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, N283 ESC, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4361 | Brigham Young University has an excellent tradition in physics and astronomy research and education. We are consistently among the top 5 programs in the United States in numbers of undergraduate BS physics degrees granted. Our graduate program, although smaller, maintains the same level of excellence and commitment to success. Our graduates are among the best in the world. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Physics and Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | The purpose of the Physics Astronomy PhD program is to train students in the discipline of physics research to prepare them for careers in governmental research, industrial research, or academic research and teaching. Students gain breadth by attending a weekly colloquium and by visiting several of the research group meetings held in the department. Students gain depth in the field by taking a standard set of astronomy courses. Students will also develop the habits of integrity required by scientific research and will develop spiritual strength by working closely with faculty members and fellow students of faith. 1. Each student will master scientific communication skills, both oral and written. 2. Each student will pursue research of significance, including mastery of the literature in a research area, and report these results orally and in writing. Each student will also demonstrate intellectual independence by designing and carrying out astronomical observations and by analyzing data. 3. Each student will master the material in a broad range of graduate courses, including advanced graduate-level courses. Each student will also demonstrate mastery of basic physics (at the level required for college and university teaching). 4. Each student will learn and be able to articulate the principles of ethics in science. 5. Each student will become active in the professional life of their research area by presenting their work at national and regional meetings and by joining and participating in an appropriate professional society. | Required Entrance Examinations: GRE general test. Every international applicant whose native language is not English is required to submit Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores. •Academic Prerequisite: BS or BA in Mathematics Education or academic credentials at least equivalent (as determined by the Department of Mathematics Education). •Certification Prerequisite: A recognized state teacher certification. (Note: Work required to meet the certification requirement may not be counted as part of the graduate program.) •Advisement: The graduate coordinator is an entering student’s academic sponsor (preliminary advisor). Entering students should contact the graduate coordinator early to discuss initial coursework and program plans. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, N283 ESC, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4361 | Brigham Young University has an excellent tradition in physics and astronomy research and education. We are consistently among the top 5 programs in the United States in numbers of undergraduate BS physics degrees granted. Our graduate program, although smaller, maintains the same level of excellence and commitment to success. Our graduates are among the best in the world. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Physiology and Development Biology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology and Developmental Biology | Physiology is the study of the functions of the body systems. Developmental biology is the study of how specific genes govern differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs with unique structure and functions. Neuroscience is the study of the development and function of the central nervous system and its connection to influencing/ regulating behavior. Graduate programs in the department offer research training and classroom instruction in a wide range of areas pertaining to these disciplines. A biophysics research group is also part of the department. Areas of research include neuroendocrinology and reproduction, endocrine and immune interactions, development of the central nervous system, hereditary connective tissue disorders, mouse and chick models of development, exercise physiology and glucose metabolism, membrane transport and channel structure, synaptic vesicle recycling, and blood pressure control by the autonomic nervous system. | Academic Requirements: A. Fulfill all requirements for admission to the BYU graduate school. (See the current University Catalog.) B. NATABOC certified or be eligible to become certified. C. Have a minimum GPA of 3.0 for the last 60 semester hours of undergraduate academic work. D. Achieve satisfactory scores on the GRE. E. Submit a letter of intent which includes the following: NOTE: Place “LETTER OF INTENT” at the top of your letter. 1. Your preparation and background for the program to which you are applying. 2. The special emphasis which you hope to pursue in your program. 3. The basic reasons for your choice of career. 4. Special qualities and talents that would enhance success in your particular career. 5. Research interests, including faculty you would like to do research with. 6. Your professional goals. 7. Your particular reasons for applying to Brigham Young University. 8. The specific duration for accomplishing your graduate degree. 9. (Optional) Any specific circumstances or objectives you wish to have taken into consideration. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology andDevelopmental Biology | College of Life Sciences, Department of Physiology andDevelopmental Biology, 574 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2006 | Physiology is the study of the functions of the body systems. Developmental biology is the study of how specific genes govern differentiation of cells, tissues, and organs with unique structure and functions. Both disciplines require a firm foundation of mathematics, chemistry, physics, and cellular biology. The related area of biophysics uses the methods of physics, chemistry, mathematics and biology to investigate the physical basis of life. Upper division courses require synthesis and integration of information from many areas of science to allow understanding of such remarkable processes of how the heart pumps blood, how neurons communicate with one another, how insulin regulates blood sugar, or how specific gene products determine the morphology and functional capacity of the nervous system. Knowledge in these areas is expanding rapidly due to application of new techniques in molecular biology. Hence, significant exposure to concepts and techniques of molecular biology is an important component of the major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Sociology | The coursework is designed to teach students to understand and utilize the primary methods of sociological research, employ statistical models to test hypotheses, engage sociological theory to inform their understanding of key social issues, and specialize in particular areas of sociology. The culmination of the program is a Master’s thesis that demonstrates the student’s ability to conduct high quality, independent research. We are proud of our success in placing graduate students in top PhD programs and positions with research organizations and government agencies. If you would like more information about the graduate program, please click the links in the Graduate Program menu above. | International applicants are required to demonstrate an acceptable level of proficiency in the English language to satisfy the university's requirements for admission to graduate study. All applicants who have not received a bachelor's degree (or higher) from an educational institution in the United States or from one of the exempt countries (Canada, the U.K., the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, or Australia) are required to submit official IELTS or TOEFL scores in order to be considered for admission. Please note: The degree must not be older than 2 years at the time of enrollment to qualify for the exemption.U.S. Permanent Residents (PR) are not waived from the English proficiency requirement unless they have met the criteria above. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Sociology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Sociology, 2008 Joseph F. Smith Building, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 0625 | The Mexico Sociology program learns about community organization, development, and poverty by working on projects that have been planned by residents in indigenous villages. Most projects are designed to improve access to water and agricultural production. Here you see the group taking a break from their work for a great photo op. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | Theoretical and philosophical psychology takes as its subject of investigation the philosophical, theoretical, historical, and methodological foundations of the discipline of psychology. Theoretical psychologists have two main tasks in psychology: The first is to formulate, and help others formulate, the theories that are ultimately tested - whether through quantitative, qualitative, or theoretical means. The tradition of formulating "personality theories" is an example of this first task. The second task is to examine, and help others examine, the nonempirical issues that currently facilitate or stymie the work of psychologists. Nonempirical issues are those issues of the discipline that are not decided on the basis of empirical studies alone, though such studies would nearly always be considered. Currently, the Program of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology at Brigham Young University is one of only several of its kind in the world. In recent years, it has become an academic center for theoretical psychology, bringing together some of the foremost thinkers and professors and brightest students in the field. The program's faculty continue to make important scholarly contributions, both through published research and through involvement in professional organizations such as Division 24 of the American Psychological Association. | While many APA programs currently prefer students to apply at the baccalaureate degree level, we welcome students with either a bachelors or masters degree. Prerequisites : Bachelors degree (Psychology degree preferred but not required), GPA of at least 3.0 for the last sixty semester hours, General area GRE. The following courses, or their equivalents, should have been completed: General Psychology (111), Elementary Psychological Statistics (301), Experimental Psychology (302), and three 300-level psychology courses. The doctoral program requires the completion of a masters degree as part of the program. Students are expected to complete a masters thesis by the end of their second year. Refer to the Graduate Catalog for further information. Barring unexpected circumstances such as prolonged severe illness, the Psychology PhD program should be completed within four years from the date of entry into the program. Even if a rare time allowance is made for an extreme circumstance, credits will become outdated after eight years. Students must register for a minimum of 6 semester hours per academic year (September-August) to stay in the program. Full-time graduate student status requires registration for 4.5 credits per term or 8.5 credits per semester (9 credits for international students). | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Family Home and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology, 1001 Kimball Tower P.O. Box 25543, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 6002 | Among the many majors at BYU, there is one that delves into the depths of the human mind: the psychology major. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Wild land Conservation | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | Upon completion of the MS Degree in Wildlife and Wild lands Conservation our students will be able to: Demonstrate ability to relate and synthesize literature relevant to a research project including historical and ecological context, basic mechanisms underlying results, and natural resource management applicability of the research. Demonstrate application of the scientific and analytical methods to conduct designed field or laboratory research. This includes development of testable questions and statistically-testable experimental design in wild land plant, soil, or wildlife problems and expected scope of inference in naturally-variable wild land environments. Demonstrate oral and written scientific communications skills including presentation of the environmental and management context, research approach and both ecological and management inferences developed from a research project. | Acceptance should be based on a balanced consideration of several areas of information, with strong support in one area offsetting weaker support in other areas. Faculty are encouraged to review the files of potential graduate students and to communicate directly with candidates regarding research opportunities. Faculty should feel their opinions regarding a student’s candidacy will be welcomed by the Department’s Graduate Committee. Pursuant to this, a Graduate Student Review Sheet will be prepared for each candidate and space provided for comments by faculty. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, 275 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2760 | These guidelines have been prepared for the graduate student in Plant and Wildlife Sciences and must be used in conjunction with those contained in the BYU Graduate Handbook and the graduate section of the General Catalog. The graduate student must keep current on changes made each year in the graduate program at both the Department and the University level. The ultimate responsibility for complying with all Department and University requirements rests with the student. Forms for requesting exceptions to Graduate policy are available in the Graduate Secretary's office (271 WIDB). Petitions must be signed by the Chair of the Advisory Committee, Department Graduate Coordinator, Department Chair, and Dean and sent to the Office of Graduate Studies. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | PhD in Wildlife Conservation | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | Upon completion of the MS Degree in Wildlife and Wild lands Conservation our students will be able to: Demonstrate ability to relate and synthesize literature relevant to a research project including historical and ecological context, basic mechanisms underlying results, and natural resource management applicability of the research. Demonstrate application of the scientific and analytical methods to conduct designed field or laboratory research. This includes development of testable questions and statistically-testable experimental design in wild land plant, soil, or wildlife problems and expected scope of inference in naturally-variable wild land environments. Demonstrate oral and written scientific communications skills including presentation of the environmental and management context, research approach and both ecological and management inferences developed from a research project. | Acceptance should be based on a balanced consideration of several areas of information, with strong support in one area offsetting weaker support in other areas. Faculty are encouraged to review the files of potential graduate students and to communicate directly with candidates regarding research opportunities. Faculty should feel their opinions regarding a student’s candidacy will be welcomed by the Department’s Graduate Committee. Pursuant to this, a Graduate Student Review Sheet will be prepared for each candidate and space provided for comments by faculty. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences | College of Life Sciences, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences, 275 WIDB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 2760 | These guidelines have been prepared for the graduate student in Plant and Wildlife Sciences and must be used in conjunction with those contained in the BYU Graduate Handbook and the graduate section of the General Catalog. The graduate student must keep current on changes made each year in the graduate program at both the Department and the University level. The ultimate responsibility for complying with all Department and University requirements rests with the student. Forms for requesting exceptions to Graduate policy are available in the Graduate Secretary's office (271 WIDB). Petitions must be signed by the Chair of the Advisory Committee, Department Graduate Coordinator, Department Chair, and Dean and sent to the Office of Graduate Studies. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 230038 | Brigham Young University | Reading (EdD) | Full Time | Variable | $4860 per semester for Fall or Winter, $2430 per term for Spring or Summer | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | The EdD in Reading Education is designed to meet several career roles as follows: Diagnostic-remedial reading specialist, Consultant/coordinator/supervisor in reading, Reading professor in a teaching university or college. | Complete admissions procedures and meet the entrance requirements of the University Graduate School. b. Provide evidence of successful teaching experience as a certified teacher in a self-contained elementary school classroom for a minimum of one year. c. Have a grade point average of 3.25 or above for the last 60 semester hours of university course work. d. Obtain acceptable scores on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Scores (not more than five years old) must be submitted to the office of Graduate Studies before the application deadline. To meet deadlines, take the GRE at least 3 months prior to application for graduate work. (Available at major university testing centers.) e. Applications for acceptance are evaluated by the Teacher Education Graduate Faculty Admissions Committee. Admission is based on faculty approval and available departmental resources. Official notification of acceptance or denial is given by the University Graduate Office. | Doctoral | BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY | Brigham Young University | 32955 | Brigham Young University, 105 FPH, PROVO, Utah, 84602 | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education | David O. McKay School of Education, Department of Teacher Education, 201 MCKB, Brigham Young University, PROVO, Utah, 84602, +1 801 422 4077 | We believe that our most important responsibility as teacher educators is the growth and development of children and youth. We contribute to their development by preparing competent caring, and reflective teachers. This is our primary mission in Teacher Education at Brigham Young University. | Yes | BYU Housing offers many living options to students. On-Campus living facilities for both single students and families are conveniently located and provide many academic helps through the Academic Living Programs. Off-Campus Housing is a service to both students and landlords to help ensure that housing environments are consistent with University guidelines. Welcome to BYU On-Campus Housing. Our mission is to "enable individuals to Live, Learn, Work, and Grow in gospel-centered communities." And that's what BYU On-Campus Housing is all about. We are dedicated to offering students an environment conducive to their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development. | ||
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Africana Studies | Full Time | Varaible | US $36,928 a year | Department of Africana Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - AFRI 0090 - An Introduction to Africana Studies, AFRI 0100 - An Introduction to Afro-American Studies, AFRI 0110 - Freshman Seminar Series, AFRI 0110A - Facing the Past: The Politics of Retrospective Justice, AFRI 0120 - Philosophy of Race and Gender, AFRI 0160 - Twentieth-Century Africa, AFRI 0170 - Afro-American History and Society Before 1800, AFRI 0190 - Caribbean History and Society Before 1800, AFRI 0200 - Modern Caribbean History and Society, AFRI 0210 - Blacks in Latin American History and Society, AFRI 0220 - Introduction to African American History from Emancipation to the Present, AFRI 0280 - Race, Slavery, Modernity and Knowledge, AFRI 0360 - Africana Philosophy and the African Novel, AFRI 0560 - Psychology of the Black Experience, AFRI 0570 - 20th Century Black Feminist Thought and Practice in the U.S, AFRI 0580 - Black Theology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Africana Studies | Department of Africana Studies, Box 1904 155 Angell Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3137 | Department of Africana Studies is the intellectual center for faculty and students interested in the artistic, historical, literary, and theoretical expressions of the various cultures of Africa and the African Diaspora. The Department is dedicated to the exploration and development of new knowledge about the cultures, histories, social formations and artistic expressions of Africa and various locations that comprise the African Diaspora. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in American Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of American Civilization | This program combines the flexibility to explore special areas of interest with support, guidance and structure. Students get an in-depth understanding of a fascinating and important subject, the United States of America. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - AMCV 0150A - American Film: The Birth of an Industry, AMCV 0190I - Back to Bondage: Black Women's History, Memory and Cultural Production, AMCV 0190J - Old Salts and Sacred Cod: Culture, Environment and Food in New England, AMCV 1550 - Methods in Public Humanities, AMCV 1610G - Asian American History, AMCV 1611J - Sex, Love, Race: Miscegenation, Mixed Race and Interracial Relations, AMCV 1611L - The Sixties Without Apology, AMCV 1611V - Color Me Cool: A Survey of Contemporary Graphic Novels, AMCV 1612E - Narratives of 9/11, AMCV 1612F - Female Maladies: Women and Mental Illness. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of American Civilization | Department of American Civilization, Box 1892 82 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2896 | The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was “to provide the student with a more comprehensive and better unified knowledge of American Civilization . . . than would be possible within the limits of a single department.” | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Ancient History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Ancient Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0500 Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1540 Archaeology of Asian Civilizations, ANTH 1570 American Indian Archaeology, ANTH 1650 Ancient Maya Writing, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Archaeology and Ethnohistory, CLAS 0210 Seneca: Philosophist, Dramatist, and Victim of Nero, CLAS 0210B Death in Ancient Greece, CLAS 0210K Sappho: Poet and Legend, CLAS 0400 Ancient Comedy and Its Influence, CLAS 0560 War and Society in the Ancient World, CLAS 0620 Greek Tragedy, CLAS 0810A Alexander the Great and the Alexander Tradition, CLAS 0820 Epics of India, CLAS 1120D Myth and Origins of Science, CLAS 1120G The Idea of Self, CLAS 1310 Roman History: The Rise and Fall of an Imperial Republic, CLAS 1750E Writing History in the Ancient World, CLAS 1750J Ancient Revenge Dramas, CLAS 2010M Problems in Old World Archaeology: The Archaeology of Empires, GREEK 0300 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREEK 1050A Aristophanes, GREEK 1060 Herodotus, GREEK 1100 Advanced Homer: Odyssey, GREEK 1110B Plato, Phaedrus, GREEK 1110 R Characters and Characterization in Greek Literature, GREEK 1810 Early Greek Literature, GREEK 2110E Aeschines and Demosthenes, “Crowning Speeches”, GREEK 2110F Greek Palaeography and Premodern Book Cultures, LATN 0300 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0400 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 1020B Cicero, Verrines, LATN 1040A Virgil: Eclogues and Georgics, LATN 1110G Latin Love Elegy, LATN 1820 Survey of Roman Literature from Horace to Suetonuis, LATN 2090B Lucretius, LATN 2120A Roman Epigraphy, COLT 0710Q Odysseus in Literature, COLT 0810H How not to Be a Hero, EAST 1250 Confucian Ethics, EAST 1880D Early Daoist Syncretism: Zhyang Zi and Hyainan Zi, EGYT 1330 Selections from Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, EGYT 1420 Ancient Egyptian Religion and Magic, EGYT 1450 History of Egypt III, Libyans, Nubians, and Persians in Egypt, EGYT 1460 History of Egypt IV. The Age of Cleopatra, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, EGYT 2510 Social Life in Ancient Egypt, HMAT 2120 Historiography of the Exact Sciences, HMAT 2310A Ancient Scientific Texts: Akkadian, HMAT 2310B Assyriology I, HMAT 2310C Assyriology II, HMAT tba Astronomy before the Telescope. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Ancient Studies | Department of Ancient Studies, Annmary Brown Memorial, 21 Brown Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | The Program in Ancient Studies was founded in the late 1970s, when faculty in various academic units sought new ways to foster collaboration and promote the study of ancient civilizations among Brown’s students. It is a Program of rich collaboration, critical exploration, and truly interdisciplinary scholarship that seeks to bring together all those at Brown (faculty, graduate students, undergraduates, and staff) who are interested in the cultures, religions, and histories of ancient civilizations. Geographically, the “ancient world” represented at Brown comprises early China and India, West Asia (Mesopotamia, Iran, Anatolia, and Israel), Egypt, the Mediterranean (especially Greece and Italy), the early Islamic and Byzantine worlds as well as the Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations. The faculty involved in Ancient Studies number close to forty, and the academic units involved include the departments of Anthropology, Classics, Comparative Literature, Egyptology, History, History of Art and Architecture, History of Mathematics, Philosophy, and Religious Studies, the Program in Judaic Studies, and the Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Ancient Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Ancient Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0500 Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1540 Archaeology of Asian Civilizations, ANTH 1570 American Indian Archaeology, ANTH 1650 Ancient Maya Writing, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Archaeology and Ethnohistory, CLAS 0210 Seneca: Philosophist, Dramatist, and Victim of Nero, CLAS 0210B Death in Ancient Greece, CLAS 0210K Sappho: Poet and Legend, CLAS 0400 Ancient Comedy and Its Influence, CLAS 0560 War and Society in the Ancient World, CLAS 0620 Greek Tragedy, CLAS 0810A Alexander the Great and the Alexander Tradition, CLAS 0820 Epics of India, CLAS 1120D Myth and Origins of Science, CLAS 1120G The Idea of Self, CLAS 1310 Roman History: The Rise and Fall of an Imperial Republic, CLAS 1750E Writing History in the Ancient World, CLAS 1750J Ancient Revenge Dramas, CLAS 2010M Problems in Old World Archaeology: The Archaeology of Empires, GREEK 0300 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREEK 1050A Aristophanes, GREEK 1060 Herodotus, GREEK 1100 Advanced Homer: Odyssey, GREEK 1110B Plato, Phaedrus, GREEK 1110 R Characters and Characterization in Greek Literature, GREEK 1810 Early Greek Literature, GREEK 2110E Aeschines and Demosthenes, “Crowning Speeches”, GREEK 2110F Greek Palaeography and Premodern Book Cultures, LATN 0300 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0400 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 1020B Cicero, Verrines, LATN 1040A Virgil: Eclogues and Georgics, LATN 1110G Latin Love Elegy, LATN 1820 Survey of Roman Literature from Horace to Suetonuis, LATN 2090B Lucretius, LATN 2120A Roman Epigraphy, COLT 0710Q Odysseus in Literature, COLT 0810H How not to Be a Hero, EAST 1250 Confucian Ethics, EAST 1880D Early Daoist Syncretism: Zhyang Zi and Hyainan Zi, EGYT 1330 Selections from Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, EGYT 1420 Ancient Egyptian Religion and Magic, EGYT 1450 History of Egypt III, Libyans, Nubians, and Persians in Egypt, EGYT 1460 History of Egypt IV. The Age of Cleopatra, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, EGYT 2510 Social Life in Ancient Egypt, HMAT 2120 Historiography of the Exact Sciences, HMAT 2310A Ancient Scientific Texts: Akkadian, HMAT 2310B Assyriology I, HMAT 2310C Assyriology II, HMAT tba Astronomy before the Telescope. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Ancient Studies | Department of Ancient Studies, Annmary Brown Memorial, 21 Brown Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | The Program in Ancient Studies was founded in the late 1970s, when faculty in various academic units sought new ways to foster collaboration and promote the study of ancient civilizations among Brown’s students. It is a Program of rich collaboration, critical exploration, and truly interdisciplinary scholarship that seeks to bring together all those at Brown (faculty, graduate students, undergraduates, and staff) who are interested in the cultures, religions, and histories of ancient civilizations. Geographically, the “ancient world” represented at Brown comprises early China and India, West Asia (Mesopotamia, Iran, Anatolia, and Israel), Egypt, the Mediterranean (especially Greece and Italy), the early Islamic and Byzantine worlds as well as the Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations. The faculty involved in Ancient Studies number close to forty, and the academic units involved include the departments of Anthropology, Classics, Comparative Literature, Egyptology, History, History of Art and Architecture, History of Mathematics, Philosophy, and Religious Studies, the Program in Judaic Studies, and the Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Anthropology - Anthropological Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Anthropology | This program examines human communication, especially the relationship between language and culture; and biological anthropology focuses on human biological variation and its evolution. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0066C - Population and Culture, ANTH 0066E - Colonial Cities, ANTH 0066F - Families and Households, ANTH 0066G - Explorers and Cultural Encounters, ANTH 0066H - Healers and Healing, ANTH 0066I - Human Trafficking, ANTH 0066K - International Perspectives of omen's Agency and Society, ANTH 0066L - Singing and Language, ANTH 0066M - Holy Wars, ANTH 0066N - Peoples and Cultures of Greater Mexico, ANTH 0066P - Transnational Lives: Anthropology of Migration and Mobilities, ANTH 0100 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 0110 - Anthropology and Global Social Problems, ANTH 0200 - Culture and Human Behavior, ANTH 0300 - Culture and Health, ANTH 0301 - Gender, Medicine and Care, ANTH 0310 - Human Evolution, ANTH 0400 - Growing Up Ethnic and Multicultural, ANTH 0500 - Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 - Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1100 - Circumpolar Ethnography, ANTH 1110 - African Issues in Anthropological Perspective, ANTH 1119 - Andean Anthropology, ANTH 1121 - From Coyote to Casinos: Native North American Peoples and Cultures, ANTH 1123 - Native North Americans in the Twentieth Century. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, Box 1921, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3251 | Department of Anthropology faculty are trained as social and cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and anthropological linguists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Anthropology - Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Anthropology | This program helps students to study the social lives and adaptations of people in the past mostly through material remains and physical changes in the landscape. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0066C - Population and Culture, ANTH 0066E - Colonial Cities, ANTH 0066F - Families and Households, ANTH 0066G - Explorers and Cultural Encounters, ANTH 0066H - Healers and Healing, ANTH 0066I - Human Trafficking, ANTH 0066K - International Perspectives of omen's Agency and Society, ANTH 0066L - Singing and Language, ANTH 0066M - Holy Wars, ANTH 0066N - Peoples and Cultures of Greater Mexico, ANTH 0066P - Transnational Lives: Anthropology of Migration and Mobilities, ANTH 0100 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 0110 - Anthropology and Global Social Problems, ANTH 0200 - Culture and Human Behavior, ANTH 0300 - Culture and Health, ANTH 0301 - Gender, Medicine and Care, ANTH 0310 - Human Evolution, ANTH 0400 - Growing Up Ethnic and Multicultural, ANTH 0500 - Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 - Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1100 - Circumpolar Ethnography, ANTH 1110 - African Issues in Anthropological Perspective, ANTH 1119 - Andean Anthropology, ANTH 1121 - From Coyote to Casinos: Native North American Peoples and Cultures, ANTH 1123 - Native North Americans in the Twentieth Century. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, Box 1921, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3251 | Department of Anthropology faculty are trained as social and cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and anthropological linguists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Anthropology - Biological Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Anthropology | This program focuses on human biological variation and its evolution. Students will learn about other ways of life and different systems of belief and knowledge; become familiar with the methods used by anthropological researchers for studying human beings in different time periods and from different vantage points; and gain a more critical understanding of the human condition and their own cultural backgrounds. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0066C - Population and Culture, ANTH 0066E - Colonial Cities, ANTH 0066F - Families and Households, ANTH 0066G - Explorers and Cultural Encounters, ANTH 0066H - Healers and Healing, ANTH 0066I - Human Trafficking, ANTH 0066K - International Perspectives of omen's Agency and Society, ANTH 0066L - Singing and Language, ANTH 0066M - Holy Wars, ANTH 0066N - Peoples and Cultures of Greater Mexico, ANTH 0066P - Transnational Lives: Anthropology of Migration and Mobilities, ANTH 0100 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 0110 - Anthropology and Global Social Problems, ANTH 0200 - Culture and Human Behavior, ANTH 0300 - Culture and Health, ANTH 0301 - Gender, Medicine and Care, ANTH 0310 - Human Evolution, ANTH 0400 - Growing Up Ethnic and Multicultural, ANTH 0500 - Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 - Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1100 - Circumpolar Ethnography, ANTH 1110 - African Issues in Anthropological Perspective, ANTH 1119 - Andean Anthropology, ANTH 1121 - From Coyote to Casinos: Native North American Peoples and Cultures, ANTH 1123 - Native North Americans in the Twentieth Century. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, Box 1921, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3251 | Department of Anthropology faculty are trained as social and cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and anthropological linguists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Anthropology - Sociocultural Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Anthropology | This program emphasizes contemporary societies and cultures, and addresses issues such as gender and kinship, ethnicity and nationalism, population and health, and politics and violence. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0066C - Population and Culture, ANTH 0066E - Colonial Cities, ANTH 0066F - Families and Households, ANTH 0066G - Explorers and Cultural Encounters, ANTH 0066H - Healers and Healing, ANTH 0066I - Human Trafficking, ANTH 0066K - International Perspectives of omen's Agency and Society, ANTH 0066L - Singing and Language, ANTH 0066M - Holy Wars, ANTH 0066N - Peoples and Cultures of Greater Mexico, ANTH 0066P - Transnational Lives: Anthropology of Migration and Mobilities, ANTH 0100 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 0110 - Anthropology and Global Social Problems, ANTH 0200 - Culture and Human Behavior, ANTH 0300 - Culture and Health, ANTH 0301 - Gender, Medicine and Care, ANTH 0310 - Human Evolution, ANTH 0400 - Growing Up Ethnic and Multicultural, ANTH 0500 - Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 - Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1100 - Circumpolar Ethnography, ANTH 1110 - African Issues in Anthropological Perspective, ANTH 1119 - Andean Anthropology, ANTH 1121 - From Coyote to Casinos: Native North American Peoples and Cultures, ANTH 1123 - Native North Americans in the Twentieth Century. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, Box 1921, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3251 | Department of Anthropology faculty are trained as social and cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and anthropological linguists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Applied Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Applied Mathematics | This program is designed for students with a wide range of goals and are not limited to the needs of students following an applied mathematics concentration. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - APMA 0070 - Introduction to Applied Complex Variables, APMA 0090 - Introduction to Mathematical Modeling, APMA 0120 - Mathematics of Finance, APMA 0160 - Introduction to Scientific Computing, APMA 0180 - Modeling the World with Mathematics: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians, APMA 0330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0340 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0350 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0360 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0410 - Mathematical Methods in the Brain Sciences, APMA 0650 - Essential Statistics, APMA 1070 - Quantitative Models of Biological Systems, APMA 1170 - Introduction to Computational Linear Algebra, APMA 1180 - Introduction to Numerical Solution of Differential Equations, APMA 1200 - Operations Research: Probabilistic Models, APMA 1260 - Introduction to the Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, APMA 1330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics III, IV, APMA 1650 - Statistical Inference I, APMA 1660 - Statistical Inference II, APMA 1670 - Statistical Analysis of Time Series, APMA 1680 - Nonparametric Statistics, APMA 1930A - Actuarial Mathematics ,APMA 1930C - Information Theory, APMA 1930D - Mixing and Transport in Dynamical Systems, APMA 1940C - Introduction to Mathematics of Fluids, APMA 1940F - Mathematics of Physical Plasmas, APMA 1940I - The Mathematics of Finance, APMA 1940L - Mathematical Models in Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Applied Mathematics | Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2115 | The Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University is one of the most prominent departments at Brown, and is also one of the oldest and strongest of its type in the country. The Division of Applied Mathematics is a world renowned center of research activity in a wide spectrum of traditional and modern mathematics. It explores the connections between mathematics and its applications at both the research and educational levels. The principal areas of research activities are ordinary, functional, and partial differential equations: stochastic control theory; applied probability, statistics and stochastic systems theory; neuroscience and computational biology; numerical analysis and scientific computation; and the mechanics of solids, materials science and fluids. The effort in virtually all research ranges from applied and algorithmic problems to the study of fundamental mathematical questions. The Division emphasizes applied mathematics as a unifying theme. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Applied Mathematics - Economics (Advanced Economics Track) | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Applied Mathematics | This program is designed for students with a wide range of goals and are not limited to the needs of students following an applied mathematics concentration. This program is to provide sufficient command of mathematical concepts to allow pursuit of an economics program emphasizing modern research problems. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - APMA 0070 - Introduction to Applied Complex Variables, APMA 0090 - Introduction to Mathematical Modeling, APMA 0120 - Mathematics of Finance, APMA 0160 - Introduction to Scientific Computing, APMA 0180 - Modeling the World with Mathematics: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians, APMA 0330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0340 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0350 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0360 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0410 - Mathematical Methods in the Brain Sciences, APMA 0650 - Essential Statistics, APMA 1070 - Quantitative Models of Biological Systems, APMA 1170 - Introduction to Computational Linear Algebra, APMA 1180 - Introduction to Numerical Solution of Differential Equations, APMA 1200 - Operations Research: Probabilistic Models, APMA 1260 - Introduction to the Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, APMA 1330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics III, IV, APMA 1650 - Statistical Inference I, APMA 1660 - Statistical Inference II, APMA 1670 - Statistical Analysis of Time Series, APMA 1680 - Nonparametric Statistics, APMA 1930A - Actuarial Mathematics ,APMA 1930C - Information Theory, APMA 1930D - Mixing and Transport in Dynamical Systems, APMA 1940C - Introduction to Mathematics of Fluids, APMA 1940F - Mathematics of Physical Plasmas, APMA 1940I - The Mathematics of Finance, APMA 1940L - Mathematical Models in Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Applied Mathematics | Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2115 | The Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University is one of the most prominent departments at Brown, and is also one of the oldest and strongest of its type in the country. The Division of Applied Mathematics is a world renowned center of research activity in a wide spectrum of traditional and modern mathematics. It explores the connections between mathematics and its applications at both the research and educational levels. The principal areas of research activities are ordinary, functional, and partial differential equations: stochastic control theory; applied probability, statistics and stochastic systems theory; neuroscience and computational biology; numerical analysis and scientific computation; and the mechanics of solids, materials science and fluids. The effort in virtually all research ranges from applied and algorithmic problems to the study of fundamental mathematical questions. The Division emphasizes applied mathematics as a unifying theme. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Applied Mathematics - Economics (Mathematical Finance Track) | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Applied Mathematics | This program is designed for students with a wide range of goals and are not limited to the needs of students following an applied mathematics concentration. This program is to provide sufficient command of mathematical concepts to allow pursuit of an economics program emphasizing modern research problems. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - APMA 0070 - Introduction to Applied Complex Variables, APMA 0090 - Introduction to Mathematical Modeling, APMA 0120 - Mathematics of Finance, APMA 0160 - Introduction to Scientific Computing, APMA 0180 - Modeling the World with Mathematics: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians, APMA 0330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0340 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0350 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0360 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0410 - Mathematical Methods in the Brain Sciences, APMA 0650 - Essential Statistics, APMA 1070 - Quantitative Models of Biological Systems, APMA 1170 - Introduction to Computational Linear Algebra, APMA 1180 - Introduction to Numerical Solution of Differential Equations, APMA 1200 - Operations Research: Probabilistic Models, APMA 1260 - Introduction to the Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, APMA 1330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics III, IV, APMA 1650 - Statistical Inference I, APMA 1660 - Statistical Inference II, APMA 1670 - Statistical Analysis of Time Series, APMA 1680 - Nonparametric Statistics, APMA 1930A - Actuarial Mathematics ,APMA 1930C - Information Theory, APMA 1930D - Mixing and Transport in Dynamical Systems, APMA 1940C - Introduction to Mathematics of Fluids, APMA 1940F - Mathematics of Physical Plasmas, APMA 1940I - The Mathematics of Finance, APMA 1940L - Mathematical Models in Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Applied Mathematics | Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2115 | The Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University is one of the most prominent departments at Brown, and is also one of the oldest and strongest of its type in the country. The Division of Applied Mathematics is a world renowned center of research activity in a wide spectrum of traditional and modern mathematics. It explores the connections between mathematics and its applications at both the research and educational levels. The principal areas of research activities are ordinary, functional, and partial differential equations: stochastic control theory; applied probability, statistics and stochastic systems theory; neuroscience and computational biology; numerical analysis and scientific computation; and the mechanics of solids, materials science and fluids. The effort in virtually all research ranges from applied and algorithmic problems to the study of fundamental mathematical questions. The Division emphasizes applied mathematics as a unifying theme. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Archaeology and the Ancient World | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | This program emphasizes material culture studies across the full spectrum of the ancient world. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ARCH 0100 Field Archaeology in the Ancient World, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, ARCH 0325 "Dead White Guys": Greco-Roman Civilization and American Identity, ARCH 0420 Archaeologies of the Greek Past, ARCH 0650 Islamic Civilizations, ARCH 1120 Pompeii, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, ARCH 1625 Temples and Tombs: Egyptian Religion and Culture, ARCH 1710 Architecture and Memory, ARCH 1780 Violence and Civilization: A Deep History of Social Violence, ARCH 1860 Engineering Material Culture: An Introduction to Archaeological Science, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan, ANTH 1121 Nations within States, ANTH 1570 No. American Archaeology, ANTH 1620 Global Historical Archaeology, ANTH 1710 Biological Issues, ANTH 2410 Exhibitions in Museums, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Seminar, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0560 The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 1040G Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden of China, HIAA 1440D Topics in Medieval Architecture: The Gothic Cathedral, HIAA 1850C Topics in 20th Century: The City of Paris Urbanism and Architecture, JUDS 1400 The Archaeology of Palestine. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Box 1837, 70 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3188 | The Artemis A. W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World is dedicated to the academic study and public promotion of the archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean, Egypt, and Western Asia (the latter broadly construed as extending from Anatolia and the Levant to the Caucasus, and including the territories of the ancient Near East); Principal research interests lie in the complex societies of the pre-modern era. Although the core efforts of the Joukowsky Institute are archaeological in nature and are located within this broadly defined zone, close ties with all individuals interested in the ancient world, and with archaeologists of all parts of the globe, are welcome and actively encouraged. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Architectural Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History of Art and Architecture | This program prepares students for the continued study of architecture and the history of architecture in graduate school as well as careers in related areas such as urban studies. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HIAA 0050C First Year Seminar: Illustrating Knowledge, HIAA 0080 Introduction to the History of Photography, HIAA 0110A Ancient China: Art and Archaeology, HIAA 0550 A Florence and Tuscany in the 15th Century, HIAA 0620 The Age of Rubens and Rembrandt: Visual Culture of the Netherlands in the 17th Century, HIAA 0080 20th Century European Art, HIAA 0860 A Contemporary Architecture, HIAA 1040H Topics in East Asian Art: The Shape of Good Fortune, HIAA 1200E Topics in Roman Art and Architecture: Roman Spectacles, HIAA 1600B Topics in 17th Century Art: Caravaggio, HIAA 1760B Topics in Later 19th Century Painting: French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Art, HIAA 1910 A Project Seminar for Architectural Studies Concentrators: Downtown Providence from Late 19th Century to Present , HIAA 2870E Special Topics: Art and Utopia in the 1960’s: The Artist as the Architect of a Free Society, HIAA 2920 Methods of Research and Art Historical Interpretation, HIAA 0010 A Introduction to History of Art and Architecture, HIAA 0050D First Year Seminar: Seeing and Writing on Contemporary Arts, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0340A Roman Art and Architecture: Julius Caesar to Hadrian, HIAA 0490 A Urban Modernity and the Middle East, HIAA 0560A The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 0880 Contemporary Art I, HIAA 0910 Contemporary Photography, HIAA 1040I A Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden in China and Japan, HIAA 1430B Shaping Faith: Sacred Images in Medieval Art and Culture Pending Approval, HIAA 1600G Art and Religion in Early Modern Europe: Visual Communication. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History of Art and Architecture | Department of History of Art and Architecture, 64 College St, Box 1855, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1174 | The Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown University grants undergraduate degrees in the History of Art and Architecture, as well as in Architectural Studies.Graduate study in this department is geared toward earning a PhD in the History of Art, Architectural Studies, and many areas of visual culture from the ancient world through the present. Work in the department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown is conceived as an interdisciplinary undertaking, in which students are encouraged to become familiar with the variety of methodologies and practices that have historically been, and continue to be productive in fields. The department also maintain a longstanding commitment to museum studies and the study of objects through a close working relationship with the Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design.Interested students in this department have the opportunity to hold internships and (in the case of graduate students) proctorships at the museum. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Physics | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHYS 0270 Introduction to Astronomy, PHYS 0280 Introduction to Astrophysics and Cosmology, PHYS 0470 Electricity and Magnetism, PHYS 0500 Advanced Classical Mechanics, PHYS 0560 Experiments in Modern Physics, PHYS 0720 Methods of Mathematical Physics, PHYS 0790 Physics of Matter, PHYS 1100 Introduction to General Relativity, PHYS 1170 Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, PHYS 1280 Introduction to Cosmology, PHYS 1410 Quantum Mechanics A. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Physics | Department of Physics, Brown University, Box 1843, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2641 | Physics is the most fundamental of sciences. It provides a foundation of crucial ideas for other scientific fields, and the underpinnings of all of modern technology. The physics faculty at Brown is actively engaged in both teaching and research, including mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. Research focuses on phenomena ranging from the subatomic to the cosmic, and includes collaborative efforts with biologists, chemists, engineers, geologists, and mathematicians. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | The program is designed to provide both the breadth necessary for an appreciation of the diversity and unity which characterize living beings, and the opportunity for focusing in a subdiscipline within biology. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Chemistry | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - UNIV0140 Insights into Chemistry A Historical Perspective, CHEM0080 First Year Seminars, CHEM0080A First Year Seminar – Energy, CHEM0080B First Year Seminar - Molecular Structures in Chemistry,CHEM0100 Introductory Chemistry, CHEM0120 Chemistry of the Environment, CHEM0190 Chemical Ecology: Pheromones, Poisons, and Chemical Messages, CHEM0330 Equilibrium, Rate, and Structure, CHEM0350 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0360 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0400 Biophysical and Bioinorganic Chemistry, CHEM0500 Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM0970 Undergraduate Research, CHEM0980 Undergraduate Research, CHEM1060 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1140 Physical Chemistry: Quantum Chemistry, CHEM1150 Physical Chemistry: Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, CHEM1160 Physical Chemistry Laboratory, CHEM1170 Environmental Chemistry, CHEM1220 Computational Tools in Biochemistry and Chemical Biology, CHEM1230 Chemical Biology, CHEM1240 Biochemistry, CHEM1450 Advanced Organic Chemistry, CHEM1560 Topics in Advanced Chemistry CHEM1560A Molecular Modeling, CHEM1560B Techniques in Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1560C Advanced Spectroscopy, CHEM1560D Chemistry and Biology of Naturally Occurring Antibiotics CHEM1560E Biological Mass Spectrometry, CHEM1560F Organic Structure Analysis, CHEM1560I DNA Damage and Repair, CHEM1620 Chemical Physics, CHEM1620A Photoacoustics, CHEM1620B Spectroscopy, CHEM1620C To Be Determined, CHEM1700 Nanoscale Materials: Synthesis and Appliciations, CHEM1830 Group Research Project, CHEM1840 Group Research Project, CHEM2010 Advanced Thermodynamics, CHEM2020 Statistical Mechanics, CHEM2210 Chemical Crystallography, CHEM2310 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2320 Physical Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2410 Physical Organic Chemistry, CHEM2420 Organic Reactions, CHEM2430 Synthetic Organic Chemistry, CHEM2770 Quantum Chemistry, CHEM2780 Quantum Mechanics, CHEM2810 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2820 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2870 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2880 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2920 Special Topics in Chemistry, CHEM2920A Chemistry and Physics of Amorphous Materials. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Chemistry | Department of Chemistry, Box H 324 Brook Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2256 | The Department of Chemistry maintains pedagogical and research strengths in organic, inorganic, and theoretical and experimental physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, chemical biology and nanochemistry. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Classical Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | This program is intended for those interested chiefly in the ‘classic’ civilizations of the Mediterranean (Greece and Rome), as well as for those interested in both earlier (prehistoric) and later (medieval) periods in that geographic region. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ARCH 0100 Field Archaeology in the Ancient World, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, ARCH 0325 "Dead White Guys": Greco-Roman Civilization and American Identity, ARCH 0420 Archaeologies of the Greek Past, ARCH 0650 Islamic Civilizations, ARCH 1120 Pompeii, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, ARCH 1625 Temples and Tombs: Egyptian Religion and Culture, ARCH 1710 Architecture and Memory, ARCH 1780 Violence and Civilization: A Deep History of Social Violence, ARCH 1860 Engineering Material Culture: An Introduction to Archaeological Science, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan, ANTH 1121 Nations within States, ANTH 1570 No. American Archaeology, ANTH 1620 Global Historical Archaeology, ANTH 1710 Biological Issues, ANTH 2410 Exhibitions in Museums, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Seminar, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0560 The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 1040G Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden of China, HIAA 1440D Topics in Medieval Architecture: The Gothic Cathedral, HIAA 1850C Topics in 20th Century: The City of Paris Urbanism and Architecture, JUDS 1400 The Archaeology of Palestine. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Box 1837, 70 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3188 | The Artemis A. W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World is dedicated to the academic study and public promotion of the archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean, Egypt, and Western Asia (the latter broadly construed as extending from Anatolia and the Levant to the Caucasus, and including the territories of the ancient Near East); Principal research interests lie in the complex societies of the pre-modern era. Although the core efforts of the Joukowsky Institute are archaeological in nature and are located within this broadly defined zone, close ties with all individuals interested in the ancient world, and with archaeologists of all parts of the globe, are welcome and actively encouraged. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Classics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CLAS 0010 The Greeks, CLAS 0020 The Romans, CLAS 0150 Ancient Philosophy, CLAS 0180 Indian Civilization through Its Literature, CLAS 0210 Topics in Classical Literature and Civilization, CLAS 0210A Alexander the Great and Alexandria, CLAS 0210B Death in Ancient Greece, CLAS 0210D Herodotus, CLAS 0210E The Family in the Classical World, CLAS 0210F The Meaning of History in the Ancient World. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Classics and Sanskrit | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CLAS 0010 The Greeks, CLAS 0020 The Romans, CLAS 0150 Ancient Philosophy, CLAS 0180 Indian Civilization through Its Literature, CLAS 0210 Topics in Classical Literature and Civilization, CLAS 0210A Alexander the Great and Alexandria, CLAS 0210B Death in Ancient Greece, CLAS 0210D Herodotus, CLAS 0210E The Family in the Classical World, CLAS 0210F The Meaning of History in the Ancient World. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Cognitive Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | This program is designed to provide a flexible interdisciplinary approach with four areas of emphasis: perception, cognition, language, and cognitive neuroscience. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 7 Language, Truth, and Advertising, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 11 Perception, Illusion, and the Visual Arts, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 32 The Biology and Evolution of Language, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 45 Language and the Mind, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 50 Making Decisions, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 63 Children's Thinking: The Nature of Cognitive Development, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 87 Language in Africa, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 88 Meaning and Thought, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 102 Neural Modelling Laboratory, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 111 Introduction to Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 112 Lexical Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 113 Formal Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 116 Human Factors, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 118 Cognitive Development, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 119 Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 120 Computational Vision, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 121 Introduction to Phonological Theory, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 123 The Production, Perception, and Analysis of Speech, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 124 Research Methods in Physiological and Acoustic Phonetics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 129 Understanding the Brain, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 131 Introduction to Syntax, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 136 Introduction to Computational Linguistics , Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 138 Ecological Approach to Perception and Action, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 141 Language Processing, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 142 Syntactic Theory and Syntactic Processing, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 143 Child Language Acquisition, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 144 Visualizing Vision Lab, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 147 Language Learning Disorders, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 148 Language and the Brain, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 150 Subcortical Brain Bases of Language and Thought, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 152 Thinking, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 153 Laboratory in Cognitive Processes, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 154 Evolution of Perceptual Systems, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 156 Human Memory and Learning. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship - Business Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship | This program offers a strong and cohesive knowledge base of the basic principles and approaches of economics. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ECON 0110 Principles of Economics, ECON 1110 Intermediate Microeconomics, SOC 1030 Organizational Theories of Public and Private Sectors, SOC 1090 Theories of Organizational Dynamics and Decision Making, ENGN 0020 Transforming Society—Technology and Choices for the Future, ENGN 1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, MATH 0050 Introductory Calculus Part I. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship, Feinstein House, 130 Hope Street Box 1922, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 6348 | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations, and Entrepreneurship (COE) engages faculty and students in the study of commercial activity, entrepreneurship, technological innovation, and the organizations within which such activity occurs. The initiative spans a number of departments, disciplines, and co-curricular activities at the University, and it supports the research of leading scholars at Brown. COE will educate students to be creative and flexible leaders in a number of careers. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship - Entrepreneurship and Technology Management | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship | This program offers a strong and cohesive knowledge base of the basic principles and approaches of entrepreneurship and management. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ECON 0110 Principles of Economics, ECON 1110 Intermediate Microeconomics, SOC 1030 Organizational Theories of Public and Private Sectors, SOC 1090 Theories of Organizational Dynamics and Decision Making, ENGN 0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN 1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, MATH 0200 Intermediate Calculus (Physics/Engineering), Methods of Applied Math I, II, SOC 1100 Statistics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship, Feinstein House, 130 Hope Street Box 1922, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 6348 | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations, and Entrepreneurship (COE) engages faculty and students in the study of commercial activity, entrepreneurship, technological innovation, and the organizations within which such activity occurs. The initiative spans a number of departments, disciplines, and co-curricular activities at the University, and it supports the research of leading scholars at Brown. COE will educate students to be creative and flexible leaders in a number of careers. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship - Organizational Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship | This program offers a strong and cohesive knowledge base of the basic principles and approaches of Organizational theory. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ECON 0110 Principles of Economics, ECON 1110 Intermediate Microeconomics, SOC 1030 Organizational Theories of Public and Private Sectors, SOC 1090 Theories of Organizational Dynamics and Decision Making, ENGN 0020 Transforming Society—Technology and Choices for the Future, ENGN 1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, MATH 0070 Introductory Calculus Part I, SOC 1100 Statistics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship, Feinstein House, 130 Hope Street Box 1922, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 6348 | The C.V. Starr Program in Commerce, Organizations, and Entrepreneurship (COE) engages faculty and students in the study of commercial activity, entrepreneurship, technological innovation, and the organizations within which such activity occurs. The initiative spans a number of departments, disciplines, and co-curricular activities at the University, and it supports the research of leading scholars at Brown. COE will educate students to be creative and flexible leaders in a number of careers. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Community Health | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Community Health | This program is an interdisciplinary concentration that examines patterns of and explanations for, population health and disease; health policy; cross-cultural and international aspects of health; the organizational and social structures through which health services are delivered/received; and the public health system. Courses in the program demonstrate the ways in which the social, political, behavioral and biological sciences contribute to the understanding of national and international health care systems, resource allocation, and patterns of population distributions of health and disease. The program provides students with courses in basic research methods and statistics necessary for problem solving and critical thinking in the emerging emphasis on evidence-based health care and public health. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Introduction to the Health Care System of the U.S., Introduction to Public Health, Survey Research Methods, Environmental Health and Policy. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Community Health | Department of Community Health, Box G-S121 121 South Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3172 | Our educational mission encompasses medical students, graduate students, fellows and baccalaureate level students in courses and educational experiences in a range of methodological areas. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Comparative Literature - English and One Foreign Language | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Comparative Literature | This program enable students to study literature in cross-cultural perspectives. The aim of the program is to encourage students to study a varied and illustrative range of literary topics rather than the total development of a single literary tradition. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - COLT 0610G Literature and the American Presidency, COLT 0610H Renaissance Epic, COLT 0710C Introduction to Scandinavian Literature, COLT 0710I New Worlds, COLT 0710Q Odysseus in Literature, COLT 0810H How Not to Be a Hero, COLT 0810I Tales and Talemakers of the NonWestern World, COLT 0810J The Colonial and Postcolonial Marvelous, COLT 0810K Dropping Out in Morocco, COLT 0810X European Renaissances, COLT 0810Y Greece in the Imagination of Western Authors, COLT 1410K European Early Modern Drama, COLT 1420R The 1001 Nights, COLT 1420U The South: Literature of the U.S. South and South America, COLT 1421A European Fiction, COLT 1421C Subaltern Studies: History, Literature, Theory, COLT 1421D Mediterranean Islands, COLT 1430D Critical Approaches to Chinese Poetry, COLT 1430K The Classical Tradition in English Poetry, COLT 1430N The Albatross and the Nightingale: NineteethCentury Poetry, COLT 1710A Translation as Art, COLT 1810C City (B)Lights, COLT 1810G Fiction and History, COLT 1810I Gates of Asia, COLT 1810N Freud: Writer and Reader, COLT 1810P Literature and Medicine, COLT 1811J The Paternalistic Thiller and other Studies in Colonial Fiction, COLT1811X Marx and his Critics, COLT1811Y Genius and Melancholia in the Renaissance. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Comparative Literature | Department of Comparative Literature, Marston Hall Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2818 | Department of Comparative Literature is distinct in its conviction that literary research and instruction must be international in character, and its undergraduate and graduate programs are considered among the finest in the country. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Comparative Literature - English and Two Foreign Languages | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Comparative Literature | This program enable students to study literature in cross-cultural perspectives. The aim of the program is to encourage students to study a varied and illustrative range of literary topics rather than the total development of a single literary tradition. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - COLT 0610G Literature and the American Presidency, COLT 0610H Renaissance Epic, COLT 0710C Introduction to Scandinavian Literature, COLT 0710I New Worlds, COLT 0710Q Odysseus in Literature, COLT 0810H How Not to Be a Hero, COLT 0810I Tales and Talemakers of the NonWestern World, COLT 0810J The Colonial and Postcolonial Marvelous, COLT 0810K Dropping Out in Morocco, COLT 0810X European Renaissances, COLT 0810Y Greece in the Imagination of Western Authors, COLT 1410K European Early Modern Drama, COLT 1420R The 1001 Nights, COLT 1420U The South: Literature of the U.S. South and South America, COLT 1421A European Fiction, COLT 1421C Subaltern Studies: History, Literature, Theory, COLT 1421D Mediterranean Islands, COLT 1430D Critical Approaches to Chinese Poetry, COLT 1430K The Classical Tradition in English Poetry, COLT 1430N The Albatross and the Nightingale: NineteethCentury Poetry, COLT 1710A Translation as Art, COLT 1810C City (B)Lights, COLT 1810G Fiction and History, COLT 1810I Gates of Asia, COLT 1810N Freud: Writer and Reader, COLT 1810P Literature and Medicine, COLT 1811J The Paternalistic Thiller and other Studies in Colonial Fiction, COLT1811X Marx and his Critics, COLT1811Y Genius and Melancholia in the Renaissance. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Comparative Literature | Department of Comparative Literature, Marston Hall Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2818 | Department of Comparative Literature is distinct in its conviction that literary research and instruction must be international in character, and its undergraduate and graduate programs are considered among the finest in the country. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Comparative Literature - Literary Translation | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Comparative Literature | This program enable students to study literature in cross-cultural perspectives. The aim of the program is to encourage students to study a varied and illustrative range of literary topics rather than the total development of a single literary tradition. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - COLT 0610G Literature and the American Presidency, COLT 0610H Renaissance Epic, COLT 0710C Introduction to Scandinavian Literature, COLT 0710I New Worlds, COLT 0710Q Odysseus in Literature, COLT 0810H How Not to Be a Hero, COLT 0810I Tales and Talemakers of the NonWestern World, COLT 0810J The Colonial and Postcolonial Marvelous, COLT 0810K Dropping Out in Morocco, COLT 0810X European Renaissances, COLT 0810Y Greece in the Imagination of Western Authors, COLT 1410K European Early Modern Drama, COLT 1420R The 1001 Nights, COLT 1420U The South: Literature of the U.S. South and South America, COLT 1421A European Fiction, COLT 1421C Subaltern Studies: History, Literature, Theory, COLT 1421D Mediterranean Islands, COLT 1430D Critical Approaches to Chinese Poetry, COLT 1430K The Classical Tradition in English Poetry, COLT 1430N The Albatross and the Nightingale: NineteethCentury Poetry, COLT 1710A Translation as Art, COLT 1810C City (B)Lights, COLT 1810G Fiction and History, COLT 1810I Gates of Asia, COLT 1810N Freud: Writer and Reader, COLT 1810P Literature and Medicine, COLT 1811J The Paternalistic Thiller and other Studies in Colonial Fiction, COLT1811X Marx and his Critics, COLT1811Y Genius and Melancholia in the Renaissance. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Comparative Literature | Department of Comparative Literature, Marston Hall Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2818 | Department of Comparative Literature is distinct in its conviction that literary research and instruction must be international in character, and its undergraduate and graduate programs are considered among the finest in the country. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Computer Science | This program is designed to combine educational breadth in the areas of software, hardware, and theoretical computer science with deeper understanding of specialized areas such as software system design, programming languages, machine architecture, artificial intelligence, the analysis of algorithms, and the theory of computation. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CSCI0020 Concepts and Challenges of Computer Science, CSCI0040 Introduction to Scientific Computing and Problem Solving, CSCI0090-A Building a Web Application, CSCI0090-B Computers and Human Values, CSCI0090-C Talking with Computers, CSCI0150 Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming and Computer Science, CSCI0160 Introduction to Algorithms and Data Structures, CSCI0170 CS: An Integrated Introduction, CSCI0180 CS: An Integrated Introduction, CSCI0190 Programming with Data Structures and Algorithms, CSCI0220 Introduction to Discrete Structures and Probability, CSCI0240(CS024)Visual Thinking/Visual Computing, CSCI0310(CS031)Introduction to Computer Systems, CSCI0320(CS032)Introduction to Software Engineering, CSCI0360(CS036)Introduction to Systems Programming, CSCI0510(CS051)Models of Computation, CSCI0530Directions: The Matrix in Computer Science, CSCI0920(CS092)Educational Software Seminar, CSCI1230(CS123)Introduction to Computer Graphics, CSCI1250(CS125)Introduction to Computer Animation, CSCI1260(CS126)Introductory Compiler Construction, CSCI1270(CS127)Database Management Systems, CSCI1280(CS128)Intermediate 3D Computer Animation, CSCI1340(CS196-2)Innovating Game Development, CSCI1370(CS137)Virtual Reality Design for Science, CSCI1380(CS138)Distributed Computer Systems, CSCI1410(CS141)Introduction to Artificial Intelligence, CSCI1430(CS143)Introduction to Computer Vision, CSCI1460(CS146)Introduction to Computational Linguistics, CSCI1480(CS148)Building Intelligent Robots, CSCI1490(CS149)Introduction to Combinatorial Optimization, CSCI1510(CS151)Introduction to Cryptography and Computer Security, CSCI1550(CS155)Probabilistic Methods in Computer Science, CSCI1570(CS157)Design and Analysis of Algorithms, CSCI1590(CS159)Introduction to Computational Complexity, CSCI1600(CS160)Introduction to Embedded Real-time Software, CSCI1610(CS161)Building High-Performance Servers, CSCI1660(CS166)Introduction to Computer Systems Security, CSCI1670(CS167)Operating Systems. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Computer Science | Department of Computer Science, Brown University Box 1910, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 7600 | Computer Science Department at Brown has forged a path of innovative information technology research and teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. From the modest beginnings as an interest group within the Divisions of Applied Mathematics and Engineering in the 1960s to its current stature as one of the nation's leading computer science programs - as ranked by the National Research Council - the Computer Science Department has continuously produced the most prominent contributors in the field, at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Computer Science - Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Computer Science | This program is designed to combine educational breadth in the areas of software, hardware, and theoretical computer science with deeper understanding of specialized areas such as software system design, programming languages, machine architecture, artificial intelligence, the analysis of algorithms, and the theory of computation. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CSCI0020 Concepts and Challenges of Computer Science, CSCI0040 Introduction to Scientific Computing and Problem Solving, CSCI0090-A Building a Web Application, CSCI0090-B Computers and Human Values, CSCI0090-C Talking with Computers, CSCI0150 Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming and Computer Science, CSCI0160 Introduction to Algorithms and Data Structures, CSCI0170 CS: An Integrated Introduction, CSCI0180 CS: An Integrated Introduction, CSCI0190 Programming with Data Structures and Algorithms, CSCI0220 Introduction to Discrete Structures and Probability, CSCI0240(CS024)Visual Thinking/Visual Computing, CSCI0310(CS031)Introduction to Computer Systems, CSCI0320(CS032)Introduction to Software Engineering, CSCI0360(CS036)Introduction to Systems Programming, CSCI0510(CS051)Models of Computation, CSCI0530Directions: The Matrix in Computer Science, CSCI0920(CS092)Educational Software Seminar, CSCI1230(CS123)Introduction to Computer Graphics, CSCI1250(CS125)Introduction to Computer Animation, CSCI1260(CS126)Introductory Compiler Construction, CSCI1270(CS127)Database Management Systems, CSCI1280(CS128)Intermediate 3D Computer Animation, CSCI1340(CS196-2)Innovating Game Development, CSCI1370(CS137)Virtual Reality Design for Science, CSCI1380(CS138)Distributed Computer Systems, CSCI1410(CS141)Introduction to Artificial Intelligence, CSCI1430(CS143)Introduction to Computer Vision, CSCI1460(CS146)Introduction to Computational Linguistics, CSCI1480(CS148)Building Intelligent Robots, CSCI1490(CS149)Introduction to Combinatorial Optimization, CSCI1510(CS151)Introduction to Cryptography and Computer Security, CSCI1550(CS155)Probabilistic Methods in Computer Science, CSCI1570(CS157)Design and Analysis of Algorithms, CSCI1590(CS159)Introduction to Computational Complexity, CSCI1600(CS160)Introduction to Embedded Real-time Software, CSCI1610(CS161)Building High-Performance Servers, CSCI1660(CS166)Introduction to Computer Systems Security, CSCI1670(CS167)Operating Systems. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Computer Science | Department of Computer Science, Brown University Box 1910, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 7600 | Computer Science Department at Brown has forged a path of innovative information technology research and teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. From the modest beginnings as an interest group within the Divisions of Applied Mathematics and Engineering in the 1960s to its current stature as one of the nation's leading computer science programs - as ranked by the National Research Council - the Computer Science Department has continuously produced the most prominent contributors in the field, at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in East Asian Studies - China | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of East Asian Studies | This program is designed to serve undergraduate students wishing to attain reasonable fluency in Chinese and Japanese and specialized familiarity with selected East Asian subjects. The concentration serves students with two different types of professional and academic interests: those who wish to pursue active professional careers related to the East Asian region; and those who will continue their education at the graduate level in the humanities or social sciences with special emphasis on China or Japan. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 1540 Archaeology of Asian Civilization, ARCH 2040D Genealogies of Complexity in East Asia (3000-221 BCE), COLT 1810I Gates of Asia, EAST 1100 Korean Culture and Film, EAST 1200 Pop, Political and Patrician: Culture in Japan and the Koreas, EAST 1880C Zen Meditation in China, Korea and Japan, EAST 1950C After Empire: History, Memory and Mourning, HIST 0410 Introduction to East Asian Civilization: China, KREA 0300 Intermediate Korean, RELS 0040 Great Contemplative Traditions of Asia, RELS 1430 Classics of East Asian Buddhism, COLT 1430D Critical Approaches to Chinese Poetry, CHIN 0100 Basic Chinese, CHIN 0300 Intermediate Chinese, CHIN 0500 Advanced Modern Chinese I, CHIN 0700 Advanced Modern Chinese II, CHIN 0910B Introduction to Classical Chinese, EAST 1070 China Modern: 20th Century Chinese Literature, EAST 1950B Chinese Women, Gender and Feminism from Historical and Transnational Perspectives, EAST 1950J The Chinese Story, Its Authors and Readers, HIST 0971C China in the Literature of Travel, HIST 1510A China's Late Empires, HIAA 0110 Ancient China: Art and Archaeology, HIAA 1040H The Shape of Good Fortune. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of East Asian Studies | Department of East Asian Studies, Brown University Box 1850, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2778 | East Asian Studies is a multidisciplinary department teaching and creating new knowledge about that part of the world geographically located in East Asia, embracing the western rim of the Pacific Ocean, and whose society is based on the Confucian tradition. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in East Asian Studies - Japan | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of East Asian Studies | This program is designed to serve undergraduate students wishing to attain reasonable fluency in Chinese and Japanese and specialized familiarity with selected East Asian subjects. The concentration serves students with two different types of professional and academic interests: those who wish to pursue active professional careers related to the East Asian region; and those who will continue their education at the graduate level in the humanities or social sciences with special emphasis on China or Japan. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 1540 Archaeology of Asian Civilization, ARCH 2040D Genealogies of Complexity in East Asia (3000-221 BCE), COLT 1810I Gates of Asia, EAST 1100 Korean Culture and Film, EAST 1200 Pop, Political and Patrician: Culture in Japan and the Koreas, EAST 1880C Zen Meditation in China, Korea and Japan, EAST 1950C After Empire: History, Memory and Mourning, HIST 0410 Introduction to East Asian Civilization: China, KREA 0300 Intermediate Korean, RELS 0040 Great Contemplative Traditions of Asia, RELS 1430 Classics of East Asian Buddhism, COLT 1430D Critical Approaches to Chinese Poetry, CHIN 0100 Basic Chinese, CHIN 0300 Intermediate Chinese, CHIN 0500 Advanced Modern Chinese I, CHIN 0700 Advanced Modern Chinese II, CHIN 0910B Introduction to Classical Chinese, EAST 1070 China Modern: 20th Century Chinese Literature, EAST 1950B Chinese Women, Gender and Feminism from Historical and Transnational Perspectives, EAST 1950J The Chinese Story, Its Authors and Readers, HIST 0971C China in the Literature of Travel, HIST 1510A China's Late Empires, HIAA 0110 Ancient China: Art and Archaeology, HIAA 1040H The Shape of Good Fortune. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of East Asian Studies | Department of East Asian Studies, Brown University Box 1850, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2778 | East Asian Studies is a multidisciplinary department teaching and creating new knowledge about that part of the world geographically located in East Asia, embracing the western rim of the Pacific Ocean, and whose society is based on the Confucian tradition. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Economics - Standard Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Economics | This program helps students understand the functioning of markets, of firms, and of financial organizations; it helps students understand public debate about economic policy, including taxation and government expenditure, trade and globalization, health and welfare; it prepares students for graduate study in fields like business and law; and it prepares students for graduate study leading to careers in teaching and research in economics. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ECON 0110 - Principles of Economics, ECON 0180A - Economics on a Broad Canvas, ECON 0180B - The Welfare State in America, ECON 0180C - Punishment and Inequality in America, ECON 0250 - Welfare Rights, Cosmopolitanism, and Economic Development, ECON 0510 - Development and the International Economy, ECON 0710 - Financial Accounting, ECON 0780 - Political Theory and Economic Analysis. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Box B Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3836 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Education Studies - History and Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Education | This program provides the historical underpinnings and fosters the intellectual skills that allow students to think clearly and analytically about education questions and issues that can arise in many different settings and contexts. Students who study in this area will be introduced to the leading education policy topics of the day and will develop an understanding of the tight relationship between education policy and practice. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EDUC0400 The Campus on Fire: American Colleges and Universities in the 1960s, EDUC0410B Controversies in American Education Policy: A Multidisciplinary Approach, EDUC0410D Brown v. Board of Education, EDUC0850 History of Intercollegiate Athletics, EDUC1020 The History of American Education, EDUC1040 Sociology of Education, EDUC1050 History of AfricanAmerican Education, EDUC1060 Politics and Public Education, EDUC1130 Analyzing Education Policy: Lessons from Economics, EDUC1150 Education, the Economy and School Reform, EDUC1160 Evaluating the Impacts of Social Programs, EDUC1200 History of American School Reform, EDUC1650 Policy Implementation in Education, EDUC1730 American Higher Education in Historical Context, EDUC1740 Academic Freedom on Trial: A Century of Campus Controversies, EDUC1750 Contemporary Social Problems: Views from Human Development and Urban Education, EDUC1820 The History of Print Culture in America, EDUC2020 Educational Leadership in Diverse Settings: Research, Policy and Practice, EDUC2130 Issues and Trends in Education, EDUC2350 Economics of Education, EDUC0410E Empowering Youth: Insights from Research on Urban Adolescents, EDUC0800 Introduction to Human Development and Education, EDUC0900 Fieldwork and Seminar in Secondary Education, EDUC1010 The Craft of Teaching, EDUC1260 Emotion, Cognition, Education, EDUC1270 Adolescent Psychology, EDUC1430 The Psychology of Race, Class, and Gender, EDUC1450 The Psychology of Teaching and Learning, EDUC1580 CrossCultural Perspectives on Child Development, EDUC1710 History and Theories of Child Development, EDUC1750 Contemporary Social Problems: Views from Human Development and Urban Education, EDUC1850 Moral Development and Education, EDUC1860 Social Context of Learning and Development, EDUC2340 Human Development and Urban Education. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Education | Department of Education, 21 Manning Walk, Box 1938, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2407 | The Education Department focuses its scholarly and teaching efforts on the study of human learning and development, the history of education, teaching, school reform, and education policy. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Education Studies - Human Development | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Education | This program, a well-established interdisciplinary field, is grounded in psychology and other social sciences that have a foundational connection to education. Undergraduates in this “area of emphasis” take courses and work with faculty to learn about psychological, social, and cultural processes in a variety of contexts, including schools, families, peer groups, and neighborhoods. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EDUC0410E Empowering Youth: Insights from Research on Urban Adolescents, EDUC0800 Introduction to Human Development and Education, EDUC1260 Emotion, Cognition, Education, EDUC1270 Adolescent Psychology, EDUC1430 The Psychology of Race, Class, and Gender, EDUC1450 The Psychology of Teaching and Learning, EDUC1580 CrossCultural Perspectives on Child Development, EDUC1710 History and Theories of Child Development, EDUC1750 Contemporary Social Problems: Views from Human Development and Urban Education, EDUC1850 Moral Development and Education, EDUC1860 Social Context of Learning and Development, EDUC0400 The Campus on Fire: American Colleges and Universities in the 1960s, EDUC0410B Controversies in American Education Policy: A Multidisciplinary Approach, EDUC0410D Brown v. Board of Education, EDUC0850 History of Intercollegiate Athletics, EDUC0900 Fieldwork and Seminar in Secondary Education, EDUC1010 The Craft of Teaching, EDUC1020 The History of American Education, EDUC1040 Sociology of Education, EDUC1050 History of AfricanAmerican Education, EDUC1060 Politics and Public Education, EDUC1130 Analyzing Education Policy: Lessons from Economics, EDUC1150 Education, the Economy and School Reform, EDUC1160 Evaluating the Impacts of Social Programs, EDUC1200 History of American School Reform, EDUC1650 Policy Implementation in Education, EDUC1730 American Higher Education in Historical Context, EDUC1740 Academic Freedom on Trial: A Century of Campus Controversies. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Education | Department of Education, 21 Manning Walk, Box 1938, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2407 | The Education Department focuses its scholarly and teaching efforts on the study of human learning and development, the history of education, teaching, school reform, and education policy. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Egyptian and Ancient Western Asian Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | This program is intended for those interested chiefly in the cultures of Egypt and Ancient Western Asia (the ancient ‘Near East’ — Anatolia, the Levant, Mesopotamia), from prehistoric through Islamic times. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ARCH 0100 Field Archaeology in the Ancient World, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, ARCH 0325 "Dead White Guys": Greco-Roman Civilization and American Identity, ARCH 0420 Archaeologies of the Greek Past, ARCH 0650 Islamic Civilizations, ARCH 1120 Pompeii, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, ARCH 1625 Temples and Tombs: Egyptian Religion and Culture, ARCH 1710 Architecture and Memory, ARCH 1780 Violence and Civilization: A Deep History of Social Violence, ARCH 1860 Engineering Material Culture: An Introduction to Archaeological Science, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan, ANTH 1121 Nations within States, ANTH 1570 No. American Archaeology, ANTH 1620 Global Historical Archaeology, ANTH 1710 Biological Issues, ANTH 2410 Exhibitions in Museums, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Seminar, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0560 The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 1040G Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden of China, HIAA 1440D Topics in Medieval Architecture: The Gothic Cathedral, HIAA 1850C Topics in 20th Century: The City of Paris Urbanism and Architecture, JUDS 1400 The Archaeology of Palestine. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Box 1837, 70 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3188 | The Artemis A. W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World is dedicated to the academic study and public promotion of the archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean, Egypt, and Western Asia (the latter broadly construed as extending from Anatolia and the Levant to the Caucasus, and including the territories of the ancient Near East); Principal research interests lie in the complex societies of the pre-modern era. Although the core efforts of the Joukowsky Institute are archaeological in nature and are located within this broadly defined zone, close ties with all individuals interested in the ancient world, and with archaeologists of all parts of the globe, are welcome and actively encouraged. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Center for Environmental Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENVS0510 International Environmental Policy, ENVS1350 Environmental Economics, ENVS1410 Environmental Law and Policy, ENVS1710 Environmental Health, HI179 North Am Environmental History, ENVS0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL0420 Principles of Ecology, GEOL0220 Physical Processes in Geology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Center for Environmental Studies | Center for Environmental Studies, Box 1943, 135 Angell Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3449 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Ethnic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America | The program is organized around a set of core Ethnic Studies courses, intended to help students identify a set of historical and theoretical questions to be studied, and to give them the tools necessary to address the questions in a systematic and well-defined manner. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - AFRI 0210 Blacks in Latin American History and Society, AFRI 1060F Philosophy and Race, AFRI 1210 Afro-Brazilians and the Brazilian Polity, AFRI 1800 Race, Empire and Modernity, AMCV 0150H China in the American Imagination, AMCV 0190F Race, Sex and Biology A Cultural History of Differences, AMCV 0190H Chinatown Race, Power and the American City, AMCV 1621I Women on the Move Gender, Sexuality and Migration, AMCV 1902R Race and Psychoanalysis, AMCV 1903P Please, Please Me, ANTH 0400 Growing Up Ethnic and Multicultural, ANTH 0066L Signing and Language, ANTH 1119Andean Anthropology, ANTH 1121 Coyote to Casinos Native North America Peoples and Cultures, ANTH 1221 Anthropology of Masculinity, ANTH 1810 Language and Power, ANTH 2040 Advanced Social Theory, EAST 1070 China Modern An Introduction to the Literature of Twentieth Century China, EDUC 0410D Brown v. Board of Education, EDUC 1020 The History of American Education, EDUC 1430 The Psychology of Race, Class, and Gender, EDUC 2340 Human Development and Urban Education, ENGL 1760O American Orientalism, HIST 0510 American History to 1877, HIST 0970P Culture and the U.S. Empire, HIST 1890 History of American Foreign Relations I, HIST 2980C Race, Ethnicity and Identity, HMAN 1970A Eating Cultures Food and Society, INTL 1800J Identity, Rights and Conflict, LAST 1510E Race, Music and Literature in the Spanish Caribbean, RUSS 0990 The Black Experience in Russia and the Soviet Union, TSDA 0800A 21st Century American Drama, TSDA 1281G Caribbean Culture and Performance, TSDA 1610 Political Theatre of the Americas. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America | Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America, Dyer House, 150 Power Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3080 | Brown University has a long and distinguished history of recognizing and encouraging diversity, exemplified not merely in the racial composition of the student body, but also academically through its curricular options. The Ethnic Studies concentration was added to the Brown curriculum in 1996 as an interdisciplinary and comparative concentration that examines the construction of race and ethnicity in social, cultural, historical, political, and economic contexts. The ET concentration is housed at the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America (CSREA), which also supports a number of community-based research projects—English for Action, the Transcultural Community Health Initiative, and others. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in French Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | This program is designed to help students develop an understanding of French culture, history and contemporary issues, including Francophone countries and cultures. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - FREN 0100 Basic French, FREN 0200 Basic French, FREN 0220 Reading French in the Arts and Sciences, FREN 0300 Intermediate French I, FREN 0400 Intermediate French II, FREN 0500 Writing and Speaking French I, FREN 0520 Introduction to the Literary Experience, FREN 0600 Writing and Speaking French II, FREN 0720A From Courtly Love to Postmodern Desire, FREN 0750 Literature and Social Thought, FREN 0760 Intensive Introduction to Literature and Literary Methods, FREN 1000 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1010 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1020 Early French Language and Literature, FREN 1030 Studies in French Literature of the Renaissance, FREN 1040 Studies in French Literature of the Seventeenth Century, FREN 1040A Civilite et literature, FREN 1050 Studies in French Literature of the Eighteenth Century, FREN 1060 Studies in French Literature of the Nineteenth Century, FREN 1060B Gender and the Novel, FREN 1060F Paris: Capital of the 19th Century, FREN 1070 Studies in French Literature of the Twentieth Century, FREN 1070A AvantGardes, FREN 1070B Emergent literature: Postcolonial Nations and Cultural Identity, FREN 1070F Nations of Writers. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in French Language | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | The program helps students to combine advanced proficiency in uses of the language with an understanding of language as a human phenomenon, through work both in French Studies and in other disciplines that, variously, analyze the functioning of language (e.g., Linguistics), use linguistic models to study other fields of human behavior (e.g., Anthropology), or provide other specialized insight (e.g., Semiotics, Philosophy, language pathology). | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - FREN 0100 Basic French, FREN 0200 Basic French, FREN 0220 Reading French in the Arts and Sciences, FREN 0300 Intermediate French I, FREN 0400 Intermediate French II, FREN 0500 Writing and Speaking French I, FREN 0520 Introduction to the Literary Experience, FREN 0600 Writing and Speaking French II, FREN 0720A From Courtly Love to Postmodern Desire, FREN 0750 Literature and Social Thought, FREN 0760 Intensive Introduction to Literature and Literary Methods, FREN 1000 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1010 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1020 Early French Language and Literature, FREN 1030 Studies in French Literature of the Renaissance, FREN 1040 Studies in French Literature of the Seventeenth Century, FREN 1040A Civilite et literature, FREN 1050 Studies in French Literature of the Eighteenth Century, FREN 1060 Studies in French Literature of the Nineteenth Century, FREN 1060B Gender and the Novel, FREN 1060F Paris: Capital of the 19th Century, FREN 1070 Studies in French Literature of the Twentieth Century, FREN 1070A AvantGardes, FREN 1070B Emergent literature: Postcolonial Nations and Cultural Identity, FREN 1070F Nations of Writers. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in French Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | This program is to provide students with a comprehensive view of French and Francophone literature and various types of literary analysis. Both introductory and upper-level courses provide opportunities to explore a particular author, genre, period, or special topic, and to learn and use diverse analytical approaches, including semiotic, philosophical, psychological, feminist and reader-oriented methods of criticism. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - FREN 0100 Basic French, FREN 0200 Basic French, FREN 0220 Reading French in the Arts and Sciences, FREN 0300 Intermediate French I, FREN 0400 Intermediate French II, FREN 0500 Writing and Speaking French I, FREN 0520 Introduction to the Literary Experience, FREN 0600 Writing and Speaking French II, FREN 0720A From Courtly Love to Postmodern Desire, FREN 0750 Literature and Social Thought, FREN 0760 Intensive Introduction to Literature and Literary Methods, FREN 1000 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1010 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1020 Early French Language and Literature, FREN 1030 Studies in French Literature of the Renaissance, FREN 1040 Studies in French Literature of the Seventeenth Century, FREN 1040A Civilite et literature, FREN 1050 Studies in French Literature of the Eighteenth Century, FREN 1060 Studies in French Literature of the Nineteenth Century, FREN 1060B Gender and the Novel, FREN 1060F Paris: Capital of the 19th Century, FREN 1070 Studies in French Literature of the Twentieth Century, FREN 1070A AvantGardes, FREN 1070B Emergent literature: Postcolonial Nations and Cultural Identity, FREN 1070F Nations of Writers. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Gender and Sexuality Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women | This program is an interdisciplinary concentration that examines the construction of gender and sexuality in social, cultural, political, economic, or scientific contexts. Each concentrator will focus on a well-defined topic or question and work closely with a concentration advisor to develop a program that investigates this focus area rigorously and supplements it with foundational courses in the relevant disciplines. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GNSS0090C Reproductive Health Science and Politics, GNSS0120 Introduction to Gender and Sexuality Studies, GNSS1810, GNSS1820 Independent Study and Research, GNSS1960A Feminist Ethnographies, GNSS1970, GNSS1980 Directed Research and Thesis, GNSS2010B, GNSS2020B Research Seminar Advanced Topics in Feminist Theory, AFRI0570 Black Feminist Thought and Practice, AFRI0710A Racial and Gender Politics in Contemporary Brazil, AMCV15 Women /Writing/Power Morrison, Condé, Kincaid, AMCV1612F Female Maladies Women and Mental Illness in the United States since 1860, AMCV1903U Sex Acts The Cultural Logics of Intimacy in America, ANTH2250 Psychology of Gender, ENGL1900R Queer Relations, FREN1900 French Feminisms, MCM15020 Feminism Meets Queery Theory, POLS2131 Politics of Gender, RELS1210 Religion and Gender in the Greco Roman Mediterranean. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women | Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women, 172 Meeting Street, Box l958, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2643 | The Pembroke Center was established in 1981 as a research center on gender. Funded in its early years by the Ford Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Rockefeller Foundation, the Center now supports its programs largely through its endowment, made possible by generous alumnae and other donors. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, numerous centers for research on women and gender were established in the US. What distinguished the Pembroke Center was its focus on the theoretical dimensions of the category of gender. The story of the Center's uniqueness can be seen in the relationship between its name and its research mission--a relationship that has carried a productive tension from the beginning. In 1981, a decade after the merger of Pembroke College into Brown University, the Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women was named in honor of Pembroke College and the history of women's efforts to gain access to higher education: the first two women were admitted to Brown in 1891; in 1928, the women's college was named Pembroke after Pembroke College at Cambridge University and retained that name until the 1971 merger. The name of the Center was designed to keep alive the history of women at Brown and Pembroke. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Geological Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | This program provides a broad introduction to the geological sciences. Recommended for students seeking a liberal education and a general understanding of Earth processes and Earth history. Especially attractive for double concentrations, such as geology and economics as a career path to law or business, or geology and English as a career path to journalism or technical writing. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GEOL 0010-S01 Face of the Earth Gromet, GEOL 0070-S01 Introduction to Oceanography Clemens, GEOL 0230-S01 Geochemistry: Earth and Planetary Materials and Processes Gromet, GEOL 0240-S01 Earth: Evolution of a Habitable Planet Herbert, GEOL 0810-S01 Planetary Geology Schultz, GEOL 1150-S01 Limnology: The Study of Lakes Russell, GEOL 1350-S01 Weather and Climate Hastings, GEOL 1420-S01 Petrology Saal, GEOL 1450-S01 Structural Geology Tullis, GEOL 1580-S01 Quantitative Elements of Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1620-S01 Continuum Physics of the Solid Earth Parmentier, GEOL 1650-S01 Earthquake Seismology Fischer, GEOL 1960D-S01 Concepts and Processes in Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1960F-S01 Patterns in Nature, in Society Cooper, GEOL 1960H-S01 The Early Earth Parman, GEOL 2350-S01 Quaternary Climatology Seminar Russell, GEOL 2410-S01 Kinetics of Geochemical Processes Liang, GEOL 2430-S01 Igneous Petrology, GEOL 2800-S01 The Chemistry and Mineralogy of Mars Wyatt, GEOL 2870-S01 Planetary Evolution Pieters, GEOL 2920B-S01 Cyclicities and Singularities in the History of Life Whiteside, GEOL 2920K-S01 Special Topics in Geological Sciences: The Hydrological Cycle on Mars Head, GEOL 2920N-S01 Problems Antartic Dry Valley Geoscience Head, GEOL 2920Q-S01 Rheological Boundaries in the Earth Parmentier, GEOL 2920R-S01 Evolution of the Moon Liang, GEOL 2920S-S01 Paleoceanography/Paleoclimate Seminar Clemens, GEOL 2920U-S01 Climate Variations Russell. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Geology - Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | This program emphasizes interrelations between biological and geological processes including an understanding of the origin and development of life as interpreted from the geologic record, evolution of climate and environments, and dynamic processes in the stratigraphic record. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GEOL 0010-S01 Face of the Earth Gromet, GEOL 0070-S01 Introduction to Oceanography Clemens, GEOL 0230-S01 Geochemistry: Earth and Planetary Materials and Processes Gromet, GEOL 0240-S01 Earth: Evolution of a Habitable Planet Herbert, GEOL 0810-S01 Planetary Geology Schultz, GEOL 1150-S01 Limnology: The Study of Lakes Russell, GEOL 1350-S01 Weather and Climate Hastings, GEOL 1420-S01 Petrology Saal, GEOL 1450-S01 Structural Geology Tullis, GEOL 1580-S01 Quantitative Elements of Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1620-S01 Continuum Physics of the Solid Earth Parmentier, GEOL 1650-S01 Earthquake Seismology Fischer, GEOL 1960D-S01 Concepts and Processes in Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1960F-S01 Patterns in Nature, in Society Cooper, GEOL 1960H-S01 The Early Earth Parman, GEOL 2350-S01 Quaternary Climatology Seminar Russell, GEOL 2410-S01 Kinetics of Geochemical Processes Liang, GEOL 2430-S01 Igneous Petrology, GEOL 2800-S01 The Chemistry and Mineralogy of Mars Wyatt, GEOL 2870-S01 Planetary Evolution Pieters, GEOL 2920B-S01 Cyclicities and Singularities in the History of Life Whiteside, GEOL 2920K-S01 Special Topics in Geological Sciences: The Hydrological Cycle on Mars Head, GEOL 2920N-S01 Problems Antartic Dry Valley Geoscience Head, GEOL 2920Q-S01 Rheological Boundaries in the Earth Parmentier, GEOL 2920R-S01 Evolution of the Moon Liang, GEOL 2920S-S01 Paleoceanography/Paleoclimate Seminar Clemens, GEOL 2920U-S01 Climate Variations Russell. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Geology - Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | This program emphasizes geochemical processes and phenomena on and within the Earth. Recommended for students seeking a liberal education and interested in applying physical and chemical principles toward an understanding of Earth history, Earth processes, and environmental and resource issues. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GEOL 0010-S01 Face of the Earth Gromet, GEOL 0070-S01 Introduction to Oceanography Clemens, GEOL 0230-S01 Geochemistry: Earth and Planetary Materials and Processes Gromet, GEOL 0240-S01 Earth: Evolution of a Habitable Planet Herbert, GEOL 0810-S01 Planetary Geology Schultz, GEOL 1150-S01 Limnology: The Study of Lakes Russell, GEOL 1350-S01 Weather and Climate Hastings, GEOL 1420-S01 Petrology Saal, GEOL 1450-S01 Structural Geology Tullis, GEOL 1580-S01 Quantitative Elements of Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1620-S01 Continuum Physics of the Solid Earth Parmentier, GEOL 1650-S01 Earthquake Seismology Fischer, GEOL 1960D-S01 Concepts and Processes in Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1960F-S01 Patterns in Nature, in Society Cooper, GEOL 1960H-S01 The Early Earth Parman, GEOL 2350-S01 Quaternary Climatology Seminar Russell, GEOL 2410-S01 Kinetics of Geochemical Processes Liang, GEOL 2430-S01 Igneous Petrology, GEOL 2800-S01 The Chemistry and Mineralogy of Mars Wyatt, GEOL 2870-S01 Planetary Evolution Pieters, GEOL 2920B-S01 Cyclicities and Singularities in the History of Life Whiteside, GEOL 2920K-S01 Special Topics in Geological Sciences: The Hydrological Cycle on Mars Head, GEOL 2920N-S01 Problems Antartic Dry Valley Geoscience Head, GEOL 2920Q-S01 Rheological Boundaries in the Earth Parmentier, GEOL 2920R-S01 Evolution of the Moon Liang, GEOL 2920S-S01 Paleoceanography/Paleoclimate Seminar Clemens, GEOL 2920U-S01 Climate Variations Russell. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Geology - Physics/Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | This program emphasizes geochemical processes and phenomena on and within the Earth. Recommended for students seeking a liberal education and interested in applying physical and chemical principles toward an understanding of Earth history, Earth processes, and environmental and resource issues. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GEOL 0010-S01 Face of the Earth Gromet, GEOL 0070-S01 Introduction to Oceanography Clemens, GEOL 0230-S01 Geochemistry: Earth and Planetary Materials and Processes Gromet, GEOL 0240-S01 Earth: Evolution of a Habitable Planet Herbert, GEOL 0810-S01 Planetary Geology Schultz, GEOL 1150-S01 Limnology: The Study of Lakes Russell, GEOL 1350-S01 Weather and Climate Hastings, GEOL 1420-S01 Petrology Saal, GEOL 1450-S01 Structural Geology Tullis, GEOL 1580-S01 Quantitative Elements of Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1620-S01 Continuum Physics of the Solid Earth Parmentier, GEOL 1650-S01 Earthquake Seismology Fischer, GEOL 1960D-S01 Concepts and Processes in Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1960F-S01 Patterns in Nature, in Society Cooper, GEOL 1960H-S01 The Early Earth Parman, GEOL 2350-S01 Quaternary Climatology Seminar Russell, GEOL 2410-S01 Kinetics of Geochemical Processes Liang, GEOL 2430-S01 Igneous Petrology, GEOL 2800-S01 The Chemistry and Mineralogy of Mars Wyatt, GEOL 2870-S01 Planetary Evolution Pieters, GEOL 2920B-S01 Cyclicities and Singularities in the History of Life Whiteside, GEOL 2920K-S01 Special Topics in Geological Sciences: The Hydrological Cycle on Mars Head, GEOL 2920N-S01 Problems Antartic Dry Valley Geoscience Head, GEOL 2920Q-S01 Rheological Boundaries in the Earth Parmentier, GEOL 2920R-S01 Evolution of the Moon Liang, GEOL 2920S-S01 Paleoceanography/Paleoclimate Seminar Clemens, GEOL 2920U-S01 Climate Variations Russell. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in German Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of German Studies | This program offers students an interdisciplinary approach to German culture in a wide variety of areas. Along with courses from the German Studies core program, students have the opportunity to take courses from other departments and programs that deal with topics from the German cultural tradition including History, History of Art and Architecture, Judaic Studies, Modern Culture and Media, Music, Philosophy, Political Science. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GRMN 0110 Intensive Beginning German, GRMN 0200 Beginning German, GRMN 0400 Intermediate German II, GRMN 0600B Was ist Deutsch?, GRMN 0750C Crime Fiction: The Global Hyper-Genre, GRMN 1320E Goethe und die Klassik, GRMN 1660D - History of the Theory of Photography, GRMN 1660Z Migrant Culture in Contemporary Culture, GRMN 1990B Site of Memory. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of German Studies | Department of German Studies, 190 Hope Street, Box 1979, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2596 | The Department of German Studies offers a full range of courses in German language, literature and culture. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Greek | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GREK 0100 Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0110 Introduction to Ancient Greek, GREK 0200 Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0300 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 0310 Grammar Review and Composition, GREK 0400 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 1010 Introduction to Greek Drama, GREK 1050A Aristophanes, GREK 1050B Euripides, GREK 1050C Sophocles, GREK 1060 Herodotus. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Greek and Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GREK 0100 Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0110 Introduction to Ancient Greek, GREK 0200 Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0300 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 0310 Grammar Review and Composition, GREK 0400 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 1010 Introduction to Greek Drama, GREK 1050A Aristophanes, GREK 1050B Euripides, GREK 1050C Sophocles, GREK 1060 Herodotus, LATN 0100 Essentials of the Latin Language, LATN 0110 Introduction to Latin, LATN 0200 Essentials of the Latin Language, LATN 0300 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0310 Grammar Review and Composition, LATN 0400 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0510 Readings in Latin Literature, LATN 0510A Latin Mystical Writing, LATN 0510B Medieval Latin Lyric, LATN 1010 Latin Lyric: Catullus and Horace, LATN 1020 Cicero, LATN 1020B Cicero, Verrines. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Hispanic Literature and Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Hispanic Studies | This program allows students to develop the linguistic competency and literary and cultural knowledge necessary for an understanding of the Spanish-speaking world. It provides grounding for careers in teaching, diplomacy, medicine, and any other field involving the Hispanic world. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HISP 0200-S01 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S02 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S03 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S04 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S05 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S06 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S07 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S01 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S02 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S03 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0400-S01 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S02 Intermediate Spanish II Smith , HISP 0400-S03 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S04 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S05 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0500-S01 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S02 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S03 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S04 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S05 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S06 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0600-S01 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S02 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S03 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S04 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S05 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S06 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S07 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S08 Advanced Composition, HISP 0730-S01 Early and Contemporary Writers of Spanish America Wey-Gomez, HISP 0740-S01 Intensive Survey of Spanish Literature Vaquero, HISP 0750B-S01 Hispanics in the United States Bauer, HISP 0750K-S01 To Be Determined, HISP 1210C-S01 History of the Spanish Language Vaquero, HISP 1240H-S01 Spanish Golden Age Stories, HISP 1330K-S01 Contemporary Poetry of Latin America Mazzucchelli, HISP 1330N-S01 Early Transatlantic Encounters Wey-Gomez, HISP 1370N-S01 Carlos Fuentes y Nueva Narrativa Mexicana Ortega, HISP 1370Q-S01 Caribbean Messianisms and Utopias Price. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Hispanic Studies | Department of Hispanic Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2569 | The Department of Hispanic Studies at Brown offers an in-depth introduction to Hispanic culture. At the undergraduate level it offers the possibility of learning the language and culture of both Spain and Latin America, and at the graduate level it trains students to become effective teachers and scholars. The faculty members represent a broad range of approaches to language, literature, and culture, from philology to literary theory and cultural studies. All courses are taught in Spanish, and the development of fluency in reading, speaking, and writing the target language is an important goal in all classes. However, the goals of the department go beyond language instruction, as it seeks to prepare students to be able to understand a completely different national, continental, and global reality in all its complexity. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History | The program entails the study of chronologically and culturally diverse societies, considered singly and comparatively. The aim of the program is to provide students with appreciation of different approaches to the study of the past and to encourage them to develop an understanding of the ways in which societies and cultures change over time. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HIST 0020S01 Europe since the French Revolution Richards, HIST 0420S01 Introduction to East Asian Civilization: Japan Smith, HIST 0520S01 American History since 1877 Chudacoff, HIST 0971AS01 The Holy Grail and the Historian's Quest for the Truth Remensnyder, HIST 1000BS01 The Shaping of the Classical World: Greeks, Jews, and Romans Sacks, HIST 1010BS01 Roman History II Kennelly, HIST 1040S01 Europe in the High Middle Ages (ca. 1000ca. 1450) Remensnyder, HIST 1050S01 Renaissance Italy Nummedal, HIST 1120S01 Revolution from Below: Political Violence in Southern Europe and the Balkans Kornetis, HIST 1140S01 Nature, Knowledge, and Power in Early Modern Europe Nummedal, HIST 1220S01 European Intellectual and Cultural History: Exploring the Modern, 18801914 Gluck, HIST 1310S01 Empire to Cool Britannia: TwentiethCentury Britain Cohen, HIST 1350S01 Modern Genocide and Other Crimes against Humanity, HIST 1380S01 History of Chinese Political Thought, HIST 1410S01 Modern Russia to the Revolution, HIST 1440S01 Islamic History, 14001800 Akarli, HIST 1520BS01 Twentieth Century China Swislocki, HIST 1530S01 Modern Korea: Contending with Modernity McClain, HIST 1540S01 Samurai and Merchants, Prostitutes and Priests: Japanese Urban Culture in the Early Modern Period McClain, HIST 1620S01 Colonial Latin America, HIST 1630S01 Modern Latin America I LopezDenis, HIST 1730S01 Antebellum America and the Road to Civil War Rockman, HIST 1750S01 Politics and Culture in the U.S. Since 1945, HIST 1790S01 North American Environmental History Jacoby, HIST 1850S01 American Legal and Constitutional History Vorenberg, HIST 1870S01 Modern France Colvin, HIST 1900S01 History of American Foreign Relations II Shibusawa, HIST 1950FS01 From Morocco to China:Frontier Societies, Cultural Brokers, Multiple Identities in Portuguese Empire Flores, HIST 1970FS01 The Problem of Class in Early American History Rockman, HIST 1970GS01 American Indian History Jacoby, HIST 1970KS01 The Practice and Theory of Everyday Life Gluck, HIST 1970NS01 Autobiography and Memoirs in Recent American History Gorn, HIST 1970WS01 Medieval and Renaissance Medicine Nummedal. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History | Department of History, Box N, 79 Brown Street Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2131 | History department is one of the first institutions in the United States to provide for historical studies, Brown University has long valued and nurtured research in the Department of History. The faculty’s high standard of scholarship and excellence in teaching are well known, and members of the department are committed to the value a rigorous education in the humanities confers upon students. The department trains students in the fundamentals of historical thinking: skills and attitudes that will provide a foundation for excellence in a wide range of careers and professions, including teaching, law, medicine, business, public service, and advanced historical research. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in History of Art and Architecture | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History of Art and Architecture | This program provides essential training in perceptual, historical, and critical analysis that will allow them to pursue career opportunities in art and architectural history as well as a range of other professions. Career choices for students concentrating in History of Art are as diversified as any within the University. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HIAA 0050C First Year Seminar: Illustrating Knowledge, HIAA 0080 Introduction to the History of Photography, HIAA 0110A Ancient China: Art and Archaeology, HIAA 0550 A Florence and Tuscany in the 15th Century, HIAA 0620 The Age of Rubens and Rembrandt: Visual Culture of the Netherlands in the 17th Century, HIAA 0080 20th Century European Art, HIAA 0860 A Contemporary Architecture, HIAA 1040H Topics in East Asian Art: The Shape of Good Fortune, HIAA 1200E Topics in Roman Art and Architecture: Roman Spectacles, HIAA 1600B Topics in 17th Century Art: Caravaggio, HIAA 1760B Topics in Later 19th Century Painting: French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Art, HIAA 1910 A Project Seminar for Architectural Studies Concentrators: Downtown Providence from Late 19th Century to Present , HIAA 2870E Special Topics: Art and Utopia in the 1960’s: The Artist as the Architect of a Free Society, HIAA 2920 Methods of Research and Art Historical Interpretation, HIAA 0010 A Introduction to History of Art and Architecture, HIAA 0050D First Year Seminar: Seeing and Writing on Contemporary Arts, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0340A Roman Art and Architecture: Julius Caesar to Hadrian, HIAA 0490 A Urban Modernity and the Middle East, HIAA 0560A The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 0880 Contemporary Art I, HIAA 0910 Contemporary Photography, HIAA 1040I A Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden in China and Japan, HIAA 1430B Shaping Faith: Sacred Images in Medieval Art and Culture Pending Approval, HIAA 1600G Art and Religion in Early Modern Europe: Visual Communication. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History of Art and Architecture | Department of History of Art and Architecture, 64 College St, Box 1855, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1174 | The Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown University grants undergraduate degrees in the History of Art and Architecture, as well as in Architectural Studies.Graduate study in this department is geared toward earning a PhD in the History of Art, Architectural Studies, and many areas of visual culture from the ancient world through the present. Work in the department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown is conceived as an interdisciplinary undertaking, in which students are encouraged to become familiar with the variety of methodologies and practices that have historically been, and continue to be productive in fields. The department also maintain a longstanding commitment to museum studies and the study of objects through a close working relationship with the Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design.Interested students in this department have the opportunity to hold internships and (in the case of graduate students) proctorships at the museum. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Human Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program is an interdisciplinary program that offers a strong foundation in biological sciences, within the context of one of four Themes. Themes include: Health and Disease; Race and Gender; Brain and Behavior; Ecosystems, Evolution and Environment. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Interdisciplinary Latin American Literature and Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Hispanic Studies | This program allows students to develop the linguistic competency and literary and cultural knowledge necessary for an understanding of the Spanish-speaking world. It provides grounding for careers in teaching, diplomacy, medicine, and any other field involving the Hispanic world. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HISP 0200-S01 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S02 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S03 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S04 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S05 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S06 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S07 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S01 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S02 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S03 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0400-S01 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S02 Intermediate Spanish II Smith , HISP 0400-S03 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S04 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S05 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0500-S01 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S02 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S03 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S04 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S05 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S06 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0600-S01 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S02 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S03 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S04 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S05 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S06 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S07 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S08 Advanced Composition, HISP 0730-S01 Early and Contemporary Writers of Spanish America Wey-Gomez, HISP 0740-S01 Intensive Survey of Spanish Literature Vaquero, HISP 0750B-S01 Hispanics in the United States Bauer, HISP 0750K-S01 To Be Determined, HISP 1210C-S01 History of the Spanish Language Vaquero, HISP 1240H-S01 Spanish Golden Age Stories, HISP 1330K-S01 Contemporary Poetry of Latin America Mazzucchelli, HISP 1330N-S01 Early Transatlantic Encounters Wey-Gomez, HISP 1370N-S01 Carlos Fuentes y Nueva Narrativa Mexicana Ortega, HISP 1370Q-S01 Caribbean Messianisms and Utopias Price. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Hispanic Studies | Department of Hispanic Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2569 | The Department of Hispanic Studies at Brown offers an in-depth introduction to Hispanic culture. At the undergraduate level it offers the possibility of learning the language and culture of both Spain and Latin America, and at the graduate level it trains students to become effective teachers and scholars. The faculty members represent a broad range of approaches to language, literature, and culture, from philology to literary theory and cultural studies. All courses are taught in Spanish, and the development of fluency in reading, speaking, and writing the target language is an important goal in all classes. However, the goals of the department go beyond language instruction, as it seeks to prepare students to be able to understand a completely different national, continental, and global reality in all its complexity. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Interdisciplinary Peninsular Literature and Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Hispanic Studies | This program allows students to develop the linguistic competency and literary and cultural knowledge necessary for an understanding of the Spanish-speaking world. It provides grounding for careers in teaching, diplomacy, medicine, and any other field involving the Hispanic world. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HISP 0200-S01 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S02 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S03 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S04 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S05 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S06 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S07 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S01 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S02 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S03 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0400-S01 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S02 Intermediate Spanish II Smith , HISP 0400-S03 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S04 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S05 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0500-S01 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S02 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S03 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S04 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S05 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S06 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0600-S01 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S02 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S03 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S04 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S05 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S06 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S07 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S08 Advanced Composition, HISP 0730-S01 Early and Contemporary Writers of Spanish America Wey-Gomez, HISP 0740-S01 Intensive Survey of Spanish Literature Vaquero, HISP 0750B-S01 Hispanics in the United States Bauer, HISP 0750K-S01 To Be Determined, HISP 1210C-S01 History of the Spanish Language Vaquero, HISP 1240H-S01 Spanish Golden Age Stories, HISP 1330K-S01 Contemporary Poetry of Latin America Mazzucchelli, HISP 1330N-S01 Early Transatlantic Encounters Wey-Gomez, HISP 1370N-S01 Carlos Fuentes y Nueva Narrativa Mexicana Ortega, HISP 1370Q-S01 Caribbean Messianisms and Utopias Price. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Hispanic Studies | Department of Hispanic Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2569 | The Department of Hispanic Studies at Brown offers an in-depth introduction to Hispanic culture. At the undergraduate level it offers the possibility of learning the language and culture of both Spain and Latin America, and at the graduate level it trains students to become effective teachers and scholars. The faculty members represent a broad range of approaches to language, literature, and culture, from philology to literary theory and cultural studies. All courses are taught in Spanish, and the development of fluency in reading, speaking, and writing the target language is an important goal in all classes. However, the goals of the department go beyond language instruction, as it seeks to prepare students to be able to understand a completely different national, continental, and global reality in all its complexity. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in International Relations - Global Environment/Global Health | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program | The program encompasses the broad array of environmental, health, population, and urbanization issues relevant to contemporary international politics. The track provides students with the opportunity to investigate the international dimensions of environmental change, resource use, disease patterns, and population trends and the economic, regulatory, institutional, and symbolic practices that shape global and local struggles over the environment and health. Students are encouraged to bridge disciplines and supplement their track courses with courses in environmental science, public health, international law, public policy, economics, anthropology, and sociology. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - INTL 1050 Globalization, Governance, and Equality, INTL 1100 The Contemporary Transformation of the Modern State's Security Apparatus: Critical Perspectives 1150 The City and The World: The Legal Aspects of the Globalization of Cities, INTL 1350 History and Theory of International Relations, INTL 1700 International Law 1800A International Human Rights, INTL 1800B Inter-Korean Relations and the Evolution of the 'Stable' Nuclear Crisis, INTL 1800D The Chinese Democracy Movement in the 20th Century, INTL 1800F Perspectives on Terrorism 1800I Global Migration and Citizenship, INTL 1800K The American Military: Global Supremacy, Democracy and Leadership 1800N Global Media: History/Theory/Production, INTL 1800O Central Asian Security, INTL 1800R Post-Soviet States From the Past into the Future, INTL 1800S The Vietnam War Revisited 1800U Political Community Beyond the State: Challenges, Changes in a Globalizing Era, INTL 1800Y Human Rights: From Politics to Law, INTL 1801C Globalization and Sovereignty. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program, 111 Thayer Street Box 1970, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2809 | International Relations (IR) is an interdisciplinary undergraduate concentration within the social sciences that focuses on the study of global issues from a wide variety of perspectives. It draws on courses from numerous departments including political science, history, economics, anthropology, sociology, psychology, religion, and environmental studies. It also incorporates courses from the humanities, particularly area and language departments, and requires advanced study of a foreign language. Taking a broad approach, the concentration examines a range of global issues including diplomacy, war, and peace; poverty, inequality, and development; trade, globalization, and economic conflict; human rights and humanitarianism; the production and role of culture and political identities; and the environment and global public health. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in International Relations - Global Security | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program | This program focuses on issues of war and peace in international relations and the politics and diplomacy of foreign policymaking. Critical security issues are investigated not only as conflicts among states but as effects of new global actors, trans-border flows, and complex networks. It includes the increasingly important role of international, transnational, and non-governmental organizations at both the regional and global levels. The global security track is intended for students interested in getting a general overview of the key theoretical approaches and major issues of international relations. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - INTL 1050 Globalization, Governance, and Equality, INTL 1100 The Contemporary Transformation of the Modern State's Security Apparatus: Critical Perspectives 1150 The City and The World: The Legal Aspects of the Globalization of Cities, INTL 1350 History and Theory of International Relations, INTL 1700 International Law 1800A International Human Rights, INTL 1800B Inter-Korean Relations and the Evolution of the 'Stable' Nuclear Crisis, INTL 1800D The Chinese Democracy Movement in the 20th Century, INTL 1800F Perspectives on Terrorism 1800I Global Migration and Citizenship, INTL 1800K The American Military: Global Supremacy, Democracy and Leadership 1800N Global Media: History/Theory/Production, INTL 1800O Central Asian Security, INTL 1800R Post-Soviet States From the Past into the Future, INTL 1800S The Vietnam War Revisited 1800U Political Community Beyond the State: Challenges, Changes in a Globalizing Era, INTL 1800Y Human Rights: From Politics to Law, INTL 1801C Globalization and Sovereignty. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program, 111 Thayer Street Box 1970, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2809 | International Relations (IR) is an interdisciplinary undergraduate concentration within the social sciences that focuses on the study of global issues from a wide variety of perspectives. It draws on courses from numerous departments including political science, history, economics, anthropology, sociology, psychology, religion, and environmental studies. It also incorporates courses from the humanities, particularly area and language departments, and requires advanced study of a foreign language. Taking a broad approach, the concentration examines a range of global issues including diplomacy, war, and peace; poverty, inequality, and development; trade, globalization, and economic conflict; human rights and humanitarianism; the production and role of culture and political identities; and the environment and global public health. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in International Relations - Political Economy and Development | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program | This program focuses on the interaction of political and economic processes at the international and domestic levels. It provides a set of courses primarily in economics, political science, and sociology that allows students to understand the rapidly changing world of political economy. The track covers such issues as the evolution of international trade and finance regimes, the impact of globalization, the challenge of development in the Global South and in the former Communist countries, and trends toward integration in Europe, Asia, and Latin America | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - INTL 1050 Globalization, Governance, and Equality, INTL 1100 The Contemporary Transformation of the Modern State's Security Apparatus: Critical Perspectives 1150 The City and The World: The Legal Aspects of the Globalization of Cities, INTL 1350 History and Theory of International Relations, INTL 1700 International Law 1800A International Human Rights, INTL 1800B Inter-Korean Relations and the Evolution of the 'Stable' Nuclear Crisis, INTL 1800D The Chinese Democracy Movement in the 20th Century, INTL 1800F Perspectives on Terrorism 1800I Global Migration and Citizenship, INTL 1800K The American Military: Global Supremacy, Democracy and Leadership 1800N Global Media: History/Theory/Production, INTL 1800O Central Asian Security, INTL 1800R Post-Soviet States From the Past into the Future, INTL 1800S The Vietnam War Revisited 1800U Political Community Beyond the State: Challenges, Changes in a Globalizing Era, INTL 1800Y Human Rights: From Politics to Law, INTL 1801C Globalization and Sovereignty. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program, 111 Thayer Street Box 1970, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2809 | International Relations (IR) is an interdisciplinary undergraduate concentration within the social sciences that focuses on the study of global issues from a wide variety of perspectives. It draws on courses from numerous departments including political science, history, economics, anthropology, sociology, psychology, religion, and environmental studies. It also incorporates courses from the humanities, particularly area and language departments, and requires advanced study of a foreign language. Taking a broad approach, the concentration examines a range of global issues including diplomacy, war, and peace; poverty, inequality, and development; trade, globalization, and economic conflict; human rights and humanitarianism; the production and role of culture and political identities; and the environment and global public health. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in International Relations - Politics, Culture, and Identity | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program | The program focuses on the comparative study of sociocultural shaping of politics and the politics of culture. The program combines a foundation in anthropology with cutting edge scholarship from numerous disciplines, including the humanities. The program seeks a transnational and contextualized understanding of the way institutions, social movements, and communities produce knowledge about the world. It focuses on the fluid, constructed, and politicized character of identity, international norms, policies, and crises. It also draws on courses that discuss the important roles that religion, race, ethnicity, class, nationalism, and gender play in political life. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - INTL 1050 Globalization, Governance, and Equality, INTL 1100 The Contemporary Transformation of the Modern State's Security Apparatus: Critical Perspectives 1150 The City and The World: The Legal Aspects of the Globalization of Cities, INTL 1350 History and Theory of International Relations, INTL 1700 International Law 1800A International Human Rights, INTL 1800B Inter-Korean Relations and the Evolution of the 'Stable' Nuclear Crisis, INTL 1800D The Chinese Democracy Movement in the 20th Century, INTL 1800F Perspectives on Terrorism 1800I Global Migration and Citizenship, INTL 1800K The American Military: Global Supremacy, Democracy and Leadership 1800N Global Media: History/Theory/Production, INTL 1800O Central Asian Security, INTL 1800R Post-Soviet States From the Past into the Future, INTL 1800S The Vietnam War Revisited 1800U Political Community Beyond the State: Challenges, Changes in a Globalizing Era, INTL 1800Y Human Rights: From Politics to Law, INTL 1801C Globalization and Sovereignty. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program | The Watson Institute for International Studies, International Relations Program, 111 Thayer Street Box 1970, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2809 | International Relations (IR) is an interdisciplinary undergraduate concentration within the social sciences that focuses on the study of global issues from a wide variety of perspectives. It draws on courses from numerous departments including political science, history, economics, anthropology, sociology, psychology, religion, and environmental studies. It also incorporates courses from the humanities, particularly area and language departments, and requires advanced study of a foreign language. Taking a broad approach, the concentration examines a range of global issues including diplomacy, war, and peace; poverty, inequality, and development; trade, globalization, and economic conflict; human rights and humanitarianism; the production and role of culture and political identities; and the environment and global public health. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Italian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Italian Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - IT0200 Elementary Italian, IT0400 Intermediate Italian II, IT0600 Writing and Speaking Italian II, ITAL 0950 Introduction to Italian Cinema: Italian Film and History, ITAL 1020 Boccaccio's Decameron and the End of the World, ITAL 1400J Casanova, ITAL 1420 Sex and the Cities: Venice, Florence, and Rome, 14501800, ITAL 1620 The Divina Commedia: Dante's Paradiso: Justifying a Cosmos, ITAL 2200 Testifying to the Self: Legal, Literary, and Autobiographical Transcripts, ITAL 2820A Italian Studies Colloquium. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Italian Studies | Department of Italian Studies, 190 Hope Street, Box 1942, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1561 | Italian Studies at Brown not only teaches language and literature to students but guides their research toward problems that are cross-disciplinary in both content and method, rather than merely confirming a fixed canon or predetermined field of study. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Judaic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Program in Judaic Studies | This program allows students to learn how several academic disciplines deal with a single subject, the study of Jews and Judaism. The principal disciplines represented in the Program are History, Language (Hebrew, Aramaic), Literature, Religious Studies, and Sociology. The Program thus joins humanistic and social scientific approaches to learning. The educational goal of the concentration is to show how different scholarly disciplines approach the study of Jews and Judaism in different chronological settings ranging from biblical times to the present. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - JUDS0110 Elementary Hebrew, JUDS0130 Intermediate Hebrew, JUDS0150 Writing and Speaking Hebrew, JUDS0470 The Hebrew Bible and the History of Ancient Israel, JUDS0980 Seminars in Judaic Studies, JUDS0980D Good and Evil, JUDS0980O Zionism, Anti-Zionism and Post-Zionism: past, Present, Future, JUDS1400 The Archaeology of Palestine, JUDS01980 Advanced Seminars in Judaic Studies, JUDS1980I Ethics, Love, and Justice: The Religious and Philosophical Thought of Emmanuel Levinas. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Program in Judaic Studies | Program in Judaic Studies, Brown University, 163 George Street Box 1826, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3912 | The Program in Judaic Studies is an interdisciplinary unit devoted to the academic study of Jews and Judaism in all historical and geographic contexts. The faculty includes scholars from both humanistic and social scientific disciplines, including anthropology, history, literary criticism, philosophy, and sociology.The program offers an undergraduate curriculum that covers a wide array of courses in Judaic Studies.Several faculty members are engaged in graduate instruction in other departments.In addition to faculty members with appointments in the Program, eight Brown faculty members with research and teaching interests in Judaic Studies are affiliated with the Program.Their home departments include Anthropology, History, Modern Culture and Media, Political Science, and Sociology. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Language and Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Hispanic Studies | This program allows students to develop the linguistic competency and literary and cultural knowledge necessary for an understanding of the Spanish-speaking world. It provides grounding for careers in teaching, diplomacy, medicine, and any other field involving the Hispanic world. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HISP 0200-S01 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S02 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S03 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S04 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S05 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S06 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S07 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S01 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S02 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S03 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0400-S01 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S02 Intermediate Spanish II Smith , HISP 0400-S03 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S04 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S05 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0500-S01 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S02 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S03 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S04 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S05 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S06 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0600-S01 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S02 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S03 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S04 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S05 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S06 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S07 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S08 Advanced Composition, HISP 0730-S01 Early and Contemporary Writers of Spanish America Wey-Gomez, HISP 0740-S01 Intensive Survey of Spanish Literature Vaquero, HISP 0750B-S01 Hispanics in the United States Bauer, HISP 0750K-S01 To Be Determined, HISP 1210C-S01 History of the Spanish Language Vaquero, HISP 1240H-S01 Spanish Golden Age Stories, HISP 1330K-S01 Contemporary Poetry of Latin America Mazzucchelli, HISP 1330N-S01 Early Transatlantic Encounters Wey-Gomez, HISP 1370N-S01 Carlos Fuentes y Nueva Narrativa Mexicana Ortega, HISP 1370Q-S01 Caribbean Messianisms and Utopias Price. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Hispanic Studies | Department of Hispanic Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2569 | The Department of Hispanic Studies at Brown offers an in-depth introduction to Hispanic culture. At the undergraduate level it offers the possibility of learning the language and culture of both Spain and Latin America, and at the graduate level it trains students to become effective teachers and scholars. The faculty members represent a broad range of approaches to language, literature, and culture, from philology to literary theory and cultural studies. All courses are taught in Spanish, and the development of fluency in reading, speaking, and writing the target language is an important goal in all classes. However, the goals of the department go beyond language instruction, as it seeks to prepare students to be able to understand a completely different national, continental, and global reality in all its complexity. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Late Antique Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program focuses on the third through the ninth centuries C.E., when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - LATN 0100 Essentials of the Latin Language, LATN 0110 Introduction to Latin, LATN 0200 Essentials of the Latin Language, LATN 0300 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0310 Grammar Review and Composition, LATN 0400 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0510 Readings in Latin Literature, LATN 0510A Latin Mystical Writing, LATN 0510B Medieval Latin Lyric, LATN 1010 Latin Lyric: Catullus and Horace, LATN 1020 Cicero, LATN 1020B Cicero, Verrines. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Latin American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Watson Institute for International Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies | This program is designed to help students develop an interdisciplinary understanding of culture, history, and contemporary issues in Latin American. Social, political, economic, literary, and cultural factors combine to explain the Latin American societies of today. The concentration in Latin American Studies provides the opportunity to use the methods of various disciplines and integrate different ways of knowing. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - LAST 1510B-S01 - The Struggle fo Human Rights in Brazil: Democracy without Citizenship, LAST 1510C-S01 - Democracy and the (Un)rule of Law in Latin America: Two Decades after Transitions, LAST 1510D-S01 - Pop Music + Soc Chng in Lat Am, LAST 1510E-S01 - Race, Music, Lit in Caribbean, LAST 1510G-S01 - Literature and Popular Culture in Latin America, LAST 1510H-S01 - Shaping the Brazilian Nation through Music, LAST 1990-S01 - Individual Thesis Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Watson Institute for International Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies | The Watson Institute for International Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University Box 1866 111 Thayer Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2106 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | This program is designed both for students interested in the discipline itself and also for those wishing to use their understanding of linguistic structure to pursue other disciplines. Linguists are concerned with such issues as what all human languages have in common, why languages change, how linguistic abilities interact with cognitive abilities, how language is learnable, and developing formal models of linguistic structure. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - LAST 1510B-S01 - The Struggle fo Human Rights in Brazil: Democracy without Citizenship, LAST 1510C-S01 - Democracy and the (Un)rule of Law in Latin America: Two Decades after Transitions, LAST 1510D-S01 - Pop Music + Soc Chng in Lat Am, LAST 1510E-S01 - Race, Music, Lit in Caribbean, LAST 1510G-S01 - Literature and Popular Culture in Latin America, LAST 1510H-S01 - Shaping the Brazilian Nation through Music, LAST 1990-S01 - Individual Thesis Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Literary Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Literary Arts Program | This program is is designed to allow students to develop their skills as writers in one or more genres while deepening their understanding of the craft of writing. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - LITR 0110A-S01 - Fiction I, LITR 0110A-S02 - Fiction I, LITR 0110A-S03 - Fiction I, LITR 0110A-S04 - Fiction I, LITR 0110B-S01 - Poetry I, LITR 0110B-S02 - Poetry I, LITR 0110B-S03 - Poetry I, LITR 0110C-S01 - Playwriting I, LITR 0110C-S02 - Playwriting I, LITR 0110E-S01 - Screenwriting I, LITR 0210A-S01 - Fiction Writing II, LITR 0210A-S02 - Fiction Writing II, LITR 0210B-S01 - Poetry Writing II, LITR 0210B-S03 - Poetry Writing II, LITR 0210C-S01 - Playwriting II, LITR 0210D-L01 - Electronic Writing II, LITR 0210D-S01 - Electronic Writing II, LITR 0210E-S01 - Screenwriting II, LITR 0310A-S01 - Poetry in Service to Schools and the Community, LITR 0510A-S01 - Masters and Servants, LITR 1010A-S01 - Advanced Fiction, LITR 1010A-S02 - Advanced Fiction, LITR 1010A-S03 - Advanced Fiction, LITR 1010B-S01 - Advanced Poetry, LITR 1010F-S01 - Advanced Translation, LITR 1010G-S01 - Cave Writing, LITR 1110P-S01 - Alternative Scriptwriting: Writing Beyond the Rules, LITR 1110Q-S01 – Music, LITR 1110R-S01 - Performance Dimensions of Text, LITR 1150G-S01 - Books by Hand, LITR 1150H-S01 - Latin-American Poetry Live, LITR 1150P-S01 - John Cage and Meditative Poetics, LITR 1150R-S01 - Exemplary Ancient Fictions, LITR 1230I-S01 - The Documentary Vision in Recent American Literature, LITR 1230J-S01 - Writing: Material Difference, LITR 1410A-S01 - Fiction Honors, LITR 1410C-S01 - Playwriting Honors, LITR 2010A-S01 - Graduate Fiction, LITR 2010B-S01 - Graduate Poetry, LITR 2010C-S01 - Graduate Playwriting, LITR 2110B-S01 - Collaborative Languages, LITR 2110E-S01 - The Foreign Home: Interdisciplinary Arts. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Literary Arts Program | Literary Arts Program, Box 1923, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3260 | For nearly 40 years, the Brown University Program in Literary Arts has been a creative and intellectual center for the U.S. literary avant-garde.Along with only a handful of other writing programs nationwide, Brown’s Program in Literary Arts provides a home for innovative writers of fiction, poetry, playwriting, electronic writing (hypertext) and mixed media. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Literatures and Cultures in English - Medieval and Early Modern Literatures and Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of English | This program helps students learn to think about the relation between a literary text and its moment in history; develop a sense of the work as shaped by, and shaping, contemporary practices and debates; and encounter critical models as bodies of knowledge with their own histories, tensions and traditions. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGL0210E Three Great Poets: Shakespeare, Donne, Milton, ENGL0250E The Medieval King Arthur, ENGL0250F Shakespeare s Present Tense, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL1310B American Degenerates, ENGL1310V Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales, HMAN1970C Europe in the Vernacular, ENGL1360A The Stage as Globe in Renaissance Drama, ENGL1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, ENGL2360K The Renaissance and Modernity, ENGL2360M The Making of Shakespeare, ENGL0410A Literature and the Fantastic, ENGL0410F Devils, Demons, and Do-Gooders, ENGL0410H American Literature and the Sea, ENGL0410J The Literature of Identity from Shakespeare to Wilde, ENGL0450F Man and Machine, ENGL0450G The Transatlantic American Novel. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of English | Department of English, 70 Brown St., Box 1852, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2393 | English Department is also the home of Novel, one of the leading professional journals devoted to the study of narrative fiction. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Literatures and Cultures in English - Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of English | This program helps students learn to think about the relation between a literary text and its moment in history; develop a sense of the work as shaped by, and shaping, contemporary practices and debates; and encounter critical models as bodies of knowledge with their own histories, tensions and traditions. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGL0210E Three Great Poets: Shakespeare, Donne, Milton, ENGL0250E The Medieval King Arthur, ENGL0250F Shakespeare s Present Tense, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL1310B American Degenerates, ENGL1310V Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales, HMAN1970C Europe in the Vernacular, ENGL1360A The Stage as Globe in Renaissance Drama, ENGL1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, ENGL2360K The Renaissance and Modernity, ENGL2360M The Making of Shakespeare, ENGL0410A Literature and the Fantastic, ENGL0410F Devils, Demons, and Do-Gooders, ENGL0410H American Literature and the Sea, ENGL0410J The Literature of Identity from Shakespeare to Wilde, ENGL0450F Man and Machine, ENGL0450G The Transatlantic American Novel. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of English | Department of English, 70 Brown St., Box 1852, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2393 | English Department is also the home of Novel, one of the leading professional journals devoted to the study of narrative fiction. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Literatures and Cultures in English - The Enlightenment and the Rise of National Literatures and Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of English | This program helps students learn to think about the relation between a literary text and its moment in history; develop a sense of the work as shaped by, and shaping, contemporary practices and debates; and encounter critical models as bodies of knowledge with their own histories, tensions and traditions. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGL0210E Three Great Poets: Shakespeare, Donne, Milton, ENGL0250E The Medieval King Arthur, ENGL0250F Shakespeare s Present Tense, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL1310B American Degenerates, ENGL1310V Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales, HMAN1970C Europe in the Vernacular, ENGL1360A The Stage as Globe in Renaissance Drama, ENGL1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, ENGL2360K The Renaissance and Modernity, ENGL2360M The Making of Shakespeare, ENGL0410A Literature and the Fantastic, ENGL0410F Devils, Demons, and Do-Gooders, ENGL0410H American Literature and the Sea, ENGL0410J The Literature of Identity from Shakespeare to Wilde, ENGL0450F Man and Machine, ENGL0450G The Transatlantic American Novel. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of English | Department of English, 70 Brown St., Box 1852, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2393 | English Department is also the home of Novel, one of the leading professional journals devoted to the study of narrative fiction. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Mathematics | This program is designed to present students with challenging courses that will train them for any future they desire be it in the economy, in government, or in academe. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Math 0050 Analytic Geometry and Calculus, Math 0090 Introductory Calculus I, Math 0100 Introductory Calculus II, Math 0170 Advanced Placement Calculus, Math 0180 Intermediate Calculus, Math 0190 Advanced Placement Calculus(Physics/Engineering), Math 0200 Intermediate Calculus(Physics/Engineering), Math 0350 Honors Calculus, Math 0520 Linear Algebra, Math 0540 Honors Linear Algebra, Math 1060 Differential Geometry, Math 1110 Ordinary Differential Equations, Math 1130 Functions of Several Variables, Math 1260 Complex Analysis, Math 1270 Functional Analysis, Math 1530 Abstract Algebra, Math 1580 Cryptography, Math 1610 Probability, Math 1810 A Second Course in Linear Algebra, Math 2010 Differential Geometry, Math 2050 Algebraic Geometry, Math 2250 Complex Function Theory, Math 2370 Algebraic Topology, Math 2510 Algebra, Math 2530 Number Theory, Math 2710C Gluing Constructions in Differential Geometry, Math 2710D Lie Groups and Lie Algebras, Math 2710E Arithmetic Groups. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Mathematics | Department of Mathematics, 151 Thayer Street, Box 1917, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2708 | The Mathematics Department at Brown balances a lively interest in students and teaching with a distinguished research reputation. Several strong research groups, Analysis, Algebraic Geometry, Geometry and Topology, and Number Theory, all have active weekly seminars that draw speakers ranging from the local to the international. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Medieval Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries, combining interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with depth of study in one or two disciplines. One traditional area of study is Western Europe, but students are encouraged to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic and Slavic. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Modern Culture and Media - German | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program offers interested students an opportunity to explore the phenomenon of "Germany" using the approaches of cultural theory. Students will take a number of required courses through which they learn the basic theories and approaches to issues of language and meaning, subjectivity and identity, ideology and consciousness, gender and sexuality, and theories of narrativity. Other courses offer the student an overview of the German textual traditions in literature, philosophy, music, film, and the fine arts. German language proficiency is expected of all participants in the program and may be gained by a variety of approaches available within the German Studies Department. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Modern Culture and Media - Italian | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Modern Culture and Media - Track I | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program combines the study of contemporary theories of representation and cultural production with the analysis of diverse texts – visual and verbal, literary and historical, archival and imaginative – in the period broadly designated as “modern” (18th to 21st centuries). Since the appearance of modern means of textual production and reproduction (print, film, video, sound recording, digital practices, etc.), traditional artistic and literary forms have changed significantly and new forms have been developed. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Modern Culture and Media - Track II | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program combines the study of contemporary theories of representation and cultural production with the analysis of diverse texts – visual and verbal, literary and historical, archival and imaginative – in the period broadly designated as “modern” (18th to 21st centuries). Since the appearance of modern means of textual production and reproduction (print, film, video, sound recording, digital practices, etc.), traditional artistic and literary forms have changed significantly and new forms have been developed. The program combines production courses with the critical study of the cultural role of practice. It aims to engage students in the analysis of theories of production elaborated within philosophical, artistic, and technological traditions, while encouraging them to produce works that interrogate these traditions. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Philosophy - Ethics and Political Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Philosophy | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHIL 0040S01 Reason and Religion, PHIL 0200CS01 Personal Identity, PHIL 0350S01 Ancient Philosophy, PHIL 0360S01 Early Modern Philosophy, PHIL 0540S01 Logic, PHIL 0880S01 Philosophical Themes in the Contemporary American Short Story, PHIL 0990GS01 Plato, PHIL 0990MS01 Descartes Meditations, PHIL 0990PS01 Personal Identity, PHIL 1250S01 Aristotle, PHIL 1420S01 Philosophy and Poetry , PHIL 1640S01 The Nature of Morality, PHIL 1650S01 Moral Theories, PHIL 1660S01 Metaphysics, PHIL 1750S01 Epistemology, PHIL 1760S01 Philosophy of Language, PHIL 1770S01 Philosophy of Mind, PHIL 1880S01 Advanced Deductive Logic, PHIL 2060GS01 Other Minds, PHIL 2120IS01 Frege, PHIL 2160GS01 Moral, Social, and Political Philosophical Issues in Malory's Morte d'Arthur, PHIL 2160HS01 Disability, Fiction, and Bioethics, PHIL 2170FS01 Philosophical Issues from Freud, PHIL 2180BS01 Civic Virtue and the Duties of Citizenship, PHIL 2190AS01 Skepticism, PHIL 2200S01 Graduate Proseminar. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Philosophy | Department of Philosophy, Box 1918, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2718 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Philosophy - Logic and Philosophy of Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Philosophy | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHIL 0040S01 Reason and Religion, PHIL 0200CS01 Personal Identity, PHIL 0350S01 Ancient Philosophy, PHIL 0360S01 Early Modern Philosophy, PHIL 0540S01 Logic, PHIL 0880S01 Philosophical Themes in the Contemporary American Short Story, PHIL 0990GS01 Plato, PHIL 0990MS01 Descartes Meditations, PHIL 0990PS01 Personal Identity, PHIL 1250S01 Aristotle, PHIL 1420S01 Philosophy and Poetry , PHIL 1640S01 The Nature of Morality, PHIL 1650S01 Moral Theories, PHIL 1660S01 Metaphysics, PHIL 1750S01 Epistemology, PHIL 1760S01 Philosophy of Language, PHIL 1770S01 Philosophy of Mind, PHIL 1880S01 Advanced Deductive Logic, PHIL 2060GS01 Other Minds, PHIL 2120IS01 Frege, PHIL 2160GS01 Moral, Social, and Political Philosophical Issues in Malory's Morte d'Arthur, PHIL 2160HS01 Disability, Fiction, and Bioethics, PHIL 2170FS01 Philosophical Issues from Freud, PHIL 2180BS01 Civic Virtue and the Duties of Citizenship, PHIL 2190AS01 Skepticism, PHIL 2200S01 Graduate Proseminar. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Philosophy | Department of Philosophy, Box 1918, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2718 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Philosophy - Standard | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Philosophy | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHIL 0040S01 Reason and Religion, PHIL 0200CS01 Personal Identity, PHIL 0350S01 Ancient Philosophy, PHIL 0360S01 Early Modern Philosophy, PHIL 0540S01 Logic, PHIL 0880S01 Philosophical Themes in the Contemporary American Short Story, PHIL 0990GS01 Plato, PHIL 0990MS01 Descartes Meditations, PHIL 0990PS01 Personal Identity, PHIL 1250S01 Aristotle, PHIL 1420S01 Philosophy and Poetry , PHIL 1640S01 The Nature of Morality, PHIL 1650S01 Moral Theories, PHIL 1660S01 Metaphysics, PHIL 1750S01 Epistemology, PHIL 1760S01 Philosophy of Language, PHIL 1770S01 Philosophy of Mind, PHIL 1880S01 Advanced Deductive Logic, PHIL 2060GS01 Other Minds, PHIL 2120IS01 Frege, PHIL 2160GS01 Moral, Social, and Political Philosophical Issues in Malory's Morte d'Arthur, PHIL 2160HS01 Disability, Fiction, and Bioethics, PHIL 2170FS01 Philosophical Issues from Freud, PHIL 2180BS01 Civic Virtue and the Duties of Citizenship, PHIL 2190AS01 Skepticism, PHIL 2200S01 Graduate Proseminar. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Philosophy | Department of Philosophy, Box 1918, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2718 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Physics | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHYS 0040-S01 - Basic Physics, PHYS 0040-S02 - Basic Physics, PHYS 0060-S01 - Foundations of Electromagnetism and Modern Physics, PHYS 0100-S01 - Flat Earth to Quantum Uncertainty: On the Nature and Meaning of Scientific Explanation, PHYS 0120-S01 - Adventures in Nanoworld, PHYS 0160-S01 - Introduction to Relativity and Quantum Physics, PHYS 0220-S01 - Beginning Astronomy, PHYS 0500-S01 - Advanced Classical Mechanics, PHYS 0560-S01 - Experiments in Modern Physics, PHYS 1100-S01 - Introduction to General Relativity, PHYS 1170-S01 - Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, PHYS 1420-S01 - Quantum Mechanics, PHYS 1560-S01 - Modern Physics Laboratory, PHYS 1600-S01 - Computational Physics, PHYS 1970B-S01 - Introductory Optics, PHYS 2010-S01 - Techniques in Experimental Physics, PHYS 2040-S01 - Classical Theoretical Physics II, PHYS 2060-S01 - Quantum Mechanics, PHYS 2140-S01 - Statistical Mechanics, PHYS 2170-S01 - Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, PHYS 2280-S01 - Astrophysics and Cosmology, PHYS 2300-S01 - Quantum Theory of Fields I, PHYS 2340-S01 - Group Theory, PHYS 2420-S01 - Solid State Physics II, PHYS 2620F-S01 - Selected Topics in Molecular Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Physics | Department of Physics, Brown University, Box 1843, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2641 | Physics is the most fundamental of sciences. It provides a foundation of crucial ideas for other scientific fields, and the underpinnings of all of modern technology. The physics faculty at Brown is actively engaged in both teaching and research, including mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. Research focuses on phenomena ranging from the subatomic to the cosmic, and includes collaborative efforts with biologists, chemists, engineers, geologists, and mathematicians. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Political Science - American Politics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Political Science | The program offers opportunities for learning in a number of different areas. Students completing the program of study will be prepared for jobs in government, private corporations, and nonprofit organizations as well as for more advanced study in law, business, or graduate school. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - POLS 0100S01 Introduction to Public Policy, POLS 0400S01 Introduction to International Politics, POLS 0500S01 Foundations of Political Analysis, POLS 0820OS01 Political Theory of Capitalism, POLS 0820PS01 Fourth Branch of Goverment, POLS 0820QS01 Politics and Film, POLS 0820RS01 Global Governance, POLS 1010S01 Topics in American Constitutional Law, POLS 1050S01 Ethics and Public Policy, POLS 1110S01 Mass Media, POLS 1130S01 The American Presidency, POLS 1210S01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1230S01 Politics of the Eastern European States, POLS 1250S01 The Politics of European Democracies, POLS 1450S01 Political Economy of Development, POLS 1480S01 Theory of International Relations, POLS 1510S01 Great Powers and Empires, POLS 1820BS01 Roots of Radical Islam, POLS 1820WS01 Market Liberalism: Origins, Principles and Contemporary Applications, POLS 1820XS01 States, Markets, Women and Welfare, POLS 1820ZS01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1821CS01 Economic Freedom and Social Justice, POLS 1821HS01 Authority and Legitimacy, POLS 1821JS01 Rhode Island Government and Politics, POLS 1821KS01 Just War Theory, POLS 1821QS01 The United States in World Politics, POLS 1821XS01 The Politics of Social Welfare in the Middle East, POLS 1920S01 Senior Honors Thesis Preparation, POLS 2051S01 Preparing the Prospectus II, POLS 2090GS01 Readings in American Institutions, POLS 2090HS01 Readings in Comparative Politics, POLS 2120S01 Proseminar in Political Theory I, POLS 2130S01 Proseminar in International Relations, POLS 2150S01 Democratic Theory, Justice, and the Law, POLS 2220S01 Urban Politics, POLS 2350S01 Freedom, Power and Politcal Action, POLS 2590S01 Quantitative Research Methods, POLS 2971S01 Preliminary Examination Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Political Science | Department of Political Science, 36 Prospect Street, Box 1844, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2825 | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Political Science - Comparative Politics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Political Science | The program offers opportunities for learning in a number of different areas. Students completing the program of study will be prepared for jobs in government, private corporations, and nonprofit organizations as well as for more advanced study in law, business, or graduate school. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - POLS 0100S01 Introduction to Public Policy, POLS 0400S01 Introduction to International Politics, POLS 0500S01 Foundations of Political Analysis, POLS 0820OS01 Political Theory of Capitalism, POLS 0820PS01 Fourth Branch of Goverment, POLS 0820QS01 Politics and Film, POLS 0820RS01 Global Governance, POLS 1010S01 Topics in American Constitutional Law, POLS 1050S01 Ethics and Public Policy, POLS 1110S01 Mass Media, POLS 1130S01 The American Presidency, POLS 1210S01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1230S01 Politics of the Eastern European States, POLS 1250S01 The Politics of European Democracies, POLS 1450S01 Political Economy of Development, POLS 1480S01 Theory of International Relations, POLS 1510S01 Great Powers and Empires, POLS 1820BS01 Roots of Radical Islam, POLS 1820WS01 Market Liberalism: Origins, Principles and Contemporary Applications, POLS 1820XS01 States, Markets, Women and Welfare, POLS 1820ZS01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1821CS01 Economic Freedom and Social Justice, POLS 1821HS01 Authority and Legitimacy, POLS 1821JS01 Rhode Island Government and Politics, POLS 1821KS01 Just War Theory, POLS 1821QS01 The United States in World Politics, POLS 1821XS01 The Politics of Social Welfare in the Middle East, POLS 1920S01 Senior Honors Thesis Preparation, POLS 2051S01 Preparing the Prospectus II, POLS 2090GS01 Readings in American Institutions, POLS 2090HS01 Readings in Comparative Politics, POLS 2120S01 Proseminar in Political Theory I, POLS 2130S01 Proseminar in International Relations, POLS 2150S01 Democratic Theory, Justice, and the Law, POLS 2220S01 Urban Politics, POLS 2350S01 Freedom, Power and Politcal Action, POLS 2590S01 Quantitative Research Methods, POLS 2971S01 Preliminary Examination Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Political Science | Department of Political Science, 36 Prospect Street, Box 1844, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2825 | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Political Science - International Relations | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Political Science | The program offers opportunities for learning in a number of different areas. Students completing the program of study will be prepared for jobs in government, private corporations, and nonprofit organizations as well as for more advanced study in law, business, or graduate school. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - POLS 0100S01 Introduction to Public Policy, POLS 0400S01 Introduction to International Politics, POLS 0500S01 Foundations of Political Analysis, POLS 0820OS01 Political Theory of Capitalism, POLS 0820PS01 Fourth Branch of Goverment, POLS 0820QS01 Politics and Film, POLS 0820RS01 Global Governance, POLS 1010S01 Topics in American Constitutional Law, POLS 1050S01 Ethics and Public Policy, POLS 1110S01 Mass Media, POLS 1130S01 The American Presidency, POLS 1210S01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1230S01 Politics of the Eastern European States, POLS 1250S01 The Politics of European Democracies, POLS 1450S01 Political Economy of Development, POLS 1480S01 Theory of International Relations, POLS 1510S01 Great Powers and Empires, POLS 1820BS01 Roots of Radical Islam, POLS 1820WS01 Market Liberalism: Origins, Principles and Contemporary Applications, POLS 1820XS01 States, Markets, Women and Welfare, POLS 1820ZS01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1821CS01 Economic Freedom and Social Justice, POLS 1821HS01 Authority and Legitimacy, POLS 1821JS01 Rhode Island Government and Politics, POLS 1821KS01 Just War Theory, POLS 1821QS01 The United States in World Politics, POLS 1821XS01 The Politics of Social Welfare in the Middle East, POLS 1920S01 Senior Honors Thesis Preparation, POLS 2051S01 Preparing the Prospectus II, POLS 2090GS01 Readings in American Institutions, POLS 2090HS01 Readings in Comparative Politics, POLS 2120S01 Proseminar in Political Theory I, POLS 2130S01 Proseminar in International Relations, POLS 2150S01 Democratic Theory, Justice, and the Law, POLS 2220S01 Urban Politics, POLS 2350S01 Freedom, Power and Politcal Action, POLS 2590S01 Quantitative Research Methods, POLS 2971S01 Preliminary Examination Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Political Science | Department of Political Science, 36 Prospect Street, Box 1844, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2825 | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Political Science - Political Theory | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Political Science | The program offers opportunities for learning in a number of different areas. Students completing the program of study will be prepared for jobs in government, private corporations, and nonprofit organizations as well as for more advanced study in law, business, or graduate school. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - POLS 0100S01 Introduction to Public Policy, POLS 0400S01 Introduction to International Politics, POLS 0500S01 Foundations of Political Analysis, POLS 0820OS01 Political Theory of Capitalism, POLS 0820PS01 Fourth Branch of Goverment, POLS 0820QS01 Politics and Film, POLS 0820RS01 Global Governance, POLS 1010S01 Topics in American Constitutional Law, POLS 1050S01 Ethics and Public Policy, POLS 1110S01 Mass Media, POLS 1130S01 The American Presidency, POLS 1210S01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1230S01 Politics of the Eastern European States, POLS 1250S01 The Politics of European Democracies, POLS 1450S01 Political Economy of Development, POLS 1480S01 Theory of International Relations, POLS 1510S01 Great Powers and Empires, POLS 1820BS01 Roots of Radical Islam, POLS 1820WS01 Market Liberalism: Origins, Principles and Contemporary Applications, POLS 1820XS01 States, Markets, Women and Welfare, POLS 1820ZS01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1821CS01 Economic Freedom and Social Justice, POLS 1821HS01 Authority and Legitimacy, POLS 1821JS01 Rhode Island Government and Politics, POLS 1821KS01 Just War Theory, POLS 1821QS01 The United States in World Politics, POLS 1821XS01 The Politics of Social Welfare in the Middle East, POLS 1920S01 Senior Honors Thesis Preparation, POLS 2051S01 Preparing the Prospectus II, POLS 2090GS01 Readings in American Institutions, POLS 2090HS01 Readings in Comparative Politics, POLS 2120S01 Proseminar in Political Theory I, POLS 2130S01 Proseminar in International Relations, POLS 2150S01 Democratic Theory, Justice, and the Law, POLS 2220S01 Urban Politics, POLS 2350S01 Freedom, Power and Politcal Action, POLS 2590S01 Quantitative Research Methods, POLS 2971S01 Preliminary Examination Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Political Science | Department of Political Science, 36 Prospect Street, Box 1844, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2825 | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Portuguese and Brazilian Studies - Interdisciplinary focus | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | This program is the study of the Portuguese-speaking world, a large and diverse geographical and cultural area spread over five continents, including Brazil, Continental and Insular Portugal, Lusophone Africa and Luso-America, and inhabited by two hundred million people. Although students are encouraged to explore the global nature of the Portuguese-speaking world, their individual program will generally focus on one of the specific geographical areas mentioned above. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - POBS 0200S01 Elementary Portuguese, POBS 0400S01 Writing and Speaking Portuguese, POBS 0620S01 Mapping PortugueseSpeaking Cultures: Portugal and Africa, POBS 1080S01 Performing Brazil: Language, Theater, Culture, POBS 1500TS01 Jose Saramago and his Contemporaries, POBS 1600CS01 CrossCultural Perspectives on Education: Education and the PortugueseSpeaking World, POBS 1600MS01 Immigration into Southern Europe, POBS 1600QS01 Perceptions of the Other and Ethnographical Writing in Early Modern Portugal, POBS 1720S01 Literacy, Culture, and Schooling for the Language Minority Student, POBS 1800FS01 The Lusophone World and the Struggle for Modernity, POBS 2010AS01 Language Theory and Curriculum Development, POBS 2020AS01 Applied Linguistics for ESL, POBS 2600OS01 The Sage of Suspicion: Machado de Assis and the Agencies of Narrative. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, 159 George Street Meiklejohn House, Box O, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3042 | The Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies has an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching on the Portuguese-speaking world — a vast geographical area encompassing eight different countries on four continents (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor), in addition to long-standing immigrant communities in the United States. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Portuguese and Brazilian Studies - Language and literature focus | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | This program is the study of the Portuguese-speaking world, a large and diverse geographical and cultural area spread over five continents, including Brazil, Continental and Insular Portugal, Lusophone Africa and Luso-America, and inhabited by two hundred million people. Although students are encouraged to explore the global nature of the Portuguese-speaking world, their individual program will generally focus on one of the specific geographical areas mentioned above. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - POBS 0200S01 Elementary Portuguese, POBS 0400S01 Writing and Speaking Portuguese, POBS 0620S01 Mapping PortugueseSpeaking Cultures: Portugal and Africa, POBS 1080S01 Performing Brazil: Language, Theater, Culture, POBS 1500TS01 Jose Saramago and his Contemporaries, POBS 1600CS01 CrossCultural Perspectives on Education: Education and the PortugueseSpeaking World, POBS 1600MS01 Immigration into Southern Europe, POBS 1600QS01 Perceptions of the Other and Ethnographical Writing in Early Modern Portugal, POBS 1720S01 Literacy, Culture, and Schooling for the Language Minority Student, POBS 1800FS01 The Lusophone World and the Struggle for Modernity, POBS 2010AS01 Language Theory and Curriculum Development, POBS 2020AS01 Applied Linguistics for ESL, POBS 2600OS01 The Sage of Suspicion: Machado de Assis and the Agencies of Narrative. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, 159 George Street Meiklejohn House, Box O, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3042 | The Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies has an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching on the Portuguese-speaking world — a vast geographical area encompassing eight different countries on four continents (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor), in addition to long-standing immigrant communities in the United States. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Psychology | This program is designed for liberal arts students seeking an understanding of scientific psychology and for students preparing for advanced training and professional work. The program provide students with the flexibility to design a curriculum that best suits their interests and career goals. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are PSYC 0090S01 Quantitative Methods in Psychology, PSYC 0190CS01 Olfaction and Human Behavior, PSYC 0300S01 Personality, PSYC 0500S01 Mechanisms of Animal Behavior, PSYC 0750S01 Principles of Behavioral Neuroscience, PSYC 0810S01 Child Development, PSYC 1030S01 Techniques in Physiological Psychology, PSYC 1070S01 Psychological Theory, PSYC 1090S01 Research Methods in Psychology, PSYC 1410S01 Human Resilience, PSYC 1450S01 Animal Behavior Laboratory, PSYC 1540S01 Laboratory in Social Cognition, PSYC 1700S01 Behavior Modification, PSYC 1750BS01 Canine Behavior, PSYC 1790S01 Psychology of Timing, PSYC 1810S01 Seminar in Cognitive Neuroscience, PSYC 1830S01 Cognitive Aging and Dementia, PSYC 1840S01 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Theory and Practice, PSYC 1880S01 Seminar in the Neural Bases of Cognition, PSYC 2020S01 Quantitative Methods in Psychology, PSYC 2050S01 Practicum in Teaching, PSYC 2080S01 Multivariate Statistical Techniques, PSYC 2270S01 Graduate Core in the Neural Basis of Behavior. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Psychology | Department of Psychology, 89 Waterman Street, Box 1853, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2727 | Department of Psychology enters its second century, its research mission encompasses a wide range of phenomena and levels of analysis, organized in pursuit of three broad goals. One is to deepen an understanding of the cognitive and neural mechanisms of sensation, perception, learning, and emotion. A second is to probe the biological and evolutionary foundations of animal behavior. A third is to clarify the social perception and assessment of individuals and groups. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Public Policy and American Institutions - Economics and Public Policy Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Taubman Center for Public Policy | This program focuses on the role of economic thinking in policy evaluation. It requires eleven courses: eight from the basic Public Policy requirements and three specific to the economics and public policy track. The basic requirements are the five core courses, two American Institutions courses, and a Comparative Institutions course. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PPAI 0700AS01 Issues Facing Education Policy, PPAI 0700BS01 Issues Facing Healthcare, PPAI 0700DS01 Religion and Public Policy, PPAI 1200S01 Policy Analysis and Program Evaluation, PPAI 1510S01 The Corporation, Law and Society, PPAI 1700CS01 The Internet and Public Policy, PPAI 1700DS01 The Economics of Health Policy, PPAI 1700FS01 Economics and Public Policy, PPAI 1700GS01 Education Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700JS01 GIS and Public Policy, PPAI 1700NS01 Legal Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700OS01 Shaping Policy: Political Institutions in the United States, PPAI 1700QS01 Urban Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700SS01 Policies Affecting Working Families, PPAI 1700US01 Communications, Advocacy and Public Affairs, PPAI 1700VS01 Nonprofit Organizations, PPAI 1700XS01 Social Movements and Ethnic Conflicts, PPAI 1700YS01 Crisis Management, PPAI 1700ZS01 State and Local Government, PPAI 1701BS01 Public Organization and Management, PPAI 1701FS01 How Lawyers Think: Lessons in Reading, Reasoning and Rulership from American Legal Thought, PPAI 1701NS01 Issues Facing Legal Policy: Individual Rights Under the Federal Constitution, PPAI 1991S01 Public Policy Colloquium, PPAI 2010S01 Economics and Public Policy, PPAI 2040S01 Policy Analysis, PPAI 2130S01 Organizations and Policymaking, PPAI 2150S01 Strategic Communication, PPAI 2170S01 Leadership and Organization, PPAI 2250S01 U.S. National Security Policy, PPAI 2650S01 Congress and the Federal Budget: Procedure, Politics and Public Policy, PPAI 2800S01 Internship, PPAI 2900S01 Research Workshop. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Taubman Center for Public Policy | Taubman Center for Public Policy, 67 George Street, Box 1977, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2201 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Public Policy and American Institutions - Law and Public Policy Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Taubman Center for Public Policy | This program emphasizes the interdisciplinary study of legal issues with specific emphasis on contemporary legal institutions (the three branches of government). It requires eleven courses: seven from the basic Public Policy requirements and four specific to the law track. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PPAI 0700AS01 Issues Facing Education Policy, PPAI 0700BS01 Issues Facing Healthcare, PPAI 0700DS01 Religion and Public Policy, PPAI 1200S01 Policy Analysis and Program Evaluation, PPAI 1510S01 The Corporation, Law and Society, PPAI 1700CS01 The Internet and Public Policy, PPAI 1700DS01 The Economics of Health Policy, PPAI 1700FS01 Economics and Public Policy, PPAI 1700GS01 Education Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700JS01 GIS and Public Policy, PPAI 1700NS01 Legal Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700OS01 Shaping Policy: Political Institutions in the United States, PPAI 1700QS01 Urban Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700SS01 Policies Affecting Working Families, PPAI 1700US01 Communications, Advocacy and Public Affairs, PPAI 1700VS01 Nonprofit Organizations, PPAI 1700XS01 Social Movements and Ethnic Conflicts, PPAI 1700YS01 Crisis Management, PPAI 1700ZS01 State and Local Government, PPAI 1701BS01 Public Organization and Management, PPAI 1701FS01 How Lawyers Think: Lessons in Reading, Reasoning and Rulership from American Legal Thought, PPAI 1701NS01 Issues Facing Legal Policy: Individual Rights Under the Federal Constitution, PPAI 1991S01 Public Policy Colloquium, PPAI 2010S01 Economics and Public Policy, PPAI 2040S01 Policy Analysis, PPAI 2130S01 Organizations and Policymaking, PPAI 2150S01 Strategic Communication, PPAI 2170S01 Leadership and Organization, PPAI 2250S01 U.S. National Security Policy, PPAI 2650S01 Congress and the Federal Budget: Procedure, Politics and Public Policy, PPAI 2800S01 Internship, PPAI 2900S01 Research Workshop. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Taubman Center for Public Policy | Taubman Center for Public Policy, 67 George Street, Box 1977, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2201 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Religious Studies | The program is expected to encompass the study of at least one religious tradition from each of the following groups. Ordinarily, this requirement is satisfied by two or more courses in each of these areas: Traditions that emerge from West Asia and the Mediterranean World and Traditions that emerge from South and East Asia. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - RELS 0140-S01Introduction to Indian Religions, RELS 0190-S01Japanese Religious Traditions, RELS 0280-S01Christian Ethical Theories, RELS 0290C-S01Christian Ethical Theories, RELS 0410-S01Christianity in Late Antiquity, RELS 0640-S01Martyrdom and Jihad in the Islamic Tradition, RELS 0820-S01Sexual Ethics, RELS 0910-S01Music, Drama, and Religion in India, RELS 1170A-S01Talmudic Historiography, RELS 1210-S01Religion and Gender in the Ancient Mediterranean, RELS 1220-S01Paul and the Philosophers, RELS 1520-S01Pilgrimage and Sacred Travel in the Lands of Islam, RELS 1610-S01Sacrifice and Society, RELS 1820-S01Religious Ethics and Human Rights, RELS 2160-S01Aramaic Readings, RELS 2200M-S01Early Christian Hymnography, RELS 2200N-S01Roman Religions, RELS 2500-S01Religion, Culture and Comparison: Description, Redescription and Comparison, RELS 2600F-S01Seminar on Religion and Critical Thought: Brandom. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Religious Studies | Department of Religious Studies, Box 1927, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3104 | The Department of Religious Studies at Brown University provides students with an understanding of diverse religious traditions, an exposure to a variety of approaches employed within the academic study of religion, as well as an opportunity to explore diverse intellectual, social-theoretical, and ethical issues that arise when one considers the various manifestation of religion in human affairs. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Renaissance and Early Modern Studies | The Renaissance and Early Modern Studies Program (REMS) pursues a multi-disciplinary approach to this complex epoch. REMS encourages students to explore different perspectives by taking courses in different departments , and fosters curiosity about the languages, literature, history, science, art, music and philosophy of the Renaissance. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Afro-American History and Society before 1800, Caribean History and Society, Special Topics in Afro-American Studies, Topics in Material Culture Studies, Ancient Novel and Its Influence, Ancient Utopias and Imaginary Places, Greek Mythology, Virgil: Aeneid, Introduction to Greek Literature, Introduction to Latin Literature, Survey of Republican Literature, Literary Creation and Literary Discourse, Literature and Its History, Ideas, Myths, and Themes, Studies in the Literature of Ideas, Seminars in Writing, Literatures, and Cultures, Introduction to Medieval and Early Modern Literatures and Cultures, Introductory Seminars in Medieval and Early Modern Literatures and Cultures, Introduction to Shakespeare, Foundations of the Novel, Eighteenth-Century British Literature, Special Topics in Medieval and Early Modern Literatures and Cultures, Special Topics Seminars in Medieval and Early Modern Literatures and Cultures, Special Topics in the Enlightenment and the Rise of National Literatures and Cultures, From Courtly Love to Postmodern Desire, Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, Early French Language and Literature, Studies in French Literature of the Seventeenth Century, Special Topics in French Studies II, Studies in French Literature in English Translation, Studies in German Culture, Intensive Surveys in Spanish Literature, Topics in Hispanic Culture and Civilization, Studies in Spanish Literature of the Golden Age, Studies in Spanish American Literature. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Renaissance and Early Modern Studies | Renaissance and Early Modern Studies, Box 1905, Annmary Brown Memorial 21 Brown Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Science and Society | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Committee on Science and Technology Studies | This program examines the processes of scientific discovery and the establishment of scientific policies and systems of belief from historical, philosophical, anthropological and sociological perspectives | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - SCSO 0490S01 Introduction to Science Studies, SCSO 1400S01 Sci + Soc: Theories/Controvers , SCSO 1500S01 Objectivity and its Loss, SCSO 1550BS01 Neuroethics, SCSO 1900S01 Senior Seminar in Science and Society, SCSO 1900S01 Sr Sem in Science and Society. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Committee on Science and Technology Studies | Committee on Science and Technology Studies, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1000 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Semiotics - French | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | This program is offered jointly between the Department of French Studies and the Department of Modern Culture and Media. It is intended for students who wish to receive special preparation in French language and literature, with emphasis on contemporary semiotic theory, and those students whose primary interest is in theory and who wish to strengthen their knowledge of French language, literature, and culture (civilization). | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Slavic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Slavic Languages | This program integrates study of the languages, literatures, and civilizations of the Slavic world. Built on sound knowledge of one or two Slavic languages. The program allows students to develop an in-depth appreciation and understanding of the East European cultures and civilizations on which they are primarily focused through a broad spectrum of interdisciplinary fields at Brown. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - SLAV 1300 S01 Sociolinguistics, SLAV 1770 S01 Prague and St. Petersburg: A Tale of Two Cities, SLAV 1790 S01 Looking for a Centre: East Central European Modernism, SLAV 1890 S01 Slavic Contributions to Literary Theory, SLAV 1950 S01 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S02 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S03 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S04 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S05 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S06 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S07 Independent Study LAV 1950 S08 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S09 Independent Study , SLAV 1970B S01 Spirituality in Russian Literature, SLAV 1981 S01 Ind Study Research Slavic Lang, SLAV 1981 S02 Ind Study Research Slavic Lang, SLAV 1981 S03 Ind Study Research Slavic Lang, SLAV 1981 S04 Ind Study Research Slavic Lang, SLAV 1990 S01 Senior Thesis, SLAV 1990 S02 Senior Thesis, SLAV 1990 S03 Senior Thesis, SLAV 1990 S04 Senior Thesis, SLAV 1990 S05 Senior Thesis, SLAV 2970 S01 Preliminary Examination Prep, SLAV 2980 S01 Advanced Reading and Research. |
Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Slavic Languages | Department of Slavic Languages, 20 Manning Walk, Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2689 | The Department of Slavic Languages is Brown University’s center for studying the cultures and literatures of Russia and other Slavic countries. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Sociology | The program helps students develop a versatile and marketable skill set, including: critical thinking and analysis; polished written and oral communication; collection and interpretation of data, including statistical information; and in-depth engagement with the major social and policy issues. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - SOC 0020-S01 Perspectives on Social Interaction: An Introduction to Social Psychology, SOC 0170-S01 The Family, SOC 0200-S01 Population and Society, SOC 0300E-S01 HIV/AIDS: Politics, Culture and Society, SOC 1050-S01 Methods of Research in Organizations, SOC 1060-S01 Leadership in Organizations, SOC 1090-S01 Theories of Organizational Dynamics and Decision Making, SOC 1100-S01 Introductory Statistics for Social Research, SOC 1260-S01 Market Research in Public and Private Sectors, SOC 1270-S01 Race, Class, and Ethnicity in the Modern World, SOC 1330-S01 Remaking the City, SOC 1600-S01 Comparative Development, SOC 1640-S01 Social Exclusion, SOC 1870A-S01 Investing in Social Change, SOC 1871B-S01 Sociological Perspectives on Poverty, SOC 1871H-S01 Social Perspectives on HIV/AIDS, SOC 1950-S01 Senior Seminar, SOC 2020-S01 Multivariate Statistical Methods II, SOC 2050-S01 Contemporary Sociology, SOC 2080-S01 Principles of Population, SOC 2090-S01 Culture and Social Structure, SOC 2130-S01 Health, Illness and Medicine in Social Context, SOC 2200-S01 Social Capital and Social Networks, SOC 2210-S01 Qualitative Methods, SOC 2350-S01 Social Movements in Health, SOC 2380-S01 Mortality and Morbidity, SOC 2510-S01 Teaching Practicum in Sociology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Sociology | Department of Sociology, 112 George Street, Box 1916, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2367 | Sociology as a discipline provides students with the conceptual and analytic tools to make sense of complex social structures in a rapidly changing global environment. Brown’s Sociology department brings together a dynamic group of scholars with international reputations for outstanding achievement in core research areas—social demography, the sociology of health, and macrosociology. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in South Asian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | South Asian Studies Program | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - AN 129 S01 Film and Anthropology: Identity and Images in Indian Societies, AN 134 S01 Comparative Sex Roles, AN 137 S01 Impact on Colonialism: Gender and Nationalism in India, EC 152 S01 The Economic Analysis of Institutions, HI197 S37 The Partition of 1947: Violence, Displacement and Memory in South Asia, HI158 S01 Making of Modern South Asia, HI159 S01 Recovering Early South Asia, HN 010–20 Beginning Hindi, HN 030 Intermediate Hindi, HN 040 S01 Intermediate Hindi, HN 108 S01 Advanced Hindi, PS 138 S01 Ethnic Politics and Conflict, RS 003 S01 Introduction to Indian Religions, RS 005 S01 Introduction to Islam, RS 088 S14 Hindu and Christian Modes of Loving Devotion, RS 088 S23 Great Mystical Traditions of Asia. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | South Asian Studies Program | South Asian Studies Program, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1000 | The diversity and shared histories of South Asia's cultures, religions, languages and nations are an important area of engagement for us in the world today. While India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and neighboring nation-states can be identified on the map as making up a recognizable geographic region, the equally vital diasporic communities from South Asia and their globally dispersed networks extend the understanding of an old and yet changing South Asia. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Center for Statistical Sciences | The program is constructed on several premises: that statistics is a scientific discipline in its own right, with its characteristic methodology and body of knowledge; that it is essentially concerned with the art and science of the analysis of data; and that it is best taught in conjunction with specific, substantive applications. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EC0163, 0164 Econometrics, EC0203 Introduction To Econometrics I, EC0204 Econometric Methods, EC0263 Econometric Theory, EC0264 Microeconometrics, SO0222 Adv. Quantitative Methods of Sociology Analysis, SO0223 Techniques of Demographic Analysis, AM0171 Information Theory, AM0282 Statistical Inference in Molecular Biology, BI0142 Experimental Design, BC0261 Statistical Methods in Bioinformatics, BC0250 Modern methods for Categorical Data Analysis, BC0251 Generalized Linear Model, BC0212 Methods in Epidemiologic Research, BC0252 Analysis of Lifetime Data, BC0234 Clinical Trials Methodology, BC0253 Analysis of Longitudinal Data, BC0260 Bayesian methods. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Center for Statistical Sciences | Center for Statistical Sciences, Brown University, Box G-S121-7 121 S. Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 9181 | The Brown University Center for Statistical Sciences (CSS) was founded in 1995 to foster research and statistical education at Brown Medical School and the University at large. Center activity and personnel have grown over the years to the present configuration of over twenty faculty members, staff biostatisticians, graduate student assistants, and administrative and computing support personnel. The Center is located at 121 S. Main Street and has state-of-the-art computing facilities and networking infrastructure. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Urban Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Urban Studies Program | The program focuses on urban phenomena through the approaches of different disciplines, thus providing an interdisciplinary context in which to understand various dimensions of the urbanization process. Although the program provides sufficient flexibility to allow students to pursue specific interests without being overly bound by requirements, it is designed so that there is a core content. The primary aim of the program is to contribute to a broad, liberal education. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - URBN 1000S01 Fieldwork in the Urban Community, URBN 1200S01 The United States Metropolis, 19452000, URBN 1420S01 Urbanization in China, URBN 1870AS01 American Culture and the City, URBN 1870DS01 Downtown Development, URBN 1870FS01 Housing and Homelessness, URBN 1870IS01 The Changing American City. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Urban Studies Program | Urban Studies Program, Brown University, P.O. Box 1833 29 Manning Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401863 2090 | The Brown Urban Studies Program is the quintessential interdisciplinary program. The core faculty members come from 8 academic disciplines and students draw on very diverse ideas and methods. The program organize students approach around a set of basic research and teaching areas that reflect the depth and diversity of the program: urban development and economics, urban politics and community, the urban built environment, American urban history, suburbanization, and literary representations of urban space and social relations. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | A.B. in Visual Art | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Visual Art | The program is directed towards the practice of art, is broadly based in the studio areas of painting, sculpture, printmaking, drawing, photography, and digital imaging. Courses in art history combine with these to frame the direction of the concentrator's work and give them skills in critical thinking. Students are encouraged to develop their own direction and to cultivate an informed and thoughtful individual perspective. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - VISA 0100-S01 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S02 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S03 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S04 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S05 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S06 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S07 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0110-S01 - Advanced Studio Foundation, VISA 0120-S01 - Foundation Media: Sound and Image, VISA 0120-S02 - Foundation Media: Sound and Image, VISA 0130-S01 - 3-D Foundation, VISA 1120-S01 - Drawing II, VISA 1210E-S01 – Printmaking, VISA 1210G-S01 – Silkscreen, VISA 1250-S01 - Art of the Book, VISA 1310-S01 - Painting I, VISA 1320-S01 - Painting II, VISA 1420-S01 - Sculpture II, VISA 1510-S01 - Photography I, VISA 1520-S01 - Photography II - Digital Photography, VISA 1720-S01 - New Genre: Physical Computing, VISA 1800A-S01 - Accessorizing Painting, VISA 1800G-S01 - Junior/Senior Seminar, VISA 1800L-S01 - Hybrid Art. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Visual Art | Department of Visual Art, List Art Building, 64 College Street Brown University Box 1861, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2423 | The Department of Visual Art is located in the List Building on the West end of campus at 64 College St. The department share the Philip Johnson designed building with the David Winton Bell Gallery, the History of Art and Architecture Department, and the Art Slide Library. The sculpture studio, at 4100 square feet, is outfitted for both wood and metal working. The painting studio, 4000 square feet on the 5th floor, is lit by north facing skylights. Painting students get their own small studios. There is a similar size Printmaking facility on the 3rd floor, with equipment for relief, intaglio, lithography, and silk- screen. In addition the department have large format digital printers capable of printing works 40" wide and several feet long. Department have a photo classroom and darkroom facility, two 1400 square feet drawing studios, and a few smaller rooms for independent study studio space. The Bell Gallery, located on the first floor, mounts six shows a year of contemporary artists in both one person and group exhibitions. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | B.A. in Egyptology - Egyptian Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | The program in Egyptian civilization permits specialization in Egyptian culture, including history, literature and religion in addition to language. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EGYT1200, 1210 Archaeology of Ancient Egypt I, II, EGYT1310, 1320 An Introduction to Middle Egyptian I, II, EGYT1330 Selection From Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, EGYT1340 Selections From Middle Egyptian Hieratic Texts, EGYT1410 Ancient Egyptian Literature, EGYT1420 Ancient Egyptian Religion and Magic, EGYT1430 History of Egypt I The History and Society of Ancient Egypt, EGYT1440 History of Egypt II The New Kingdom, EGYT1450 History of Egypt III Libyans, Nubians, and Persians in Egypt, EGYT1460 History of Egypt IV The Age of Cleopatra, EGY1500 Ancient Egyptian Art and Architecture, EGYT1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, EGYT1600 Astronomy Before the Telescope, EGYT1700 Astronomy, Divination and Politics in the Ancient World, EGYT1910,1920 Senior Seminar I, II, HMAT0200 Introduction to Akkadian, HMAT0210 Intermediate Akkadian. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies, Box 1899 Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3132 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is an expansion of the existing Department of Egyptology, founded at Brown in 1948. This new academic unit is still forming and operating on a relatively small scale, as its expansion takes shape. Plans for the new department involve widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia, also known as the Ancient Near East. The Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is a new department designed to explore what is sometimes called the birthplace of Western civilization. It builds on the strengths of Brown’s former Department of Egyptology, widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | B.A. in Egyptology - Egyptian History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | The program in Egyptian history stresses this aspect in relation to either Greek, Roman, Early Christian, Judaic, or African history. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EGYT1200, 1210 Archaeology of Ancient Egypt I, II, EGYT1310, 1320 An Introduction to Middle Egyptian I, II, EGYT1330 Selection From Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, EGYT1340 Selections From Middle Egyptian Hieratic Texts, EGYT1410 Ancient Egyptian Literature, EGYT1420 Ancient Egyptian Religion and Magic, EGYT1430 History of Egypt I The History and Society of Ancient Egypt, EGYT1440 History of Egypt II The New Kingdom, EGYT1450 History of Egypt III Libyans, Nubians, and Persians in Egypt, EGYT1460 History of Egypt IV The Age of Cleopatra, EGY1500 Ancient Egyptian Art and Architecture, EGYT1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, EGYT1600 Astronomy Before the Telescope, EGYT1700 Astronomy, Divination and Politics in the Ancient World, EGYT1910,1920 Senior Seminar I, II, HMAT0200 Introduction to Akkadian, HMAT0210 Intermediate Akkadian. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies, Box 1899 Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3132 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is an expansion of the existing Department of Egyptology, founded at Brown in 1948. This new academic unit is still forming and operating on a relatively small scale, as its expansion takes shape. Plans for the new department involve widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia, also known as the Ancient Near East. The Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is a new department designed to explore what is sometimes called the birthplace of Western civilization. It builds on the strengths of Brown’s former Department of Egyptology, widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | B.A. in Egyptology - Egyptian Language and Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | This program allows students to pursue more advanced study in Old Egyptian, Late Egyptian, Demotic or Coptic as well as linguistics and other related languages (Greek, Latin, Hebrew, Akkadian, Arabic, and Aramaic). | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EGYT1200, 1210 Archaeology of Ancient Egypt I, II, EGYT1310, 1320 An Introduction to Middle Egyptian I, II, EGYT1330 Selection From Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, EGYT1340 Selections From Middle Egyptian Hieratic Texts, EGYT1410 Ancient Egyptian Literature, EGYT1420 Ancient Egyptian Religion and Magic, EGYT1430 History of Egypt I The History and Society of Ancient Egypt, EGYT1440 History of Egypt II The New Kingdom, EGYT1450 History of Egypt III Libyans, Nubians, and Persians in Egypt, EGYT1460 History of Egypt IV The Age of Cleopatra, EGY1500 Ancient Egyptian Art and Architecture, EGYT1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, EGYT1600 Astronomy Before the Telescope, EGYT1700 Astronomy, Divination and Politics in the Ancient World, EGYT1910,1920 Senior Seminar I, II, HMAT0200 Introduction to Akkadian, HMAT0210 Intermediate Akkadian. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies, Box 1899 Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3132 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is an expansion of the existing Department of Egyptology, founded at Brown in 1948. This new academic unit is still forming and operating on a relatively small scale, as its expansion takes shape. Plans for the new department involve widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia, also known as the Ancient Near East. The Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is a new department designed to explore what is sometimes called the birthplace of Western civilization. It builds on the strengths of Brown’s former Department of Egyptology, widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Arts in Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is to equip students with a solid foundation for productive careers, to advance the knowledge base for future technologies and to merge teaching, scholarship, and practice in the pursuit of solutions to human needs. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Arts in Engineering - Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is to equip students with a solid foundation for productive careers, to advance the knowledge base for future technologies and to merge teaching, scholarship, and practice in the pursuit of solutions to human needs. This program is intended for students who want to prepare for positions and/or graduate programs in environmental policy, planning, and regulation. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Electronic Music and Multimedia | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Music | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Music | Department of Music, Orwig Music Building - 1 Young Orchard Avenue, Box 1924, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3234 | The Department of Music at Brown provides an ideal environment for such an education, with its integrated faculty of scholars, performers, composers, and theorists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Ethnomusicology Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Music | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Music | Department of Music, Orwig Music Building - 1 Young Orchard Avenue, Box 1924, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3234 | The Department of Music at Brown provides an ideal environment for such an education, with its integrated faculty of scholars, performers, composers, and theorists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Arts in Music - Traditional Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Music | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Music | Department of Music, Orwig Music Building - 1 Young Orchard Avenue, Box 1924, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3234 | The Department of Music at Brown provides an ideal environment for such an education, with its integrated faculty of scholars, performers, composers, and theorists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Applied Mathematics | This program is designed for students with a wide range of goals and are not limited to the needs of students following an applied mathematics concentration. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - APMA 0070 - Introduction to Applied Complex Variables, APMA 0090 - Introduction to Mathematical Modeling, APMA 0120 - Mathematics of Finance, APMA 0160 - Introduction to Scientific Computing, APMA 0180 - Modeling the World with Mathematics: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians, APMA 0330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0340 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0350 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0360 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0410 - Mathematical Methods in the Brain Sciences, APMA 0650 - Essential Statistics, APMA 1070 - Quantitative Models of Biological Systems, APMA 1170 - Introduction to Computational Linear Algebra, APMA 1180 - Introduction to Numerical Solution of Differential Equations, APMA 1200 - Operations Research: Probabilistic Models, APMA 1260 - Introduction to the Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, APMA 1330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics III, IV, APMA 1650 - Statistical Inference I, APMA 1660 - Statistical Inference II, APMA 1670 - Statistical Analysis of Time Series, APMA 1680 - Nonparametric Statistics, APMA 1930A - Actuarial Mathematics ,APMA 1930C - Information Theory, APMA 1930D - Mixing and Transport in Dynamical Systems, APMA 1940C - Introduction to Mathematics of Fluids, APMA 1940F - Mathematics of Physical Plasmas, APMA 1940I - The Mathematics of Finance, APMA 1940L - Mathematical Models in Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Applied Mathematics | Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2115 | The Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University is one of the most prominent departments at Brown, and is also one of the oldest and strongest of its type in the country. The Division of Applied Mathematics is a world renowned center of research activity in a wide spectrum of traditional and modern mathematics. It explores the connections between mathematics and its applications at both the research and educational levels. The principal areas of research activities are ordinary, functional, and partial differential equations: stochastic control theory; applied probability, statistics and stochastic systems theory; neuroscience and computational biology; numerical analysis and scientific computation; and the mechanics of solids, materials science and fluids. The effort in virtually all research ranges from applied and algorithmic problems to the study of fundamental mathematical questions. The Division emphasizes applied mathematics as a unifying theme. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics - Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Applied Mathematics | This program is designed for students with a wide range of goals and are not limited to the needs of students following an applied mathematics concentration. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - APMA 0070 - Introduction to Applied Complex Variables, APMA 0090 - Introduction to Mathematical Modeling, APMA 0120 - Mathematics of Finance, APMA 0160 - Introduction to Scientific Computing, APMA 0180 - Modeling the World with Mathematics: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians, APMA 0330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0340 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0350 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0360 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0410 - Mathematical Methods in the Brain Sciences, APMA 0650 - Essential Statistics, APMA 1070 - Quantitative Models of Biological Systems, APMA 1170 - Introduction to Computational Linear Algebra, APMA 1180 - Introduction to Numerical Solution of Differential Equations, APMA 1200 - Operations Research: Probabilistic Models, APMA 1260 - Introduction to the Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, APMA 1330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics III, IV, APMA 1650 - Statistical Inference I, APMA 1660 - Statistical Inference II, APMA 1670 - Statistical Analysis of Time Series, APMA 1680 - Nonparametric Statistics, APMA 1930A - Actuarial Mathematics ,APMA 1930C - Information Theory, APMA 1930D - Mixing and Transport in Dynamical Systems, APMA 1940C - Introduction to Mathematics of Fluids, APMA 1940F - Mathematics of Physical Plasmas, APMA 1940I - The Mathematics of Finance, APMA 1940L - Mathematical Models in Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Applied Mathematics | Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2115 | The Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University is one of the most prominent departments at Brown, and is also one of the oldest and strongest of its type in the country. The Division of Applied Mathematics is a world renowned center of research activity in a wide spectrum of traditional and modern mathematics. It explores the connections between mathematics and its applications at both the research and educational levels. The principal areas of research activities are ordinary, functional, and partial differential equations: stochastic control theory; applied probability, statistics and stochastic systems theory; neuroscience and computational biology; numerical analysis and scientific computation; and the mechanics of solids, materials science and fluids. The effort in virtually all research ranges from applied and algorithmic problems to the study of fundamental mathematical questions. The Division emphasizes applied mathematics as a unifying theme. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics - Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Applied Mathematics | This program is designed for students with a wide range of goals and are not limited to the needs of students following an applied mathematics concentration. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - APMA 0070 - Introduction to Applied Complex Variables, APMA 0090 - Introduction to Mathematical Modeling, APMA 0120 - Mathematics of Finance, APMA 0160 - Introduction to Scientific Computing, APMA 0180 - Modeling the World with Mathematics: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians, APMA 0330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0340 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0350 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0360 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0410 - Mathematical Methods in the Brain Sciences, APMA 0650 - Essential Statistics, APMA 1070 - Quantitative Models of Biological Systems, APMA 1170 - Introduction to Computational Linear Algebra, APMA 1180 - Introduction to Numerical Solution of Differential Equations, APMA 1200 - Operations Research: Probabilistic Models, APMA 1260 - Introduction to the Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, APMA 1330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics III, IV, APMA 1650 - Statistical Inference I, APMA 1660 - Statistical Inference II, APMA 1670 - Statistical Analysis of Time Series, APMA 1680 - Nonparametric Statistics, APMA 1930A - Actuarial Mathematics ,APMA 1930C - Information Theory, APMA 1930D - Mixing and Transport in Dynamical Systems, APMA 1940C - Introduction to Mathematics of Fluids, APMA 1940F - Mathematics of Physical Plasmas, APMA 1940I - The Mathematics of Finance, APMA 1940L - Mathematical Models in Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Applied Mathematics | Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2115 | The Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University is one of the most prominent departments at Brown, and is also one of the oldest and strongest of its type in the country. The Division of Applied Mathematics is a world renowned center of research activity in a wide spectrum of traditional and modern mathematics. It explores the connections between mathematics and its applications at both the research and educational levels. The principal areas of research activities are ordinary, functional, and partial differential equations: stochastic control theory; applied probability, statistics and stochastic systems theory; neuroscience and computational biology; numerical analysis and scientific computation; and the mechanics of solids, materials science and fluids. The effort in virtually all research ranges from applied and algorithmic problems to the study of fundamental mathematical questions. The Division emphasizes applied mathematics as a unifying theme. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics - Economics (Advanced Economics Track) | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Applied Mathematics | This program is designed for students with a wide range of goals and are not limited to the needs of students following an applied mathematics concentration. This program is to provide sufficient command of mathematical concepts to allow pursuit of an economics program emphasizing modern research problems. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - APMA 0070 - Introduction to Applied Complex Variables, APMA 0090 - Introduction to Mathematical Modeling, APMA 0120 - Mathematics of Finance, APMA 0160 - Introduction to Scientific Computing, APMA 0180 - Modeling the World with Mathematics: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians, APMA 0330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0340 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0350 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0360 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0410 - Mathematical Methods in the Brain Sciences, APMA 0650 - Essential Statistics, APMA 1070 - Quantitative Models of Biological Systems, APMA 1170 - Introduction to Computational Linear Algebra, APMA 1180 - Introduction to Numerical Solution of Differential Equations, APMA 1200 - Operations Research: Probabilistic Models, APMA 1260 - Introduction to the Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, APMA 1330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics III, IV, APMA 1650 - Statistical Inference I, APMA 1660 - Statistical Inference II, APMA 1670 - Statistical Analysis of Time Series, APMA 1680 - Nonparametric Statistics, APMA 1930A - Actuarial Mathematics ,APMA 1930C - Information Theory, APMA 1930D - Mixing and Transport in Dynamical Systems, APMA 1940C - Introduction to Mathematics of Fluids, APMA 1940F - Mathematics of Physical Plasmas, APMA 1940I - The Mathematics of Finance, APMA 1940L - Mathematical Models in Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Applied Mathematics | Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2115 | The Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University is one of the most prominent departments at Brown, and is also one of the oldest and strongest of its type in the country. The Division of Applied Mathematics is a world renowned center of research activity in a wide spectrum of traditional and modern mathematics. It explores the connections between mathematics and its applications at both the research and educational levels. The principal areas of research activities are ordinary, functional, and partial differential equations: stochastic control theory; applied probability, statistics and stochastic systems theory; neuroscience and computational biology; numerical analysis and scientific computation; and the mechanics of solids, materials science and fluids. The effort in virtually all research ranges from applied and algorithmic problems to the study of fundamental mathematical questions. The Division emphasizes applied mathematics as a unifying theme. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics - Economics (Mathematical Finance Track) | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Applied Mathematics | This program is designed for students with a wide range of goals and are not limited to the needs of students following an applied mathematics concentration. This program is to provide sufficient command of mathematical concepts to allow pursuit of an economics program emphasizing modern research problems. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - APMA 0070 - Introduction to Applied Complex Variables, APMA 0090 - Introduction to Mathematical Modeling, APMA 0120 - Mathematics of Finance, APMA 0160 - Introduction to Scientific Computing, APMA 0180 - Modeling the World with Mathematics: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians, APMA 0330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0340 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0350 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0360 - Methods of Applied Mathematics I, II, APMA 0410 - Mathematical Methods in the Brain Sciences, APMA 0650 - Essential Statistics, APMA 1070 - Quantitative Models of Biological Systems, APMA 1170 - Introduction to Computational Linear Algebra, APMA 1180 - Introduction to Numerical Solution of Differential Equations, APMA 1200 - Operations Research: Probabilistic Models, APMA 1260 - Introduction to the Mechanics of Solids and Fluids, APMA 1330 - Methods of Applied Mathematics III, IV, APMA 1650 - Statistical Inference I, APMA 1660 - Statistical Inference II, APMA 1670 - Statistical Analysis of Time Series, APMA 1680 - Nonparametric Statistics, APMA 1930A - Actuarial Mathematics ,APMA 1930C - Information Theory, APMA 1930D - Mixing and Transport in Dynamical Systems, APMA 1940C - Introduction to Mathematics of Fluids, APMA 1940F - Mathematics of Physical Plasmas, APMA 1940I - The Mathematics of Finance, APMA 1940L - Mathematical Models in Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Applied Mathematics | Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2115 | The Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University is one of the most prominent departments at Brown, and is also one of the oldest and strongest of its type in the country. The Division of Applied Mathematics is a world renowned center of research activity in a wide spectrum of traditional and modern mathematics. It explores the connections between mathematics and its applications at both the research and educational levels. The principal areas of research activities are ordinary, functional, and partial differential equations: stochastic control theory; applied probability, statistics and stochastic systems theory; neuroscience and computational biology; numerical analysis and scientific computation; and the mechanics of solids, materials science and fluids. The effort in virtually all research ranges from applied and algorithmic problems to the study of fundamental mathematical questions. The Division emphasizes applied mathematics as a unifying theme. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Astronomy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Physics | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHYS 0270 Introduction to Astronomy, PHYS 0280 Introduction to Astrophysics and Cosmology, PHYS 0470 Electricity and Magnetism, PHYS 0500 Advanced Classical Mechanics, PHYS 0560 Experiments in Modern Physics, PHYS 0720 Methods of Mathematical Physics, PHYS 0790 Physics of Matter, PHYS 1100 Introduction to General Relativity, PHYS 1170 Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, PHYS 1280 Introduction to Cosmology, PHYS 1410 Quantum Mechanics A. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Physics | Department of Physics, Brown University, Box 1843, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2641 | Physics is the most fundamental of sciences. It provides a foundation of crucial ideas for other scientific fields, and the underpinnings of all of modern technology. The physics faculty at Brown is actively engaged in both teaching and research, including mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. Research focuses on phenomena ranging from the subatomic to the cosmic, and includes collaborative efforts with biologists, chemists, engineers, geologists, and mathematicians. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program is designed to provide an understanding of basic principles and concepts of modern biochemistry and molecular biology as well as a background for medical school or graduate studies in biochemistry, molecular biology or other medical sciences. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | The program is designed to provide both the breadth necessary for an appreciation of the diversity and unity which characterize living beings, and the opportunity for focusing in a subdiscipline within biology. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program is designed for students interested in applying the methods and tools of engineering to the subject matter of biology and the life sciences. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are- BIOL 0470 Genetics, BIOL 0530 Immunology, BIOL 0800 or BIOL 1170 Physiology, BIOL 1050 or 1060 Cell Biology, BIOL 1100 or 1190 Cell Physiology, NEUR 1020 or NEUR 1670 Neurobiology, BIOL 1080 Organ Replacement, BIOL 1090 Polymer Science for Biomaterials, BIOL 1120 Biomaterials, ENGN 1110 Transport Pehn in Chem and Biomed Enginnering, ENGN 1120 Chemical and Bioreactor Design, BIOL 1140 Tissue Enginnering, ENGN 1210 Biomechanics, ENGN 1220 Neuroscience, ENGN 1490 Biomaterials, BIOL 1720 Scientific Basis of Medical Imaging, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, PHYS 1610 Biological Physics, BIOL 2110 Drug and Gene Delivery, BIOL 2130 Techniques in Molecular and Cell Science, BIOL 2140 Experimental Surgery, ENGN 1930B Biophotonics, ENGN 1930P Solid Biomechanics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Biophysics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program prepares students for careers in many fields including scientific research, medicine, and patent law. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are- BIOL 0470 Genetics, BIOL 0530 Immunology, BIOL 0800 or BIOL 1170 Physiology, BIOL 1050 or 1060 Cell Biology, BIOL 1100 or 1190 Cell Physiology, NEUR 1020 or NEUR 1670 Neurobiology, BIOL 1080 Organ Replacement, BIOL 1090 Polymer Science for Biomaterials, BIOL 1120 Biomaterials, ENGN 1110 Transport Pehn in Chem and Biomed Enginnering, ENGN 1120 Chemical and Bioreactor Design, BIOL 1140 Tissue Enginnering, ENGN 1210 Biomechanics, ENGN 1220 Neuroscience, ENGN 1490 Biomaterials, BIOL 1720 Scientific Basis of Medical Imaging, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, PHYS 1610 Biological Physics, BIOL 2110 Drug and Gene Delivery, BIOL 2130 Techniques in Molecular and Cell Science, BIOL 2140 Experimental Surgery, ENGN 1930B Biophotonics, ENGN 1930P Solid Biomechanics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Chemical Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Chemistry | This program is designed for students who have a strong interest in the interface of chemistry with biology | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - UNIV0140 Insights into Chemistry A Historical Perspective, CHEM0080 First Year Seminars, CHEM0080A First Year Seminar – Energy, CHEM0080B First Year Seminar - Molecular Structures in Chemistry,CHEM0100 Introductory Chemistry, CHEM0120 Chemistry of the Environment, CHEM0190 Chemical Ecology: Pheromones, Poisons, and Chemical Messages, CHEM0330 Equilibrium, Rate, and Structure, CHEM0350 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0360 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0400 Biophysical and Bioinorganic Chemistry, CHEM0500 Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM0970 Undergraduate Research, CHEM0980 Undergraduate Research, CHEM1060 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1140 Physical Chemistry: Quantum Chemistry, CHEM1150 Physical Chemistry: Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, CHEM1160 Physical Chemistry Laboratory, CHEM1170 Environmental Chemistry, CHEM1220 Computational Tools in Biochemistry and Chemical Biology, CHEM1230 Chemical Biology, CHEM1240 Biochemistry, CHEM1450 Advanced Organic Chemistry, CHEM1560 Topics in Advanced Chemistry CHEM1560A Molecular Modeling, CHEM1560B Techniques in Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1560C Advanced Spectroscopy, CHEM1560D Chemistry and Biology of Naturally Occurring Antibiotics CHEM1560E Biological Mass Spectrometry, CHEM1560F Organic Structure Analysis, CHEM1560I DNA Damage and Repair, CHEM1620 Chemical Physics, CHEM1620A Photoacoustics, CHEM1620B Spectroscopy, CHEM1620C To Be Determined, CHEM1700 Nanoscale Materials: Synthesis and Appliciations, CHEM1830 Group Research Project, CHEM1840 Group Research Project, CHEM2010 Advanced Thermodynamics, CHEM2020 Statistical Mechanics, CHEM2210 Chemical Crystallography, CHEM2310 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2320 Physical Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2410 Physical Organic Chemistry, CHEM2420 Organic Reactions, CHEM2430 Synthetic Organic Chemistry, CHEM2770 Quantum Chemistry, CHEM2780 Quantum Mechanics, CHEM2810 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2820 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2870 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2880 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2920 Special Topics in Chemistry, CHEM2920A Chemistry and Physics of Amorphous Materials. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Chemistry | Department of Chemistry, Box H 324 Brook Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2256 | The Department of Chemistry maintains pedagogical and research strengths in organic, inorganic, and theoretical and experimental physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, chemical biology and nanochemistry. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Chemical Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Chemistry | This program provides students with a broad-based understanding in fundamental molecular sciences, as well as a background for graduate studies in physical chemistry, chemical physics, or molecular engineering. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - UNIV0140 Insights into Chemistry A Historical Perspective, CHEM0080 First Year Seminars, CHEM0080A First Year Seminar – Energy, CHEM0080B First Year Seminar - Molecular Structures in Chemistry,CHEM0100 Introductory Chemistry, CHEM0120 Chemistry of the Environment, CHEM0190 Chemical Ecology: Pheromones, Poisons, and Chemical Messages, CHEM0330 Equilibrium, Rate, and Structure, CHEM0350 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0360 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0400 Biophysical and Bioinorganic Chemistry, CHEM0500 Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM0970 Undergraduate Research, CHEM0980 Undergraduate Research, CHEM1060 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1140 Physical Chemistry: Quantum Chemistry, CHEM1150 Physical Chemistry: Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, CHEM1160 Physical Chemistry Laboratory, CHEM1170 Environmental Chemistry, CHEM1220 Computational Tools in Biochemistry and Chemical Biology, CHEM1230 Chemical Biology, CHEM1240 Biochemistry, CHEM1450 Advanced Organic Chemistry, CHEM1560 Topics in Advanced Chemistry CHEM1560A Molecular Modeling, CHEM1560B Techniques in Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1560C Advanced Spectroscopy, CHEM1560D Chemistry and Biology of Naturally Occurring Antibiotics CHEM1560E Biological Mass Spectrometry, CHEM1560F Organic Structure Analysis, CHEM1560I DNA Damage and Repair, CHEM1620 Chemical Physics, CHEM1620A Photoacoustics, CHEM1620B Spectroscopy, CHEM1620C To Be Determined, CHEM1700 Nanoscale Materials: Synthesis and Appliciations, CHEM1830 Group Research Project, CHEM1840 Group Research Project, CHEM2010 Advanced Thermodynamics, CHEM2020 Statistical Mechanics, CHEM2210 Chemical Crystallography, CHEM2310 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2320 Physical Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2410 Physical Organic Chemistry, CHEM2420 Organic Reactions, CHEM2430 Synthetic Organic Chemistry, CHEM2770 Quantum Chemistry, CHEM2780 Quantum Mechanics, CHEM2810 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2820 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2870 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2880 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2920 Special Topics in Chemistry, CHEM2920A Chemistry and Physics of Amorphous Materials. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Chemistry | Department of Chemistry, Box H 324 Brook Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2256 | The Department of Chemistry maintains pedagogical and research strengths in organic, inorganic, and theoretical and experimental physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, chemical biology and nanochemistry. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Chemical and Biochemical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is to equip students with a solid foundation for productive careers, to advance the knowledge base for future technologies and to merge teaching, scholarship, and practice in the pursuit of solutions to human needs. Through fundamental courses involving thermodynamics, transport processes, reaction engineering and design, students learn how to work with molecules as simple as hydrogen and methane, to as complex as proteins, nucleic acids and lipids, and learn how new products and processes are developed. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Chemistry | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - UNIV0140 Insights into Chemistry A Historical Perspective, CHEM0080 First Year Seminars, CHEM0080A First Year Seminar – Energy, CHEM0080B First Year Seminar - Molecular Structures in Chemistry,CHEM0100 Introductory Chemistry, CHEM0120 Chemistry of the Environment, CHEM0190 Chemical Ecology: Pheromones, Poisons, and Chemical Messages, CHEM0330 Equilibrium, Rate, and Structure, CHEM0350 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0360 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0400 Biophysical and Bioinorganic Chemistry, CHEM0500 Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM0970 Undergraduate Research, CHEM0980 Undergraduate Research, CHEM1060 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1140 Physical Chemistry: Quantum Chemistry, CHEM1150 Physical Chemistry: Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, CHEM1160 Physical Chemistry Laboratory, CHEM1170 Environmental Chemistry, CHEM1220 Computational Tools in Biochemistry and Chemical Biology, CHEM1230 Chemical Biology, CHEM1240 Biochemistry, CHEM1450 Advanced Organic Chemistry, CHEM1560 Topics in Advanced Chemistry CHEM1560A Molecular Modeling, CHEM1560B Techniques in Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1560C Advanced Spectroscopy, CHEM1560D Chemistry and Biology of Naturally Occurring Antibiotics CHEM1560E Biological Mass Spectrometry, CHEM1560F Organic Structure Analysis, CHEM1560I DNA Damage and Repair, CHEM1620 Chemical Physics, CHEM1620A Photoacoustics, CHEM1620B Spectroscopy, CHEM1620C To Be Determined, CHEM1700 Nanoscale Materials: Synthesis and Appliciations, CHEM1830 Group Research Project, CHEM1840 Group Research Project, CHEM2010 Advanced Thermodynamics, CHEM2020 Statistical Mechanics, CHEM2210 Chemical Crystallography, CHEM2310 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2320 Physical Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2410 Physical Organic Chemistry, CHEM2420 Organic Reactions, CHEM2430 Synthetic Organic Chemistry, CHEM2770 Quantum Chemistry, CHEM2780 Quantum Mechanics, CHEM2810 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2820 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2870 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2880 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2920 Special Topics in Chemistry, CHEM2920A Chemistry and Physics of Amorphous Materials. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Chemistry | Department of Chemistry, Box H 324 Brook Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2256 | The Department of Chemistry maintains pedagogical and research strengths in organic, inorganic, and theoretical and experimental physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, chemical biology and nanochemistry. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering - Environmental Problems and Planning | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The program focus on fluid mechanics and the chemical and geological issues of environmental engineering. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN1360 Soil Mechanics and Principles of Foundation Engineering, ENGN1370 Advanced Engineering Mechanics, ENGN1380 Design of Civil Engineering Structures, ENGN1400 Analytical Methods in Biomaterials, ENGN1410 Physical Chemistry of Solids, ENGN1420 Kinetics Processes in Materials Science and Engineering, ENGN1440 Mechanical Properties of Materials, ENGN1450 Properties and Processing of Electronic Materials, ENGN1470 Structure and Properties of Nonmetallic Material, ENGN1480 Metallic Materials, ENGN1490 Biomaterials, ENGN1560 Applied Electromagnetics, ENGN1570 Linear System Analysis, ENGN1580 Communication Systems, ENGN1590 Introduction to Semiconductors and Semiconductor Electronics, ENGN1600 Design and Implementation of Very LargeScale Integrated Systems, ENGN1610 Image Understanding, ENGN1620 Analysis and Design of Electronic Circuits, ENGN1630 Digital Electronics Systems Design, ENGN1640 Design of Computing Systems, ENGN1650 Embedded Microprocessor Design, ENGN1680 Design of Semiconductor Devices. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering - Structures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The program focus on the analysis and design of structures, including the soil mechanics background required for the design of foundations. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Cognitive Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | This program is the study of higher cognitive functions in humans and its underlying neural bases. This is an integrative area of study drawing principally from cognitive science, psychology, neuroscience, and linguistics. There are two broad directions which can be taken in this program - one is behavioral/experimental and the other is computational/modeling. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CG32 Biology and Evolution of Language, CG/PY44 Perception and Mind, CG45 Language and the Mind, CG48 Human Thinking and Problem-Solving, CG50 Making Decisions, CG/PY63 Children's Thinking: The Nature of Cognitive Development, CG120 Computational Vision, CG123 Production, Perception, and Analysis of Speech, CG138 Ecological Approach to Perception and Action, CG141 Language Processing, CG142 Syntactic Theory and Syntactic Processing, CG143 Child Language Acquisition, CG144 Visualizing Vision, CG147 Language Learning Disorders, CG148 Language and the Brain, CG150 Subcortical Bases of Language and Thought, CG/PY152 Thinking, CG154 The Evolution of Perceptual System, CG156 Human Memory and Learning, CG162 Cognitive Development, CG174 Topics in Language Acquisition, CG186 Topics in Cognitive Science, CG187 Concepts and Categories, BN65 Biology of Hearing, BN66 Biology of Vision, BN168 Computational Neuroscience, PY27 Basic Perception, PY44 Perception and Mind, PY75 Principles of Behavioral Neuroscience, PY81 Child Development, PY94 Developmental Psyhopathology, PY101 Psychopharmacology, PY102 Psychophysiology of Sleep and Dreams, PY105 Music and Mind, PY140 Human Memory, PY178 Psychological Acoustics, PY179 Psychology of Timing, PY180 Animal Cognition, PY181 Seminar in Cognitive Neuroscience, PY182 Cognitive Neuroscience of Emotion, PY184 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Theory and Practice, PY185 Motion Perception, BI45 Animal Behavior. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Cognitive Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | This program is designed to provide a flexible interdisciplinary approach with four areas of emphasis: perception, cognition, language, and cognitive neuroscience. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 7 Language, Truth, and Advertising, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 11 Perception, Illusion, and the Visual Arts, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 32 The Biology and Evolution of Language, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 45 Language and the Mind, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 50 Making Decisions, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 63 Children's Thinking: The Nature of Cognitive Development, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 87 Language in Africa, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 88 Meaning and Thought, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 102 Neural Modelling Laboratory, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 111 Introduction to Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 112 Lexical Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 113 Formal Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 116 Human Factors, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 118 Cognitive Development, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 119 Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 120 Computational Vision, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 121 Introduction to Phonological Theory, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 123 The Production, Perception, and Analysis of Speech, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 124 Research Methods in Physiological and Acoustic Phonetics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 129 Understanding the Brain, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 131 Introduction to Syntax, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 136 Introduction to Computational Linguistics , Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 138 Ecological Approach to Perception and Action, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 141 Language Processing, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 142 Syntactic Theory and Syntactic Processing, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 143 Child Language Acquisition, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 144 Visualizing Vision Lab, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 147 Language Learning Disorders, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 148 Language and the Brain, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 150 Subcortical Brain Bases of Language and Thought, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 152 Thinking, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 153 Laboratory in Cognitive Processes, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 154 Evolution of Perceptual Systems, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 156 Human Memory and Learning. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Computational Biology - Applied Mathematics and Statistical Genomics Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program is is designed for students whose interest focuses on extracting information from genomic and molecular biology data, and modeling the dynamics of these systems. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Computational Biology - Biological Sciences Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program is designed for students whose interests lean more towards biological questions. Students shall take at least four courses comprising a coherent theme. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Computational Biology - Computational Genomics Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program is designed to provide a sound pedagogical foundation for the field that is at the intersection of computer science, biology, and related disciplines. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Computational Biology - Molecular Modeling Track | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program is designed for students who wish to gain competence in the field of molecular modeling and drug design. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The program may be considered the discipline that joins electrical engineering and computer science. Computer Engineers are rigorously trained in the areas of engineering problem solving, mathematics (both continuous and discrete), physical understanding, and a wide variety of software skills ranging from systems software to computer-aided design. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN2430 Deformation Behavior of Materials, ENGN2490 Special Topics in Materials Science, ENGN2500 Medical Image Analysis, ENGN2520 Pattern Recognition and Computer Vision, ENGN2530 Digital Signal Processing, ENGN2540 Speech Processing, ENGN2560 Computer Vision, ENGN2570 Applied Stochastic Processes, ENGN2610 Physics of Solid State Devices, ENGN2620 Solid State Quantum and Optoelectronics, ENGN2630 ElectroOptical Properties of Materials and Biomolecules, ENGN2640 Classical Theoretical Physics II, ENGN2660 Physics and Technology of Semiconductor Heterostructures , ENGN2730 Advanced Thermodynamics I, ENGN2740 Advanced Thermodynamics II, ENGN2760 Heat and Mass Transfer, ENGN2810 Fluid Mechanics I, ENGN2820 Fluid Mechanics II, ENGN2910 Special Topics in Engineering, ENGN2910M Microfluidics and its Applications, ENGN2911X Reconfigurable Computing, ENGN2912C Future Directions in Computing, ENGN2920 Special Topics in Engineering, ENGN2970 Preliminary Examination Preparation, ENGN2980 Special Projects, Reading, Research and Design, ENGN2990 Thesis Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Computer Science | This program is designed to combine educational breadth in the areas of software, hardware, and theoretical computer science with deeper understanding of specialized areas such as software system design, programming languages, machine architecture, artificial intelligence, the analysis of algorithms, and the theory of computation. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CSCI0020 Concepts and Challenges of Computer Science, CSCI0040 Introduction to Scientific Computing and Problem Solving, CSCI0090-A Building a Web Application, CSCI0090-B Computers and Human Values, CSCI0090-C Talking with Computers, CSCI0150 Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming and Computer Science, CSCI0160 Introduction to Algorithms and Data Structures, CSCI0170 CS: An Integrated Introduction, CSCI0180 CS: An Integrated Introduction, CSCI0190 Programming with Data Structures and Algorithms, CSCI0220 Introduction to Discrete Structures and Probability, CSCI0240(CS024)Visual Thinking/Visual Computing, CSCI0310(CS031)Introduction to Computer Systems, CSCI0320(CS032)Introduction to Software Engineering, CSCI0360(CS036)Introduction to Systems Programming, CSCI0510(CS051)Models of Computation, CSCI0530Directions: The Matrix in Computer Science, CSCI0920(CS092)Educational Software Seminar, CSCI1230(CS123)Introduction to Computer Graphics, CSCI1250(CS125)Introduction to Computer Animation, CSCI1260(CS126)Introductory Compiler Construction, CSCI1270(CS127)Database Management Systems, CSCI1280(CS128)Intermediate 3D Computer Animation, CSCI1340(CS196-2)Innovating Game Development, CSCI1370(CS137)Virtual Reality Design for Science, CSCI1380(CS138)Distributed Computer Systems, CSCI1410(CS141)Introduction to Artificial Intelligence, CSCI1430(CS143)Introduction to Computer Vision, CSCI1460(CS146)Introduction to Computational Linguistics, CSCI1480(CS148)Building Intelligent Robots, CSCI1490(CS149)Introduction to Combinatorial Optimization, CSCI1510(CS151)Introduction to Cryptography and Computer Security, CSCI1550(CS155)Probabilistic Methods in Computer Science, CSCI1570(CS157)Design and Analysis of Algorithms, CSCI1590(CS159)Introduction to Computational Complexity, CSCI1600(CS160)Introduction to Embedded Real-time Software, CSCI1610(CS161)Building High-Performance Servers, CSCI1660(CS166)Introduction to Computer Systems Security, CSCI1670(CS167)Operating Systems. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Computer Science | Department of Computer Science, Brown University Box 1910, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 7600 | Computer Science Department at Brown has forged a path of innovative information technology research and teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. From the modest beginnings as an interest group within the Divisions of Applied Mathematics and Engineering in the 1960s to its current stature as one of the nation's leading computer science programs - as ranked by the National Research Council - the Computer Science Department has continuously produced the most prominent contributors in the field, at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science - Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Computer Science | This program is designed to combine educational breadth in the areas of software, hardware, and theoretical computer science with deeper understanding of specialized areas such as software system design, programming languages, machine architecture, artificial intelligence, the analysis of algorithms, and the theory of computation. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CSCI0020 Concepts and Challenges of Computer Science, CSCI0040 Introduction to Scientific Computing and Problem Solving, CSCI0090-A Building a Web Application, CSCI0090-B Computers and Human Values, CSCI0090-C Talking with Computers, CSCI0150 Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming and Computer Science, CSCI0160 Introduction to Algorithms and Data Structures, CSCI0170 CS: An Integrated Introduction, CSCI0180 CS: An Integrated Introduction, CSCI0190 Programming with Data Structures and Algorithms, CSCI0220 Introduction to Discrete Structures and Probability, CSCI0240(CS024)Visual Thinking/Visual Computing, CSCI0310(CS031)Introduction to Computer Systems, CSCI0320(CS032)Introduction to Software Engineering, CSCI0360(CS036)Introduction to Systems Programming, CSCI0510(CS051)Models of Computation, CSCI0530Directions: The Matrix in Computer Science, CSCI0920(CS092)Educational Software Seminar, CSCI1230(CS123)Introduction to Computer Graphics, CSCI1250(CS125)Introduction to Computer Animation, CSCI1260(CS126)Introductory Compiler Construction, CSCI1270(CS127)Database Management Systems, CSCI1280(CS128)Intermediate 3D Computer Animation, CSCI1340(CS196-2)Innovating Game Development, CSCI1370(CS137)Virtual Reality Design for Science, CSCI1380(CS138)Distributed Computer Systems, CSCI1410(CS141)Introduction to Artificial Intelligence, CSCI1430(CS143)Introduction to Computer Vision, CSCI1460(CS146)Introduction to Computational Linguistics, CSCI1480(CS148)Building Intelligent Robots, CSCI1490(CS149)Introduction to Combinatorial Optimization, CSCI1510(CS151)Introduction to Cryptography and Computer Security, CSCI1550(CS155)Probabilistic Methods in Computer Science, CSCI1570(CS157)Design and Analysis of Algorithms, CSCI1590(CS159)Introduction to Computational Complexity, CSCI1600(CS160)Introduction to Embedded Real-time Software, CSCI1610(CS161)Building High-Performance Servers, CSCI1660(CS166)Introduction to Computer Systems Security, CSCI1670(CS167)Operating Systems. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Computer Science | Department of Computer Science, Brown University Box 1910, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 7600 | Computer Science Department at Brown has forged a path of innovative information technology research and teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. From the modest beginnings as an interest group within the Divisions of Applied Mathematics and Engineering in the 1960s to its current stature as one of the nation's leading computer science programs - as ranked by the National Research Council - the Computer Science Department has continuously produced the most prominent contributors in the field, at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering - Bioelectrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is a study of fundamental Electrical Engineering principles in biology and medicine, including, for example, bio-instrumentation, control of eye movements, and medical imaging. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering - Communications Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is a study of encoding, transmission, and decoding of information and messages. Material ranges from digital and analog hardware to digital signal processing algorithms and software, and ultimately to abstract statistical communication and information theories. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering - Computer Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is a study of the design of computers and computer systems and architectures, including both hardware and software aspects. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering - Control Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is a study and application of feedback principles that underpin many man-made and natural systems, including industrial automation, robotics, avionics, and economic regulation. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering - Microelectronic Systems | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is a study of physical aspects of microelectronic technology, including devices, integrated circuit design, layout, large scale integration. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering - Multimedia Signal Processing | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is a study of the application of computing and digital signal processing to multimedia data. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering - Solid State Electronics and Optoelectronics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is a study of the microelectronic and optoelectronic devices, such as transistors and lasers. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN0020 Transforming SocietyTechnology and Choices for the Future, ENGN0030 Introduction to Engineering, ENGN0040 Dynamics and Vibrations, ENGN0090 Management of Industrial and Nonprofit Organizations, ENGN0120 First Year Seminar, ENGN0120A Crossing the Space Chasm Through Engineering Design, ENGN0230 Surveying, ENGN0260 Mechanical Technology, ENGN0310 Mechanics of Solids and Structures, ENGN0410 Materials Science, ENGN0510 Electricity and Magnetism, ENGN0520 Electrical Circuits and Signals, ENGN0720 Thermodynamics, ENGN0810 Fluid Mechanics, ENGN0900 Managerial Decision Making, ENGN0930 Technology and Society Course Series, ENGN1000 Projects in Engineering Design, ENGN1010 The Entrepreneurial Process: Innovation in Practice, ENGN1110 Transport and Biotransport Processes, ENGN1120 Chemical Reactor Design, ENGN1130 Phase and Chemical Equilibria, ENGN1140 Chemical Process Design, ENGN1210 Biomechanics, ENGN1220 Neuroengineering: Control of Eye Movement, ENGN1230 Instrumentation Design, ENGN1300 Structural Analysis, ENGN1340 Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Engineering Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Physics | This program provides students with an in-depth understanding of the fundamental principles underlying modern technology. Specifically, it gives those who are interested in applied technical problems a strong background in physics and mathematics beyond that given in the standard engineering program. Students take a significant part of the usual engineering and physics programs, obtain substantial laboratory experience, and take several upper-level courses focusing on applied physics. The program allows students to take either the standard physics or engineering programs during their freshman and sophomore years and then switch to this combined program. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Electricity and Magnetism, Advanced Classical Mechanics, Experiments in Modern Physics, Methods of Mathematical Physics, Physics of Matter, Introduction to General Relativity, Principles of Quantum Mechanics, Quantum Mechanics B, Advanced Electromagnetic Theory, Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, Modern Physics Laboratory, Computational Physics, Biological Physics, Stellar Physics and the Interstellar Medium, Introductory Optics, Techniques in Experimental Physics - Semester II, Techniques in Experimental Physics - Semester I, Mathematical Methods of Engineers and Physicists, Classical Theoretical Physics I, Classical Theoretical Physics II, Quantum Mechanics I, Quantum Mechanics II, Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Statistical Mechanics, Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, Introduction to Astrophysics and Cosmology, Quantum Theory of Fields I, Quantum Theory of Fields II, Group Theory, Solid State Physics I, Solid State Physics II, Quantum Many Body Theory, Advanced Statistical Mechanics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Physics | Department of Physics, Brown University, Box 1843, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2641 | Physics is the most fundamental of sciences. It provides a foundation of crucial ideas for other scientific fields, and the underpinnings of all of modern technology. The physics faculty at Brown is actively engaged in both teaching and research, including mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. Research focuses on phenomena ranging from the subatomic to the cosmic, and includes collaborative efforts with biologists, chemists, engineers, geologists, and mathematicians. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Center for Environmental Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENVS0510 International Environmental Policy, ENVS1350 Environmental Economics, ENVS1410 Environmental Law and Policy, ENVS1710 Environmental Health, HI179 North Am Environmental History, ENVS0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL0420 Principles of Ecology, GEOL0220 Physical Processes in Geology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Center for Environmental Studies | Center for Environmental Studies, Box 1943, 135 Angell Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3449 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Geological Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | This program provides a broad introduction to the geological sciences. Recommended for students seeking a liberal education and a general understanding of Earth processes and Earth history. Especially attractive for double concentrations, such as geology and economics as a career path to law or business, or geology and English as a career path to journalism or technical writing. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GEOL 0010-S01 Face of the Earth Gromet, GEOL 0070-S01 Introduction to Oceanography Clemens, GEOL 0230-S01 Geochemistry: Earth and Planetary Materials and Processes Gromet, GEOL 0240-S01 Earth: Evolution of a Habitable Planet Herbert, GEOL 0810-S01 Planetary Geology Schultz, GEOL 1150-S01 Limnology: The Study of Lakes Russell, GEOL 1350-S01 Weather and Climate Hastings, GEOL 1420-S01 Petrology Saal, GEOL 1450-S01 Structural Geology Tullis, GEOL 1580-S01 Quantitative Elements of Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1620-S01 Continuum Physics of the Solid Earth Parmentier, GEOL 1650-S01 Earthquake Seismology Fischer, GEOL 1960D-S01 Concepts and Processes in Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1960F-S01 Patterns in Nature, in Society Cooper, GEOL 1960H-S01 The Early Earth Parman, GEOL 2350-S01 Quaternary Climatology Seminar Russell, GEOL 2410-S01 Kinetics of Geochemical Processes Liang, GEOL 2430-S01 Igneous Petrology, GEOL 2800-S01 The Chemistry and Mineralogy of Mars Wyatt, GEOL 2870-S01 Planetary Evolution Pieters, GEOL 2920B-S01 Cyclicities and Singularities in the History of Life Whiteside, GEOL 2920K-S01 Special Topics in Geological Sciences: The Hydrological Cycle on Mars Head, GEOL 2920N-S01 Problems Antartic Dry Valley Geoscience Head, GEOL 2920Q-S01 Rheological Boundaries in the Earth Parmentier, GEOL 2920R-S01 Evolution of the Moon Liang, GEOL 2920S-S01 Paleoceanography/Paleoclimate Seminar Clemens, GEOL 2920U-S01 Climate Variations Russell. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Geology - Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | This program emphasizes interrelations between biological and geological processes including an understanding of the origin and development of life as interpreted from the geologic record, evolution of climate and environments, and dynamic processes in the stratigraphic record. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GEOL 0010-S01 Face of the Earth Gromet, GEOL 0070-S01 Introduction to Oceanography Clemens, GEOL 0230-S01 Geochemistry: Earth and Planetary Materials and Processes Gromet, GEOL 0240-S01 Earth: Evolution of a Habitable Planet Herbert, GEOL 0810-S01 Planetary Geology Schultz, GEOL 1150-S01 Limnology: The Study of Lakes Russell, GEOL 1350-S01 Weather and Climate Hastings, GEOL 1420-S01 Petrology Saal, GEOL 1450-S01 Structural Geology Tullis, GEOL 1580-S01 Quantitative Elements of Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1620-S01 Continuum Physics of the Solid Earth Parmentier, GEOL 1650-S01 Earthquake Seismology Fischer, GEOL 1960D-S01 Concepts and Processes in Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1960F-S01 Patterns in Nature, in Society Cooper, GEOL 1960H-S01 The Early Earth Parman, GEOL 2350-S01 Quaternary Climatology Seminar Russell, GEOL 2410-S01 Kinetics of Geochemical Processes Liang, GEOL 2430-S01 Igneous Petrology, GEOL 2800-S01 The Chemistry and Mineralogy of Mars Wyatt, GEOL 2870-S01 Planetary Evolution Pieters, GEOL 2920B-S01 Cyclicities and Singularities in the History of Life Whiteside, GEOL 2920K-S01 Special Topics in Geological Sciences: The Hydrological Cycle on Mars Head, GEOL 2920N-S01 Problems Antartic Dry Valley Geoscience Head, GEOL 2920Q-S01 Rheological Boundaries in the Earth Parmentier, GEOL 2920R-S01 Evolution of the Moon Liang, GEOL 2920S-S01 Paleoceanography/Paleoclimate Seminar Clemens, GEOL 2920U-S01 Climate Variations Russell. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Geology - Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | This program emphasizes geochemical processes and phenomena on and within the Earth. Recommended for students seeking a liberal education and interested in applying physical and chemical principles toward an understanding of Earth history, Earth processes, and environmental and resource issues. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GEOL 0010-S01 Face of the Earth Gromet, GEOL 0070-S01 Introduction to Oceanography Clemens, GEOL 0230-S01 Geochemistry: Earth and Planetary Materials and Processes Gromet, GEOL 0240-S01 Earth: Evolution of a Habitable Planet Herbert, GEOL 0810-S01 Planetary Geology Schultz, GEOL 1150-S01 Limnology: The Study of Lakes Russell, GEOL 1350-S01 Weather and Climate Hastings, GEOL 1420-S01 Petrology Saal, GEOL 1450-S01 Structural Geology Tullis, GEOL 1580-S01 Quantitative Elements of Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1620-S01 Continuum Physics of the Solid Earth Parmentier, GEOL 1650-S01 Earthquake Seismology Fischer, GEOL 1960D-S01 Concepts and Processes in Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1960F-S01 Patterns in Nature, in Society Cooper, GEOL 1960H-S01 The Early Earth Parman, GEOL 2350-S01 Quaternary Climatology Seminar Russell, GEOL 2410-S01 Kinetics of Geochemical Processes Liang, GEOL 2430-S01 Igneous Petrology, GEOL 2800-S01 The Chemistry and Mineralogy of Mars Wyatt, GEOL 2870-S01 Planetary Evolution Pieters, GEOL 2920B-S01 Cyclicities and Singularities in the History of Life Whiteside, GEOL 2920K-S01 Special Topics in Geological Sciences: The Hydrological Cycle on Mars Head, GEOL 2920N-S01 Problems Antartic Dry Valley Geoscience Head, GEOL 2920Q-S01 Rheological Boundaries in the Earth Parmentier, GEOL 2920R-S01 Evolution of the Moon Liang, GEOL 2920S-S01 Paleoceanography/Paleoclimate Seminar Clemens, GEOL 2920U-S01 Climate Variations Russell. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Geology - Physics/Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | This program emphasizes geochemical processes and phenomena on and within the Earth. Recommended for students seeking a liberal education and interested in applying physical and chemical principles toward an understanding of Earth history, Earth processes, and environmental and resource issues. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GEOL 0010-S01 Face of the Earth Gromet, GEOL 0070-S01 Introduction to Oceanography Clemens, GEOL 0230-S01 Geochemistry: Earth and Planetary Materials and Processes Gromet, GEOL 0240-S01 Earth: Evolution of a Habitable Planet Herbert, GEOL 0810-S01 Planetary Geology Schultz, GEOL 1150-S01 Limnology: The Study of Lakes Russell, GEOL 1350-S01 Weather and Climate Hastings, GEOL 1420-S01 Petrology Saal, GEOL 1450-S01 Structural Geology Tullis, GEOL 1580-S01 Quantitative Elements of Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1620-S01 Continuum Physics of the Solid Earth Parmentier, GEOL 1650-S01 Earthquake Seismology Fischer, GEOL 1960D-S01 Concepts and Processes in Physical Hydrology Hermance, GEOL 1960F-S01 Patterns in Nature, in Society Cooper, GEOL 1960H-S01 The Early Earth Parman, GEOL 2350-S01 Quaternary Climatology Seminar Russell, GEOL 2410-S01 Kinetics of Geochemical Processes Liang, GEOL 2430-S01 Igneous Petrology, GEOL 2800-S01 The Chemistry and Mineralogy of Mars Wyatt, GEOL 2870-S01 Planetary Evolution Pieters, GEOL 2920B-S01 Cyclicities and Singularities in the History of Life Whiteside, GEOL 2920K-S01 Special Topics in Geological Sciences: The Hydrological Cycle on Mars Head, GEOL 2920N-S01 Problems Antartic Dry Valley Geoscience Head, GEOL 2920Q-S01 Rheological Boundaries in the Earth Parmentier, GEOL 2920R-S01 Evolution of the Moon Liang, GEOL 2920S-S01 Paleoceanography/Paleoclimate Seminar Clemens, GEOL 2920U-S01 Climate Variations Russell. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Human Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | This program is an interdisciplinary program that offers a strong foundation in biological sciences, within the context of one of four Themes. Themes include: Health and Disease; Race and Gender; Brain and Behavior; Ecosystems, Evolution and Environment. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Marine Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | The Marine Biology program provides the foundation for graduate study in biology or geology, or for jobs in such areas as environmental studies, limnology and oceanography, and various scientific laboratories. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - BIOL 0190F Darwinian Medicine, BIOL 0190E Botanical Roots of Modern Medicine, BIOL 0190K Tropical Marine Ecology, BIOL 0190N Dinosaurs in Science and Culture, BIOL 0190O Conservation Medicine, BIOL 0190Q Climate Change and Sepecies Extinction, BIOL 0380 The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease, BIOL 0390 Vertebrate Evolution and Diversity, BIOL 0400 Biological Design, BIOL 0410 Invertebrate Zoology, BIOL 0420 Principles of Ecology, BIOL 0430 Diversity and Adaptation of Seed Plants, BIOL 0450 Animal Behavior, BIOL 0460 Insect Biology, BIOL 0480 Evolutionary Biology, BIOL 0490 Environmental Science in a Changing World, BIOL 1400 Behavioral Ecology; Evolutionary and Ecological Determinants of Animal Behavior, BIOL 1410 Evolutionary Genetics, BIOL 1420 Experimental Design in Ecology, BIOL 1430 The Computational Theory of Molecular Evolution, BIOL 1440 Marine Biology, BIOL 1460 Microbial Diversity and the Environment, BIOL 1470 Conservation Biology, BIOL 1480 Terrestrial Biogeochemistry and the Functioning of Ecosystems, BIOL 1490 Human Impacts Ecosystem Function, BIOL 1500 Plant Ecology, BIOL 1800 Animal Locomotion, BIOL 1880 Comparative Biology of the Vertebrates, BIOL 1940W Genetics and Evolution of Complex Traits, BIOL 2430/2440 Topics in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Materials Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Chemistry | This program is designed for students who have a strong interest in the interface of chemistry with nanoscience and materials science. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - UNIV0140 Insights into Chemistry A Historical Perspective, CHEM0080 First Year Seminars, CHEM0080A First Year Seminar – Energy, CHEM0080B First Year Seminar - Molecular Structures in Chemistry,CHEM0100 Introductory Chemistry, CHEM0120 Chemistry of the Environment, CHEM0190 Chemical Ecology: Pheromones, Poisons, and Chemical Messages, CHEM0330 Equilibrium, Rate, and Structure, CHEM0350 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0360 Organic Chemistry, CHEM0400 Biophysical and Bioinorganic Chemistry, CHEM0500 Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM0970 Undergraduate Research, CHEM0980 Undergraduate Research, CHEM1060 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1140 Physical Chemistry: Quantum Chemistry, CHEM1150 Physical Chemistry: Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, CHEM1160 Physical Chemistry Laboratory, CHEM1170 Environmental Chemistry, CHEM1220 Computational Tools in Biochemistry and Chemical Biology, CHEM1230 Chemical Biology, CHEM1240 Biochemistry, CHEM1450 Advanced Organic Chemistry, CHEM1560 Topics in Advanced Chemistry CHEM1560A Molecular Modeling, CHEM1560B Techniques in Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM1560C Advanced Spectroscopy, CHEM1560D Chemistry and Biology of Naturally Occurring Antibiotics CHEM1560E Biological Mass Spectrometry, CHEM1560F Organic Structure Analysis, CHEM1560I DNA Damage and Repair, CHEM1620 Chemical Physics, CHEM1620A Photoacoustics, CHEM1620B Spectroscopy, CHEM1620C To Be Determined, CHEM1700 Nanoscale Materials: Synthesis and Appliciations, CHEM1830 Group Research Project, CHEM1840 Group Research Project, CHEM2010 Advanced Thermodynamics, CHEM2020 Statistical Mechanics, CHEM2210 Chemical Crystallography, CHEM2310 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2320 Physical Inorganic Chemistry, CHEM2410 Physical Organic Chemistry, CHEM2420 Organic Reactions, CHEM2430 Synthetic Organic Chemistry, CHEM2770 Quantum Chemistry, CHEM2780 Quantum Mechanics, CHEM2810 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2820 Departmental Seminars, CHEM2870 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2880 Departmental Colloquia, CHEM2920 Special Topics in Chemistry, CHEM2920A Chemistry and Physics of Amorphous Materials. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Chemistry | Department of Chemistry, Box H 324 Brook Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2256 | The Department of Chemistry maintains pedagogical and research strengths in organic, inorganic, and theoretical and experimental physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, chemical biology and nanochemistry. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Materials Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program provides specialized training in subjects related to physics and chemistry to improve the performance of materials used in all types of technological applications. The design of processing techniques to create materials with optimized performance in electronic, magnetic, optical, chemical, or biological applications is achieved by controlling the microstructure of the material. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN2430 Deformation Behavior of Materials, ENGN2490 Special Topics in Materials Science, ENGN2500 Medical Image Analysis, ENGN2520 Pattern Recognition and Computer Vision, ENGN2530 Digital Signal Processing, ENGN2540 Speech Processing, ENGN2560 Computer Vision, ENGN2570 Applied Stochastic Processes, ENGN2610 Physics of Solid State Devices, ENGN2620 Solid State Quantum and Optoelectronics, ENGN2630 ElectroOptical Properties of Materials and Biomolecules, ENGN2640 Classical Theoretical Physics II, ENGN2660 Physics and Technology of Semiconductor Heterostructures , ENGN2730 Advanced Thermodynamics I, ENGN2740 Advanced Thermodynamics II, ENGN2760 Heat and Mass Transfer, ENGN2810 Fluid Mechanics I, ENGN2820 Fluid Mechanics II, ENGN2910 Special Topics in Engineering, ENGN2910M Microfluidics and its Applications, ENGN2911X Reconfigurable Computing, ENGN2912C Future Directions in Computing, ENGN2920 Special Topics in Engineering, ENGN2970 Preliminary Examination Preparation, ENGN2980 Special Projects, Reading, Research and Design, ENGN2990 Thesis Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Mathematics | This program is designed to present students with challenging courses that will train them for any future they desire be it in the economy, in government, or in academe. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Math 0050 Analytic Geometry and Calculus, Math 0090 Introductory Calculus I, Math 0100 Introductory Calculus II, Math 0170 Advanced Placement Calculus, Math 0180 Intermediate Calculus, Math 0190 Advanced Placement Calculus(Physics/Engineering), Math 0200 Intermediate Calculus(Physics/Engineering), Math 0350 Honors Calculus, Math 0520 Linear Algebra, Math 0540 Honors Linear Algebra, Math 1060 Differential Geometry, Math 1110 Ordinary Differential Equations, Math 1130 Functions of Several Variables, Math 1260 Complex Analysis, Math 1270 Functional Analysis, Math 1530 Abstract Algebra, Math 1580 Cryptography, Math 1610 Probability, Math 1810 A Second Course in Linear Algebra, Math 2010 Differential Geometry, Math 2050 Algebraic Geometry, Math 2250 Complex Function Theory, Math 2370 Algebraic Topology, Math 2510 Algebra, Math 2530 Number Theory, Math 2710C Gluing Constructions in Differential Geometry, Math 2710D Lie Groups and Lie Algebras, Math 2710E Arithmetic Groups. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Mathematics | Department of Mathematics, 151 Thayer Street, Box 1917, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2708 | The Mathematics Department at Brown balances a lively interest in students and teaching with a distinguished research reputation. Several strong research groups, Analysis, Algebraic Geometry, Geometry and Topology, and Number Theory, all have active weekly seminars that draw speakers ranging from the local to the international. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | This program is designed: to give students a broad exposure to all areas of engineering; to develop a deep understanding of mechanical engineering science; and to foster student's creativity and professional skills through design and project work. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGN1360 Soil Mechanics and Principles of Foundation Engineering, ENGN1370 Advanced Engineering Mechanics, ENGN1380 Design of Civil Engineering Structures, ENGN1400 Analytical Methods in Biomaterials, ENGN1410 Physical Chemistry of Solids, ENGN1420 Kinetics Processes in Materials Science and Engineering, ENGN1440 Mechanical Properties of Materials, ENGN1450 Properties and Processing of Electronic Materials, ENGN1470 Structure and Properties of Nonmetallic Material, ENGN1480 Metallic Materials, ENGN1490 Biomaterials, ENGN1560 Applied Electromagnetics, ENGN1570 Linear System Analysis, ENGN1580 Communication Systems, ENGN1590 Introduction to Semiconductors and Semiconductor Electronics, ENGN1600 Design and Implementation of Very LargeScale Integrated Systems, ENGN1610 Image Understanding, ENGN1620 Analysis and Design of Electronic Circuits, ENGN1630 Digital Electronics Systems Design, ENGN1640 Design of Computing Systems, ENGN1650 Embedded Microprocessor Design, ENGN1680 Design of Semiconductor Devices. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Neuroscience | The program offers study in the fields of knowledge important to an understanding of brain function. Neuroscience is an interdisciplinary program bringing together neurobiology (anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, molecular biology, development) with elements of psychology and cognitive science, as well as mathematical and physical principles involved in modeling neural systems. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - NEUR 0010 The Brain: An Introduction to Neuroscience, NEUR 0190 Seeing with Sound: The Biology of Bats and Dolphins, NEUR 0650 Biology of Hearing, NEUR 1020 Principles of Neurobiology, NEUR 1030 Neural Systems, NEUR 1040 Developmental Neurobiology, NEUR 1600 Experimental Neurobiology, NEUR 1650 Structure of the Nervous System, NEUR 1660 Cognitive and Neural Systems, NEUR 1670 Neuropharmacology and Synaptic Transmission, NEUR 1680 Computational Neuroscience, NEUR 1930 Topics in Neuroscience. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Neuroscience | Department of Neuroscience, 185 Meeting Street, Box G-LN, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3440 | The Graduate Program in Neuroscience at Brown University offers advanced study for academic and research careers in the field of neuroscience. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Physics | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHYS 0040-S01 - Basic Physics, PHYS 0040-S02 - Basic Physics, PHYS 0060-S01 - Foundations of Electromagnetism and Modern Physics, PHYS 0100-S01 - Flat Earth to Quantum Uncertainty: On the Nature and Meaning of Scientific Explanation, PHYS 0120-S01 - Adventures in Nanoworld, PHYS 0160-S01 - Introduction to Relativity and Quantum Physics, PHYS 0220-S01 - Beginning Astronomy, PHYS 0500-S01 - Advanced Classical Mechanics, PHYS 0560-S01 - Experiments in Modern Physics, PHYS 1100-S01 - Introduction to General Relativity, PHYS 1170-S01 - Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, PHYS 1420-S01 - Quantum Mechanics, PHYS 1560-S01 - Modern Physics Laboratory, PHYS 1600-S01 - Computational Physics, PHYS 1970B-S01 - Introductory Optics, PHYS 2010-S01 - Techniques in Experimental Physics, PHYS 2040-S01 - Classical Theoretical Physics II, PHYS 2060-S01 - Quantum Mechanics, PHYS 2140-S01 - Statistical Mechanics, PHYS 2170-S01 - Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, PHYS 2280-S01 - Astrophysics and Cosmology, PHYS 2300-S01 - Quantum Theory of Fields I, PHYS 2340-S01 - Group Theory, PHYS 2420-S01 - Solid State Physics II, PHYS 2620F-S01 - Selected Topics in Molecular Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Physics | Department of Physics, Brown University, Box 1843, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2641 | Physics is the most fundamental of sciences. It provides a foundation of crucial ideas for other scientific fields, and the underpinnings of all of modern technology. The physics faculty at Brown is actively engaged in both teaching and research, including mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. Research focuses on phenomena ranging from the subatomic to the cosmic, and includes collaborative efforts with biologists, chemists, engineers, geologists, and mathematicians. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Psychology | This program is designed for liberal arts students seeking an understanding of scientific psychology and for students preparing for advanced training and professional work. The program provide students with the flexibility to design a curriculum that best suits their interests and career goals. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are PSYC 0090S01 Quantitative Methods in Psychology, PSYC 0190CS01 Olfaction and Human Behavior, PSYC 0300S01 Personality, PSYC 0500S01 Mechanisms of Animal Behavior, PSYC 0750S01 Principles of Behavioral Neuroscience, PSYC 0810S01 Child Development, PSYC 1030S01 Techniques in Physiological Psychology, PSYC 1070S01 Psychological Theory, PSYC 1090S01 Research Methods in Psychology, PSYC 1410S01 Human Resilience, PSYC 1450S01 Animal Behavior Laboratory, PSYC 1540S01 Laboratory in Social Cognition, PSYC 1700S01 Behavior Modification, PSYC 1750BS01 Canine Behavior, PSYC 1790S01 Psychology of Timing, PSYC 1810S01 Seminar in Cognitive Neuroscience, PSYC 1830S01 Cognitive Aging and Dementia, PSYC 1840S01 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Theory and Practice, PSYC 1880S01 Seminar in the Neural Bases of Cognition, PSYC 2020S01 Quantitative Methods in Psychology, PSYC 2050S01 Practicum in Teaching, PSYC 2080S01 Multivariate Statistical Techniques, PSYC 2270S01 Graduate Core in the Neural Basis of Behavior. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Psychology | Department of Psychology, 89 Waterman Street, Box 1853, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2727 | Department of Psychology enters its second century, its research mission encompasses a wide range of phenomena and levels of analysis, organized in pursuit of three broad goals. One is to deepen an understanding of the cognitive and neural mechanisms of sensation, perception, learning, and emotion. A second is to probe the biological and evolutionary foundations of animal behavior. A third is to clarify the social perception and assessment of individuals and groups. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Bachelor of Science in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Sociology | The program helps students develop a versatile and marketable skill set, including: critical thinking and analysis; polished written and oral communication; collection and interpretation of data, including statistical information; and in-depth engagement with the major social and policy issues. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - SOC 0020-S01 Perspectives on Social Interaction: An Introduction to Social Psychology, SOC 0170-S01 The Family, SOC 0200-S01 Population and Society, SOC 0300E-S01 HIV/AIDS: Politics, Culture and Society, SOC 1050-S01 Methods of Research in Organizations, SOC 1060-S01 Leadership in Organizations, SOC 1090-S01 Theories of Organizational Dynamics and Decision Making, SOC 1100-S01 Introductory Statistics for Social Research, SOC 1260-S01 Market Research in Public and Private Sectors, SOC 1270-S01 Race, Class, and Ethnicity in the Modern World, SOC 1330-S01 Remaking the City, SOC 1600-S01 Comparative Development, SOC 1640-S01 Social Exclusion, SOC 1870A-S01 Investing in Social Change, SOC 1871B-S01 Sociological Perspectives on Poverty, SOC 1871H-S01 Social Perspectives on HIV/AIDS, SOC 1950-S01 Senior Seminar, SOC 2020-S01 Multivariate Statistical Methods II, SOC 2050-S01 Contemporary Sociology, SOC 2080-S01 Principles of Population, SOC 2090-S01 Culture and Social Structure, SOC 2130-S01 Health, Illness and Medicine in Social Context, SOC 2200-S01 Social Capital and Social Networks, SOC 2210-S01 Qualitative Methods, SOC 2350-S01 Social Movements in Health, SOC 2380-S01 Mortality and Morbidity, SOC 2510-S01 Teaching Practicum in Sociology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Sociology | Department of Sociology, 112 George Street, Box 1916, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2367 | Sociology as a discipline provides students with the conceptual and analytic tools to make sense of complex social structures in a rapidly changing global environment. Brown’s Sociology department brings together a dynamic group of scholars with international reputations for outstanding achievement in core research areas—social demography, the sociology of health, and macrosociology. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Africana Studies | Full Time | Varaible | US $36,928 a year | Department of Africana Studies | This program requires students to complete a research paper of distinguished quality while enrolled in a 1000-level seminar. Participation in the Africana Studies senior-level capstone seminar AFRI 1360 is required. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - AFRI 0090 - An Introduction to Africana Studies, AFRI 0100 - An Introduction to Afro-American Studies, AFRI 0110 - Freshman Seminar Series, AFRI 0110A - Facing the Past: The Politics of Retrospective Justice, AFRI 0120 - Philosophy of Race and Gender, AFRI 0160 - Twentieth-Century Africa, AFRI 0170 - Afro-American History and Society Before 1800, AFRI 0190 - Caribbean History and Society Before 1800, AFRI 0200 - Modern Caribbean History and Society, AFRI 0210 - Blacks in Latin American History and Society, AFRI 0220 - Introduction to African American History from Emancipation to the Present, AFRI 0280 - Race, Slavery, Modernity and Knowledge, AFRI 0360 - Africana Philosophy and the African Novel, AFRI 0560 - Psychology of the Black Experience, AFRI 0570 - 20th Century Black Feminist Thought and Practice in the U.S, AFRI 0580 - Black Theology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Africana Studies | Department of Africana Studies, Box 1904 155 Angell Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3137 | Department of Africana Studies is the intellectual center for faculty and students interested in the artistic, historical, literary, and theoretical expressions of the various cultures of Africa and the African Diaspora. The Department is dedicated to the exploration and development of new knowledge about the cultures, histories, social formations and artistic expressions of Africa and various locations that comprise the African Diaspora. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in American Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of American Civilization | This program combines the flexibility to explore special areas of interest with support, guidance and structure. Students get an in-depth understanding of a fascinating and important subject, the United States of America. Students must register in each semester of their senior year for a thesis writing course, AMCV 1970. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - AMCV 0150A - American Film: The Birth of an Industry, AMCV 0190I - Back to Bondage: Black Women's History, Memory and Cultural Production, AMCV 0190J - Old Salts and Sacred Cod: Culture, Environment and Food in New England, AMCV 1550 - Methods in Public Humanities, AMCV 1610G - Asian American History, AMCV 1611J - Sex, Love, Race: Miscegenation, Mixed Race and Interracial Relations, AMCV 1611L - The Sixties Without Apology, AMCV 1611V - Color Me Cool: A Survey of Contemporary Graphic Novels, AMCV 1612E - Narratives of 9/11, AMCV 1612F - Female Maladies: Women and Mental Illness. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of American Civilization | Department of American Civilization, Box 1892 82 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2896 | The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was “to provide the student with a more comprehensive and better unified knowledge of American Civilization . . . than would be possible within the limits of a single department.” | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Ancient History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Ancient Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 for the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0500 Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1540 Archaeology of Asian Civilizations, ANTH 1570 American Indian Archaeology, ANTH 1650 Ancient Maya Writing, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Archaeology and Ethnohistory, CLAS 0210 Seneca: Philosophist, Dramatist, and Victim of Nero, CLAS 0210B Death in Ancient Greece, CLAS 0210K Sappho: Poet and Legend, CLAS 0400 Ancient Comedy and Its Influence, CLAS 0560 War and Society in the Ancient World, CLAS 0620 Greek Tragedy, CLAS 0810A Alexander the Great and the Alexander Tradition, CLAS 0820 Epics of India, CLAS 1120D Myth and Origins of Science, CLAS 1120G The Idea of Self, CLAS 1310 Roman History: The Rise and Fall of an Imperial Republic, CLAS 1750E Writing History in the Ancient World, CLAS 1750J Ancient Revenge Dramas, CLAS 2010M Problems in Old World Archaeology: The Archaeology of Empires, GREEK 0300 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREEK 1050A Aristophanes, GREEK 1060 Herodotus, GREEK 1100 Advanced Homer: Odyssey, GREEK 1110B Plato, Phaedrus, GREEK 1110 R Characters and Characterization in Greek Literature, GREEK 1810 Early Greek Literature, GREEK 2110E Aeschines and Demosthenes, “Crowning Speeches”, GREEK 2110F Greek Palaeography and Premodern Book Cultures, LATN 0300 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0400 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 1020B Cicero, Verrines, LATN 1040A Virgil: Eclogues and Georgics, LATN 1110G Latin Love Elegy, LATN 1820 Survey of Roman Literature from Horace to Suetonuis, LATN 2090B Lucretius, LATN 2120A Roman Epigraphy, COLT 0710Q Odysseus in Literature, COLT 0810H How not to Be a Hero, EAST 1250 Confucian Ethics, EAST 1880D Early Daoist Syncretism: Zhyang Zi and Hyainan Zi, EGYT 1330 Selections from Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, EGYT 1420 Ancient Egyptian Religion and Magic, EGYT 1450 History of Egypt III, Libyans, Nubians, and Persians in Egypt, EGYT 1460 History of Egypt IV. The Age of Cleopatra, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, EGYT 2510 Social Life in Ancient Egypt, HMAT 2120 Historiography of the Exact Sciences, HMAT 2310A Ancient Scientific Texts: Akkadian, HMAT 2310B Assyriology I, HMAT 2310C Assyriology II, HMAT tba Astronomy before the Telescope. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Ancient Studies | Department of Ancient Studies, Annmary Brown Memorial, 21 Brown Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | The Program in Ancient Studies was founded in the late 1970s, when faculty in various academic units sought new ways to foster collaboration and promote the study of ancient civilizations among Brown’s students. It is a Program of rich collaboration, critical exploration, and truly interdisciplinary scholarship that seeks to bring together all those at Brown (faculty, graduate students, undergraduates, and staff) who are interested in the cultures, religions, and histories of ancient civilizations. Geographically, the “ancient world” represented at Brown comprises early China and India, West Asia (Mesopotamia, Iran, Anatolia, and Israel), Egypt, the Mediterranean (especially Greece and Italy), the early Islamic and Byzantine worlds as well as the Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations. The faculty involved in Ancient Studies number close to forty, and the academic units involved include the departments of Anthropology, Classics, Comparative Literature, Egyptology, History, History of Art and Architecture, History of Mathematics, Philosophy, and Religious Studies, the Program in Judaic Studies, and the Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Ancient Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Ancient Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 for the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0500 Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1540 Archaeology of Asian Civilizations, ANTH 1570 American Indian Archaeology, ANTH 1650 Ancient Maya Writing, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Archaeology and Ethnohistory, CLAS 0210 Seneca: Philosophist, Dramatist, and Victim of Nero, CLAS 0210B Death in Ancient Greece, CLAS 0210K Sappho: Poet and Legend, CLAS 0400 Ancient Comedy and Its Influence, CLAS 0560 War and Society in the Ancient World, CLAS 0620 Greek Tragedy, CLAS 0810A Alexander the Great and the Alexander Tradition, CLAS 0820 Epics of India, CLAS 1120D Myth and Origins of Science, CLAS 1120G The Idea of Self, CLAS 1310 Roman History: The Rise and Fall of an Imperial Republic, CLAS 1750E Writing History in the Ancient World, CLAS 1750J Ancient Revenge Dramas, CLAS 2010M Problems in Old World Archaeology: The Archaeology of Empires, GREEK 0300 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREEK 1050A Aristophanes, GREEK 1060 Herodotus, GREEK 1100 Advanced Homer: Odyssey, GREEK 1110B Plato, Phaedrus, GREEK 1110 R Characters and Characterization in Greek Literature, GREEK 1810 Early Greek Literature, GREEK 2110E Aeschines and Demosthenes, “Crowning Speeches”, GREEK 2110F Greek Palaeography and Premodern Book Cultures, LATN 0300 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0400 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 1020B Cicero, Verrines, LATN 1040A Virgil: Eclogues and Georgics, LATN 1110G Latin Love Elegy, LATN 1820 Survey of Roman Literature from Horace to Suetonuis, LATN 2090B Lucretius, LATN 2120A Roman Epigraphy, COLT 0710Q Odysseus in Literature, COLT 0810H How not to Be a Hero, EAST 1250 Confucian Ethics, EAST 1880D Early Daoist Syncretism: Zhyang Zi and Hyainan Zi, EGYT 1330 Selections from Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, EGYT 1420 Ancient Egyptian Religion and Magic, EGYT 1450 History of Egypt III, Libyans, Nubians, and Persians in Egypt, EGYT 1460 History of Egypt IV. The Age of Cleopatra, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, EGYT 2510 Social Life in Ancient Egypt, HMAT 2120 Historiography of the Exact Sciences, HMAT 2310A Ancient Scientific Texts: Akkadian, HMAT 2310B Assyriology I, HMAT 2310C Assyriology II, HMAT tba Astronomy before the Telescope. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Ancient Studies | Department of Ancient Studies, Annmary Brown Memorial, 21 Brown Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | The Program in Ancient Studies was founded in the late 1970s, when faculty in various academic units sought new ways to foster collaboration and promote the study of ancient civilizations among Brown’s students. It is a Program of rich collaboration, critical exploration, and truly interdisciplinary scholarship that seeks to bring together all those at Brown (faculty, graduate students, undergraduates, and staff) who are interested in the cultures, religions, and histories of ancient civilizations. Geographically, the “ancient world” represented at Brown comprises early China and India, West Asia (Mesopotamia, Iran, Anatolia, and Israel), Egypt, the Mediterranean (especially Greece and Italy), the early Islamic and Byzantine worlds as well as the Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations. The faculty involved in Ancient Studies number close to forty, and the academic units involved include the departments of Anthropology, Classics, Comparative Literature, Egyptology, History, History of Art and Architecture, History of Mathematics, Philosophy, and Religious Studies, the Program in Judaic Studies, and the Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Anthropology | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ANTH 0066C - Population and Culture, ANTH 0066E - Colonial Cities, ANTH 0066F - Families and Households, ANTH 0066G - Explorers and Cultural Encounters, ANTH 0066H - Healers and Healing, ANTH 0066I - Human Trafficking, ANTH 0066K - International Perspectives of omen's Agency and Society, ANTH 0066L - Singing and Language, ANTH 0066M - Holy Wars, ANTH 0066N - Peoples and Cultures of Greater Mexico, ANTH 0066P - Transnational Lives: Anthropology of Migration and Mobilities, ANTH 0100 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 0110 - Anthropology and Global Social Problems, ANTH 0200 - Culture and Human Behavior, ANTH 0300 - Culture and Health, ANTH 0301 - Gender, Medicine and Care, ANTH 0310 - Human Evolution, ANTH 0400 - Growing Up Ethnic and Multicultural, ANTH 0500 - Discovering the Past: Introduction to Archaeology and Prehistory, ANTH 0520 - Classic Mayan Civilization, ANTH 1100 - Circumpolar Ethnography, ANTH 1110 - African Issues in Anthropological Perspective, ANTH 1119 - Andean Anthropology, ANTH 1121 - From Coyote to Casinos: Native North American Peoples and Cultures, ANTH 1123 - Native North Americans in the Twentieth Century. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, Box 1921, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3251 | Department of Anthropology faculty are trained as social and cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and anthropological linguists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Archaeology and the Ancient World | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | This program emphasizes material culture studies across the full spectrum of the ancient world. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ARCH 0100 Field Archaeology in the Ancient World, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, ARCH 0325 "Dead White Guys": Greco-Roman Civilization and American Identity, ARCH 0420 Archaeologies of the Greek Past, ARCH 0650 Islamic Civilizations, ARCH 1120 Pompeii, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, ARCH 1625 Temples and Tombs: Egyptian Religion and Culture, ARCH 1710 Architecture and Memory, ARCH 1780 Violence and Civilization: A Deep History of Social Violence, ARCH 1860 Engineering Material Culture: An Introduction to Archaeological Science, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan, ANTH 1121 Nations within States, ANTH 1570 No. American Archaeology, ANTH 1620 Global Historical Archaeology, ANTH 1710 Biological Issues, ANTH 2410 Exhibitions in Museums, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Seminar, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0560 The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 1040G Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden of China, HIAA 1440D Topics in Medieval Architecture: The Gothic Cathedral, HIAA 1850C Topics in 20th Century: The City of Paris Urbanism and Architecture, JUDS 1400 The Archaeology of Palestine. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Box 1837, 70 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3188 | The Artemis A. W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World is dedicated to the academic study and public promotion of the archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean, Egypt, and Western Asia (the latter broadly construed as extending from Anatolia and the Levant to the Caucasus, and including the territories of the ancient Near East); Principal research interests lie in the complex societies of the pre-modern era. Although the core efforts of the Joukowsky Institute are archaeological in nature and are located within this broadly defined zone, close ties with all individuals interested in the ancient world, and with archaeologists of all parts of the globe, are welcome and actively encouraged. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Architectural Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History of Art and Architecture | This program prepares students for the continued study of architecture and the history of architecture in graduate school as well as careers in related areas such as urban studies. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HIAA 0050C First Year Seminar: Illustrating Knowledge, HIAA 0080 Introduction to the History of Photography, HIAA 0110A Ancient China: Art and Archaeology, HIAA 0550 A Florence and Tuscany in the 15th Century, HIAA 0620 The Age of Rubens and Rembrandt: Visual Culture of the Netherlands in the 17th Century, HIAA 0080 20th Century European Art, HIAA 0860 A Contemporary Architecture, HIAA 1040H Topics in East Asian Art: The Shape of Good Fortune, HIAA 1200E Topics in Roman Art and Architecture: Roman Spectacles, HIAA 1600B Topics in 17th Century Art: Caravaggio, HIAA 1760B Topics in Later 19th Century Painting: French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Art, HIAA 1910 A Project Seminar for Architectural Studies Concentrators: Downtown Providence from Late 19th Century to Present , HIAA 2870E Special Topics: Art and Utopia in the 1960’s: The Artist as the Architect of a Free Society, HIAA 2920 Methods of Research and Art Historical Interpretation, HIAA 0010 A Introduction to History of Art and Architecture, HIAA 0050D First Year Seminar: Seeing and Writing on Contemporary Arts, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0340A Roman Art and Architecture: Julius Caesar to Hadrian, HIAA 0490 A Urban Modernity and the Middle East, HIAA 0560A The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 0880 Contemporary Art I, HIAA 0910 Contemporary Photography, HIAA 1040I A Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden in China and Japan, HIAA 1430B Shaping Faith: Sacred Images in Medieval Art and Culture Pending Approval, HIAA 1600G Art and Religion in Early Modern Europe: Visual Communication. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History of Art and Architecture | Department of History of Art and Architecture, 64 College St, Box 1855, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1174 | The Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown University grants undergraduate degrees in the History of Art and Architecture, as well as in Architectural Studies.Graduate study in this department is geared toward earning a PhD in the History of Art, Architectural Studies, and many areas of visual culture from the ancient world through the present. Work in the department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown is conceived as an interdisciplinary undertaking, in which students are encouraged to become familiar with the variety of methodologies and practices that have historically been, and continue to be productive in fields. The department also maintain a longstanding commitment to museum studies and the study of objects through a close working relationship with the Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design.Interested students in this department have the opportunity to hold internships and (in the case of graduate students) proctorships at the museum. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Classical Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | This program is intended for those interested chiefly in the ‘classic’ civilizations of the Mediterranean (Greece and Rome), as well as for those interested in both earlier (prehistoric) and later (medieval) periods in that geographic region. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ARCH 0100 Field Archaeology in the Ancient World, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, ARCH 0325 "Dead White Guys": Greco-Roman Civilization and American Identity, ARCH 0420 Archaeologies of the Greek Past, ARCH 0650 Islamic Civilizations, ARCH 1120 Pompeii, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, ARCH 1625 Temples and Tombs: Egyptian Religion and Culture, ARCH 1710 Architecture and Memory, ARCH 1780 Violence and Civilization: A Deep History of Social Violence, ARCH 1860 Engineering Material Culture: An Introduction to Archaeological Science, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan, ANTH 1121 Nations within States, ANTH 1570 No. American Archaeology, ANTH 1620 Global Historical Archaeology, ANTH 1710 Biological Issues, ANTH 2410 Exhibitions in Museums, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Seminar, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0560 The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 1040G Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden of China, HIAA 1440D Topics in Medieval Architecture: The Gothic Cathedral, HIAA 1850C Topics in 20th Century: The City of Paris Urbanism and Architecture, JUDS 1400 The Archaeology of Palestine. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Box 1837, 70 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3188 | The Artemis A. W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World is dedicated to the academic study and public promotion of the archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean, Egypt, and Western Asia (the latter broadly construed as extending from Anatolia and the Levant to the Caucasus, and including the territories of the ancient Near East); Principal research interests lie in the complex societies of the pre-modern era. Although the core efforts of the Joukowsky Institute are archaeological in nature and are located within this broadly defined zone, close ties with all individuals interested in the ancient world, and with archaeologists of all parts of the globe, are welcome and actively encouraged. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Classics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a Average of B grade overall in the program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CLAS 0010 The Greeks, CLAS 0020 The Romans, CLAS 0150 Ancient Philosophy, CLAS 0180 Indian Civilization through Its Literature, CLAS 0210 Topics in Classical Literature and Civilization, CLAS 0210A Alexander the Great and Alexandria, CLAS 0210B Death in Ancient Greece, CLAS 0210D Herodotus, CLAS 0210E The Family in the Classical World, CLAS 0210F The Meaning of History in the Ancient World. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Classics and Sanskrit | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a Average of B grade overall in the program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CLAS 0010 The Greeks, CLAS 0020 The Romans, CLAS 0150 Ancient Philosophy, CLAS 0180 Indian Civilization through Its Literature, CLAS 0210 Topics in Classical Literature and Civilization, CLAS 0210A Alexander the Great and Alexandria, CLAS 0210B Death in Ancient Greece, CLAS 0210D Herodotus, CLAS 0210E The Family in the Classical World, CLAS 0210F The Meaning of History in the Ancient World. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Cognitive Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | This program is the study of higher cognitive functions in humans and its underlying neural bases. This is an integrative area of study drawing principally from cognitive science, psychology, neuroscience, and linguistics. There are two broad directions which can be taken in this program - one is behavioral/experimental and the other is computational/modeling. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students are expected to have half of their grades as A or √+ in courses in the concentration and are required to satisfactorily complete a written thesis and an oral defense. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - CG32 Biology and Evolution of Language, CG/PY44 Perception and Mind, CG45 Language and the Mind, CG48 Human Thinking and Problem-Solving, CG50 Making Decisions, CG/PY63 Children's Thinking: The Nature of Cognitive Development, CG120 Computational Vision, CG123 Production, Perception, and Analysis of Speech, CG138 Ecological Approach to Perception and Action, CG141 Language Processing, CG142 Syntactic Theory and Syntactic Processing, CG143 Child Language Acquisition, CG144 Visualizing Vision, CG147 Language Learning Disorders, CG148 Language and the Brain, CG150 Subcortical Bases of Language and Thought, CG/PY152 Thinking, CG154 The Evolution of Perceptual System, CG156 Human Memory and Learning, CG162 Cognitive Development, CG174 Topics in Language Acquisition, CG186 Topics in Cognitive Science, CG187 Concepts and Categories, BN65 Biology of Hearing, BN66 Biology of Vision, BN168 Computational Neuroscience, PY27 Basic Perception, PY44 Perception and Mind, PY75 Principles of Behavioral Neuroscience, PY81 Child Development, PY94 Developmental Psyhopathology, PY101 Psychopharmacology, PY102 Psychophysiology of Sleep and Dreams, PY105 Music and Mind, PY140 Human Memory, PY178 Psychological Acoustics, PY179 Psychology of Timing, PY180 Animal Cognition, PY181 Seminar in Cognitive Neuroscience, PY182 Cognitive Neuroscience of Emotion, PY184 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Theory and Practice, PY185 Motion Perception, BI45 Animal Behavior. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Cognitive Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | This program is designed to provide a flexible interdisciplinary approach with four areas of emphasis: perception, cognition, language, and cognitive neuroscience. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 7 Language, Truth, and Advertising, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 11 Perception, Illusion, and the Visual Arts, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 32 The Biology and Evolution of Language, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 45 Language and the Mind, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 50 Making Decisions, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 63 Children's Thinking: The Nature of Cognitive Development, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 87 Language in Africa, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 88 Meaning and Thought, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 102 Neural Modelling Laboratory, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 111 Introduction to Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 112 Lexical Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 113 Formal Semantics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 116 Human Factors, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 118 Cognitive Development, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 119 Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 120 Computational Vision, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 121 Introduction to Phonological Theory, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 123 The Production, Perception, and Analysis of Speech, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 124 Research Methods in Physiological and Acoustic Phonetics, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 129 Understanding the Brain, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 131 Introduction to Syntax, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 136 Introduction to Computational Linguistics , Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 138 Ecological Approach to Perception and Action, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 141 Language Processing, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 142 Syntactic Theory and Syntactic Processing, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 143 Child Language Acquisition, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 144 Visualizing Vision Lab, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 147 Language Learning Disorders, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 148 Language and the Brain, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 150 Subcortical Brain Bases of Language and Thought, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 152 Thinking, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 153 Laboratory in Cognitive Processes, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 154 Evolution of Perceptual Systems, Cognitive and Linguistic Sci. 156 Human Memory and Learning. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Community Health | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Community Health | This program is an interdisciplinary concentration that examines patterns of and explanations for, population health and disease; health policy; cross-cultural and international aspects of health; the organizational and social structures through which health services are delivered/received; and the public health system. Courses in the program demonstrate the ways in which the social, political, behavioral and biological sciences contribute to the understanding of national and international health care systems, resource allocation, and patterns of population distributions of health and disease. The program provides students with courses in basic research methods and statistics necessary for problem solving and critical thinking in the emerging emphasis on evidence-based health care and public health. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must submit a prospectus to the Honors Advisor by the end of the student's sixth semester. Students must have grades of A or B in all concentration courses, with A as the majority of grades. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Introduction to the Health Care System of the U.S., Introduction to Public Health, Survey Research Methods, Environmental Health and Policy. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Community Health | Department of Community Health, Box G-S121 121 South Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3172 | Our educational mission encompasses medical students, graduate students, fellows and baccalaureate level students in courses and educational experiences in a range of methodological areas. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Comparative Literature | This program enable students to study literature in cross-cultural perspectives. The aim of the program is to encourage students to study a varied and illustrative range of literary topics rather than the total development of a single literary tradition. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - COLT 0610G Literature and the American Presidency, COLT 0610H Renaissance Epic, COLT 0710C Introduction to Scandinavian Literature, COLT 0710I New Worlds, COLT 0710Q Odysseus in Literature, COLT 0810H How Not to Be a Hero, COLT 0810I Tales and Talemakers of the NonWestern World, COLT 0810J The Colonial and Postcolonial Marvelous, COLT 0810K Dropping Out in Morocco, COLT 0810X European Renaissances, COLT 0810Y Greece in the Imagination of Western Authors, COLT 1410K European Early Modern Drama, COLT 1420R The 1001 Nights, COLT 1420U The South: Literature of the U.S. South and South America, COLT 1421A European Fiction, COLT 1421C Subaltern Studies: History, Literature, Theory, COLT 1421D Mediterranean Islands, COLT 1430D Critical Approaches to Chinese Poetry, COLT 1430K The Classical Tradition in English Poetry, COLT 1430N The Albatross and the Nightingale: NineteethCentury Poetry, COLT 1710A Translation as Art, COLT 1810C City (B)Lights, COLT 1810G Fiction and History, COLT 1810I Gates of Asia, COLT 1810N Freud: Writer and Reader, COLT 1810P Literature and Medicine, COLT 1811J The Paternalistic Thiller and other Studies in Colonial Fiction, COLT1811X Marx and his Critics, COLT1811Y Genius and Melancholia in the Renaissance. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Comparative Literature | Department of Comparative Literature, Marston Hall Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2818 | Department of Comparative Literature is distinct in its conviction that literary research and instruction must be international in character, and its undergraduate and graduate programs are considered among the finest in the country. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Literary Arts Program | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain the grade points required for the honors program in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - LITR 0110A-S01 - Fiction I, LITR 0110A-S02 - Fiction I, LITR 0110A-S03 - Fiction I, LITR 0110A-S04 - Fiction I, LITR 0110B-S01 - Poetry I, LITR 0110B-S02 - Poetry I, LITR 0110B-S03 - Poetry I, LITR 0110C-S01 - Playwriting I, LITR 0110C-S02 - Playwriting I, LITR 0110E-S01 - Screenwriting I, LITR 0210A-S01 - Fiction Writing II, LITR 0210A-S02 - Fiction Writing II, LITR 0210B-S01 - Poetry Writing II, LITR 0210B-S03 - Poetry Writing II, LITR 0210C-S01 - Playwriting II, LITR 0210D-L01 - Electronic Writing II, LITR 0210D-S01 - Electronic Writing II, LITR 0210E-S01 - Screenwriting II, LITR 0310A-S01 - Poetry in Service to Schools and the Community, LITR 0510A-S01 - Masters and Servants, LITR 1010A-S01 - Advanced Fiction, LITR 1010A-S02 - Advanced Fiction, LITR 1010A-S03 - Advanced Fiction, LITR 1010B-S01 - Advanced Poetry, LITR 1010F-S01 - Advanced Translation, LITR 1010G-S01 - Cave Writing, LITR 1110P-S01 - Alternative Scriptwriting: Writing Beyond the Rules, LITR 1110Q-S01 – Music, LITR 1110R-S01 - Performance Dimensions of Text, LITR 1150G-S01 - Books by Hand, LITR 1150H-S01 - Latin-American Poetry Live, LITR 1150P-S01 - John Cage and Meditative Poetics, LITR 1150R-S01 - Exemplary Ancient Fictions, LITR 1230I-S01 - The Documentary Vision in Recent American Literature, LITR 1230J-S01 - Writing: Material Difference, LITR 1410A-S01 - Fiction Honors, LITR 1410C-S01 - Playwriting Honors, LITR 2010A-S01 - Graduate Fiction, LITR 2010B-S01 - Graduate Poetry, LITR 2010C-S01 - Graduate Playwriting, LITR 2110B-S01 - Collaborative Languages, LITR 2110E-S01 - The Foreign Home: Interdisciplinary Arts. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Literary Arts Program | Literary Arts Program, Box 1923, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3260 | For nearly 40 years, the Brown University Program in Literary Arts has been a creative and intellectual center for the U.S. literary avant-garde.Along with only a handful of other writing programs nationwide, Brown’s Program in Literary Arts provides a home for innovative writers of fiction, poetry, playwriting, electronic writing (hypertext) and mixed media. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Education Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Education | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a minimum grade that includes more A's than B's. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EDUC0410E Empowering Youth: Insights from Research on Urban Adolescents, EDUC0800 Introduction to Human Development and Education, EDUC1260 Emotion, Cognition, Education, EDUC1270 Adolescent Psychology, EDUC1430 The Psychology of Race, Class, and Gender, EDUC1450 The Psychology of Teaching and Learning, EDUC1580 CrossCultural Perspectives on Child Development, EDUC1710 History and Theories of Child Development, EDUC1750 Contemporary Social Problems: Views from Human Development and Urban Education, EDUC1850 Moral Development and Education, EDUC1860 Social Context of Learning and Development, EDUC0400 The Campus on Fire: American Colleges and Universities in the 1960s, EDUC0410B Controversies in American Education Policy: A Multidisciplinary Approach, EDUC0410D Brown v. Board of Education, EDUC0850 History of Intercollegiate Athletics, EDUC0900 Fieldwork and Seminar in Secondary Education, EDUC1010 The Craft of Teaching, EDUC1020 The History of American Education, EDUC1040 Sociology of Education, EDUC1050 History of AfricanAmerican Education, EDUC1060 Politics and Public Education, EDUC1130 Analyzing Education Policy: Lessons from Economics, EDUC1150 Education, the Economy and School Reform, EDUC1160 Evaluating the Impacts of Social Programs, EDUC1200 History of American School Reform, EDUC1650 Policy Implementation in Education, EDUC1730 American Higher Education in Historical Context, EDUC1740 Academic Freedom on Trial: A Century of Campus Controversies. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Education | Department of Education, 21 Manning Walk, Box 1938, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2407 | The Education Department focuses its scholarly and teaching efforts on the study of human learning and development, the history of education, teaching, school reform, and education policy. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Egyptian and Ancient Western Asian Archaeology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | This program is intended for those interested chiefly in the cultures of Egypt and Ancient Western Asia (the ancient ‘Near East’ — Anatolia, the Levant, Mesopotamia), from prehistoric through Islamic times. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ARCH 0100 Field Archaeology in the Ancient World, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, ARCH 0325 "Dead White Guys": Greco-Roman Civilization and American Identity, ARCH 0420 Archaeologies of the Greek Past, ARCH 0650 Islamic Civilizations, ARCH 1120 Pompeii, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, ARCH 1625 Temples and Tombs: Egyptian Religion and Culture, ARCH 1710 Architecture and Memory, ARCH 1780 Violence and Civilization: A Deep History of Social Violence, ARCH 1860 Engineering Material Culture: An Introduction to Archaeological Science, ANTH 0520 Classic Mayan, ANTH 1121 Nations within States, ANTH 1570 No. American Archaeology, ANTH 1620 Global Historical Archaeology, ANTH 1710 Biological Issues, ANTH 2410 Exhibitions in Museums, ANTH 2520 Mesoamerican Seminar, CLAS 0210L Who Owns the Classical Past?, EGYT 1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0560 The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 1040G Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden of China, HIAA 1440D Topics in Medieval Architecture: The Gothic Cathedral, HIAA 1850C Topics in 20th Century: The City of Paris Urbanism and Architecture, JUDS 1400 The Archaeology of Palestine. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World | Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Box 1837, 70 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3188 | The Artemis A. W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World is dedicated to the academic study and public promotion of the archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean, Egypt, and Western Asia (the latter broadly construed as extending from Anatolia and the Levant to the Caucasus, and including the territories of the ancient Near East); Principal research interests lie in the complex societies of the pre-modern era. Although the core efforts of the Joukowsky Institute are archaeological in nature and are located within this broadly defined zone, close ties with all individuals interested in the ancient world, and with archaeologists of all parts of the globe, are welcome and actively encouraged. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Egyptology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must accumulate a 3.5 grade point average by the end of the junior year. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EGYT1200, 1210 Archaeology of Ancient Egypt I, II, EGYT1310, 1320 An Introduction to Middle Egyptian I, II, EGYT1330 Selection From Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, EGYT1340 Selections From Middle Egyptian Hieratic Texts, EGYT1410 Ancient Egyptian Literature, EGYT1420 Ancient Egyptian Religion and Magic, EGYT1430 History of Egypt I The History and Society of Ancient Egypt, EGYT1440 History of Egypt II The New Kingdom, EGYT1450 History of Egypt III Libyans, Nubians, and Persians in Egypt, EGYT1460 History of Egypt IV The Age of Cleopatra, EGY1500 Ancient Egyptian Art and Architecture, EGYT1510 Ancient Egyptian Art II, EGYT1600 Astronomy Before the Telescope, EGYT1700 Astronomy, Divination and Politics in the Ancient World, EGYT1910,1920 Senior Seminar I, II, HMAT0200 Introduction to Akkadian, HMAT0210 Intermediate Akkadian. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies, Box 1899 Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3132 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is an expansion of the existing Department of Egyptology, founded at Brown in 1948. This new academic unit is still forming and operating on a relatively small scale, as its expansion takes shape. Plans for the new department involve widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia, also known as the Ancient Near East. The Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is a new department designed to explore what is sometimes called the birthplace of Western civilization. It builds on the strengths of Brown’s former Department of Egyptology, widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Ethnic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America | The program is organized around a set of core Ethnic Studies courses, intended to help students identify a set of historical and theoretical questions to be studied, and to give them the tools necessary to address the questions in a systematic and well-defined manner. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must write a senior honors thesis and maintain a overall GPA of 3.5 in concentration courses. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - AFRI 0210 Blacks in Latin American History and Society, AFRI 1060F Philosophy and Race, AFRI 1210 Afro-Brazilians and the Brazilian Polity, AFRI 1800 Race, Empire and Modernity, AMCV 0150H China in the American Imagination, AMCV 0190F Race, Sex and Biology A Cultural History of Differences, AMCV 0190H Chinatown Race, Power and the American City, AMCV 1621I Women on the Move Gender, Sexuality and Migration, AMCV 1902R Race and Psychoanalysis, AMCV 1903P Please, Please Me, ANTH 0400 Growing Up Ethnic and Multicultural, ANTH 0066L Signing and Language, ANTH 1119Andean Anthropology, ANTH 1121 Coyote to Casinos Native North America Peoples and Cultures, ANTH 1221 Anthropology of Masculinity, ANTH 1810 Language and Power, ANTH 2040 Advanced Social Theory, EAST 1070 China Modern An Introduction to the Literature of Twentieth Century China, EDUC 0410D Brown v. Board of Education, EDUC 1020 The History of American Education, EDUC 1430 The Psychology of Race, Class, and Gender, EDUC 2340 Human Development and Urban Education, ENGL 1760O American Orientalism, HIST 0510 American History to 1877, HIST 0970P Culture and the U.S. Empire, HIST 1890 History of American Foreign Relations I, HIST 2980C Race, Ethnicity and Identity, HMAN 1970A Eating Cultures Food and Society, INTL 1800J Identity, Rights and Conflict, LAST 1510E Race, Music and Literature in the Spanish Caribbean, RUSS 0990 The Black Experience in Russia and the Soviet Union, TSDA 0800A 21st Century American Drama, TSDA 1281G Caribbean Culture and Performance, TSDA 1610 Political Theatre of the Americas. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America | Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America, Dyer House, 150 Power Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3080 | Brown University has a long and distinguished history of recognizing and encouraging diversity, exemplified not merely in the racial composition of the student body, but also academically through its curricular options. The Ethnic Studies concentration was added to the Brown curriculum in 1996 as an interdisciplinary and comparative concentration that examines the construction of race and ethnicity in social, cultural, historical, political, and economic contexts. The ET concentration is housed at the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America (CSREA), which also supports a number of community-based research projects—English for Action, the Transcultural Community Health Initiative, and others. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in French Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | This program is designed to help students develop an understanding of French culture, history and contemporary issues, including Francophone countries and cultures. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must receive no grade lower than an "A" in her/his concentration program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - FREN 0100 Basic French, FREN 0200 Basic French, FREN 0220 Reading French in the Arts and Sciences, FREN 0300 Intermediate French I, FREN 0400 Intermediate French II, FREN 0500 Writing and Speaking French I, FREN 0520 Introduction to the Literary Experience, FREN 0600 Writing and Speaking French II, FREN 0720A From Courtly Love to Postmodern Desire, FREN 0750 Literature and Social Thought, FREN 0760 Intensive Introduction to Literature and Literary Methods, FREN 1000 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1010 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1020 Early French Language and Literature, FREN 1030 Studies in French Literature of the Renaissance, FREN 1040 Studies in French Literature of the Seventeenth Century, FREN 1040A Civilite et literature, FREN 1050 Studies in French Literature of the Eighteenth Century, FREN 1060 Studies in French Literature of the Nineteenth Century, FREN 1060B Gender and the Novel, FREN 1060F Paris: Capital of the 19th Century, FREN 1070 Studies in French Literature of the Twentieth Century, FREN 1070A AvantGardes, FREN 1070B Emergent literature: Postcolonial Nations and Cultural Identity, FREN 1070F Nations of Writers. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in French Language | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | The program helps students to combine advanced proficiency in uses of the language with an understanding of language as a human phenomenon, through work both in French Studies and in other disciplines that, variously, analyze the functioning of language (e.g., Linguistics), use linguistic models to study other fields of human behavior (e.g., Anthropology), or provide other specialized insight (e.g., Semiotics, Philosophy, language pathology). | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must receive no grade lower than an "A" in her/his concentration program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - FREN 0100 Basic French, FREN 0200 Basic French, FREN 0220 Reading French in the Arts and Sciences, FREN 0300 Intermediate French I, FREN 0400 Intermediate French II, FREN 0500 Writing and Speaking French I, FREN 0520 Introduction to the Literary Experience, FREN 0600 Writing and Speaking French II, FREN 0720A From Courtly Love to Postmodern Desire, FREN 0750 Literature and Social Thought, FREN 0760 Intensive Introduction to Literature and Literary Methods, FREN 1000 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1010 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1020 Early French Language and Literature, FREN 1030 Studies in French Literature of the Renaissance, FREN 1040 Studies in French Literature of the Seventeenth Century, FREN 1040A Civilite et literature, FREN 1050 Studies in French Literature of the Eighteenth Century, FREN 1060 Studies in French Literature of the Nineteenth Century, FREN 1060B Gender and the Novel, FREN 1060F Paris: Capital of the 19th Century, FREN 1070 Studies in French Literature of the Twentieth Century, FREN 1070A AvantGardes, FREN 1070B Emergent literature: Postcolonial Nations and Cultural Identity, FREN 1070F Nations of Writers. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in French Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | This program is to provide students with a comprehensive view of French and Francophone literature and various types of literary analysis. Both introductory and upper-level courses provide opportunities to explore a particular author, genre, period, or special topic, and to learn and use diverse analytical approaches, including semiotic, philosophical, psychological, feminist and reader-oriented methods of criticism. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must receive no grade lower than an "A" in her/his concentration program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - FREN 0100 Basic French, FREN 0200 Basic French, FREN 0220 Reading French in the Arts and Sciences, FREN 0300 Intermediate French I, FREN 0400 Intermediate French II, FREN 0500 Writing and Speaking French I, FREN 0520 Introduction to the Literary Experience, FREN 0600 Writing and Speaking French II, FREN 0720A From Courtly Love to Postmodern Desire, FREN 0750 Literature and Social Thought, FREN 0760 Intensive Introduction to Literature and Literary Methods, FREN 1000 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1010 Masterpieces of French Literature from the Middle Ages to the Present, FREN 1020 Early French Language and Literature, FREN 1030 Studies in French Literature of the Renaissance, FREN 1040 Studies in French Literature of the Seventeenth Century, FREN 1040A Civilite et literature, FREN 1050 Studies in French Literature of the Eighteenth Century, FREN 1060 Studies in French Literature of the Nineteenth Century, FREN 1060B Gender and the Novel, FREN 1060F Paris: Capital of the 19th Century, FREN 1070 Studies in French Literature of the Twentieth Century, FREN 1070A AvantGardes, FREN 1070B Emergent literature: Postcolonial Nations and Cultural Identity, FREN 1070F Nations of Writers. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Gender and Sexuality Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women | This program is an interdisciplinary concentration that examines the construction of gender and sexuality in social, cultural, political, economic, or scientific contexts. Each concentrator will focus on a well-defined topic or question and work closely with a concentration advisor to develop a program that investigates this focus area rigorously and supplements it with foundational courses in the relevant disciplines. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must receive no grade lower than an "A" in her/his concentration program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GNSS0090C Reproductive Health Science and Politics, GNSS0120 Introduction to Gender and Sexuality Studies, GNSS1810, GNSS1820 Independent Study and Research, GNSS1960A Feminist Ethnographies, GNSS1970, GNSS1980 Directed Research and Thesis, GNSS2010B, GNSS2020B Research Seminar Advanced Topics in Feminist Theory, AFRI0570 Black Feminist Thought and Practice, AFRI0710A Racial and Gender Politics in Contemporary Brazil, AMCV15 Women /Writing/Power Morrison, Condé, Kincaid, AMCV1612F Female Maladies Women and Mental Illness in the United States since 1860, AMCV1903U Sex Acts The Cultural Logics of Intimacy in America, ANTH2250 Psychology of Gender, ENGL1900R Queer Relations, FREN1900 French Feminisms, MCM15020 Feminism Meets Queery Theory, POLS2131 Politics of Gender, RELS1210 Religion and Gender in the Greco Roman Mediterranean. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women | Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women, 172 Meeting Street, Box l958, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2643 | The Pembroke Center was established in 1981 as a research center on gender. Funded in its early years by the Ford Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Rockefeller Foundation, the Center now supports its programs largely through its endowment, made possible by generous alumnae and other donors. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, numerous centers for research on women and gender were established in the US. What distinguished the Pembroke Center was its focus on the theoretical dimensions of the category of gender. The story of the Center's uniqueness can be seen in the relationship between its name and its research mission--a relationship that has carried a productive tension from the beginning. In 1981, a decade after the merger of Pembroke College into Brown University, the Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women was named in honor of Pembroke College and the history of women's efforts to gain access to higher education: the first two women were admitted to Brown in 1891; in 1928, the women's college was named Pembroke after Pembroke College at Cambridge University and retained that name until the 1971 merger. The name of the Center was designed to keep alive the history of women at Brown and Pembroke. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in German Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of German Studies | This program offers students an interdisciplinary approach to German culture in a wide variety of areas. Along with courses from the German Studies core program, students have the opportunity to take courses from other departments and programs that deal with topics from the German cultural tradition including History, History of Art and Architecture, Judaic Studies, Modern Culture and Media, Music, Philosophy, Political Science. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have superior record in departmental courses and will have to be approved by the Department of German Studies. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GRMN 0110 Intensive Beginning German, GRMN 0200 Beginning German, GRMN 0400 Intermediate German II, GRMN 0600B Was ist Deutsch?, GRMN 0750C Crime Fiction: The Global Hyper-Genre, GRMN 1320E Goethe und die Klassik, GRMN 1660D - History of the Theory of Photography, GRMN 1660Z Migrant Culture in Contemporary Culture, GRMN 1990B Site of Memory. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of German Studies | Department of German Studies, 190 Hope Street, Box 1979, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2596 | The Department of German Studies offers a full range of courses in German language, literature and culture. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Greek | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a Average of B grade overall in the program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GREK 0100 Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0110 Introduction to Ancient Greek, GREK 0200 Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0300 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 0310 Grammar Review and Composition, GREK 0400 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 1010 Introduction to Greek Drama, GREK 1050A Aristophanes, GREK 1050B Euripides, GREK 1050C Sophocles, GREK 1060 Herodotus. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Greek and Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a Average of B grade overall in the program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GREK 0100 Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0110 Introduction to Ancient Greek, GREK 0200 Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0300 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 0310 Grammar Review and Composition, GREK 0400 Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 1010 Introduction to Greek Drama, GREK 1050A Aristophanes, GREK 1050B Euripides, GREK 1050C Sophocles, GREK 1060 Herodotus, LATN 0100 Essentials of the Latin Language, LATN 0110 Introduction to Latin, LATN 0200 Essentials of the Latin Language, LATN 0300 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0310 Grammar Review and Composition, LATN 0400 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0510 Readings in Latin Literature, LATN 0510A Latin Mystical Writing, LATN 0510B Medieval Latin Lyric, LATN 1010 Latin Lyric: Catullus and Horace, LATN 1020 Cicero, LATN 1020B Cicero, Verrines. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Hispanic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Hispanic Studies | This program allows students to develop the linguistic competency and literary and cultural knowledge necessary for an understanding of the Spanish-speaking world. It provides grounding for careers in teaching, diplomacy, medicine, and any other field involving the Hispanic world. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have more A grades in their program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HISP 0200-S01 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S02 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S03 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S04 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S05 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S06 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S07 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S01 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S02 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S03 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0400-S01 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S02 Intermediate Spanish II Smith , HISP 0400-S03 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S04 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S05 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0500-S01 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S02 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S03 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S04 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S05 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S06 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0600-S01 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S02 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S03 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S04 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S05 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S06 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S07 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S08 Advanced Composition, HISP 0730-S01 Early and Contemporary Writers of Spanish America Wey-Gomez, HISP 0740-S01 Intensive Survey of Spanish Literature Vaquero, HISP 0750B-S01 Hispanics in the United States Bauer, HISP 0750K-S01 To Be Determined, HISP 1210C-S01 History of the Spanish Language Vaquero, HISP 1240H-S01 Spanish Golden Age Stories, HISP 1330K-S01 Contemporary Poetry of Latin America Mazzucchelli, HISP 1330N-S01 Early Transatlantic Encounters Wey-Gomez, HISP 1370N-S01 Carlos Fuentes y Nueva Narrativa Mexicana Ortega, HISP 1370Q-S01 Caribbean Messianisms and Utopias Price. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Hispanic Studies | Department of Hispanic Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2569 | The Department of Hispanic Studies at Brown offers an in-depth introduction to Hispanic culture. At the undergraduate level it offers the possibility of learning the language and culture of both Spain and Latin America, and at the graduate level it trains students to become effective teachers and scholars. The faculty members represent a broad range of approaches to language, literature, and culture, from philology to literary theory and cultural studies. All courses are taught in Spanish, and the development of fluency in reading, speaking, and writing the target language is an important goal in all classes. However, the goals of the department go beyond language instruction, as it seeks to prepare students to be able to understand a completely different national, continental, and global reality in all its complexity. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Hispanic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Hispanic Studies | This program allows students to develop the linguistic competency and literary and cultural knowledge necessary for an understanding of the Spanish-speaking world. It provides grounding for careers in teaching, diplomacy, medicine, and any other field involving the Hispanic world. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have more A grades in their program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HISP 0200-S01 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S02 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S03 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S04 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S05 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S06 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0200-S07 Basic Spanish Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S01 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S02 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0300-S03 Intermediate Spanish I Schuhmacher, HISP 0400-S01 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S02 Intermediate Spanish II Smith , HISP 0400-S03 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S04 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0400-S05 Intermediate Spanish II Smith, HISP 0500-S01 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S02 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S03 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S04 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S05 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0500-S06 Advanced Spanish Conversation/Hispanic Cultures and Civilization Sobral, HISP 0600-S01 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S02 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S03 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S04 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S05 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S06 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S07 Advanced Composition Schuhmacher, HISP 0600-S08 Advanced Composition, HISP 0730-S01 Early and Contemporary Writers of Spanish America Wey-Gomez, HISP 0740-S01 Intensive Survey of Spanish Literature Vaquero, HISP 0750B-S01 Hispanics in the United States Bauer, HISP 0750K-S01 To Be Determined, HISP 1210C-S01 History of the Spanish Language Vaquero, HISP 1240H-S01 Spanish Golden Age Stories, HISP 1330K-S01 Contemporary Poetry of Latin America Mazzucchelli, HISP 1330N-S01 Early Transatlantic Encounters Wey-Gomez, HISP 1370N-S01 Carlos Fuentes y Nueva Narrativa Mexicana Ortega, HISP 1370Q-S01 Caribbean Messianisms and Utopias Price. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Hispanic Studies | Department of Hispanic Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2569 | The Department of Hispanic Studies at Brown offers an in-depth introduction to Hispanic culture. At the undergraduate level it offers the possibility of learning the language and culture of both Spain and Latin America, and at the graduate level it trains students to become effective teachers and scholars. The faculty members represent a broad range of approaches to language, literature, and culture, from philology to literary theory and cultural studies. All courses are taught in Spanish, and the development of fluency in reading, speaking, and writing the target language is an important goal in all classes. However, the goals of the department go beyond language instruction, as it seeks to prepare students to be able to understand a completely different national, continental, and global reality in all its complexity. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History | The program entails the study of chronologically and culturally diverse societies, considered singly and comparatively. The aim of the program is to provide students with appreciation of different approaches to the study of the past and to encourage them to develop an understanding of the ways in which societies and cultures change over time. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must be a History concentrator meeting all the grade point requirements for the honors program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HIST 0020S01 Europe since the French Revolution Richards, HIST 0420S01 Introduction to East Asian Civilization: Japan Smith, HIST 0520S01 American History since 1877 Chudacoff, HIST 0971AS01 The Holy Grail and the Historian's Quest for the Truth Remensnyder, HIST 1000BS01 The Shaping of the Classical World: Greeks, Jews, and Romans Sacks, HIST 1010BS01 Roman History II Kennelly, HIST 1040S01 Europe in the High Middle Ages (ca. 1000ca. 1450) Remensnyder, HIST 1050S01 Renaissance Italy Nummedal, HIST 1120S01 Revolution from Below: Political Violence in Southern Europe and the Balkans Kornetis, HIST 1140S01 Nature, Knowledge, and Power in Early Modern Europe Nummedal, HIST 1220S01 European Intellectual and Cultural History: Exploring the Modern, 18801914 Gluck, HIST 1310S01 Empire to Cool Britannia: TwentiethCentury Britain Cohen, HIST 1350S01 Modern Genocide and Other Crimes against Humanity, HIST 1380S01 History of Chinese Political Thought, HIST 1410S01 Modern Russia to the Revolution, HIST 1440S01 Islamic History, 14001800 Akarli, HIST 1520BS01 Twentieth Century China Swislocki, HIST 1530S01 Modern Korea: Contending with Modernity McClain, HIST 1540S01 Samurai and Merchants, Prostitutes and Priests: Japanese Urban Culture in the Early Modern Period McClain, HIST 1620S01 Colonial Latin America, HIST 1630S01 Modern Latin America I LopezDenis, HIST 1730S01 Antebellum America and the Road to Civil War Rockman, HIST 1750S01 Politics and Culture in the U.S. Since 1945, HIST 1790S01 North American Environmental History Jacoby, HIST 1850S01 American Legal and Constitutional History Vorenberg, HIST 1870S01 Modern France Colvin, HIST 1900S01 History of American Foreign Relations II Shibusawa, HIST 1950FS01 From Morocco to China:Frontier Societies, Cultural Brokers, Multiple Identities in Portuguese Empire Flores, HIST 1970FS01 The Problem of Class in Early American History Rockman, HIST 1970GS01 American Indian History Jacoby, HIST 1970KS01 The Practice and Theory of Everyday Life Gluck, HIST 1970NS01 Autobiography and Memoirs in Recent American History Gorn, HIST 1970WS01 Medieval and Renaissance Medicine Nummedal. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History | Department of History, Box N, 79 Brown Street Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2131 | History department is one of the first institutions in the United States to provide for historical studies, Brown University has long valued and nurtured research in the Department of History. The faculty’s high standard of scholarship and excellence in teaching are well known, and members of the department are committed to the value a rigorous education in the humanities confers upon students. The department trains students in the fundamentals of historical thinking: skills and attitudes that will provide a foundation for excellence in a wide range of careers and professions, including teaching, law, medicine, business, public service, and advanced historical research. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in History of Art and Architecture | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History of Art and Architecture | This program provides essential training in perceptual, historical, and critical analysis that will allow them to pursue career opportunities in art and architectural history as well as a range of other professions. Career choices for students concentrating in History of Art are as diversified as any within the University. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - HIAA 0050C First Year Seminar: Illustrating Knowledge, HIAA 0080 Introduction to the History of Photography, HIAA 0110A Ancient China: Art and Archaeology, HIAA 0550 A Florence and Tuscany in the 15th Century, HIAA 0620 The Age of Rubens and Rembrandt: Visual Culture of the Netherlands in the 17th Century, HIAA 0080 20th Century European Art, HIAA 0860 A Contemporary Architecture, HIAA 1040H Topics in East Asian Art: The Shape of Good Fortune, HIAA 1200E Topics in Roman Art and Architecture: Roman Spectacles, HIAA 1600B Topics in 17th Century Art: Caravaggio, HIAA 1760B Topics in Later 19th Century Painting: French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Art, HIAA 1910 A Project Seminar for Architectural Studies Concentrators: Downtown Providence from Late 19th Century to Present , HIAA 2870E Special Topics: Art and Utopia in the 1960’s: The Artist as the Architect of a Free Society, HIAA 2920 Methods of Research and Art Historical Interpretation, HIAA 0010 A Introduction to History of Art and Architecture, HIAA 0050D First Year Seminar: Seeing and Writing on Contemporary Arts, HIAA 0200 Chinese Scholar Ink Painting, HIAA 0340A Roman Art and Architecture: Julius Caesar to Hadrian, HIAA 0490 A Urban Modernity and the Middle East, HIAA 0560A The Visual Culture of Early Modern Rome, HIAA 0750 Imagining Nation and Empire in Early 19th Century Europe, HIAA 0880 Contemporary Art I, HIAA 0910 Contemporary Photography, HIAA 1040I A Topics in East Asian Art: The Garden in China and Japan, HIAA 1430B Shaping Faith: Sacred Images in Medieval Art and Culture Pending Approval, HIAA 1600G Art and Religion in Early Modern Europe: Visual Communication. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History of Art and Architecture | Department of History of Art and Architecture, 64 College St, Box 1855, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1174 | The Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown University grants undergraduate degrees in the History of Art and Architecture, as well as in Architectural Studies.Graduate study in this department is geared toward earning a PhD in the History of Art, Architectural Studies, and many areas of visual culture from the ancient world through the present. Work in the department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown is conceived as an interdisciplinary undertaking, in which students are encouraged to become familiar with the variety of methodologies and practices that have historically been, and continue to be productive in fields. The department also maintain a longstanding commitment to museum studies and the study of objects through a close working relationship with the Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design.Interested students in this department have the opportunity to hold internships and (in the case of graduate students) proctorships at the museum. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Italian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Italian Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have grade points required for the honors program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - IT0200 Elementary Italian, IT0400 Intermediate Italian II, IT0600 Writing and Speaking Italian II, ITAL 0950 Introduction to Italian Cinema: Italian Film and History, ITAL 1020 Boccaccio's Decameron and the End of the World, ITAL 1400J Casanova, ITAL 1420 Sex and the Cities: Venice, Florence, and Rome, 14501800, ITAL 1620 The Divina Commedia: Dante's Paradiso: Justifying a Cosmos, ITAL 2200 Testifying to the Self: Legal, Literary, and Autobiographical Transcripts, ITAL 2820A Italian Studies Colloquium. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Italian Studies | Department of Italian Studies, 190 Hope Street, Box 1942, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1561 | Italian Studies at Brown not only teaches language and literature to students but guides their research toward problems that are cross-disciplinary in both content and method, rather than merely confirming a fixed canon or predetermined field of study. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Judaic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Program in Judaic Studies | This program allows students to learn how several academic disciplines deal with a single subject, the study of Jews and Judaism. The principal disciplines represented in the Program are History, Language (Hebrew, Aramaic), Literature, Religious Studies, and Sociology. The Program thus joins humanistic and social scientific approaches to learning. The educational goal of the concentration is to show how different scholarly disciplines approach the study of Jews and Judaism in different chronological settings ranging from biblical times to the present. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students should maintain an outstanding record (at least A-) in Judaic Studies courses. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - JUDS0110 Elementary Hebrew, JUDS0130 Intermediate Hebrew, JUDS0150 Writing and Speaking Hebrew, JUDS0470 The Hebrew Bible and the History of Ancient Israel, JUDS0980 Seminars in Judaic Studies, JUDS0980D Good and Evil, JUDS0980O Zionism, Anti-Zionism and Post-Zionism: past, Present, Future, JUDS1400 The Archaeology of Palestine, JUDS01980 Advanced Seminars in Judaic Studies, JUDS1980I Ethics, Love, and Justice: The Religious and Philosophical Thought of Emmanuel Levinas. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Program in Judaic Studies | Program in Judaic Studies, Brown University, 163 George Street Box 1826, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3912 | The Program in Judaic Studies is an interdisciplinary unit devoted to the academic study of Jews and Judaism in all historical and geographic contexts. The faculty includes scholars from both humanistic and social scientific disciplines, including anthropology, history, literary criticism, philosophy, and sociology.The program offers an undergraduate curriculum that covers a wide array of courses in Judaic Studies.Several faculty members are engaged in graduate instruction in other departments.In addition to faculty members with appointments in the Program, eight Brown faculty members with research and teaching interests in Judaic Studies are affiliated with the Program.Their home departments include Anthropology, History, Modern Culture and Media, Political Science, and Sociology. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Languages and Literatures of Greece, Rome, North Africa, pre-Islamic West and South Asia | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Ancient Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - GREK 0100 - Essentials of the Greek Language, GREK 0110 - Introduction to Ancient Greek, GREK 0300 - Introduction to Greek Literature, GREK 0310 - Grammar Review and Composition, GREK 1010 - Introduction to Greek Drama, GREK 1050 - Greek Drama, GREK 1110C Plato: Statesman, GREK 1110D - Plato: Symposium, SWED 0100 - Beginning Swedish, SWED 0200 - Beginning Swedish, SWED 0300 - Intermediate Swedish I, SWED 0400 - Intermediate Swedish II. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Ancient Studies | Department of Ancient Studies, Annmary Brown Memorial, 21 Brown Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | The Program in Ancient Studies was founded in the late 1970s, when faculty in various academic units sought new ways to foster collaboration and promote the study of ancient civilizations among Brown’s students. It is a Program of rich collaboration, critical exploration, and truly interdisciplinary scholarship that seeks to bring together all those at Brown (faculty, graduate students, undergraduates, and staff) who are interested in the cultures, religions, and histories of ancient civilizations. Geographically, the “ancient world” represented at Brown comprises early China and India, West Asia (Mesopotamia, Iran, Anatolia, and Israel), Egypt, the Mediterranean (especially Greece and Italy), the early Islamic and Byzantine worlds as well as the Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations. The faculty involved in Ancient Studies number close to forty, and the academic units involved include the departments of Anthropology, Classics, Comparative Literature, Egyptology, History, History of Art and Architecture, History of Mathematics, Philosophy, and Religious Studies, the Program in Judaic Studies, and the Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Late Antique Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program focuses on the third through the ninth centuries C.E., when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students should maintain grade points required for the honors program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Late Antique Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program focuses on the third through the ninth centuries C.E., when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students should maintain grade points required for the honors program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | This program is for those who wish to enter graduate school in preparation for a career in scholarship, and a broad liberal education for those with more general interests. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a Average of B grade overall in the program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - LATN 0100 Essentials of the Latin Language, LATN 0110 Introduction to Latin, LATN 0200 Essentials of the Latin Language, LATN 0300 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0310 Grammar Review and Composition, LATN 0400 Introduction to Latin Literature, LATN 0510 Readings in Latin Literature, LATN 0510A Latin Mystical Writing, LATN 0510B Medieval Latin Lyric, LATN 1010 Latin Lyric: Catullus and Horace, LATN 1020 Cicero, LATN 1020B Cicero, Verrines. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Latin American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Watson Institute for International Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies | This program is designed to help students develop an interdisciplinary understanding of culture, history, and contemporary issues in Latin American. Social, political, economic, literary, and cultural factors combine to explain the Latin American societies of today. The concentration in Latin American Studies provides the opportunity to use the methods of various disciplines and integrate different ways of knowing. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students maintain at least a B+ average in the ten courses counting for the concentration. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - LAST 1510B-S01 - The Struggle fo Human Rights in Brazil: Democracy without Citizenship, LAST 1510C-S01 - Democracy and the (Un)rule of Law in Latin America: Two Decades after Transitions, LAST 1510D-S01 - Pop Music + Soc Chng in Lat Am, LAST 1510E-S01 - Race, Music, Lit in Caribbean, LAST 1510G-S01 - Literature and Popular Culture in Latin America, LAST 1510H-S01 - Shaping the Brazilian Nation through Music, LAST 1990-S01 - Individual Thesis Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Watson Institute for International Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies | The Watson Institute for International Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University Box 1866 111 Thayer Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2106 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | This program is designed both for students interested in the discipline itself and also for those wishing to use their understanding of linguistic structure to pursue other disciplines. Linguists are concerned with such issues as what all human languages have in common, why languages change, how linguistic abilities interact with cognitive abilities, how language is learnable, and developing formal models of linguistic structure. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a good academic record in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - LAST 1510B-S01 - The Struggle fo Human Rights in Brazil: Democracy without Citizenship, LAST 1510C-S01 - Democracy and the (Un)rule of Law in Latin America: Two Decades after Transitions, LAST 1510D-S01 - Pop Music + Soc Chng in Lat Am, LAST 1510E-S01 - Race, Music, Lit in Caribbean, LAST 1510G-S01 - Literature and Popular Culture in Latin America, LAST 1510H-S01 - Shaping the Brazilian Nation through Music, LAST 1990-S01 - Individual Thesis Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Literatures and Cultures in English | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of English | This program helps students learn to think about the relation between a literary text and its moment in history; develop a sense of the work as shaped by, and shaping, contemporary practices and debates; and encounter critical models as bodies of knowledge with their own histories, tensions and traditions. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have more A grades than B grades in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGL0210E Three Great Poets: Shakespeare, Donne, Milton, ENGL0250E The Medieval King Arthur, ENGL0250F Shakespeare s Present Tense, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL1310B American Degenerates, ENGL1310V Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales, HMAN1970C Europe in the Vernacular, ENGL1360A The Stage as Globe in Renaissance Drama, ENGL1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, ENGL2360K The Renaissance and Modernity, ENGL2360M The Making of Shakespeare, ENGL0410A Literature and the Fantastic, ENGL0410F Devils, Demons, and Do-Gooders, ENGL0410H American Literature and the Sea, ENGL0410J The Literature of Identity from Shakespeare to Wilde, ENGL0450F Man and Machine, ENGL0450G The Transatlantic American Novel. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of English | Department of English, 70 Brown St., Box 1852, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2393 | English Department is also the home of Novel, one of the leading professional journals devoted to the study of narrative fiction. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Medieval Cultures | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries, combining interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with depth of study in one or two disciplines. One traditional area of study is Western Europe, but students are encouraged to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic and Slavic. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain the grade points required for the honors program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Modern Culture and Media - Italian | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain the grade points required for the honors program in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Modern Culture and Media - Track I | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program combines the study of contemporary theories of representation and cultural production with the analysis of diverse texts – visual and verbal, literary and historical, archival and imaginative – in the period broadly designated as “modern” (18th to 21st centuries). Since the appearance of modern means of textual production and reproduction (print, film, video, sound recording, digital practices, etc.), traditional artistic and literary forms have changed significantly and new forms have been developed. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain the grade points required for the honors program in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Modern Culture and Media - Track II | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | The Program in Medieval Studies | This program combines the study of contemporary theories of representation and cultural production with the analysis of diverse texts – visual and verbal, literary and historical, archival and imaginative – in the period broadly designated as “modern” (18th to 21st centuries). Since the appearance of modern means of textual production and reproduction (print, film, video, sound recording, digital practices, etc.), traditional artistic and literary forms have changed significantly and new forms have been developed. The program combines production courses with the critical study of the cultural role of practice. It aims to engage students in the analysis of theories of production elaborated within philosophical, artistic, and technological traditions, while encouraging them to produce works that interrogate these traditions. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain the grade points required for the honors program in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | The Program in Medieval Studies | The Program in Medieval Studies, Brown University, Box 1905, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1994 | Brown’s Program in Medieval Studies currently offers two concentrations: medieval cultures and late antique cultures. A concentration in medieval cultures focuses on the eighth through the fifteenth centuries and combines interdisciplinary perspectives on this period with in-depth study of one or two related disciplines. Late antique cultures deals with the third through the ninth centuries, when ancient cultural forms were still in place but medieval cultures were beginning to take shape simultaneously. The country’s first undergraduate degree of its field, the concentration in late antique cultures is organized to facilitate the study of human activity in all of its variety unrestricted by the conventional demarcations of classical and medieval studies. The concentration serves those students who are interested in the changing relation of the many kinds of cultural practices, social patterns, political, and economic forms, and artistic and literary traditions in this transitional period. The program encourages students to work in other cultural areas such as Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and Slavic studies in addition to a traditional area of study in Western Europe. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Music | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have and provide evidence of 3.5 cumulative GPA in course that count toward the concentration. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - Classics 660 The World of Byzantium, Classics 820 Epics of India, Classics 1120G Idea of Self, Comparative Literatue 701Q Odysseus in Literature, English 250E Medieval King Arthur, English 1310V Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, English 1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, French 1410M Liens communications et culturels au Moyen Age, History 1020 Living Together: Muslims, Christians, Jews in Medieval Iberia, History 1972H Sex, Power, and God: A Medieval Perspective, Latin 1110B Augustine, Confessions, Italian 1010 Dante’s World and the Invention of Modernity, Italian 1610 Divina Commedia: Inferno and urgatorio, Religious Studies 150 Introduction to Islam. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Music | Department of Music, Orwig Music Building - 1 Young Orchard Avenue, Box 1924, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3234 | The Department of Music at Brown provides an ideal environment for such an education, with its integrated faculty of scholars, performers, composers, and theorists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Neuroscience | The program offers study in the fields of knowledge important to an understanding of brain function. Neuroscience is an interdisciplinary program bringing together neurobiology (anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, molecular biology, development) with elements of psychology and cognitive science, as well as mathematical and physical principles involved in modeling neural systems. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have grade point average of at least 3.3 earned for courses in the concentration, including the background courses. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - NEUR 0010 The Brain: An Introduction to Neuroscience, NEUR 0190 Seeing with Sound: The Biology of Bats and Dolphins, NEUR 0650 Biology of Hearing, NEUR 1020 Principles of Neurobiology, NEUR 1030 Neural Systems, NEUR 1040 Developmental Neurobiology, NEUR 1600 Experimental Neurobiology, NEUR 1650 Structure of the Nervous System, NEUR 1660 Cognitive and Neural Systems, NEUR 1670 Neuropharmacology and Synaptic Transmission, NEUR 1680 Computational Neuroscience, NEUR 1930 Topics in Neuroscience. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Neuroscience | Department of Neuroscience, 185 Meeting Street, Box G-LN, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3440 | The Graduate Program in Neuroscience at Brown University offers advanced study for academic and research careers in the field of neuroscience. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Nonfiction Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of English | The Nonfiction Writing Honors Program is intended for students who have been highly successful in their English concentration work. English concentrators pursuing Honors in Nonfiction Writing need not choose the Nonfiction Writing focus in the concentration. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have more A grades than B grades in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - ENGL0210E Three Great Poets: Shakespeare, Donne, Milton, ENGL0250E The Medieval King Arthur, ENGL0250F Shakespeare s Present Tense, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL0400A Introduction to Shakespeare, ENGL1310B American Degenerates, ENGL1310V Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales, HMAN1970C Europe in the Vernacular, ENGL1360A The Stage as Globe in Renaissance Drama, ENGL1360H Seminar in Old English Literature, ENGL2360K The Renaissance and Modernity, ENGL2360M The Making of Shakespeare, ENGL0410A Literature and the Fantastic, ENGL0410F Devils, Demons, and Do-Gooders, ENGL0410H American Literature and the Sea, ENGL0410J The Literature of Identity from Shakespeare to Wilde, ENGL0450F Man and Machine, ENGL0450G The Transatlantic American Novel. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of English | Department of English, 70 Brown St., Box 1852, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2393 | English Department is also the home of Novel, one of the leading professional journals devoted to the study of narrative fiction. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Philosophy | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a grade point average of over 3.5 in philosophy courses. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHIL 0040S01 Reason and Religion, PHIL 0200CS01 Personal Identity, PHIL 0350S01 Ancient Philosophy, PHIL 0360S01 Early Modern Philosophy, PHIL 0540S01 Logic, PHIL 0880S01 Philosophical Themes in the Contemporary American Short Story, PHIL 0990GS01 Plato, PHIL 0990MS01 Descartes Meditations, PHIL 0990PS01 Personal Identity, PHIL 1250S01 Aristotle, PHIL 1420S01 Philosophy and Poetry , PHIL 1640S01 The Nature of Morality, PHIL 1650S01 Moral Theories, PHIL 1660S01 Metaphysics, PHIL 1750S01 Epistemology, PHIL 1760S01 Philosophy of Language, PHIL 1770S01 Philosophy of Mind, PHIL 1880S01 Advanced Deductive Logic, PHIL 2060GS01 Other Minds, PHIL 2120IS01 Frege, PHIL 2160GS01 Moral, Social, and Political Philosophical Issues in Malory's Morte d'Arthur, PHIL 2160HS01 Disability, Fiction, and Bioethics, PHIL 2170FS01 Philosophical Issues from Freud, PHIL 2180BS01 Civic Virtue and the Duties of Citizenship, PHIL 2190AS01 Skepticism, PHIL 2200S01 Graduate Proseminar. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Philosophy | Department of Philosophy, Box 1918, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2718 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Physics | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a GPA of 3.3 in the physics courses. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PHYS 0040-S01 - Basic Physics, PHYS 0040-S02 - Basic Physics, PHYS 0060-S01 - Foundations of Electromagnetism and Modern Physics, PHYS 0100-S01 - Flat Earth to Quantum Uncertainty: On the Nature and Meaning of Scientific Explanation, PHYS 0120-S01 - Adventures in Nanoworld, PHYS 0160-S01 - Introduction to Relativity and Quantum Physics, PHYS 0220-S01 - Beginning Astronomy, PHYS 0500-S01 - Advanced Classical Mechanics, PHYS 0560-S01 - Experiments in Modern Physics, PHYS 1100-S01 - Introduction to General Relativity, PHYS 1170-S01 - Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, PHYS 1420-S01 - Quantum Mechanics, PHYS 1560-S01 - Modern Physics Laboratory, PHYS 1600-S01 - Computational Physics, PHYS 1970B-S01 - Introductory Optics, PHYS 2010-S01 - Techniques in Experimental Physics, PHYS 2040-S01 - Classical Theoretical Physics II, PHYS 2060-S01 - Quantum Mechanics, PHYS 2140-S01 - Statistical Mechanics, PHYS 2170-S01 - Introduction to Nuclear and High Energy Physics, PHYS 2280-S01 - Astrophysics and Cosmology, PHYS 2300-S01 - Quantum Theory of Fields I, PHYS 2340-S01 - Group Theory, PHYS 2420-S01 - Solid State Physics II, PHYS 2620F-S01 - Selected Topics in Molecular Biophysics. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Physics | Department of Physics, Brown University, Box 1843, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2641 | Physics is the most fundamental of sciences. It provides a foundation of crucial ideas for other scientific fields, and the underpinnings of all of modern technology. The physics faculty at Brown is actively engaged in both teaching and research, including mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. Research focuses on phenomena ranging from the subatomic to the cosmic, and includes collaborative efforts with biologists, chemists, engineers, geologists, and mathematicians. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Political Science | The program offers opportunities for learning in a number of different areas. Students completing the program of study will be prepared for jobs in government, private corporations, and nonprofit organizations as well as for more advanced study in law, business, or graduate school. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must provide evidence of superior work in Political Science, as evidenced by an average of at least 3.5 (50% As) in graded courses in the concentration. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - POLS 0100S01 Introduction to Public Policy, POLS 0400S01 Introduction to International Politics, POLS 0500S01 Foundations of Political Analysis, POLS 0820OS01 Political Theory of Capitalism, POLS 0820PS01 Fourth Branch of Goverment, POLS 0820QS01 Politics and Film, POLS 0820RS01 Global Governance, POLS 1010S01 Topics in American Constitutional Law, POLS 1050S01 Ethics and Public Policy, POLS 1110S01 Mass Media, POLS 1130S01 The American Presidency, POLS 1210S01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1230S01 Politics of the Eastern European States, POLS 1250S01 The Politics of European Democracies, POLS 1450S01 Political Economy of Development, POLS 1480S01 Theory of International Relations, POLS 1510S01 Great Powers and Empires, POLS 1820BS01 Roots of Radical Islam, POLS 1820WS01 Market Liberalism: Origins, Principles and Contemporary Applications, POLS 1820XS01 States, Markets, Women and Welfare, POLS 1820ZS01 Latin American Politics, POLS 1821CS01 Economic Freedom and Social Justice, POLS 1821HS01 Authority and Legitimacy, POLS 1821JS01 Rhode Island Government and Politics, POLS 1821KS01 Just War Theory, POLS 1821QS01 The United States in World Politics, POLS 1821XS01 The Politics of Social Welfare in the Middle East, POLS 1920S01 Senior Honors Thesis Preparation, POLS 2051S01 Preparing the Prospectus II, POLS 2090GS01 Readings in American Institutions, POLS 2090HS01 Readings in Comparative Politics, POLS 2120S01 Proseminar in Political Theory I, POLS 2130S01 Proseminar in International Relations, POLS 2150S01 Democratic Theory, Justice, and the Law, POLS 2220S01 Urban Politics, POLS 2350S01 Freedom, Power and Politcal Action, POLS 2590S01 Quantitative Research Methods, POLS 2971S01 Preliminary Examination Preparation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Political Science | Department of Political Science, 36 Prospect Street, Box 1844, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2825 | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | This program is the study of the Portuguese-speaking world, a large and diverse geographical and cultural area spread over five continents, including Brazil, Continental and Insular Portugal, Lusophone Africa and Luso-America, and inhabited by two hundred million people. Although students are encouraged to explore the global nature of the Portuguese-speaking world, their individual program will generally focus on one of the specific geographical areas mentioned above. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a record better than average in the entire program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - POBS 0200S01 Elementary Portuguese, POBS 0400S01 Writing and Speaking Portuguese, POBS 0620S01 Mapping PortugueseSpeaking Cultures: Portugal and Africa, POBS 1080S01 Performing Brazil: Language, Theater, Culture, POBS 1500TS01 Jose Saramago and his Contemporaries, POBS 1600CS01 CrossCultural Perspectives on Education: Education and the PortugueseSpeaking World, POBS 1600MS01 Immigration into Southern Europe, POBS 1600QS01 Perceptions of the Other and Ethnographical Writing in Early Modern Portugal, POBS 1720S01 Literacy, Culture, and Schooling for the Language Minority Student, POBS 1800FS01 The Lusophone World and the Struggle for Modernity, POBS 2010AS01 Language Theory and Curriculum Development, POBS 2020AS01 Applied Linguistics for ESL, POBS 2600OS01 The Sage of Suspicion: Machado de Assis and the Agencies of Narrative. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, 159 George Street Meiklejohn House, Box O, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3042 | The Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies has an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching on the Portuguese-speaking world — a vast geographical area encompassing eight different countries on four continents (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor), in addition to long-standing immigrant communities in the United States. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Psychology | This program is designed for liberal arts students seeking an understanding of scientific psychology and for students preparing for advanced training and professional work. The program provide students with the flexibility to design a curriculum that best suits their interests and career goals. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a overall grade point of 3.5 in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are PSYC 0090S01 Quantitative Methods in Psychology, PSYC 0190CS01 Olfaction and Human Behavior, PSYC 0300S01 Personality, PSYC 0500S01 Mechanisms of Animal Behavior, PSYC 0750S01 Principles of Behavioral Neuroscience, PSYC 0810S01 Child Development, PSYC 1030S01 Techniques in Physiological Psychology, PSYC 1070S01 Psychological Theory, PSYC 1090S01 Research Methods in Psychology, PSYC 1410S01 Human Resilience, PSYC 1450S01 Animal Behavior Laboratory, PSYC 1540S01 Laboratory in Social Cognition, PSYC 1700S01 Behavior Modification, PSYC 1750BS01 Canine Behavior, PSYC 1790S01 Psychology of Timing, PSYC 1810S01 Seminar in Cognitive Neuroscience, PSYC 1830S01 Cognitive Aging and Dementia, PSYC 1840S01 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Theory and Practice, PSYC 1880S01 Seminar in the Neural Bases of Cognition, PSYC 2020S01 Quantitative Methods in Psychology, PSYC 2050S01 Practicum in Teaching, PSYC 2080S01 Multivariate Statistical Techniques, PSYC 2270S01 Graduate Core in the Neural Basis of Behavior. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Psychology | Department of Psychology, 89 Waterman Street, Box 1853, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2727 | Department of Psychology enters its second century, its research mission encompasses a wide range of phenomena and levels of analysis, organized in pursuit of three broad goals. One is to deepen an understanding of the cognitive and neural mechanisms of sensation, perception, learning, and emotion. A second is to probe the biological and evolutionary foundations of animal behavior. A third is to clarify the social perception and assessment of individuals and groups. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Public Policy and American Institutions | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Taubman Center for Public Policy | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain an overall GPA of 3.3 or higher in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - PPAI 0700AS01 Issues Facing Education Policy, PPAI 0700BS01 Issues Facing Healthcare, PPAI 0700DS01 Religion and Public Policy, PPAI 1200S01 Policy Analysis and Program Evaluation, PPAI 1510S01 The Corporation, Law and Society, PPAI 1700CS01 The Internet and Public Policy, PPAI 1700DS01 The Economics of Health Policy, PPAI 1700FS01 Economics and Public Policy, PPAI 1700GS01 Education Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700JS01 GIS and Public Policy, PPAI 1700NS01 Legal Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700OS01 Shaping Policy: Political Institutions in the United States, PPAI 1700QS01 Urban Policy Challenges, PPAI 1700SS01 Policies Affecting Working Families, PPAI 1700US01 Communications, Advocacy and Public Affairs, PPAI 1700VS01 Nonprofit Organizations, PPAI 1700XS01 Social Movements and Ethnic Conflicts, PPAI 1700YS01 Crisis Management, PPAI 1700ZS01 State and Local Government, PPAI 1701BS01 Public Organization and Management, PPAI 1701FS01 How Lawyers Think: Lessons in Reading, Reasoning and Rulership from American Legal Thought, PPAI 1701NS01 Issues Facing Legal Policy: Individual Rights Under the Federal Constitution, PPAI 1991S01 Public Policy Colloquium, PPAI 2010S01 Economics and Public Policy, PPAI 2040S01 Policy Analysis, PPAI 2130S01 Organizations and Policymaking, PPAI 2150S01 Strategic Communication, PPAI 2170S01 Leadership and Organization, PPAI 2250S01 U.S. National Security Policy, PPAI 2650S01 Congress and the Federal Budget: Procedure, Politics and Public Policy, PPAI 2800S01 Internship, PPAI 2900S01 Research Workshop. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Taubman Center for Public Policy | Taubman Center for Public Policy, 67 George Street, Box 1977, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2201 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Religious Studies | The program is expected to encompass the study of at least one religious tradition from each of the following groups. Ordinarily, this requirement is satisfied by two or more courses in each of these areas: Traditions that emerge from West Asia and the Mediterranean World and Traditions that emerge from South and East Asia. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Student must have at least a high B in the concentration and an A on the thesis. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - RELS 0140-S01Introduction to Indian Religions, RELS 0190-S01Japanese Religious Traditions, RELS 0280-S01Christian Ethical Theories, RELS 0290C-S01Christian Ethical Theories, RELS 0410-S01Christianity in Late Antiquity, RELS 0640-S01Martyrdom and Jihad in the Islamic Tradition, RELS 0820-S01Sexual Ethics, RELS 0910-S01Music, Drama, and Religion in India, RELS 1170A-S01Talmudic Historiography, RELS 1210-S01Religion and Gender in the Ancient Mediterranean, RELS 1220-S01Paul and the Philosophers, RELS 1520-S01Pilgrimage and Sacred Travel in the Lands of Islam, RELS 1610-S01Sacrifice and Society, RELS 1820-S01Religious Ethics and Human Rights, RELS 2160-S01Aramaic Readings, RELS 2200M-S01Early Christian Hymnography, RELS 2200N-S01Roman Religions, RELS 2500-S01Religion, Culture and Comparison: Description, Redescription and Comparison, RELS 2600F-S01Seminar on Religion and Critical Thought: Brandom. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Religious Studies | Department of Religious Studies, Box 1927, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3104 | The Department of Religious Studies at Brown University provides students with an understanding of diverse religious traditions, an exposure to a variety of approaches employed within the academic study of religion, as well as an opportunity to explore diverse intellectual, social-theoretical, and ethical issues that arise when one considers the various manifestation of religion in human affairs. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Science and Society | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Committee on Science and Technology Studies | This program examines the processes of scientific discovery and the establishment of scientific policies and systems of belief from historical, philosophical, anthropological and sociological perspectives | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain a high level of excellence in courses within the concentration and above average performance in non-concentration courses. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - SCSO 0490S01 Introduction to Science Studies, SCSO 1400S01 Sci + Soc: Theories/Controvers , SCSO 1500S01 Objectivity and its Loss, SCSO 1550BS01 Neuroethics, SCSO 1900S01 Senior Seminar in Science and Society, SCSO 1900S01 Sr Sem in Science and Society. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Committee on Science and Technology Studies | Committee on Science and Technology Studies, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1000 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Semiotics - French | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | This program is offered jointly between the Department of French Studies and the Department of Modern Culture and Media. It is intended for students who wish to receive special preparation in French language and literature, with emphasis on contemporary semiotic theory, and those students whose primary interest is in theory and who wish to strengthen their knowledge of French language, literature, and culture (civilization). | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must maintain the grade points required for the honors program in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - MCM 0150S01 Text/Media/Culture: Readings in Theory, MCM 0260S01 Cinematic Coding and Narrativity, MCM 0710S01 Introduction to Cinematic Practice, MCM 0730S01 Introduction to Video Production, MCM 0740S01 Intermediate Video Production, MCM 0780S01 Ethnography, the Minor, and the Self, MCM 0790S01 This is a Public Service Announcement, MCM 0800ES01 Race and Imagined Futures, MCM 0900SS01 Censorship and Film Style in Hollywood Cinema, MCM 0900TS01 Public Cinemas, Cinema Publics, MCM 1200GS01 Cinema and Stardom: Image/Industry/Fantasy, MCM 1200XS01 Contemporary Chinese Cinema, MCM 1201AS01 Literature and Society, MCM 1201ES01 Feminist Theories of Sexual Subjectivity, MCM 1201FS01 After Poststructuralism Multiplicities, MCM 1500OS01 From Classical Film Theory to Cinema Semiotics, MCM 1500WS01 Foucault and his Interlocutors, MCM 1502OS01 Feminism Meets Queer Theory, MCM 1502PS01 Nation and Identity in Cinema, MCM 1502QS01 The Question of Psychoanalytic Criticism, MCM 1700QS01 Approaches to Media Form, MCM 2310DS01 The Idea of a Medium, MCM 2310ES01 TV Space and Time. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Slavic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Slavic Languages | This program integrates study of the languages, literatures, and civilizations of the Slavic world. Built on sound knowledge of one or two Slavic languages. The program allows students to develop an in-depth appreciation and understanding of the East European cultures and civilizations on which they are primarily focused through a broad spectrum of interdisciplinary fields at Brown. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have an excellent academic record, particularly in the concentration. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - SLAV 1300 S01 Sociolinguistics, SLAV 1770 S01 Prague and St. Petersburg: A Tale of Two Cities, SLAV 1790 S01 Looking for a Centre: East Central European Modernism, SLAV 1890 S01 Slavic Contributions to Literary Theory, SLAV 1950 S01 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S02 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S03 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S04 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S05 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S06 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S07 Independent Study LAV 1950 S08 Independent Study, SLAV 1950 S09 Independent Study , SLAV 1970B S01 Spirituality in Russian Literature, SLAV 1981 S01 Ind Study Research Slavic Lang, SLAV 1981 S02 Ind Study Research Slavic Lang, SLAV 1981 S03 Ind Study Research Slavic Lang, SLAV 1981 S04 Ind Study Research Slavic Lang, SLAV 1990 S01 Senior Thesis, SLAV 1990 S02 Senior Thesis, SLAV 1990 S03 Senior Thesis, SLAV 1990 S04 Senior Thesis, SLAV 1990 S05 Senior Thesis, SLAV 2970 S01 Preliminary Examination Prep, SLAV 2980 S01 Advanced Reading and Research. |
Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Slavic Languages | Department of Slavic Languages, 20 Manning Walk, Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2689 | The Department of Slavic Languages is Brown University’s center for studying the cultures and literatures of Russia and other Slavic countries. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Sociology | The program helps students develop a versatile and marketable skill set, including: critical thinking and analysis; polished written and oral communication; collection and interpretation of data, including statistical information; and in-depth engagement with the major social and policy issues. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students are required to have a grade of "A" in at least one half of all sociology courses. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - SOC 0020-S01 Perspectives on Social Interaction: An Introduction to Social Psychology, SOC 0170-S01 The Family, SOC 0200-S01 Population and Society, SOC 0300E-S01 HIV/AIDS: Politics, Culture and Society, SOC 1050-S01 Methods of Research in Organizations, SOC 1060-S01 Leadership in Organizations, SOC 1090-S01 Theories of Organizational Dynamics and Decision Making, SOC 1100-S01 Introductory Statistics for Social Research, SOC 1260-S01 Market Research in Public and Private Sectors, SOC 1270-S01 Race, Class, and Ethnicity in the Modern World, SOC 1330-S01 Remaking the City, SOC 1600-S01 Comparative Development, SOC 1640-S01 Social Exclusion, SOC 1870A-S01 Investing in Social Change, SOC 1871B-S01 Sociological Perspectives on Poverty, SOC 1871H-S01 Social Perspectives on HIV/AIDS, SOC 1950-S01 Senior Seminar, SOC 2020-S01 Multivariate Statistical Methods II, SOC 2050-S01 Contemporary Sociology, SOC 2080-S01 Principles of Population, SOC 2090-S01 Culture and Social Structure, SOC 2130-S01 Health, Illness and Medicine in Social Context, SOC 2200-S01 Social Capital and Social Networks, SOC 2210-S01 Qualitative Methods, SOC 2350-S01 Social Movements in Health, SOC 2380-S01 Mortality and Morbidity, SOC 2510-S01 Teaching Practicum in Sociology. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Sociology | Department of Sociology, 112 George Street, Box 1916, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2367 | Sociology as a discipline provides students with the conceptual and analytic tools to make sense of complex social structures in a rapidly changing global environment. Brown’s Sociology department brings together a dynamic group of scholars with international reputations for outstanding achievement in core research areas—social demography, the sociology of health, and macrosociology. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Center for Statistical Sciences | The program is constructed on several premises: that statistics is a scientific discipline in its own right, with its characteristic methodology and body of knowledge; that it is essentially concerned with the art and science of the analysis of data; and that it is best taught in conjunction with specific, substantive applications. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have a superior record in the concentration. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - EC0163, 0164 Econometrics, EC0203 Introduction To Econometrics I, EC0204 Econometric Methods, EC0263 Econometric Theory, EC0264 Microeconometrics, SO0222 Adv. Quantitative Methods of Sociology Analysis, SO0223 Techniques of Demographic Analysis, AM0171 Information Theory, AM0282 Statistical Inference in Molecular Biology, BI0142 Experimental Design, BC0261 Statistical Methods in Bioinformatics, BC0250 Modern methods for Categorical Data Analysis, BC0251 Generalized Linear Model, BC0212 Methods in Epidemiologic Research, BC0252 Analysis of Lifetime Data, BC0234 Clinical Trials Methodology, BC0253 Analysis of Longitudinal Data, BC0260 Bayesian methods. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Center for Statistical Sciences | Center for Statistical Sciences, Brown University, Box G-S121-7 121 S. Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 9181 | The Brown University Center for Statistical Sciences (CSS) was founded in 1995 to foster research and statistical education at Brown Medical School and the University at large. Center activity and personnel have grown over the years to the present configuration of over twenty faculty members, staff biostatisticians, graduate student assistants, and administrative and computing support personnel. The Center is located at 121 S. Main Street and has state-of-the-art computing facilities and networking infrastructure. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Urban Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Urban Studies Program | The program focuses on urban phenomena through the approaches of different disciplines, thus providing an interdisciplinary context in which to understand various dimensions of the urbanization process. Although the program provides sufficient flexibility to allow students to pursue specific interests without being overly bound by requirements, it is designed so that there is a core content. The primary aim of the program is to contribute to a broad, liberal education. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have an average academic record in the program. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - URBN 1000S01 Fieldwork in the Urban Community, URBN 1200S01 The United States Metropolis, 19452000, URBN 1420S01 Urbanization in China, URBN 1870AS01 American Culture and the City, URBN 1870DS01 Downtown Development, URBN 1870FS01 Housing and Homelessness, URBN 1870IS01 The Changing American City. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Urban Studies Program | Urban Studies Program, Brown University, P.O. Box 1833 29 Manning Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401863 2090 | The Brown Urban Studies Program is the quintessential interdisciplinary program. The core faculty members come from 8 academic disciplines and students draw on very diverse ideas and methods. The program organize students approach around a set of basic research and teaching areas that reflect the depth and diversity of the program: urban development and economics, urban politics and community, the urban built environment, American urban history, suburbanization, and literary representations of urban space and social relations. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Honors in Visual Art | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Visual Art | The program is directed towards the practice of art, is broadly based in the studio areas of painting, sculpture, printmaking, drawing, photography, and digital imaging. Courses in art history combine with these to frame the direction of the concentrator's work and give them skills in critical thinking. Students are encouraged to develop their own direction and to cultivate an informed and thoughtful individual perspective. | Students applying for this program must have official transcript of complete high school academic record. Documents should be issued in English or with official translations along with original documents in the original language. Students are requested to take SAT Reasoning Test and any two SAT Subject Tests (except for the SAT Writing Test), or the ACT taken with the Writing Test option. If native language is not English students are requested to take TOEFL exams. A TOEFL score of 600 or above on the written exam, or 250 or above on the computer-based exam, is required in most cases. Students must have grade points required for the honors program in the entire program of study. | Bachelor degree | Brown University | The courses are - VISA 0100-S01 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S02 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S03 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S04 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S05 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S06 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0100-S07 - Studio Foundation, VISA 0110-S01 - Advanced Studio Foundation, VISA 0120-S01 - Foundation Media: Sound and Image, VISA 0120-S02 - Foundation Media: Sound and Image, VISA 0130-S01 - 3-D Foundation, VISA 1120-S01 - Drawing II, VISA 1210E-S01 – Printmaking, VISA 1210G-S01 – Silkscreen, VISA 1250-S01 - Art of the Book, VISA 1310-S01 - Painting I, VISA 1320-S01 - Painting II, VISA 1420-S01 - Sculpture II, VISA 1510-S01 - Photography I, VISA 1520-S01 - Photography II - Digital Photography, VISA 1720-S01 - New Genre: Physical Computing, VISA 1800A-S01 - Accessorizing Painting, VISA 1800G-S01 - Junior/Senior Seminar, VISA 1800L-S01 - Hybrid Art. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Visual Art | Department of Visual Art, List Art Building, 64 College Street Brown University Box 1861, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2423 | The Department of Visual Art is located in the List Building on the West end of campus at 64 College St. The department share the Philip Johnson designed building with the David Winton Bell Gallery, the History of Art and Architecture Department, and the Art Slide Library. The sculpture studio, at 4100 square feet, is outfitted for both wood and metal working. The painting studio, 4000 square feet on the 5th floor, is lit by north facing skylights. Painting students get their own small studios. There is a similar size Printmaking facility on the 3rd floor, with equipment for relief, intaglio, lithography, and silk- screen. In addition the department have large format digital printers capable of printing works 40" wide and several feet long. Department have a photo classroom and darkroom facility, two 1400 square feet drawing studios, and a few smaller rooms for independent study studio space. The Bell Gallery, located on the first floor, mounts six shows a year of contemporary artists in both one person and group exhibitions. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Africana Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Africana Studies | The graduate program will train students to become skilled and informed educators, scholars and intellectuals poised to make significant contributions to academic and nonacademic communities and initiate cultural, economic, political, and social policies with humanitarian objectives informed by critical thinking and national and global perspectives on social and human development. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | The program will feature three areas of emphasis: 1) Studies in History, Politics, and Theory; 2) Studies in Literary, Expressive, and Performance Cultures; and 3) Studies in Feminism, Gender, and Sexuality. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Africana Studies | Department of Africana Studies, Box 1904 155 Angell Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3137 | Department of Africana Studies is the intellectual center for faculty and students interested in the artistic, historical, literary, and theoretical expressions of the various cultures of Africa and the African Diaspora. The Department is dedicated to the exploration and development of new knowledge about the cultures, histories, social formations and artistic expressions of Africa and various locations that comprise the African Diaspora. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in American Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of American Civilization | This program is most appropriate for international students. All students who seek admission to the terminal MA program in American Civilization must first communicate with the Director of Graduate Studies. Most students seeking an MA degree should apply to the MA in Public Humanities. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of American Civilization | Department of American Civilization, Box 1892 82 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2896 | The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was “to provide the student with a more comprehensive and better unified knowledge of American Civilization . . . than would be possible within the limits of a single department.” | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Anthropology | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Four core courses:ANTH2010 (AN 220) Principles of Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 2000 (AN 221), History of Ethnological Theory, ANTH 2501 (AN 270) Principles of Archaeology, ANTH 2800 (AN 280) Linguistic Theory and Practice. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, Box 1921, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3251 | Department of Anthropology faculty are trained as social and cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and anthropological linguists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Anthropology - Museum Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Anthropology | Emphasis is on a firm grounding in core courses taken by all Master's level students; on the study, analysis, and exhibition of material culture, and on museological study and practice. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, Box 1921, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3251 | Department of Anthropology faculty are trained as social and cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and anthropological linguists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Biostatistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Biostatistics Graduate Program | The masters programs leading to either the AM or ScM in Biostatistics provide advanced training in the theory and application of statistical methods in public health, clinical medicine, and the biological sciences. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Biostatistics Graduate Program | Biostatistics Graduate Program, 121 South Main Street, Box G-S121-7, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 9181 | Our program provides rigorous training in theory, methods and application of biostatistics, a wealth of opportunities for collaborative research, and an active and dedicated faculty. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Brazilian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | This interdisciplinary degree program is designed to provide recent graduates as well as mature professionals holding an A.B. degree and possessing a reading and speaking knowledge of Portuguese with a humanities/social science curriculum focusing on the Portuguese-speaking world. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, 159 George Street Meiklejohn House, Box O, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3042 | The Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies has an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching on the Portuguese-speaking world — a vast geographical area encompassing eight different countries on four continents (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor), in addition to long-standing immigrant communities in the United States. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Classics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | Classics at Brown covers the range of ancient studies, with strengths in classical literature, ancient history, philosophy, religion, and linguistics. Additional work is available in religious studies, history of science, and comparative literature, as well as in classical archaeology at the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. The program in Classics and Sanskrit offers courses in Sanskrit grammar, literature, philosophy, linguistics, and religion. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Comparative Literature | The department, in cooperation with the various literature departments and programs, offers a wide array of courses in literature, literary theory, and cultural studies. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Comparative Literature | Department of Comparative Literature, Marston Hall Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2818 | Department of Comparative Literature is distinct in its conviction that literary research and instruction must be international in character, and its undergraduate and graduate programs are considered among the finest in the country. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in ESL Education and Cross-Cultural Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | This interdisciplinary program offers graduate level study in advanced language and bilingual education for bilingual teachers of Portuguese as well as ESL training for teachers of ESL. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, 159 George Street Meiklejohn House, Box O, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3042 | The Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies has an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching on the Portuguese-speaking world — a vast geographical area encompassing eight different countries on four continents (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor), in addition to long-standing immigrant communities in the United States. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Egyptology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies will eventually encompass as well study of the ancient Near East from Mesopotamia to the Mediterranean. The graduate program includes archaeological courses in conjunction with the Artemis A.W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. Degrees are offered in Egyptology or Ancient Western Asian Studies, but the curriculum aims at a well-rounded knowledge of both areas of study. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies, Box 1899 Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3132 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is an expansion of the existing Department of Egyptology, founded at Brown in 1948. This new academic unit is still forming and operating on a relatively small scale, as its expansion takes shape. Plans for the new department involve widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia, also known as the Ancient Near East. The Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is a new department designed to explore what is sometimes called the birthplace of Western civilization. It builds on the strengths of Brown’s former Department of Egyptology, widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in English | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of English | The master’s program in literatures and cultures in English is intended for students seeking to engage in the advanced study of literature, theory, and literary criticism. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of English | Department of English, 70 Brown St., Box 1852, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2393 | English Department is also the home of Novel, one of the leading professional journals devoted to the study of narrative fiction. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History | The Brown University History Department regularly attracts high quality A.M. students, who actively participate in the department’s vibrant academic community of professional historians. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History | Department of History, Box N, 79 Brown Street Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2131 | History department is one of the first institutions in the United States to provide for historical studies, Brown University has long valued and nurtured research in the Department of History. The faculty’s high standard of scholarship and excellence in teaching are well known, and members of the department are committed to the value a rigorous education in the humanities confers upon students. The department trains students in the fundamentals of historical thinking: skills and attitudes that will provide a foundation for excellence in a wide range of careers and professions, including teaching, law, medicine, business, public service, and advanced historical research. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Political Science | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. The program thus equips students with analytical tools to understand the complex political issues and relationships of the contemporary era. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Political Science | Department of Political Science, 36 Prospect Street, Box 1844, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2825 | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Portuguese Bilingual Education and Cross-Cultural Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | This interdisciplinary program offers graduate level study in advanced language and bilingual education for bilingual teachers of Portuguese as well as ESL training for teachers of ESL. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, 159 George Street Meiklejohn House, Box O, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3042 | The Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies has an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching on the Portuguese-speaking world — a vast geographical area encompassing eight different countries on four continents (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor), in addition to long-standing immigrant communities in the United States. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | This interdisciplinary degree program is designed to provide recent graduates as well as mature professionals holding an A.B. degree and possessing a reading and speaking knowledge of Portuguese with a humanities/social science curriculum focusing on the Portuguese-speaking world. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, 159 George Street Meiklejohn House, Box O, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3042 | The Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies has an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching on the Portuguese-speaking world — a vast geographical area encompassing eight different countries on four continents (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor), in addition to long-standing immigrant communities in the United States. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Public Humanities | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of American Civilization | Working with the faculty of the Department, they design a course of study that will prepare them with the skills needed for a career in public humanities (for example, museums, historic preservation, or community cultural development) as well as a solid academic preparation in subject areas of interest. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of American Civilization | Department of American Civilization, Box 1892 82 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2896 | The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was “to provide the student with a more comprehensive and better unified knowledge of American Civilization . . . than would be possible within the limits of a single department.” | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Religious Studies | The Department of Religious Studies maintains exceptional strength in the study of religion in antiquity, modern religious thought, and the theoretical study of religion. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Religious Studies | Department of Religious Studies, Box 1927, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3104 | The Department of Religious Studies at Brown University provides students with an understanding of diverse religious traditions, an exposure to a variety of approaches employed within the academic study of religion, as well as an opportunity to explore diverse intellectual, social-theoretical, and ethical issues that arise when one considers the various manifestation of religion in human affairs. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Slavic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Slavic Languages | The program has a strong interdisciplinary focus and students are expected to work with departmental faculty as well as with faculty in related fields, such as comparative literature, theater, history, art history, modern culture and media, and political science. The program will train flexible and innovative scholars able to address varying teaching and research needs in the future job market. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Slavic Languages | Department of Slavic Languages, 20 Manning Walk, Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2689 | The Department of Slavic Languages is Brown University’s center for studying the cultures and literatures of Russia and other Slavic countries. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.A. in Urban Education Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Education | The tightly focused academic curriculum, integrated with a nine-month internship, is designed to impart a set of core skills and competencies that are necessary for successful careers in urban education policy. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Education | Department of Education, 21 Manning Walk, Box 1938, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2407 | The Education Department focuses its scholarly and teaching efforts on the study of human learning and development, the history of education, teaching, school reform, and education policy. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.F.A. in Theater: Brown / Trinity Repertory Consortium | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Theatre Speech and Dance | The principles governing Brown/Trinity Repertory Consortium are based on a belief that all else proceeds from the primary image of an actor on a platform talking to an audience. Actors are not the only artists in theater, nor are they the most important, but all artists in the theater (playwrights, directors, designers, and actors) start from the premise that the essence of our art is actors engaging with an audience, and that our common goal is to explore and enhance the live, communal experience that is at the heart of theater. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Theatre Speech and Dance | Department of Theatre Speech and Dance, 77 Waterman Street, Box 1897, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3283 | The Department of Theatre, Speech and Dance is the intellectual and artistic center at Brown for faculty and students interested in the aesthetic, historical, literary, practical and theoretical explorations of performance in global perspective – theatre, dance, speech, performance art, and performative “roles” in everyday life. The Department’s distinguished faculty consists of leading scholars and artists who are at the forefront in researching and teaching new and innovative methodologies produced by the intersection of the study of craft and the study of history and theory. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The program features an interdisciplinary approach in two complementary research thrusts: living systems/machine interfaces and regenerative medicine. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Biostatistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Biostatistics Graduate Program | The masters programs leading to either the AM or ScM in Biostatistics provide advanced training in the theory and application of statistical methods in public health, clinical medicine, and the biological sciences. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Biostatistics Graduate Program | Biostatistics Graduate Program, 121 South Main Street, Box G-S121-7, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 9181 | Our program provides rigorous training in theory, methods and application of biostatistics, a wealth of opportunities for collaborative research, and an active and dedicated faculty. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Computer Science | The department has expertise in a variety of areas of computer science, including algorithms and data structures, artificial intelligence, automated reasoning and planning, brain-machine interfaces, computational biology, computer security, cryptography, database management systems, distributed systems and ubiquitous computing, electronic commerce and agents, graphics and visualization, human-computer interaction, nanotechnology, natural language processing, networking, operating systems, operations research and constraint programming, programming languages, robotics and computer vision, software engineering, and stream processing. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Computer Science | Department of Computer Science, Brown University Box 1910, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 7600 | Computer Science Department at Brown has forged a path of innovative information technology research and teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. From the modest beginnings as an interest group within the Divisions of Applied Mathematics and Engineering in the 1960s to its current stature as one of the nation's leading computer science programs - as ranked by the National Research Council - the Computer Science Department has continuously produced the most prominent contributors in the field, at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Electrical Sciences and Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Electrical Sciences and Computer Engineering group is divided into solid state and quantum electronics (SSQE) and computer engineering. Research topics include projects in experimental laser sciences, semiconductors, optoelectronics, condensed matter physics, nanoscience and technology, biophotonics, and bioengineering. The computer engineering group has topics in multimedia signal processing, medical imaging, computer vision, 3D photography, speech processing, image understanding, design and test of digital integrated circuits, computer architecture, physical integrated circuit design, and nanoscale system design. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Epidemiology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Community Health | The master's program is designed to provide advanced training in theory and practice and an opportunity for research synthesis in the form of a thesis. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Community Health | Department of Community Health, Box G-S121 121 South Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3172 | Our educational mission encompasses medical students, graduate students, fellows and baccalaureate level students in courses and educational experiences in a range of methodological areas. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Fluid, Thermal and Chemical Processes | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Fluids, Thermal and Chemical Processes group covers a very broad range of topics including chemical kinetics, nanoscale sciences, thermodynamics, energy conversion, environmental technologies, fluid mechanics, microfluidics, biotechnology and biomechanics. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Innovation Management and Entrepreneurship Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Program in Innovation Management and Entrepreneurship (PRIME) Engineering merges engineering science and design with innovation and entrepreneurship. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Materials Science and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Materials Science focuses on a fundamental understanding of the different types of materials and the interrelationship between processing, structure, and materials properties. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | M.S. in Mechanics of Solids | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Mechanics of Solids group fosters a balanced program that integrates the perspectives of continuum mechanics, structure of matter, and materials science. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | MAT in Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Education | Graduate study within Brown's Education Department offers many opportunities to explore the field of education. We offer an MAT in Elementary Education, an MAT in Secondary Education (with specialization in English, social studies/history, or biology/science), and an MA in Urban Education Policy. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Education | Department of Education, 21 Manning Walk, Box 1938, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2407 | The Education Department focuses its scholarly and teaching efforts on the study of human learning and development, the history of education, teaching, school reform, and education policy. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | MAT in Secondary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Education | Graduate study within Brown's Education Department offers many opportunities to explore the field of education. We offer an MAT in Elementary Education, an MAT in Secondary Education (with specialization in English, social studies/history, or biology/science), and an MA in Urban Education Policy. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Education | Department of Education, 21 Manning Walk, Box 1938, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2407 | The Education Department focuses its scholarly and teaching efforts on the study of human learning and development, the history of education, teaching, school reform, and education policy. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Master in Artificial Organs, Biomaterials and Cellular Technology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Community Health | The ABC graduate program was initiated in 1986 in order to meet the interests of graduate students in the specialized field of biomedical engineering, as well as the interests of medical students in the science and technology underlying organ-replacement therapy. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Community Health | Department of Community Health, Box G-S121 121 South Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3172 | Our educational mission encompasses medical students, graduate students, fellows and baccalaureate level students in courses and educational experiences in a range of methodological areas. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Master of Arts in Teaching | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Education | Master of Arts in Teaching program is a one-year program that prepares future educators to understand fundamental principles of teaching and learning and to apply that understanding to work effectively with children, families, and communities. Intentionally small in size, the program seeks to insure that future teachers learn best practices in curriculum design and instruction. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Education | Department of Education, 21 Manning Walk, Box 1938, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2407 | The Education Department focuses its scholarly and teaching efforts on the study of human learning and development, the history of education, teaching, school reform, and education policy. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Master of Fine Arts - Literary Arts | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Literary Arts Program | The literary arts graduate program offers courses in fiction, playwriting, poetry, and electronic writing. Students take eight courses, half in writing and half in elective studies, over a two-year period to ensure maximum time for writing. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Literary Arts Program | Literary Arts Program, Box 1923, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3260 | For nearly 40 years, the Brown University Program in Literary Arts has been a creative and intellectual center for the U.S. literary avant-garde.Along with only a handful of other writing programs nationwide, Brown’s Program in Literary Arts provides a home for innovative writers of fiction, poetry, playwriting, electronic writing (hypertext) and mixed media. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Master of Public Health | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Community Health | Public health is a discipline devoted to preventing disease and promoting health in the human population. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Community Health | Department of Community Health, Box G-S121 121 South Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3172 | Our educational mission encompasses medical students, graduate students, fellows and baccalaureate level students in courses and educational experiences in a range of methodological areas. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Master of Public Policy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Taubman Center for Public Policy | The A. Alfred Taubman Center for Public Policy and American Institutions offers two graduate programs that train students to draw upon concepts from political science, economics, education, community health, sociology, and law to develop innovative solutions for issues of real-world significance. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Masters | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Taubman Center for Public Policy | Taubman Center for Public Policy, 67 George Street, Box 1977, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2201 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, and Biochemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Graduate Program in Molecular Biology Cell Biology and Biochemistry | The program in molecular biology, cell biology, and biochemistry (MCB) is for students of exceptional ability and interest who are preparing for a research career in biology or medical science. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Graduate Program in Molecular Biology Cell Biology and Biochemistry | Graduate Program in Molecular Biology Cell Biology and Biochemistry, 185 Meeting Street JW Wilson Lab, Box G-L209, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1661 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Africana Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Africana Studies | The graduate program will train students to become skilled and informed educators, scholars and intellectuals poised to make significant contributions to academic and nonacademic communities and initiate cultural, economic, political, and social policies with humanitarian objectives informed by critical thinking and national and global perspectives on social and human development. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | The program will feature three areas of emphasis: 1) Studies in History, Politics, and Theory; 2) Studies in Literary, Expressive, and Performance Cultures; and 3) Studies in Feminism, Gender, and Sexuality. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Africana Studies | Department of Africana Studies, Box 1904 155 Angell Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3137 | Department of Africana Studies is the intellectual center for faculty and students interested in the artistic, historical, literary, and theoretical expressions of the various cultures of Africa and the African Diaspora. The Department is dedicated to the exploration and development of new knowledge about the cultures, histories, social formations and artistic expressions of Africa and various locations that comprise the African Diaspora. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in American Civilization | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of American Civilization | The primary goal of the graduate program in American Civilization is to train students to become knowledgeable and productive scholars and public humanists who will significantly contribute to the communities in which they work and live. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of American Civilization | Department of American Civilization, Box 1892 82 Waterman Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2896 | The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was The Department of American Civilization at Brown University was founded in 1945 as a collaborative as well as interdisciplinary enterprise. The first catalog statement explained that its purpose was “to provide the student with a more comprehensive and better unified knowledge of American Civilization . . . than would be possible within the limits of a single department.” | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Anthropology | The program of instruction in the Department of Anthropology prepares students for professional careers in social and cultural anthropology, archaeology, and linguistics. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Anthropology | Department of Anthropology, Box 1921, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3251 | Department of Anthropology faculty are trained as social and cultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and anthropological linguists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The program features an interdisciplinary approach in two complementary research thrusts: living systems/machine interfaces and regenerative medicine. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Biostatistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Biostatistics Graduate Program | The Ph.D. program in Biostatistics is designed to train independent investigators who will develop new quantitative methods and underlying theory, and make innovative applications to substantive and demanding scientific problems in public health, medicine, biology, and the social sciences. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Biostatistics Graduate Program | Biostatistics Graduate Program, 121 South Main Street, Box G-S121-7, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 9181 | Our program provides rigorous training in theory, methods and application of biostatistics, a wealth of opportunities for collaborative research, and an active and dedicated faculty. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Brain Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Brain Science Program | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Core courses in cellular and molecular neuroscience and integrative neuroscience, one laboratory course in neuroscience or cognitive and linguistic sciences, advanced analytic courses, at least one seminar taught collaboratively by the brain science program faculty, comprehensive examination, two semesters of teaching; written dissertation proposal, dissertation. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Brain Science Program | Brain Science Program, Box 1953, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 9524 | Brown's Institute for Brain Science (BIBS) is a unique interdisciplinary program formed to tackle one of the greatest mysteries of man. The BIBS was designed to promote collaborative theoretical and experimental study of the brain from the molecular to the behavioral and cognitive level. It unites faculty who study the fundamental mechanisms of nervous system function and those who seek to create devices with brain-like functions that can assist mankind. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Chemistry | The graduate program in chemistry offers exciting opportunities to pursue cutting-edge scientific research in physical, inorganic, organic, biological and nano chemistry. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Chemistry | Department of Chemistry, Box H 324 Brook Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2256 | The Department of Chemistry maintains pedagogical and research strengths in organic, inorganic, and theoretical and experimental physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, chemical biology and nanochemistry. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Classics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Classics | Classics at Brown covers the range of ancient studies, with strengths in classical literature, ancient history, philosophy, religion, and linguistics. Additional work is available in religious studies, history of science, and comparative literature, as well as in classical archaeology at the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. The program in Classics and Sanskrit offers courses in Sanskrit grammar, literature, philosophy, linguistics, and religion. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Classics | Department of Classics, Macfarlane House, 48 College Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2123 | Brown’s Department of Classics has a long and distinguished history, stretching from the founding of the University down to the current initiatives for academic enrichment. Ranked among the top graduate programs in the country, the department offers advanced work in ancient through medieval Greek and Roman languages, literatures, linguistics, history, and philosophy, as well as in Sanskrit language and literature, leading to the degrees of M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics, or in Classics and Sanskrit. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Cognitive Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Cognitive science is the multidisciplinary study of the mind. It seeks to understand such abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Comparative Literature | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Comparative Literature | The department, in cooperation with the various literature departments and programs, offers a wide array of courses in literature, literary theory, and cultural studies. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Comparative Literature | Department of Comparative Literature, Marston Hall Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2818 | Department of Comparative Literature is distinct in its conviction that literary research and instruction must be international in character, and its undergraduate and graduate programs are considered among the finest in the country. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Computer Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Computer Science | The department has expertise in a variety of areas of computer science, including algorithms and data structures, artificial intelligence, automated reasoning and planning, brain-machine interfaces, computational biology, computer security, cryptography, database management systems, distributed systems and ubiquitous computing, electronic commerce and agents, graphics and visualization, human-computer interaction, nanotechnology, natural language processing, networking, operating systems, operations research and constraint programming, programming languages, robotics and computer vision, software engineering, and stream processing. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Computer Science | Department of Computer Science, Brown University Box 1910, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 7600 | Computer Science Department at Brown has forged a path of innovative information technology research and teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. From the modest beginnings as an interest group within the Divisions of Applied Mathematics and Engineering in the 1960s to its current stature as one of the nation's leading computer science programs - as ranked by the National Research Council - the Computer Science Department has continuously produced the most prominent contributors in the field, at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology | It is directed toward understanding biological systems at the individual, population, and community levels of organization utilizing both plant, animal, and microbial systems. Major areas pursued by our group include functional morphology, foraging ecology, the adaptive significance of animal behavior, sexual selection in plants and animals, insect mating behavior, plant population genetics, molecular population genetics and evolution, marine community ecology, theoretical population and community ecology, and ecosystem ecology. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology | Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 80 Waterman Street, Box G-W Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3324 | It is directed toward understanding biological systems at the individual, population, and community levels of organization utilizing both plant, animal, and microbial systems. The Graduate Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology is centered in Walter Hall and is a closely knit academic family that currently includes 15 faculty members, 26 graduate students, and 12 postdoctoral associates. This small size gives students the opportunity to interact in a personal and flexible program tailored for students within whole-organism biology, while resources in the other graduate programs on campus simultaneously give students the advantage of a large program. Campus-wide, there are over 25 faculty and 35 graduate students with active interests in organismal biology, addressing problems at all levels of organization. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Economics | The Ph.D. program in Economics at Brown trains students in economic theory and the tools of economic analysis. Through course work, participation in seminars, and supervised research students are taught to conduct theoretical and empirical research at the highest level. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Economics | Department of Economics, Box B Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3836 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Egyptology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies will eventually encompass as well study of the ancient Near East from Mesopotamia to the Mediterranean. The graduate program includes archaeological courses in conjunction with the Artemis A.W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World. Degrees are offered in Egyptology or Ancient Western Asian Studies, but the curriculum aims at a well-rounded knowledge of both areas of study. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies, Box 1899 Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3132 | Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is an expansion of the existing Department of Egyptology, founded at Brown in 1948. This new academic unit is still forming and operating on a relatively small scale, as its expansion takes shape. Plans for the new department involve widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia, also known as the Ancient Near East. The Department of Egyptology and Ancient Western Asian Studies is a new department designed to explore what is sometimes called the birthplace of Western civilization. It builds on the strengths of Brown’s former Department of Egyptology, widening the intellectual focus from ancient Egypt to all of Ancient Western Asia. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Electrical Sciences and Computer Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Electrical Sciences and Computer Engineering group is divided into solid state and quantum electronics (SSQE) and computer engineering. Research topics include projects in experimental laser sciences, semiconductors, optoelectronics, condensed matter physics, nanoscience and technology, biophotonics, and bioengineering. The computer engineering group has topics in multimedia signal processing, medical imaging, computer vision, 3D photography, speech processing, image understanding, design and test of digital integrated circuits, computer architecture, physical integrated circuit design, and nanoscale system design. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in English | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of English | Brown's doctoral program in literatures and cultures in English offer professional training in literary research, theory, criticism, and the teaching of literature and writing. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of English | Department of English, 70 Brown St., Box 1852, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2393 | English Department is also the home of Novel, one of the leading professional journals devoted to the study of narrative fiction. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Epidemiology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Community Health | The Ph.D. program in Epidemiology provides students with the training to become independent researchers in academia, government, and industry. Using sophisticated study designs, statistical analyses, field investigations, and laboratory techniques, epidemiology students investigate the cause of a disease, its distribution (geographic, ecological, and social), method of transmission, and measures for control and prevention. The doctoral program is designed to provide students with the training to become independent researchers. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Community Health | Department of Community Health, Box G-S121 121 South Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3172 | Our educational mission encompasses medical students, graduate students, fellows and baccalaureate level students in courses and educational experiences in a range of methodological areas. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Fluid, Thermal and Chemical Processes | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Fluids, Thermal and Chemical Processes group covers a very broad range of topics including chemical kinetics, nanoscale sciences, thermodynamics, energy conversion, environmental technologies, fluid mechanics, microfluidics, biotechnology and biomechanics. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in French Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of French Studies | Our graduate program is the home of advanced studies in French and Francophone literatures, language, and civilization. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of French Studies | Department of French Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2567 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Geological Sciences | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Geological Sciences | Courses in five primary areas: Structure and dynamics of the solid Earth, Properties and processes of geological materials, Earth system history and global change, Planetary geosciences, Environmental sciences. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Geological Sciences | Department of Geological Sciences, 324 Brook Street, Box 1846, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3339 | The graduate program in the Department of Geological Sciences at Brown is rated among the top programs in the nation and the world. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in German Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of German Studies | The Department of German Studies offers a comprehensive doctoral program specializing in German culture and literature since the Baroque period. Brown's open curriculum supports a strong interdisciplinary focus for the Ph.D., and students are expected to develop a unique, cross-disciplinary focus early in their course of study. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of German Studies | Department of German Studies, 190 Hope Street, Box 1979, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2596 | The Department of German Studies offers a full range of courses in German language, literature and culture. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Health Services Research | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Community Health | The Ph.D. program in Health Services Research seeks to develop scientists experienced in the use of state of the art experimental and non-experimental research methods for the purpose of advancing fundamental knowledge of issues central to the improvement of population health by focusing on organizational characteristics of health care delivery systems, providers, and economic forces that shape consumer and provider behavior, as well as the policy environment in which these relationships exist. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Community Health | Department of Community Health, Box G-S121 121 South Main Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3172 | Our educational mission encompasses medical students, graduate students, fellows and baccalaureate level students in courses and educational experiences in a range of methodological areas. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Hispanic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Hispanic Studies | The program in hispanic studies offers courses that are coordinated in a system of seminars, study courses, independent study, and research projects. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Hispanic Studies | Department of Hispanic Studies, Box 1961, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2569 | The Department of Hispanic Studies at Brown offers an in-depth introduction to Hispanic culture. At the undergraduate level it offers the possibility of learning the language and culture of both Spain and Latin America, and at the graduate level it trains students to become effective teachers and scholars. The faculty members represent a broad range of approaches to language, literature, and culture, from philology to literary theory and cultural studies. All courses are taught in Spanish, and the development of fluency in reading, speaking, and writing the target language is an important goal in all classes. However, the goals of the department go beyond language instruction, as it seeks to prepare students to be able to understand a completely different national, continental, and global reality in all its complexity. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in History | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History | The Ph.D. program of the Brown University History Department offers graduate courses to help students advance their critical reading, research and writing skills as they increase familiarity with different approaches to the past, build comparative understanding of major historical developments, and gain competence in the literature and sources of their fields of specialization. Students are encouraged to adopt a thematic approach to research backed by theoretically sophisticated comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History | Department of History, Box N, 79 Brown Street Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2131 | History department is one of the first institutions in the United States to provide for historical studies, Brown University has long valued and nurtured research in the Department of History. The faculty’s high standard of scholarship and excellence in teaching are well known, and members of the department are committed to the value a rigorous education in the humanities confers upon students. The department trains students in the fundamentals of historical thinking: skills and attitudes that will provide a foundation for excellence in a wide range of careers and professions, including teaching, law, medicine, business, public service, and advanced historical research. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in History of Art and Architecture | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of History of Art and Architecture | Students in the Department of History of Art and Architecture are able to study in a wide array of areas including: ancient, medieval, early modern (Renaissance, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries), modern, contemporary, East Asian and Latin American art and architecture, and history of photography. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of History of Art and Architecture | Department of History of Art and Architecture, 64 College St, Box 1855, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1174 | The Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown University grants undergraduate degrees in the History of Art and Architecture, as well as in Architectural Studies.Graduate study in this department is geared toward earning a PhD in the History of Art, Architectural Studies, and many areas of visual culture from the ancient world through the present. Work in the department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown is conceived as an interdisciplinary undertaking, in which students are encouraged to become familiar with the variety of methodologies and practices that have historically been, and continue to be productive in fields. The department also maintain a longstanding commitment to museum studies and the study of objects through a close working relationship with the Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design.Interested students in this department have the opportunity to hold internships and (in the case of graduate students) proctorships at the museum. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Italian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Italian Studies | The Italian studies program offers students the opportunity to study the language, history, and culture of Italy under the guidance of internationally renowned scholars in anthropology, history, history of art and architecture, literature, and modern culture and media. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Italian Studies | Department of Italian Studies, 190 Hope Street, Box 1942, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1561 | Italian Studies at Brown not only teaches language and literature to students but guides their research toward problems that are cross-disciplinary in both content and method, rather than merely confirming a fixed canon or predetermined field of study. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Linguistics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language, its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and biological basis. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences | Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2616 | The cognitive and linguistic sciences offer a multidisciplinary study of the mind or what might be called "natural intelligence." Cognitive science seeks an understanding of such mental abilities as perception, recognition, categorization, memory, reasoning and problem-solving, motor control, speech, language, and communication. Linguistics focuses on the nature of human language - its theoretical, descriptive, behavioral, and evolutionary bases. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Materials Science focuses on a fundamental understanding of the different types of materials and the interrelationship between processing, structure, and materials properties. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Mathematics | The mathematics program is designed to prepare especially able students for a career in mathematical research and instruction. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Mathematics | Department of Mathematics, 151 Thayer Street, Box 1917, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2708 | The Mathematics Department at Brown balances a lively interest in students and teaching with a distinguished research reputation. Several strong research groups, Analysis, Algebraic Geometry, Geometry and Topology, and Number Theory, all have active weekly seminars that draw speakers ranging from the local to the international. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Mechanics of Solids | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Engineering | The Mechanics of Solids group fosters a balanced program that integrates the perspectives of continuum mechanics, structure of matter, and materials science. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Engineering | Division of Engineering, Box D, 182 Hope Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2677 | The Division of Engineering is a unique place, which emphasizes the power of interdisciplinary thought and recognizes that engineering is intertwined with every aspect of lives. The Division is organized without the traditional departments or boundaries found at most schools; Department model is focused on making unique connections between the various engineering disciplines.Along with associations with the other scholarly disciplines – biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, computer science, the humanities and the social sciences - co-operations bring unique solutions to challenging problems.The Division focuses on unique and innovative clustering of faculty; in terms of research groups, engineers of all types team together with non-engineers to tackle some of the biggest problems facing engineering and science today. Talents and expertise lie in the interdisciplinary domain where the seemingly diverse disciplines converge. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Modern Culture and Media | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Modern Culture and Media | The Ph.D. program prepares students to engage in rigorous and innovative scholarship and teaching in the theory, history, and critical analysis of one or more media in ways that encompass diverse cultural contexts and historical periods. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Modern Culture and Media | Department of Modern Culture and Media, 155 George Street, Box 1957, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2853 | The uniqueness of Modern Culture and Media resides in its commitment to situate the study of media in the context of the broader examination of modern cultural and social formations. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Molecular Biology Cell Biology and Biochemistry | The graduate program in molecular pharmacology and physiology offers advanced training appropriate for academic and research careers in the fields of biology and medical sciences that include molecular and structural pharmacology; neuropharmacology; cellular, comparative, and organ systems physiology; translational pharmacology and neurophysiology and neuroanatomy. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Molecular Biology Cell Biology and Biochemistry | Department of Molecular Biology Cell Biology and Biochemistry, Brown University Box G-L Sidney Frank Hall, 185 Meeting Street, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1654 | The MCB Department at Brown University is a center of research excellence in cell and developmental biology, biochemistry and molecular genetics. The department offer outstanding educational programs in these areas at the graduate and undergraduate levels. The research programs of MCB faculty span a wide range of biological questions and research systems and approaches. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Music - Electronic Music and Multimedia | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Music | The Ph.D. program in electronic music and multimedia focuses on the analysis and production of original multidisciplinary works of art, exploring the use of digital music and sound in combination with video, performance, and text. The program consists of advanced examinations of theoretical, technical, cultural, and aesthetic issues surrounding music and multimedia production, centering on the use of interactive technologies and gestural control in performance. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Music | Department of Music, Orwig Music Building - 1 Young Orchard Avenue, Box 1924, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3234 | The Department of Music at Brown provides an ideal environment for such an education, with its integrated faculty of scholars, performers, composers, and theorists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Music - Ethnomusicology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Music | The Ph.D. program in ethnomusicology is organized around core seminars in fieldwork and in ethnomusicological history, theory, and practice. Building on this core, students are encouraged to design programs suiting their goals, choosing flexibly among course offerings in a variety of musical cultures as well as on topics such as music and race, class, gender, identity, and sexuality; musical thinking; music and documentary film/video production; music and modernization; and applied ethnomusicology. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Music | Department of Music, Orwig Music Building - 1 Young Orchard Avenue, Box 1924, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3234 | The Department of Music at Brown provides an ideal environment for such an education, with its integrated faculty of scholars, performers, composers, and theorists. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Neuroscience | The graduate program in neuroscience provides an intensive, multi-disciplinary education in neuroscience. Our core curriculum provides instruction about molecular, cellular, systems, cognitive, and translational neuroscience, and diseases of the nervous system. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Neuroscience | Department of Neuroscience, 185 Meeting Street, Box G-LN, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3440 | The Graduate Program in Neuroscience at Brown University offers advanced study for academic and research careers in the field of neuroscience. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Pathobiology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Division of Biology and Medicine | The Pathobiology program at Brown is interdisciplinary and devoted to defining and understanding mechanisms of disease through the application of molecular biological, biochemical, genetic, and immunological methodologies. The program has three major research themes: toxicology and environmental pathology, immunology and infection, and cancer biology. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Division of Biology and Medicine | Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G-A, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 1895 | The Division of Biology and Medicine is composed of Alpert Medical School, the Program in Biology (which includes study at the undergraduate and graduate levels), and the Public Health Program. It is home to five basic biology departments and fourteen clinical departments, and is affiliated with seven diverse teaching hospitals in and around Providence. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Philosophy | Graduate students in the philosophy program may focus their studies on the following areas: epistemology and metaphysics (including philosophy of mind), ethics (including applied ethics, metaethics, and normative ethics), history of philosophy (including the ancient, modern, or nineteenth and twentieth centuries), philosophical logic, philosophy of language, philosophy in literature, philosophy of law, philosophy of mathematics, philosophy of physics, and political philosophy. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Philosophy | Department of Philosophy, Box 1918, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2718 | The University adheres to a collaborative university-college model in which faculty are as committed to teaching as they are to research, embracing a curriculum that requires students to be architects of their education. Brown’s campus is composed of 238 buildings and sits on 143 acres in Providence, the capital of Rhode Island. The University library system contains more than 6,000,000 items, including bound volumes, periodicals, maps, sheet music and manuscripts. Other facilities include several hundred personal workstations, computers and terminals located around campus. Approximately 5,900 students are enrolled in the Undergraduate College, 1,500 in the Graduate School and 340 in the Medical School. These students represent all 50 states and many foreign countries. For 2010, more than 18,000 applicants applied for 1,450 places in the freshman class. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Physics | The physics graduate program provides students with opportunities to perform independent research in some of the most current vital areas of physics. In this process, students first develop a solid and broad base of physics knowledge through our core curriculum, departmental colloquia, and training. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Physics | Department of Physics, Brown University, Box 1843, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2641 | Physics is the most fundamental of sciences. It provides a foundation of crucial ideas for other scientific fields, and the underpinnings of all of modern technology. The physics faculty at Brown is actively engaged in both teaching and research, including mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. Research focuses on phenomena ranging from the subatomic to the cosmic, and includes collaborative efforts with biologists, chemists, engineers, geologists, and mathematicians. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Political Science | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. The program thus equips students with analytical tools to understand the complex political issues and relationships of the contemporary era. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Political Science | Department of Political Science, 36 Prospect Street, Box 1844, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2825 | Political Science is the systematic study of how political values, both positive and negative, are allocated among individuals, groups, socio-economic classes, regions, and nation-states. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | The program in Portuguese and Brazilian studies offers advanced graduate study in the language, literatures, and cultures of the Portuguese-speaking world, with concentration on one or more of the following areas: continental and insular Portugal, Brazil, Lusophone Africa, and Luso-America. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies | Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, 159 George Street Meiklejohn House, Box O, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3042 | The Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies has an international reputation for excellence in research and teaching on the Portuguese-speaking world — a vast geographical area encompassing eight different countries on four continents (Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor), in addition to long-standing immigrant communities in the United States. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Psychology | The graduate program in psychology is designed to educate and train scientists and scholars who will make contributions to society through their research and teaching. Ph.D.s in psychology from Brown are prepared for scientific careers in experimental psychology in both academic and applied settings. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Ph.D.: One core course in at least three of four areas: neural bases of behavior, sensory and perceptual processes, learning and cognition, and social psychology; at least two courses in quantitative methods; development of an area of specialization through appropriate coursework; research program developed in consultation with advisory committee; written report on first-year research project by beginning of second year, followed by an oral examination; four semesters of teaching; preliminary examination in third year; dissertation; and oral defense. | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Psychology | Department of Psychology, 89 Waterman Street, Box 1853, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2727 | Department of Psychology enters its second century, its research mission encompasses a wide range of phenomena and levels of analysis, organized in pursuit of three broad goals. One is to deepen an understanding of the cognitive and neural mechanisms of sensation, perception, learning, and emotion. A second is to probe the biological and evolutionary foundations of animal behavior. A third is to clarify the social perception and assessment of individuals and groups. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Religious Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Religious Studies | The Department of Religious Studies maintains exceptional strength in the study of religion in antiquity, modern religious thought, and the theoretical study of religion. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Religious Studies | Department of Religious Studies, Box 1927, Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3104 | The Department of Religious Studies at Brown University provides students with an understanding of diverse religious traditions, an exposure to a variety of approaches employed within the academic study of religion, as well as an opportunity to explore diverse intellectual, social-theoretical, and ethical issues that arise when one considers the various manifestation of religion in human affairs. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Slavic Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Slavic Languages | The program has a strong interdisciplinary focus and students are expected to work with departmental faculty as well as with faculty in related fields, such as comparative literature, theater, history, art history, modern culture and media, and political science. The program will train flexible and innovative scholars able to address varying teaching and research needs in the future job market. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Slavic Languages | Department of Slavic Languages, 20 Manning Walk, Box E, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2689 | The Department of Slavic Languages is Brown University’s center for studying the cultures and literatures of Russia and other Slavic countries. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Sociology | Areas of specialization within sociology cover a wide spectrum of interests among faculty. Research and teaching collaboration between sociology and other departments, programs, and institutes within Brown enriches the curricular offerings. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Sociology | Department of Sociology, 112 George Street, Box 1916, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2367 | Sociology as a discipline provides students with the conceptual and analytic tools to make sense of complex social structures in a rapidly changing global environment. Brown’s Sociology department brings together a dynamic group of scholars with international reputations for outstanding achievement in core research areas—social demography, the sociology of health, and macrosociology. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 217156 | Brown University | Ph.D. in Theater and Performance Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $36,928 a year | Department of Theatre Speech and Dance | Our program takes a broad-spectrum approach to the study of histories, theories, and methods of theater and performance. While offering a rigorous background in theater history in global perspective, we also use performance as an analytical tool, exploring the labor of mimesis in the social. | Applicants should have completed the bachelor degree to apply for master degree and should have completed masters degree for doctoral degree admission. Applicants who have attended international institutions must submit transcripts or certified attestations of study, with certified English translations, which requires that the transcript envelope be opened. All international applicants whose native language is not English must submit an official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS) score. TOEFL, the recommended minimum score for admission consideration is 577 on the paper-based test, 233 on the computer-based test, or 90 on the Internet-based test. For IELTS, the recommended minimum overall band score is 7. Some programs may have more rigorous language proficiency standards. Applicants with questions should contact programs directly. | Doctoral | BROWN UNIVERSITY | Brown University | Elke Breker, Director | 8574 | Brown University, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 2600 | Department of Theatre Speech and Dance | Department of Theatre Speech and Dance, 77 Waterman Street, Box 1897, PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, 02912, +1 401 863 3283 | The Department of Theatre, Speech and Dance is the intellectual and artistic center at Brown for faculty and students interested in the aesthetic, historical, literary, practical and theoretical explorations of performance in global perspective – theatre, dance, speech, performance art, and performative “roles” in everyday life. The Department’s distinguished faculty consists of leading scholars and artists who are at the forefront in researching and teaching new and innovative methodologies produced by the intersection of the study of craft and the study of history and theory. | Yes | The on-campus graduate and medical housing area is located in Miller Hall on the Pembroke Campus and houses up to 55 students on three floors of a traditional residence hall, with shared bathrooms and kitchens. Brown-owned off-campus housing is available to first-year graduate and medical students and is overseen by the Office of Auxiliary Housing. For more details contact : Res_Life@brown.edu | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | B.S. in Interdisciplinary Studies in Economics and Mathematics - Computational Track | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | This program provides a coordinated curriculum useful to students interested in pursuing master's or Ph.D. programs in economics, finance, business administration, or public policy. The major also prepares students for careers in finance, business, operations research or actuarial science. Modeling financial and economic phenomena mathematically has become increasingly important to securing the most prestigious positions in the financial markets. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include ECON 103 (Economics Principles and Problems), ECON 256 (Intermediate Microeconomics), ECON 257 (Intermediate Macroeconomics), ECON 258 (Intermediate Political Economy), MATH 201 (Calculus I), MATH 202 (Calculus II), MATH 211 (Calculus III), MATH 213 (Elementary Linear Algebra), MATH 216 (Statistics I), MATH 303 (Probability), MATH 304 (Mathematical Statistics), CSCI 203 (Introduction to Computer Science), MATH 343 (Numerical Analysis), 358 (Topics in Operations Research). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | B.S. in Interdisciplinary Studies in Economics and Mathematics - Computational Track | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program provides a coordinated curriculum useful to students interested in pursuing master's or Ph.D. programs in economics, finance, business administration, or public policy. The major also prepares students for careers in finance, business, operations research or actuarial science. Modeling financial and economic phenomena mathematically has become increasingly important to securing the most prestigious positions in the financial markets. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include ECON 103 (Economics Principles and Problems), ECON 256 (Intermediate Microeconomics), ECON 257 (Intermediate Macroeconomics), ECON 258 (Intermediate Political Economy), MATH 201 (Calculus I), MATH 202 (Calculus II), MATH 211 (Calculus III), MATH 213 (Elementary Linear Algebra), MATH 216 (Statistics I), MATH 303 (Probability), MATH 304 (Mathematical Statistics), CSCI 203 (Introduction to Computer Science), MATH 343 (Numerical Analysis), 358 (Topics in Operations Research). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, 168 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1476 | This Department cultivates patterns of inquiry that produce economic literacy, independent thinking, and a commitment to lifelong learning and a socially responsible life.With these goals in mind, students approach the study of Economics from multiple perspectives. Through the required and elective courses, students explore the basic tools of mainstream economic theory and political economy, as well as their historical and philosophical underpinnings. The department emphasizes the connection between economic theory and real world economies because all economic theories begin with observation of some real world economic phenomenon. The different theories inform ongoing debates about the role of government and the differences between economic systems and the varied perspectives sharpen the analytical and critical thinking skills of the students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | B.S. in Interdisciplinary Studies in Economics and Mathematics - Statistical Track | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | This program provides a coordinated curriculum useful to students interested in pursuing master's or Ph.D. programs in economics, finance, business administration, or public policy. The major also prepares students for careers in finance, business, operations research or actuarial science. Modeling financial and economic phenomena mathematically has become increasingly important to securing the most prestigious positions in the financial markets. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include ECON 103 (Economics Principles and Problems), ECON 256 (Intermediate Microeconomics), ECON 257 (Intermediate Macroeconomics), ECON 258 (Intermediate Political Economy), MATH 201 (Calculus I), MATH 202 (Calculus II), MATH 211 (Calculus III), MATH 213 (Elementary Linear Algebra), MATH 216 (Statistics I), MATH 303 (Probability), MATH 304 (Mathematical Statistics), MATH 305 (Statistical Modeling), MATH 307 (Statistical Design of Scientific Studies), MATH 358 (Topics in Operations Research). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | B.S. in Interdisciplinary Studies in Economics and Mathematics - Statistical Track | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program provides a coordinated curriculum useful to students interested in pursuing master's or Ph.D. programs in economics, finance, business administration, or public policy. The major also prepares students for careers in finance, business, operations research or actuarial science. Modeling financial and economic phenomena mathematically has become increasingly important to securing the most prestigious positions in the financial markets. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include ECON 103 (Economics Principles and Problems), ECON 256 (Intermediate Microeconomics), ECON 257 (Intermediate Macroeconomics), ECON 258 (Intermediate Political Economy), MATH 201 (Calculus I), MATH 202 (Calculus II), MATH 211 (Calculus III), MATH 213 (Elementary Linear Algebra), MATH 216 (Statistics I), MATH 303 (Probability), MATH 304 (Mathematical Statistics), MATH 305 (Statistical Modeling), MATH 307 (Statistical Design of Scientific Studies), MATH 358 (Topics in Operations Research). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, 168 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1476 | This Department cultivates patterns of inquiry that produce economic literacy, independent thinking, and a commitment to lifelong learning and a socially responsible life.With these goals in mind, students approach the study of Economics from multiple perspectives. Through the required and elective courses, students explore the basic tools of mainstream economic theory and political economy, as well as their historical and philosophical underpinnings. The department emphasizes the connection between economic theory and real world economies because all economic theories begin with observation of some real world economic phenomenon. The different theories inform ongoing debates about the role of government and the differences between economic systems and the varied perspectives sharpen the analytical and critical thinking skills of the students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | B.S. in Interdisciplinary Studies in Economics and Mathematics - Theoretical Track | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | This program provides a coordinated curriculum useful to students interested in pursuing master's or Ph.D. programs in economics, finance, business administration, or public policy. The major also prepares students for careers in finance, business, operations research or actuarial science. Modeling financial and economic phenomena mathematically has become increasingly important to securing the most prestigious positions in the financial markets. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include ECON 103 (Economics Principles and Problems), ECON 256 (Intermediate Microeconomics), ECON 257 (Intermediate Macroeconomics), ECON 258 (Intermediate Political Economy), MATH 201 (Calculus I), MATH 202 (Calculus II), MATH 211 (Calculus III), MATH 213 (Elementary Linear Algebra), MATH 216 (Statistics I), MATH 303 (Probability), MATH 304 (Mathematical Statistics), MATH 280 (Logic, Sets, and Proofs), MATH 308 (Introduction to Real Analysis), MATH 345 (Linear Algebra). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, 168 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1476 | This Department cultivates patterns of inquiry that produce economic literacy, independent thinking, and a commitment to lifelong learning and a socially responsible life.With these goals in mind, students approach the study of Economics from multiple perspectives. Through the required and elective courses, students explore the basic tools of mainstream economic theory and political economy, as well as their historical and philosophical underpinnings. The department emphasizes the connection between economic theory and real world economies because all economic theories begin with observation of some real world economic phenomenon. The different theories inform ongoing debates about the role of government and the differences between economic systems and the varied perspectives sharpen the analytical and critical thinking skills of the students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | B.S. in Interdisciplinary Studies in Economics and Mathematics - Theoretical Track | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | This program provides a coordinated curriculum useful to students interested in pursuing master's or Ph.D. programs in economics, finance, business administration, or public policy. The major also prepares students for careers in finance, business, operations research or actuarial science. Modeling financial and economic phenomena mathematically has become increasingly important to securing the most prestigious positions in the financial markets. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include ECON 103 (Economics Principles and Problems), ECON 256 (Intermediate Microeconomics), ECON 257 (Intermediate Macroeconomics), ECON 258 (Intermediate Political Economy), MATH 201 (Calculus I), MATH 202 (Calculus II), MATH 211 (Calculus III), MATH 213 (Elementary Linear Algebra), MATH 216 (Statistics I), MATH 303 (Probability), MATH 304 (Mathematical Statistics), MATH 280 (Logic, Sets, and Proofs), MATH 308 (Introduction to Real Analysis), MATH 345 (Linear Algebra). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | B.S./M.S. in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | Contact provider | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | The department offers a combined B.S./M.S. program for students who desire both more research and more advanced chemistry courses than are obtainable under the Bachelor of Science program. This program normally is elected in the sophomore year and is completed in the summer following the senior year. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, 203 Rooke Chemistry, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3258 | The Rooke Chemistry Building was opened in 1989 and is attached to the Biology Building. The combined buildings make it possible to teach biology, chemistry and biochemistry in a much more efficient and integrated way and the department conduct research in organic, inorganic, analytical, physical, biological, environmental and polymer chemistry. The chemistry department is exceptionally well-equipped with modern laboratory instrumentation. Students work "hands-on" with a wide assortment of instruments including UV-Visible and FTIR spectrophotometers, gas and liquid chromatographs, NMR spectrometers, and GC/mass spectrometers. Major instruments include a Bruker 300 MHz NMR spectrometer and a single-crystal X-ray diffractometer, an electrospray mass spectrometer equipped for LC/MS/MS, and three GC/MS instruments. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Animal Behavior | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program | The program in animal behavior offers an interdisciplinary major that includes the subject matters of biology, chemistry, mathematics, physics, and psychology. The focus is directed toward understanding behavior and providing the student with a background uniting ecological, ethological, environmental, evolutionary, and experimental approaches to the study of animal life. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include ANBE 266; any three from BIOL 205, BIOL 206, BIOL 207, or BIOL 208. (BIOL 205 and BIOL 208 are strongly recommended. Students should consult with an academic adviser in animal behavior to determine the most appropriate biology course selections given their academic goals); CHEM211 and CHEM212 or CHEM201 and 202; PSYCH 203; PSYCH 250; either PSYC 215 or MATH 216; ANBE/PSYC 296; three animal behavior electives from the set consisting of BIOL 303, BIOL 313,ANBE/PSYC 317, BIOL 318,ANBE 319 or ANBE 320, ANBE/BIOL 321, BIOL 324, ANBE/BIOL 341, ANBE/BIOL 342,ANBE/BIOL 354,ANBE/BIOL 355,ANBE/BIOL 356, ANBE/BIOL 357, BIOL 358, ANBE/BIOL/PSYC 370, ANBE/BIOL 415, PSYC 324, PSYC/BIOL 343, ANBE 391, ANBE 399.With special permission, other PSYC/BIOL courses can be considered as electives. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program, 203 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1200 | The College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization for 2700 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Biology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | A major in biology may serve as a sound preparation for those interested in careers in the life sciences including those who go on to graduate or medical school. Majoring in biology also adds to students’ understanding of the issues concerned with health, the environment, and agriculture. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The major requires eight courses in biology: the core sequence of BIOL 205, 206, 207, 208, which must be completed by the end of the third year, and four 300-level or above electives. (Only one of the four electives can be BIOL 399, but additional 399 credit may be applied as electives beyond the courses offered for the major). At least one of the four electives must be in each of the following three areas (I - Cellular/Molecular; II - Organismal; III - Ecological/Evolutionary) listed below, and two of these courses from different areas must be a laboratory or field course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 203 Biology Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1124 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | The major in chemistry offers experience in critical thinking, data analysis and experimental design. Chemistry graduates pursue a variety of careers in which these skills are important. Many work as chemists in chemical or pharmaceutical companies or in government labs. Others apply their chemical skills to careers in medicine, law, business, chemical or pharmaceutical sales, biotechnology, pharmacology, toxicology or environmental science. Many chemistry graduates pursue careers in education at the secondary, college or university level. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The major consists of eight courses in chemistry numbered 211 or above, five of which are required: CHEM 211, CHEM 212, CHEM 221, CHEM 231, and CHEM 340 or CHEM 341. In addition, one semester of calculus (MATH 201) and one semester of physics (PHYS 211) are required. MATH 202 and PHYS 212 are strongly recommended. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, 203 Rooke Chemistry, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3258 | The Rooke Chemistry Building was opened in 1989 and is attached to the Biology Building. The combined buildings make it possible to teach biology, chemistry and biochemistry in a much more efficient and integrated way and the department conduct research in organic, inorganic, analytical, physical, biological, environmental and polymer chemistry. The chemistry department is exceptionally well-equipped with modern laboratory instrumentation. Students work "hands-on" with a wide assortment of instruments including UV-Visible and FTIR spectrophotometers, gas and liquid chromatographs, NMR spectrometers, and GC/mass spectrometers. Major instruments include a Bruker 300 MHz NMR spectrometer and a single-crystal X-ray diffractometer, an electrospray mass spectrometer equipped for LC/MS/MS, and three GC/MS instruments. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program provides the student with an opportunity to combine the liberal arts tradition with computer science. The BA in computer science program is the most flexible of the three computer science programs and may be combined with another BA program for a double major. Popular second majors include mathematics and economics. Even with this extra flexibility, the BA in computer science prepares the student for employment in the computer industry and graduate education in computer science. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The major requires eight course credits in computer science: CSCI 203, CSCI 204, CSCI 206, CSCI 208, CSCI 311, CSCI 315, and either CSCI 479 and one 300-level elective or two 300-level electives. In addition, the following mathematics courses are required: MATH 201, MATH 202, MATH 211, MATH 226, and MATH 241. (MATH 226 is a half course.) | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bucknell University, LESISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1394 | The Rooke Chemistry Building was opened in 1989 and is attached to the Biology Building. The combined buildings make it possible to teach biology, chemistry and biochemistry in a much more efficient and integrated way and the department conduct research in organic, inorganic, analytical, physical, biological, environmental and polymer chemistry. The chemistry department is exceptionally well-equipped with modern laboratory instrumentation. Students work "hands-on" with a wide assortment of instruments including UV-Visible and FTIR spectrophotometers, gas and liquid chromatographs, NMR spectrometers, and GC/mass spectrometers. Major instruments include a Bruker 300 MHz NMR spectrometer and a single-crystal X-ray diffractometer, an electrospray mass spectrometer equipped for LC/MS/MS, and three GC/MS instruments. | No | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include eight courses: the six core courses (GEOL 103, 104, 201, 210, 214, 217); GEOL 205; and one course selected from GEOL 301, 305, 310, and 324. Students are encouraged to take a summer field geology course, a course in statistics, and to participate in independent study research opportunities through GEOL 319-320 or GEOL 329-430, with the latter experience preferred. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, 231 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1382 | The department offers a BA and a BS in both Geology and Environmental Geology, and emphasizes hands-on, field-based learning. Recent student graduates are working in environmental engineering consulting firms, government agencies, and education among other careers, or pursuing graduate education in some of the nation's top graduate schools. In the fifty year history of the department, approximately two-thirds of the majors have gone on to graduate school to receive a Masters or a Ph.D. degree. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies - Environmental Advocacy | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program is offered for the student with an abiding interest in the general environmental problems faced by humans, and with special concern for the social and policy aspects of their solution. An environmental study is a strong, broad, liberal arts degree. It also is a preparation for one of the growing numbers of environmental careers in planning, business, non-profits, law, enforcement, or education. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include at least one science course from the following: CHEM 160 Introduction to Environmental Chemistry, BIOL 415 Conservation Biology, ENST 211 Environmental Pollution and Control, ENST 221 Hazardous Waste and Society, GEOG 232 Evolution, Ecology, and Human Impact, GEOG 233 Food and Environment, GEOG 257 Global Environmental Change, GEOL 205 Introduction to Geochemistry, at least one humanities course from the following: ENST 205 Green Utopias, RELI 226 Environmental Ethics, PHIL 218 Ecology, Nature and the Future, ENST 207 American Environmental History and at least one social science course from the following: ENST 255 Environmental Justice, ENST 242 Environmental History of the Developing World, ENST 240 Sustainable Resource Management, ENST 215 Environmental Planning, ENST 230 Introduction to Ecological Design. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3746 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies - Environmental Ethics/Humanities | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program is offered for the student with an abiding interest in the general environmental problems faced by humans, and with special concern for the social and policy aspects of their solution. An environmental study is a strong, broad, liberal arts degree. It also is a preparation for one of the growing numbers of environmental careers in planning, business, non-profits, law, enforcement, or education. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules are as follows: four humanities courses among ANTH 260 Anthropological Perspectives on Human-Environment Relations, ENST 205 Green Utopias, ENST 207 American Environmental History, ENST 229 Environmental Thinkers, ENST 247 Environmental History of the Ancient World, ENST 255 Environmental Justice, ENST 260 Environmental Law, ENST 371 North American Disasters, PHIL 218 Ecology, Nature and the Future, RELI 226 Environmental Ethics, RELI 234-01 The End of Nature and the Post human Future, RELI 234-02 The Ethics of Consumption and one Human-Environment Systems Science Course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3746 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies - Environmental Planning | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program is offered for the student with an abiding interest in the general environmental problems faced by humans, and with special concern for the social and policy aspects of their solution. An environmental study is a strong, broad, liberal arts degree. It also is a preparation for one of the growing numbers of environmental careers in planning, business, non-profits, law, enforcement, or education. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules are as follows: three social science courses among ENST 215 Environmental Planning, ENST 230 Ecological Design, ENST 255 Environmental Justice, and ANTH 260 Anthropological Perspectives on Human-Environmental Relations, one Humanities course and one Human-Environment Systems Science Course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3746 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies - Environmental Policy, Politics and Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program is offered for the student with an abiding interest in the general environmental problems faced by humans, and with special concern for the social and policy aspects of their solution. An environmental study is a strong, broad, liberal arts degree. It also is a preparation for one of the growing numbers of environmental careers in planning, business, non-profits, law, enforcement, or education. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules are as follows: three social science courses among ENST 245 Environmental Policy, ENST 255 Environmental Justice, ENST 260 Environmental Law, ENST 355 Topics in Environmental Policy, ECON 231 Resources and the Environment, and ECON 334 Natural Resource Economics, one Humanities course and one Human-Environment Systems Science Course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3746 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies - Environmental and Human Health | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program is offered for the student with an abiding interest in the general environmental problems faced by humans, and with special concern for the social and policy aspects of their solution. An environmental study is a strong, broad, liberal arts degree. It also is a preparation for one of the growing numbers of environmental careers in planning, business, non-profits, law, enforcement, or education. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include at least one science course from the following: GEOG 233 Food and the Environment, GEOG 257 Global Environmental Change, ENST 211 Environmental Pollution and Control, ENST 221 Hazardous Waste and Society, GEOL 207 Geohazards, at least one (1) humanities course from the following: ENST 371 North American Disasters, RELI 234-01 End of Nature, PHIL 218 Ecology, Nature, and the Future, ANTH 260 Human-Environment Relationships, at least one (1) social science course from the following: ANTH 410 Cross-Cultural Perspectives on the Environment, GEOG 2XX Cultural Landscapes, and one Human-Environment Systems Science Course | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3746 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies - International Environmental Perspectives | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program is offered for the student with an abiding interest in the general environmental problems faced by humans, and with special concern for the social and policy aspects of their solution. An environmental study is a strong, broad, liberal arts degree. It also is a preparation for one of the growing numbers of environmental careers in planning, business, non-profits, law, enforcement, or education. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include three social science courses from the following: ENST 215 Environmental Planning, ENST 226 Water Politics and Policy, ENST 255 Environmental Justice, ENST 345 International Environmental Politics, ENST 355 Topics in International Environmental Perspectives, GEOG 257 Global Environmental Change, one humanities course from the following: ENST 247 Environmental History of the Ancient World, ENST 242 Environmental History of the Developing World, RELI 226 Environmental Ethics, one Human-Environment Systems Science Course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3746 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Studies - Perspectives on Sustainability | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program is offered for the student with an abiding interest in the general environmental problems faced by humans, and with special concern for the social and policy aspects of their solution. An environmental study is a strong, broad, liberal arts degree. It also is a preparation for one of the growing numbers of environmental careers in planning, business, non-profits, law, enforcement, or education. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include at least one (1) science course from the following: GEOG 233 Food and the Environment, GEOG 257 Global Environmental Change, ENST 211 Environmental Pollution and Control, ENST 221 Hazardous Waste and Society, GEOL 207 Geohazards, at least one (1) social science courses from the following: ENST 215 Environmental Planning, ENST 230 Ecological Design, ECON 231 Resources and the Environment, and one (1) Humanities course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3746 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | The geology curriculum engages students with concepts and issues related to the earth and its environments, through coursework, field studies, and scientific research. A geology degree equips students with analytical skills, problem solving skills, communication skills, experience in teamwork, and solid grounding in field-based science. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include six core courses (GEOL 103, GEOL 104, GEOL 201, GEOL 210, GEOL 214, GEOL 217), plus two additional courses at the 200 level or above, with the exception of GEOL 319, GEOL 320, GEOL 329, and GEOL 430; laboratory science courses in other departments may be substituted for any of these two courses with the approval of the department. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, 231 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1382 | The department offers a BA and a BS in both Geology and Environmental Geology, and emphasizes hands-on, field-based learning. Recent student graduates are working in environmental engineering consulting firms, government agencies, and education among other careers, or pursuing graduate education in some of the nation's top graduate schools. In the fifty year history of the department, approximately two-thirds of the majors have gone on to graduate school to receive a Masters or a Ph.D. degree. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | A major in mathematics may be seen as the first step toward obtaining a graduate degree in one of the mathematical sciences, or it may constitute preparation for a professional degree program in a field such as education, medicine, law, or business. It also opens the door to a whole range of employment opportunities, as the analytical skills that a student develops in pursuing a major in mathematics are greatly valued by potential employers. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core modules include MATH 211 Calculus III, MATH 213 Elementary Linear Algebra, MATH 280 Logic, Sets and Proofs, MATH 308 Introduction to Real Analysis I, and MATH 320 Introduction to Algebra. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics - Pure Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students majoring in mathematics with a special interest in pure mathematics or statistics can earn formal concentration in these areas by selecting their 300-level electives appropriately and taking one additional course. In particular, those intending to pursue graduate study in mathematics or statistics should plan to complete the relevant concentration. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The pure mathematics concentration consists of MATH 309, MATH 345, MATH 346, and two of the following: MATH 311, MATH 333, MATH 362. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics - Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students majoring in mathematics with a special interest in pure mathematics or statistics can earn formal concentration in these areas by selecting their 300-level electives appropriately and taking one additional course. In particular, those intending to pursue graduate study in mathematics or statistics should plan to complete the relevant concentration. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The statistics concentration consists of MATH 303, MATH 304, MATH 305, MATH 307, and either MATH 309 or MATH 345. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | A major in Physics is an appropriate first step on the path to a career as a research scientist. Since physics is such a fundamental science, it can be the basis for the understanding of principles that are relevant to a wide variety of fields. It provides preparation for graduate study in physics or in related fields such as astrophysics, biophysics, chemical physics, geophysics, or engineering. A fundamental understanding of nature has been a goal throughout history, and a study of physics can be the focus of a liberal education because of its connections with intellectual history and philosophy. A major in physics can be the platform for pursuing a wide variety of careers including medicine, law, business, and teaching. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core modules include 141 Secrets of the Universe, 142 Light and Vision, 144 How Things Work, 145 Contemporary Issues in Energy, 211 and 212 Classical and Modern Physics , 211E and 212E Classical and Modern Physics , 221 Classical Mechanics , 222 Wave Mechanics and Quantum Physics , 235 Applied Electronics , 301 Astrophysics, 303 Modern Optics, 309 Condensed Matter Physics, 310 Experimental Physics, 317 Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, 329 and 330 Experimental Physics I and II, v, 332 Quantum Mechanics, 333 Electromagnetic Theory I, 334 Electromagnetic Theory II, 336 Mathematical Physics, 337 Contemporary Problems in Physics, 339 Advanced Quantum Mechanics and Particle Physics, 350 Undergraduate Research, Astrophysics. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, 153 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1207 | The Physics and Astronomy Department encourages students to participate in research projects; research serves as an important complement to the classroom study of physics. The department offers research opportunities in atomic and molecular physics, chaos and nonlinear dynamics, astronomy and astrophysics, general relativity, theoretical quantum optics, laser spectroscopy, elementary particle physics, positron physics, biological physics, theoretical condensed matter physics, and statistical physics. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts with a Major in Education | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | This program is designed for students who are interested in studying the process and structure of education and schooling but who are not necessarily interested in pursuing a career in teaching. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core education courses: EDUC 101 Social Foundations of Education, EDUC 201 Educational Psychology, EDUC 362 Research Methods I; And one of the following: EDUC 323 Education of Young Children, EDUC 334 Later Childhood and Adolescence and EDUC 335 Child and Adolescent Development. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education, 457 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1324 | The Education Department works to prepare students for prominent roles as public intellectuals. Their blend of social sciences and professional preparation coursework is theoretically grounded and presents educational issues within social contexts that are diverse and evolving. Graduates will use their capacity for self-reflection and ethical reasoning to respond creatively to challenges encountered in their personal and professional lives. The Education Department's primary goal is the development of the students' thinking and problem-solving abilities so that they will be able to help people maximize their opportunities for success in educational environments. It views the field of education as a social science, and programs within the department reflect that perspective. In education, as in any other social or natural science, effectiveness is measured in terms of the ability of professionals to solve the problems of the discipline. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Arts with a Major in Music | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | The degree with a major in music is designed to produce a competent, broadly trained musician capable of professional activity or of graduate study. Entrance to the major in music is based upon a demonstration of sufficient musical talent and training to pursue a study of music. An audition is required for admission to all music degree programs, including the Bachelor of Arts music major. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include Theory of Music (MUSC 101, 102, 201, 202), History of Music (MUSC 204, 205, 206). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, 202 Sigfried Weis Music Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1216 | The Music Department offers a professional music program within an outstanding liberal-arts environment. Students explore musical performance, music theory, and music history with an internationally-recognized faculty whose members are committed to personalize teaching. The Department is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Music in Composition | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | This curriculum permits a concentration in the compositional aspects of music in addition to promoting sound musicianship and a broadly based background in the liberal arts. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The courses include MUSC 101, 102, 201, 202, 204, 205, 206, 209, 210, 259, 262, 304, 350 (studies in composition), plus three music electives, one of which must be a course in an area of world music. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, 202 Sigfried Weis Music Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1216 | The Music Department offers a professional music program within an outstanding liberal-arts environment. Students explore musical performance, music theory, and music history with an internationally-recognized faculty whose members are committed to personalize teaching. The Department is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Music in Music Education | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | The curriculum in music education prepares students to teach music in the public schools. The curriculum is approved by the Department of Education of Pennsylvania as a requirement for professional certification. Through this course of study a student will be expected to develop sound musicianship in an applied area, knowledge of music theory and the history of music, and broad cultural awareness through courses other than music. Students may choose a curriculum that reflects either a vocal or instrumental emphasis. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The courses include MUSC 101, 102, 115, 116, 117, 119, 201, 202, 204, 205, 206, 235, 236, 250 or 251, 259, 269, plus one credit in an area of world music; EDUC 101, EDUC 201, EDUC 439 (Practice Teaching, fulfills Capstone); and four quarter credits of additional studio instruction in secondary instruments. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, 202 Sigfried Weis Music Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1216 | The Music Department offers a professional music program within an outstanding liberal-arts environment. Students explore musical performance, music theory, and music history with an internationally-recognized faculty whose members are committed to personalize teaching. The Department is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Music in Music History | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | The curriculum in music history cultivates critical thinking and writing, instills sound musicianship, develops expertise in the area of music history and literature, and fosters a broadly based background in the liberal arts. Candidates in music history are reviewed each semester to determine sufficient progress within the degree. At the end of the sophomore year, students must be approved for upper-level study by the department. Candidates whose progress is determined to be insufficient will not be permitted to continue in the Bachelor of Music program. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The courses include MUSC 101, 102, 201, 202, 204, 205, 206, 259, 262, 304, 362, a course in an area of world music, plus four music electives, including at least three additional courses in the area of music history. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, 202 Sigfried Weis Music Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1216 | The Music Department offers a professional music program within an outstanding liberal-arts environment. Students explore musical performance, music theory, and music history with an internationally-recognized faculty whose members are committed to personalize teaching. The Department is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Music in Performance | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | In this program, candidates are reviewed at the end of each semester through an examination by a jury composed of members of the faculty of the Department of Music. At the end of the sophomore year, students must be approved for upper-level study by the department. Candidates whose progress is determined to be insufficient will not be permitted to continue in the Bachelor of Music degree program. Performance majors are expected to appear in several successful performances prior to presenting a full public recital in the senior year. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The courses include MUSC 101, 102, 201, 202, 204, 205, 206, 259, 262, 304, plus four music electives, one of which must be a course in an area of world music. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Music, 202 Sigfried Weis Music Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1216 | The Music Department offers a professional music program within an outstanding liberal-arts environment. Students explore musical performance, music theory, and music history with an internationally-recognized faculty whose members are committed to personalize teaching. The Department is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Animal Behavior | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program | The program in animal behavior offers an interdisciplinary major that includes the subject matters of biology, chemistry, mathematics, physics, and psychology. The focus is directed toward understanding behavior and providing the student with a background uniting ecological, ethological, environmental, evolutionary, and experimental approaches to the study of animal life. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | This program consists of the same course credits noted above plus: all four biology core courses, rather than three; PHYS 211 and PHYS 212; MATH 201; three half-credit laboratory courses rather than two; and four electives rather than three. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program, 203 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1200 | The College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization for 2700 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Biology | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | A major in biology may serve as a sound preparation for those interested in careers in the life sciences including those who go on to graduate or medical school. Majoring in biology also adds to students’ understanding of the issues concerned with health, the environment, and agriculture. I | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | This science major requires nine courses in biology. The major provisions in biology are the same as the arts major, but five rather than four 300-level electives are required, only one of which can be BIOL 399. The bachelor of science major also requires: organic chemistry, CHEM 211-212, which must be completed during the first year, one year of mathematics, MATH 201 (calculus I) and MATH 216 (applied statistics), and one year of physics (PHYS 211-212). Two additional courses in major-related areas are also required. Any two of the following courses will satisfy the requirements: CHEM 221, CHEM 231, CHEM 340, CHEM 351, CHEM 352; CSCI 203, CSCI 204; GEOL 103, GEOL 104, GEOL 106, GEOL 205, GEOL 213, GEOL 305, GEOL 310; MATH 202, MATH 211, MATH217; PHIL 220, PHIL 272; PHYS 221; PSYC 250, PSYC 349, ANBE/BIOL/PSYC 266. Other courses may be substituted with department approval. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 203 Biology Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1124 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | This program is designed to ensure that the students are qualified to enter and succeed in the biomedical engineering profession through direct entry to the industrial workplace or further professional study. The department strives to achieve a process of continuous improvement of the curricula, provide a faculty which is professionally current in their field and to maintain state of the art facilities. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include 205 Bioinstrumentation I (I; 3, 2), 210 Fundamentals of Biomedical Engineering (I; 3, 2), 220 Introduction to Engineering Computing (I; 2, 1) Half course, 300 Biotransport I (II; 3, 2), 350 Fundamentals of Biomedical Signals and Systems (II; 3, 2) , 400 Biotransport II (I; 3, 2), 401 Biomedical Engineering Capstone I (I; 2, 2), 402 Biomedical Engineering Capstone II (II; 2, 2), 408 Medical Device Assessment and Development (II; 2, 0) Half course, 409 Fabrication and Experimental Design (I; 2, 0) Half course 421 Light activated Therapy (I or II; 4, 0), 431 Biomimetic Materials (I or II; 4, 0), 441 Neural Signals and Systems (I or II; 4, 0) , 451 Biomechanics and Injury Prevention (I or II; 4, 0), 471 and 472 Advanced Topics in Biomedical Engineering (I and II; R; 4, 0), 480 and 481 Biomedical Engineering Project (I and II; R; 1, 5) Half course , 490 and 491 Biomedical Engineering Research (I and II; R; 1, 10). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3726 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Accounting | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Management | The study of management and accounting prepares students to think critically and communicate effectively about the economic, social, political, and cultural issues that they will face throughout their careers. Coursework in management and accounting develops one’s capacity to make decisions, take action, and stimulate performance to achieve personal and organizational goals. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core modules include 160 Accounting Foundations (I and II; 4, 0; U), 161 Accounting Foundations II (I and II; 4, 0; U), 250 Intermediate Accounting I (I; 3, 1; U), 251 Intermediate Accounting II (II; 3, 1; U), 350 Honors Course Accounting (I or II; U), 353 Advanced Accounting (I or II; 3, 1; U), 354 Tax Accounting I (I or II; 3, 1; U), 355 Tax Accounting II (S; 75, 0; U), 357 Auditing (II; 3, 1; U), 359 Advanced Seminar in Accounting (II; 3, 1; U), 365 Cost Accounting (I or II; 3, 1; U). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Management | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Management, 313 Taylor Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1337 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Business Administration - Management | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Management | The study of management and accounting prepares students to think critically and communicate effectively about the economic, social, political, and cultural issues that they will face throughout their careers. Coursework in management and accounting develops one’s capacity to make decisions, take action, and stimulate performance to achieve personal and organizational goals. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core modules include MATH 201 or MATH 192, MGMT 101, 160, 161, 220, 242, 340, 370, 380, ECON 103 and 256, and one of the following: CLAS 247, CSCI 180, CSCI 203, ENGR 100, ENGR 270, ENST 211, HIST 170, HIST 270, or MGMT 240, MGMT 312, 319, 341, and one of MGMT 330, 336, or 339. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Management | College of Arts and Sciences, School of Management, 313 Taylor Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1337 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Cell Biology/Biochemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | The major in cell biology/biochemistry will focus on sub disciplines within biology and chemistry such as immunology, genetic engineering, nucleic acids, biomembrane function, cell biology of cancer, and enzymology. This program strongly emphasizes independent student research, including both seminar programs and hands-on research. A major in cell biology/biochemistry offers students an excellent preparation for careers in biotechnology, biomedical technology, medicine, pharmacology and bioengineering. It also is an excellent foundation for students preparing for entrance into Ph.D. programs in cell and molecular biology or biochemistry or Ph.D./M.D. programs in medically related fields. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The major requires five courses within the biology department (BIOL 205, 206, 207, 327, and 352) and six courses within the chemistry department (CHEM 211, 212, 221, 231, 340 or 341, and 351). Additionally, an interdepartmental Biochemical Methods course (BIOL 340/CHEM 358) is required as are three electives chosen from the following list: BIOL 302, 316, 318, 322, 323, 324, 326, 328, 329, 339, 343, 347, 348, 365, 399; CHEM 313, 314, 317, 322, 332, 342, 352, 360, 375, 376, PSYC 250 and BIOL/PSYC 343. At least one of these biology or chemistry electives must be a laboratory course. One research course (BIOL 399, CHEM 375, 376, or 403) may be counted as an elective toward the major. Two semesters of physics (PHYS 211 and PHYS 212) and two semesters of calculus (MATH 201 and 202) are required. A course selected from the following list of related humanities and social science courses also will be completed: HIST 170, 171, 270, 271, 272, 273, 279, 370; PHIL 218, 220; RELI 240; SOCI 130; UNIV 245, 246. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 203 Biology Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1124 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering | This program emphasizes active learning with a strong laboratory component. The department nurtures the intellectual, professional and personal development of its students and faculty in order to prepare and encourage them to be highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include 101, 102, 103, 104 Chemical Engineering Seminar (II; 1, 0) No credit, 200 Chemical Engineering Principles (I; 4, 2), 210 Applied Mathematics for Chemical Engineering (II; 4, 0) , 300 Heat and Mass Transfer (I; 4, 2) , 302 Equilibrium Stage Processes (I; 2, 1) Half course, 310 Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics (II; 4, 0) , 315 Unit Operations Laboratory (II; 1, 3) Half course, 320 Chemical Reaction Engineering (I; 3, 2) , 330 Process Control (II; 3, 2), 400 Process Engineering (I; 3, 3), 410 Project Engineering (II; 3, 3) , 430 and 431 Chemical Engineering Project (I or II; R; 1, 5) Half course, 440 and 441 Chemical Engineering Research (I and II; R; 1, 10), 444 Green Engineering (II; 4, 0), 450 Polymer Science (II; 3, 3) , 451 Applied Process Analysis (II; 4, 0) , 452 Bioprocess Engineering (I or II; 4, 0), 453 Product and Process Chemistry (II; 4, 0), 455 Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (I or II; 4, 0), 457 Applied Colloid, Surface, and Nanoscience (I; 4, 0), 460 Biomaterials: Materials in Medicine (I or II; 4, 0), 470 and 472 Special Topics in Chemical Engineering (I and II; R; 4, 0) , 481 Topics in Reaction Engineering (I or II; 4, 0) , 482 Topics in Chemical Engineering Applied Mathematics (I or II; 4, 0), 483 Topics in Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics (I or II; 4, 0), 485 Topics in Transport Theory (I or II; 4, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1114 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Chemistry | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | The major in chemistry offers experience in critical thinking, data analysis and experimental design. Chemistry graduates pursue a variety of careers in which these skills are important. Many work as chemists in chemical or pharmaceutical companies or in government labs. Others apply their chemical skills to careers in medicine, law, business, chemical or pharmaceutical sales, biotechnology, pharmacology, toxicology or environmental science. Many chemistry graduates pursue careers in education at the secondary, college or university level. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The major consists of eight courses in chemistry numbered 211 or above, five of which are required: CHEM 211, CHEM 212, CHEM 221, CHEM 231, and CHEM 340 or CHEM 341. In addition, one semester of calculus (MATH 201) and one semester of physics (PHYS 211) are required. MATH 202 and PHYS 212 are strongly recommended. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, 203 Rooke Chemistry, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3258 | The Rooke Chemistry Building was opened in 1989 and is attached to the Biology Building. The combined buildings make it possible to teach biology, chemistry and biochemistry in a much more efficient and integrated way and the department conduct research in organic, inorganic, analytical, physical, biological, environmental and polymer chemistry. The chemistry department is exceptionally well-equipped with modern laboratory instrumentation. Students work "hands-on" with a wide assortment of instruments including UV-Visible and FTIR spectrophotometers, gas and liquid chromatographs, NMR spectrometers, and GC/mass spectrometers. Major instruments include a Bruker 300 MHz NMR spectrometer and a single-crystal X-ray diffractometer, an electrospray mass spectrometer equipped for LC/MS/MS, and three GC/MS instruments. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | This program seeks to prepare the students to become responsible, contributing members of society, and to continue to develop personally and professionally after graduation. The program is designed to ensure that the students are qualified to enter, and succeed in, the civil engineering profession, enroll in graduate programs in civil engineering, or enter related industrial and business professions. Primary emphasis is placed on educational excellence achieved through a coherent and comprehensive curriculum, outstanding teaching, extensive student faculty interaction, small class sizes, substantial laboratory and field trip experiences, and faculty scholarship that often directly involve students. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include 300 Introduction to Structural Engineering (I; 4, 0), 305 GIS Applications for Engineering (I or II; 3, 2), 320 Water Resources Engineering (II; 3, 3), 330 Introduction to Transportation (II; 3, 2), 340 Environmental Engineering (I; 3, 2) , 350 Geotechnical Engineering I (I; 3, 2) , 401 Structural Analysis (I or II; 3, 2), 403 Wood Engineering Design Principles (I or II; 3, 3), 405 Design of Steel Structures (I or II; 3, 3), 406 Design of Concrete Structures (I or II; 3, 3), 407 Prestressed Concrete (I or II; 3, 2), 408 Finite Element Methods (I or II; 3, 2), 409 Earthquake Engineering (II; 3, 2), 419 Advanced Topics in Structural Engineering (I or II; 4, 0), 421 Hydrology (I or II; 3, 3) , 422 Open Channel Flow (I or II; 3, 2), 429 Advanced Topics in Water Resources Engineering (I or II; 3, 2), 431 Introduction to Urban and Regional Planning (I or II; 4, 0), 432 Transportation Policy and Planning (I or II; 4, 0), 433Mass Transportation Seminar (II; 4, 0), 434 Innovative Transportation Engineering (AII; 3, 1) , 435 Travel Demand Modeling (I or II; 3, 2), 435 Traffic Engineering (I or II; 3, 2), 439 Advanced Topics in Transportation (I or II; 4, 0), 440 Physical/Chemical Treatment Processes (I or II; 3, 3), 441 Environmental Engineering Biotechnology (I or II; 3, 3), 444 Hazardous Waste Management (I or II; 3, 3), 445 Environmental Engineering Chemistry (I or II; 3, 2), 448 Environmental Engineering Unit Operations and Processes (I or II; 3, 3) , 449 Advanced Topics in Environmental Engineering (I or II; R; 4, 0), 450 Geotechnical Engineering II (I or II; 3, 2), 451 Environmental Geotechnology (II; 3, 3), 452 Ground Improvement Engineering (I or II; 3, 3) , 459 Advanced Topics in Geotechnical Engineering (I or II; 4, 0), 461 Design Loads for Buildings and Bridges (I; 3, 3), 462 Steel Connection Analysis and Design (I or II; 3, 2), 472 Construction Engineering (I; 3, 2) , 475 Forensic Engineering (I or II; 4, 0), 479 Advanced Topics in Construction Engineering and Management (I or II; R; 1, 4) Half to full course, 480 Special Topics in Civil Engineering (I or II; R) Half to full course, 481 Undergraduate Research (I and II; R) Half to full course, 490 Engineering Planning and Project Management (I; 3, 2), 491 Civil Engineering Design (II; 2, 10). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1112 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering | This is an interdisciplinary degree offered jointly by the Departments of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering. Computer engineering is the integrated study of both computer hardware and software systems to solve problems and create new systems. The bachelor of science degree in computer engineering consists of required courses in computer science and electrical engineering providing in-depth exposure to both disciplines. Students can then select electives in computer science or electrical engineering to focus their course of study towards their individual interests. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1234 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Computer Science | This is an interdisciplinary degree offered jointly by the departments of computer science and electrical engineering. Computer engineering is a balanced study of both computer hardware and software systems to solve problems and create new systems (students interested in more of a focus on software should consider the computer science and engineering program in the computer science department). | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Computer Science | College of Engineering, Department of Computer Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1394 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | This program provides the student with an opportunity to combine the liberal arts tradition with computer science. The BA in computer science program is the most flexible of the three computer science programs and may be combined with another BA program for a double major. Popular second majors include mathematics and economics. Even with this extra flexibility, the BA in computer science prepares the student for employment in the computer industry and graduate education in computer science. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The major curriculum requires 11.5 course credits in computer science: CSCI 203, CSCI 204, CSCI 206, CSCI 208, CSCI 240, CSCI 311, CSCI 315, CSCI 341, and CSCI 479 and three computer science electives that may be at the 300 level or above. In addition, the following courses are required: MATH 201, MATH 202, MATH 211, MATH 226, and MATH 241; PHYS 211, PHYS 212, and PHYS 235; one additional science course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Computer Science, Bucknell University, LESISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1394 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | No | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Computer Science | This is an engineering degree in the tradition of other bachelor of science in engineering degrees such as chemical, civil, electrical, biomedical, and mechanical engineering. It is a program for students interested in computer science in an engineering context. The program combines significant depth in mathematics, science, and engineering with a strong preparation in computer science. The program is accredited by both the Computing Accreditation Commission (CAC) and the Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) of the ABET, Inc. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Computer Science | College of Engineering, Department of Computer Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1394 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Early Childhood Education | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | The bachelor of science in education is designed for students who have clearly defined professional interests in the field of education and who desire to pursue a career in early childhood or elementary teaching. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include EDUC 101; EDUC 201; EDUC 202 (non-credit courses); EDUC 323; EDUC 341; EDUC 342; EDUC 344; EDUC 345; EDUC 346; EDUC 349 and EDUC 449 (12 credits). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education, 457 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1324 | The Education Department works to prepare students for prominent roles as public intellectuals. Their blend of social sciences and professional preparation coursework is theoretically grounded and presents educational issues within social contexts that are diverse and evolving. Graduates will use their capacity for self-reflection and ethical reasoning to respond creatively to challenges encountered in their personal and professional lives. The Education Department's primary goal is the development of the students' thinking and problem-solving abilities so that they will be able to help people maximize their opportunities for success in educational environments. It views the field of education as a social science, and programs within the department reflect that perspective. In education, as in any other social or natural science, effectiveness is measured in terms of the ability of professionals to solve the problems of the discipline. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Education - Elementary Education | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | This program is designed for students who have clearly defined professional interests in the field of education and who desire to pursue a career in early childhood or elementary teaching. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core modules include EDUC 101; EDUC 201; EDUC 202 (non-credit course); EDUC 341; EDUC 342; EDUC 343; EDUC 344; EDUC 345; EDUC 346; EDUC 349; and EDUC 449 (12 credits). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education, 457 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1324 | The Education Department works to prepare students for prominent roles as public intellectuals. Their blend of social sciences and professional preparation coursework is theoretically grounded and presents educational issues within social contexts that are diverse and evolving. Graduates will use their capacity for self-reflection and ethical reasoning to respond creatively to challenges encountered in their personal and professional lives. The Education Department's primary goal is the development of the students' thinking and problem-solving abilities so that they will be able to help people maximize their opportunities for success in educational environments. It views the field of education as a social science, and programs within the department reflect that perspective. In education, as in any other social or natural science, effectiveness is measured in terms of the ability of professionals to solve the problems of the discipline. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering | This program emphasizes active learning with a strong laboratory component. The department nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students in order to prepare and encourage them to be highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. The electrical engineering department is dedicated to providing educational opportunities in electrical engineering and computer engineering to a highly selective, predominantly undergraduate, student body of talented men and women. The department is small and emphasizes close interactions between students and the faculty, who are dedicated to education and actively engaged in scholarship that enriches the educational programs. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include 101 Electrical Engineering Analysis (II; 3, 2), 105 Electrical Engineering Fundamentals (I and II; 3, 2), 120 Foundations of Electrical Engineering (II; 3, 3), 225 Circuit Theory I (I; 2, 3) Half course, 226 Circuit Theory II (II; 2, 3) Half course, 228 and 229 Electrical Engineering Problems (I and II; R) Half to full course, 245 Introduction to Digital Systems (I; 3, 3), 247 Microcontroller System Design (II; 3; 3), 308 and 309 Advanced Electrical Engineering Laboratory (I or II; R) , 320 Linear Systems (I; 3, 3), 340 Digital System Design (II; 3, 3), 350 Electronics I (I; 3, 3), 351 Electronics II (II; 3, 3), 390 Theory and Applications of Electromagnetics (II; 4, 0) , 400 Project Planning and Engineering Design (I; 3, 0) Half course, 401 Electrical Engineering Honors Thesis (I or II; R) Half or full course, 410 Biomedical Signal Processing and Instrumentation (I or II; 3, 0), 411 Neural Signals and Systems (I or II; 4, 0) , 420 Electrical Engineering Design (II; 0, 6), 421 Computer Engineering Design (II; 0, 6), 428 and 429 Advanced Electrical Engineering Problems (I or II; R) Half to full course, 442 Digital VLSI Circuit Design (I or II; 3, 3) , 443 High Performance Computer Architecture (I or II; 3, 0), 444 Advanced Digital Design (I or II; 3, 3) , 445 Simulation (I or II; 3, 0), 452 Power Electronics (AI; 3, 3), 460 Optoelectronic Materials and Devices (II; 3, 2), 462 Fiber Optics Fundamentals (I or II; 3, 0), 463 Introduction to Mechatronics (I; 2, 2), 470 Communication and Information Systems (I or II: 3, 0) , 471 Probability with Applications in Electrical Engineering (I or II; 4, 0) , 472 Digital Signal Processing (II; 3, 2) , 473 Digital Speech and Audio Processing (I or II; 3, 3), 474 Digital Image Processing (AI; 3, 0), 475 Computer Communication Networks (I or II; 3, 0), 477 Topics in Wireless System Design (I or II; 3, 3), 480 Electrical Control Systems (I; 3, 3), 481 Advanced Control System (II; 3, 3) , 483 Fuzzy Systems and Neural Networks (I or II; 3, 3), 491 Electromechanical Energy Conversion (I; 3, 3), 493 Electric Power Systems (I or II; 3, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1234 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Environmental Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core modules include 12 courses: the six core courses (GEOL 103 104, 201, 210, 214, 217); GEOL 205, 324, 329, 430; one course selected from GEOL 301, 305, and 310; and one course selected from GEOL 213, 312, 321, or 322. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, 231 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1382 | The department offers a BA and a BS in both Geology and Environmental Geology, and emphasizes hands-on, field-based learning. Recent student graduates are working in environmental engineering consulting firms, government agencies, and education among other careers, or pursuing graduate education in some of the nation's top graduate schools. In the fifty year history of the department, approximately two-thirds of the majors have gone on to graduate school to receive a Masters or a Ph.D. degree. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Environmental Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | This program in environmental studies is offered for the student particularly interested in scientific and technical aspects of human and natural systems. As a bachelor of science major, it is meant to provide substantial depth in environmental sciences and related fields within the context of a liberal education. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include ENST 201 Gateway to Environmental Studies, BIOL 208 Population and Community Biology (Ecology course), GEOL 106 Environmental Geology (Earth Science course), MATH 201 Calculus I, MATH 216 Statistics I, ECON 103 Economic Principles and Problems, CHEM 201and CHEM 202 General Chemistry, Humanities core, Social science core, seven science and technology courses, ENST 411 Senior Clinic, Senior Thesis: ENST 349 and ENST 350, preferably taken as one-half credit in each of junior and senior year. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3746 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Geology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | The geology curriculum engages students with concepts and issues related to the earth and its environments, through coursework, field studies, and scientific research. A geology degree equips students with analytical skills, problem solving skills, communication skills, experience in teamwork, and solid grounding in field-based science. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | This program in geology requires 12 courses. The six core courses (GEOL 103 , 104, 201, 210, 214, 217), 2) GEOL 312, 329, and 430, and 3) three courses selected from GEOL 205, 213, 301, 305, 310, 321 or 322, and 324. Additional requirements include MATH 201-202, MATH 211 or 216; PHYS 211; CHEM 201-202 or CHEM 211-212 or CHEM 221 with approval of the advisers. A summer course in field geology is strongly recommended. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geology, 231 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1382 | The department offers a BA and a BS in both Geology and Environmental Geology, and emphasizes hands-on, field-based learning. Recent student graduates are working in environmental engineering consulting firms, government agencies, and education among other careers, or pursuing graduate education in some of the nation's top graduate schools. In the fifty year history of the department, approximately two-thirds of the majors have gone on to graduate school to receive a Masters or a Ph.D. degree. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | A major in mathematics may be seen as the first step toward obtaining a graduate degree in one of the mathematical sciences, or it may constitute preparation for a professional degree program in a field such as education, medicine, law, or business. It also opens the door to a whole range of employment opportunities, as the analytical skills that a student develops in pursuing a major in mathematics are greatly valued by potential employers. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core modules include MATH 211 Calculus III, MATH 212 Differential Equations, MATH 213 Elementary Linear Algebra, MATH 280 Logic, Sets and Proofs, MATH 308 Introduction to Real Analysis I, and MATH 320 Introduction to Algebra. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics - Pure Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students majoring in mathematics with a special interest in pure mathematics or statistics can earn formal concentration in these areas by selecting their 300-level electives appropriately and taking one additional course. In particular, those intending to pursue graduate study in mathematics or statistics should plan to complete the relevant concentration. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The pure mathematics concentration consists of MATH 309, MATH 345, MATH 346, and two of the following: MATH 311, MATH 333, MATH 362. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Mathematics - Statistics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students majoring in mathematics with a special interest in pure mathematics or statistics can earn formal concentration in these areas by selecting their 300-level electives appropriately and taking one additional course. In particular, those intending to pursue graduate study in mathematics or statistics should plan to complete the relevant concentration. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The statistics concentration consists of MATH 303, MATH 304, MATH 305, MATH 307, and either MATH 309 or MATH 345. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | 4 Year(s) | US $43,250 a year | College of Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering | The mechanical engineering students acquire a firm foundation in fundamental courses including thermodynamics, rigid body mechanics, fluid mechanics, strength of materials, and heat transfer. This knowledge is applied in subsequent courses in manufacturing, mechanical and thermal design, finite element analysis, and system dynamics. The curriculum culminates in a yearlong senior design sequence wherein teams of students design, build and test devices for real customers. Students also acquire specialized knowledge through senior-level engineering electives with topics including biomechanics, fracture mechanics, composite materials, combustion, internal combustion engines, mechatronics, and mechanism design. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include 151 Machining for Manufacturing Tech (I; 2, 2) No credit, 202 Graphics for Design and Manufacture (II; 1, 2) Half course, 213 Thermodynamics I (I; 4, 0), 216 Thermodynamics II (II; 3, 2), 252 Dynamics (II; 4, 0), 302 Finite Elements in Analysis and Design (II; 3, 2), 312 Heat Transfer (II; 3, 2), 313 Fluid Dynamics (I; 3, 2) , 353 Solid Mechanics (I; 3, 2) , 355 Manufacturing Processes (I; 3, 2), 392 Mechanical Design (II; 3, 2), 401 Senior Design I (I; 1, 2) Half course, 402 Senior Design II (II; 2, 2) Half course, 403 Thermal Design (I; 3, 2), 405 System Dynamics (I; 3, 2), 422 Advanced Energy Conversion (I or II; 4, 0), 424 Internal Combustion Engines (I; 4, 0), 485 Advanced Engineering Problems (I or II; R; 2, 3) Half to full course, 486 Environmental Fluid Dynamics (I or II; 3, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3193 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience - Behavior and Cognitive Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | The program in neuroscience offers students an interdisciplinary major representing aspect of biology, psychology, animal behavior, chemistry, mathematics, bioengineering, and physics. The neuroscience major is intended to give students opportunities, through coursework and research experience, to study the nervous system, its development and influence on behavior (broadly defined). If students have a specific interest in behavioral and cognitive perspectives( including developmental psycho-biology) within the study of Neuroscience, it is recommended that the student choose advanced courses from the behavioral course offerings. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include NEUR 100 Introduction to Neuroscience, BIOL 205 Introduction to Molecules and Cells, BIOL 207 Genetics, PSYC 250 Physiological Psychology, CHEM 211 Organic Chemistry I, CHEM 212 Organic Chemistry II, CHEM 201 General Chemistry I and CHEM 202 General Chemistry II or CHEM 221 Inorganic Chemistry I, CHEM 231 Analytical Chemistry I, MATH 201 Calculus I or MATH 205 Accelerated Calculus, MATH 216 Statistics I or PSYC 215 Psychological Statistics, BIOL/PSYC 343 Neural Plasticity or BIOL 303 Behavioral Neuroendocrinology or BIOL 342 Neuroethology or BIOL 324 Neurophysiology, PSYC 203 Learning or PSYC 204 Human Cognition or PSYC 252 Sensation and Perspective or NEUR 248 Developmental Psychobiology. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program, 315 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3478 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience - Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | The program in neuroscience offers students an interdisciplinary major representing aspect of biology, psychology, animal behavior, chemistry, mathematics, bioengineering, and physics. The neuroscience major is intended to give students opportunities, through coursework and research experience, to study the nervous system, its development and influence on behavior (broadly defined). For students with particular interests in cellular or molecular perspectives on nervous system structure and function, they may select courses focusing on those aspects of neuroscience by choosing course offerings. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include NEUR 100 Introduction to Neuroscience, BIOL 205 Introduction to Molecules and Cells, BIOL 207 Genetics, PSYC 250 Physiological Psychology, CHEM 211 Organic Chemistry I, CHEM 212 Organic Chemistry II, CHEM 201 General Chemistry I and CHEM 202 General Chemistry II or CHEM 221 Inorganic Chemistry I, CHEM 231 Analytical Chemistry I, MATH 201 Calculus I or MATH 205 Accelerated Calculus, MATH 216 Statistics I or PSYC 215 Psychological Statistics, BIOL/PSYC 343 Neural Plasticity or BIOL 303 Behavioral Neuroendocrinology or BIOL 342 Neuroethology or BIOL 324 Neurophysiology, PSYC 203 Learning or PSYC 204 Human Cognition or PSYC 252 Sensation and Perspective or NEUR 248 Developmental Psychobiology. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program, 315 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3478 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience - General Neuroscience | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | The program in neuroscience offers students an interdisciplinary major representing aspect of biology, psychology, animal behavior, chemistry, mathematics, bioengineering, and physics. The neuroscience major is intended to give students opportunities, through coursework and research experience, to study the nervous system, its development and influence on behavior (broadly defined). | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The modules include NEUR 100 Introduction to Neuroscience, BIOL 205 Introduction to Molecules and Cells, BIOL 207 Genetics, PSYC 250 Physiological Psychology, CHEM 211 Organic Chemistry I, CHEM 212 Organic Chemistry II, CHEM 201 General Chemistry I and CHEM 202 General Chemistry II or CHEM 221 Inorganic Chemistry I, CHEM 231 Analytical Chemistry I, MATH 201 Calculus I or MATH 205 Accelerated Calculus, MATH 216 Statistics I or PSYC 215 Psychological Statistics, BIOL/PSYC 343 Neural Plasticity or BIOL 303 Behavioral Neuroendocrinology or BIOL 342 Neuroethology or BIOL 324 Neurophysiology, PSYC 203 Learning or PSYC 204 Human Cognition or PSYC 252 Sensation and Perspective or NEUR 248 Developmental Psychobiology. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Neuroscience Program, 315 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3478 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Bachelor of Science in Physics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | A major in Physics is an appropriate first step on the path to a career as a research scientist. Since physics is such a fundamental science, it can be the basis for the understanding of principles that are relevant to a wide variety of fields. It provides preparation for graduate study in physics or in related fields such as astrophysics, biophysics, chemical physics, geophysics, or engineering. A fundamental understanding of nature has been a goal throughout history, and a study of physics can be the focus of a liberal education because of its connections with intellectual history and philosophy. A major in physics can be the platform for pursuing a wide variety of careers including medicine, law, business, and teaching. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | The core modules include 141 Secrets of the Universe, 142 Light and Vision, 144 How Things Work, 145 Contemporary Issues in Energy, 211 and 212 Classical and Modern Physics , 211E and 212E Classical and Modern Physics , 221 Classical Mechanics , 222 Wave Mechanics and Quantum Physics , 235 Applied Electronics , 301 Astrophysics, 303 Modern Optics, 309 Condensed Matter Physics, 310 Experimental Physics, 317 Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, 329 and 330 Experimental Physics I and II, v, 332 Quantum Mechanics, 333 Electromagnetic Theory I, 334 Electromagnetic Theory II, 336 Mathematical Physics, 337 Contemporary Problems in Physics, 339 Advanced Quantum Mechanics and Particle Physics, 350 Undergraduate Research, Astrophysics. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, 153 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1207 | The Physics and Astronomy Department encourages students to participate in research projects; research serves as an important complement to the classroom study of physics. The department offers research opportunities in atomic and molecular physics, chaos and nonlinear dynamics, astronomy and astrophysics, general relativity, theoretical quantum optics, laser spectroscopy, elementary particle physics, positron physics, biological physics, theoretical condensed matter physics, and statistical physics. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | The department strongly encourages qualified majors to consider working for honors in anthropology. Such students should consult in their junior year with one or more members of the faculty of the department to begin defining a research topic and writing a proposal. Normally, during the senior year, an honors student will enroll in ANTH 319 and, if agreed to by the academic adviser, a second semester in ANTH 320. The honors proposal is to be approved by the department chairperson and submitted to the Honors Council by mid-October of the senior year. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 209 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1117 | Department of Sociology and Anthropology has two main areas: sociology and anthropology. Sociology offers a wide variety of integrative views of social life (theories), numerous techniques to research its patterns in understandable forms (methods) and just as many critical stances from which to judge the fairness of social orderings (values). Appropriately enough, this multiplicity provides a diversity to course offerings and, interestingly enough, a singularity of purpose for students in their study. Anthropology explores the diversity and integrity of other cultures, and shows the value of other ways of life. The discipline is, by nature, inclusive, importing ideas, methods, and subject matter from many sources to apply to its central focus: the study of human cultural behavior. The field also has significant applications to practical problems, both in this country and elsewhere. Theoretical, descriptive, and practical aspects of anthropology are represented among the department's faculty and courses. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Art | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program leading to a major with honors in art may be proposed by the student in consultation with the department chair and appropriate department faculty. The student generally undertakes a specifically designed sequence of courses and independent research culminating in a significant studio project or written thesis. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Art Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1307 | The Department of Art and Art History encourages interactions among the disciplines of art, art history, museum studies, film studies, philosophy, history, modern languages and others. The curriculum enhances students' visual literacy and theory skills and prepares them for critical engagement in an increasingly visually oriented world. The faculty in art and art history, as well as the director and staff of the Samek Art Gallery, translate this ideal into courses appropriate for students in art, art history or related fields, to non majors seeking a well rounded academic background. | No | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | This program leading to a major with honors in art history may be proposed by the student in consultation with the department chair and appropriate department faculty. The student generally undertakes a specifically designed sequence of courses and independent research culminating in a significant studio project or written thesis. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Art Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1307 | The Department of Art and Art History encourages interactions among the disciplines of art, art history, museum studies, film studies, philosophy, history, modern languages and others. The curriculum enhances students' visual literacy and theory skills and prepares them for critical engagement in an increasingly visually oriented world. The faculty in art and art history, as well as the director and staff of the Samek Art Gallery, translate this ideal into courses appropriate for students in art, art history or related fields, to non majors seeking a well rounded academic background. | No | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in English | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The student under the guidance of a staff member, undertakes a specifically tailored sequence of courses and independent work culminating in an honors thesis, evaluated by a panel of three faculty members. It is also possible to write a departmental honors thesis without applying for Honors in English. Students writing thesis should enroll in ENGL 379 (Senior Thesis) during the semester in which they plan to complete the thesis. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, 121 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1553 | The Bucknell English Department provides students with opportunities for intensive study in language and literature. Courses in English introduce students to important works of literary art in the English and American literary traditions, to other national and regional literary traditions in English, and to diverse and multicultural voices and traditions. Students in English classes learn to express themselves critically and creatively, developing a sensitivity to language and precision in writing and speech as well as analytical skills that will serve them well in their other university courses and in their professional lives following their education at Bucknell. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in French | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | All majors who meet the requirements set by the Honors Council and wish to earn honors in French are encouraged to do so. Students interested in writing an Honors Thesis should contact a French faculty member early in the second semester of their junior year to discuss the process and to define a topic. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs, 200 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1353 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in German | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | All majors who meet the requirements set by the Honors Council and wish to earn honors in German are encouraged to do so. Students interested in writing an Honors Thesis should contact a German faculty member early in the second semester of their junior year to discuss the process and to define a topic. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs, 200 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1353 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in History | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | The department encourages students to develop independent study programs with faculty members. In addition, interested and qualified students, in consultation with the chair, are encouraged to apply to the Honors Council for admission to the university honors program. The application normally would be submitted at the beginning of the fall semester of the senior year. Students who do honors work in history submit a substantial honors thesis, the equivalent of two courses of work in their senior year. Credit may be taken either in one semester of the senior year or in both. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 107 Carnegie Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1123 | The history department at Bucknell includes scholars who are active in their professional subfields, who present a wide range of views and interests, and who take teaching seriously. Coursework in the department is demanding. Classes tend to be small, and students therefore can benefit from close contact with professional historians who take a personal interest in their students. Courses in history are designed to encourage reflection on the nature, advantages, and struggles of human societies in different times and places, and to invite cross-cultural comparisons. Moreover, they are intended to stimulate the historical imagination and to promote critical and technical skills in the comprehension and production of historical narratives. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | Students who, by the end of their junior year, have completed MATH 308 and MATH 320 and a total of at least three mathematics courses at the 300 level, and who have achieved a grade point average of at least 3.50 both in their mathematics courses and overall, are encouraged to apply for departmental honors. If an appropriate mathematics department faculty adviser is available and the student is eligible under the above criteria, then the student can work for departmental honors. To achieve departmental honors, he or she completes at least two half-credit semesters of independent study in mathematics (MATH 391), writes an honors thesis under the adviser's direction, and satisfies all other requirements as put forth by the University Honors Council. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | Qualified seniors are invited to pursue honors in political science by writing and defending an honors thesis. Interested juniors should consult with their adviser, with the department chair, or with another member of the department. Interested students also may pursue independent study (POLS 395 or POLS 396) under a plan worked out with a member of the department. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 265 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1300 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The department strongly encourages students to engage in independent research, done in close collaboration with a faculty member. Seniors, if academically eligible, often conduct senior honors projects and many others conduct independent studies. A program for honors in psychology must include PSYC 360 or the corresponding Capstone on behavioral research. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 203 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1200 | The psychology department trains students to understand and conduct studies of the mind and behavior, utilizing several perspectives and a variety of species. National surveys show that the psychology department at Bucknell is highly ranked among similar institutions in the number of majors going on to receive doctoral degrees. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Sociology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | The department strongly encourages qualified majors to consider working for honors in sociology. Such students should consult in their junior year with one or more members of the faculty of the department to begin defining a research topic and writing a proposal. Normally, during the senior year, an honors student will enroll in SOCI 319 and, if agreed to by the academic adviser, a second semester in SOCI 320. The honors proposal is to be approved by the department chairperson and submitted to the Honors Council by mid-October of the senior year. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 209 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1117 | Department of Sociology and Anthropology has two main areas: sociology and anthropology. Sociology offers a wide variety of integrative views of social life (theories), numerous techniques to research its patterns in understandable forms (methods) and just as many critical stances from which to judge the fairness of social orderings (values). Appropriately enough, this multiplicity provides a diversity to course offerings and, interestingly enough, a singularity of purpose for students in their study. Anthropology explores the diversity and integrity of other cultures, and shows the value of other ways of life. The discipline is, by nature, inclusive, importing ideas, methods, and subject matter from many sources to apply to its central focus: the study of human cultural behavior. The field also has significant applications to practical problems, both in this country and elsewhere. Theoretical, descriptive, and practical aspects of anthropology are represented among the department's faculty and courses. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Spanish | Majors with a strong academic record and interest in research are encouraged to speak with a faculty member in Spanish about an honors project in their sophomore or junior year. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Spanish | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Spanish, 200 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1353 | This department is committed to providing excellent instruction and learning opportunities that challenge majors and minors, and other interested students to develop their language proficiency in Spanish to the maximum, as well as to know and understand the literature and culture of the Spanish-speaking peoples of the world. It encourages students to think critically, to question their cultural assumptions about the Hispanic world, and to seek to immerse themselves, as much as possible, in a Spanish-speaking community. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Honors in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Dance | The major with honors in theatre may be proposed by the student in consultation with the department chair and appropriate department faculty. The student generally undertakes a specifically designed sequence of courses, independent research, and creative projects culminating in the stage direction or design of a main stage production, the writing of a play script, a performance project, or a research paper in the area of theatre history, criticism, or dramatic literature. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Bachelor degree | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Dance, 141 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1235 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Ancient History and Society | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | This program focuses upon the study of the culture and society of ancient Greece, Rome, and the Near East, including religion, politics, law, sexuality, economics, education, and patterns of thought and behavior, as well as the approaches and methodologies of ancient historians. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include CLAS 131 Greek Civilization, CLAS 132 Roman Civilization, CLAS 217 Greek History, CLAS 218 Roman History, CLAS 231 Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean, CLAS 236 The Age of Augustus, CLAS 237 Gender and Identity in Antiquity, CLAS 238 Greek Law and Political Thought, CLAS 239 Fall of Rome, CLAS 332 Classical Athens. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, 6 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1335 | The Department of Classics offers courses in Classics which enable students to study the ancient Mediterranean world through a variety of perspectives: archaeology, art, architecture, history, language, literature, religion, and philosophy.The department prides itself on its interdisciplinarity, with faculty of the department collaborating with colleagues across the university, including Comparative Humanities, Religion, History, and Women's and Gender Studies. It is also especially proud of its continuing involvement in archaeological field excavations.The faculty routinely participate in and send Bucknell students to major excavations in Greece and the eastern Mediterranean. The Department attracts people with all sorts of interests, who go on to follow a wide variety of paths in life. Some go on to graduate school to study the classics or related fields. Some go to professional school for law, medicine, business or library services. Others become editors, translators, religious leaders, computer programmers, teachers, and leaders in the non-profit sector. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Anthropology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | The aim of the major is to introduce students to the anthropological understanding of human society. Instruction is offered on various topical issues, on the ways of life characteristic of particular world regions, and on the ways in which anthropology is employed to solve practical problems. Students may go on to graduate work but anthropology furnishes skills and conceptual tools useful in a wide variety of life and career objectives. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The anthropology major requires eight courses. A student must take ANTH 109 Cultural Anthropology; a methods course chosen from SOCI/ANTH 201 Field Research in Local Communities, ANTH 287 Anthropology in Action or SOCI 208Methods of Social Research; ANTH 283 Anthropological Theory; ANTH 330 Advanced Seminar in Anthropology; and four electives, one of which should be an area course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 209 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1117 | Department of Sociology and Anthropology has two main areas: sociology and anthropology. Sociology offers a wide variety of integrative views of social life (theories), numerous techniques to research its patterns in understandable forms (methods) and just as many critical stances from which to judge the fairness of social orderings (values). Appropriately enough, this multiplicity provides a diversity to course offerings and, interestingly enough, a singularity of purpose for students in their study. Anthropology explores the diversity and integrity of other cultures, and shows the value of other ways of life. The discipline is, by nature, inclusive, importing ideas, methods, and subject matter from many sources to apply to its central focus: the study of human cultural behavior. The field also has significant applications to practical problems, both in this country and elsewhere. Theoretical, descriptive, and practical aspects of anthropology are represented among the department's faculty and courses. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Archaeology and Material Culture | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | The courses in this category focus upon the study of material culture, including the processes by which physical evidence from the ancient world is uncovered and analyzed; the evolution of urban forms; expression of architecture and art; the theories and practices of ancient technology; and the relationships of ancient cultures with their environments and ecosystems. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include CLAS 141 Ancient Cities, CLAS 241 Archaeology of Egypt, CLAS 242 Archaeology of Greece, CLAS 243 Archaeology of Rome, CLAS 247 Ancient Technology, CLAS 344 Archaeological Field Methods. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, 6 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1335 | The Department of Classics offers courses in Classics which enable students to study the ancient Mediterranean world through a variety of perspectives: archaeology, art, architecture, history, language, literature, religion, and philosophy.The department prides itself on its interdisciplinarity, with faculty of the department collaborating with colleagues across the university, including Comparative Humanities, Religion, History, and Women's and Gender Studies. It is also especially proud of its continuing involvement in archaeological field excavations.The faculty routinely participate in and send Bucknell students to major excavations in Greece and the eastern Mediterranean. The Department attracts people with all sorts of interests, who go on to follow a wide variety of paths in life. Some go on to graduate school to study the classics or related fields. Some go to professional school for law, medicine, business or library services. Others become editors, translators, religious leaders, computer programmers, teachers, and leaders in the non-profit sector. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Art History | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | The art history major consists of a minimum of nine courses: eight of which must be in art history and one of which must be in studio art. No more than two of the nine required courses may be taken for credit elsewhere. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include 101 World Art I: Caves to Cathedrals (I; 3, 0), 102 World Art II: Renaissance to Enlightenment (I or II; 3, 0), 103 World Art III: Enlightenment to Now (I or II; 3, 0), 204 Castle, Cathedral and Cloister (I; 3, 0), 207 Modern Art: 1850 - 1915 (I; 3, 0), 208 Modern Art 1915 - Now (II; 3, 0), 211 History of Photography (I or II; 3, 0), 213 History of Western Architecture (I or II; 3, 0), 215 Architecture and Art in London (I; 3, 0) Half or full course, 218 French Art and Architecture (II; 3, 0), 221 Visual Cultures of the Mediterranean 1 - 1000 CE (AII; 3, 0), 222 Philosophy of Art (I or II; 3, 0), 225 Popular Culture and Prints (II; 3, 0), 227 Introduction to Visual Culture (I or II; 3, 0), 263 Curatorial and Gallery Practices (II; 3, 1), 264 Museum Studies: Gillray Exhibition (I or II; 3, 0), 265 Topics in Aesthetics (II; R; 3, 0), 271 Italian Renaissance Art (I; 3, 0), 272 Baroque Art – Power and Persuasion (II; 3, 0), 273 Northern Renaissance Art (II; 3, 0), 275 Art and Architecture of the Islamic World (II; 3, 0), 300 Special Topics in Medieval Art (I; R; 3, 0), 315 Seminar: Rembrandt's World (I or II; 3, 0), 319 and 320 Special Studies in Art History (I and II; R), 323 Contemporary Art (I or II; 3, 0), 325 Special Studies in Modern Art (I and II; R: 3, 0), 370 Kress Paintings Seminar (I; 0, 3), 371 Gillray Prints Seminar (II; 0, 3), 419 Henry VIII and English Renaissance (I; 3, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Art Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1307 | The Department of Art and Art History encourages interactions among the disciplines of art, art history, museum studies, film studies, philosophy, history, modern languages and others. The curriculum enhances students' visual literacy and theory skills and prepares them for critical engagement in an increasingly visually oriented world. The faculty in art and art history, as well as the director and staff of the Samek Art Gallery, translate this ideal into courses appropriate for students in art, art history or related fields, to non majors seeking a well rounded academic background. | No | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Comparative Humanities | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Humanities Program | This program in comparative humanities approaches western traditions of ideas, history, literature, and art in an interdisciplinary fashion. Designed to reflect contemporary trends in humanistic scholarship, it examines issues and perspectives that conventional undergraduate disciplinary boundaries often preclude. These include the various ways in which the 'Western tradition' has been constructed and represented, and the historical shifts in the way knowledge has been classified. Inasmuch as language and culture are central to this interdisciplinary project, students who declare a major in the comparative humanities are required to satisfy a language requirement. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include 98 Myth, Reason, Faith (I or II; 4, 0), 128 Myth, Reason, Faith (I; 3, 0), 150 Art, Nature, and Knowledge (I or II; 4, 0), 250 Nihilism, Modernism, Uncertainty (I; 3, 0), 301 Humanistic Disciplines (I; R; 3, 0), 302 Historical Periods (II; R; 3, 0), 303 Cultures and Traditions (I; R; 3, 0), 304 Narrative and Media (II; R; 3, 0), 350 Senior Thesis (I and II; R; 3, 0), 351 Honors Tutorial and Senior Thesis (I and II; 3, 0), 450 Reality, Identity, Post modernity (I and II; 3, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Humanities Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Humanities Program, 200 Vaughan Lit, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1353 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in East Asian Studies - China Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of East Asian studies | The major, requiring an emphasis on either China or Japan, entails a program of study (created in consultation with a department adviser) that requires a minimum of 10 courses: six language courses in the language of one's emphasis (Chinese or Japanese) and four cultural courses, of which one must be outside one's emphasis (on China or Japan), and one - to provide a broad historical introduction to East Asian civilizations. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of East Asian studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of East Asian studies, 12 Marts Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1450 | The East Asian Studies department offers courses for the liberal education of all Bucknell students as well as for the specialized education of students choosing the East Asian studies major. The major offers two geographic and cultural emphases China or Japan. These emphases are designed to give students a balanced exposure to the arts, history, literature, politics, philosophy, religion, science, and technology of both the past and present of the region. The department offers a full four years of training in Japanese and Chinese. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in East Asian Studies - Japan Emphasis | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of East Asian studies | The major, requiring an emphasis on either China or Japan, entails a program of study (created in consultation with a department adviser) that requires a minimum of 10 courses: six language courses in the language of one's emphasis (Chinese or Japanese) and four cultural courses, of which one must be outside one's emphasis (on China or Japan), and one - to provide a broad historical introduction to East Asian civilizations. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of East Asian studies | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of East Asian studies, 12 Marts Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1450 | The East Asian Studies department offers courses for the liberal education of all Bucknell students as well as for the specialized education of students choosing the East Asian studies major. The major offers two geographic and cultural emphases China or Japan. These emphases are designed to give students a balanced exposure to the arts, history, literature, politics, philosophy, religion, science, and technology of both the past and present of the region. The department offers a full four years of training in Japanese and Chinese. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Economics | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | A major in economics offers a background for careers in law, journalism, finance and consulting, government and international affairs, teaching, industrial relations, public service, and many others. The major also provides the essential first stage for students interested in graduate work in economics, and a solid foundation for the graduate study of business and the law. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include Economics 103 (Economic principles), Economics 256 (Intermediate Microeconomics), Economics 257 (Intermediate Macroeconomics), Economics 258 (Intermediate Political Economy), Mathematics 192 or 201 (Calculus), Mathematics 216 (Statistics). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics, 168 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1476 | This Department cultivates patterns of inquiry that produce economic literacy, independent thinking, and a commitment to lifelong learning and a socially responsible life.With these goals in mind, students approach the study of Economics from multiple perspectives. Through the required and elective courses, students explore the basic tools of mainstream economic theory and political economy, as well as their historical and philosophical underpinnings. The department emphasizes the connection between economic theory and real world economies because all economic theories begin with observation of some real world economic phenomenon. The different theories inform ongoing debates about the role of government and the differences between economic systems and the varied perspectives sharpen the analytical and critical thinking skills of the students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in English - Concentration in Film/Media Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The concentration in film/media studies applies traditional literary practices of close textual reading and critical thinking to the realm of film and media. This option allows students to learn about film and media practices through historical study of american and world cinema, theoretical analysis, and creative production. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include English Core (4 courses): One English survey course, One 19th Century course, ENGL 298 (Introduction to Literary Theory) or ENGL 398 (Seminar in Critical Theory), Film/Media Studies Concentration (5 courses): ENGL 337 (Film Theory), ENGL 231 (Pre- and Early Cinema), ENGL 232 (Film History I), ENGL 233 (Film History II), ENGL 234 (National Cinemas), ENGL 235 (Gender and Film), ENGL 238 (Special Topic in Film Studies), ENGL 258 (Shakespeare and Film), One of the following seminars: ENGL 332 (Film and Technology), ENGL 336 (Film Genres and Auteur), ENGL 339 (Special Topics in Film Studies), ENGL 358 (Seminar in Shakespeare and Film). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, 121 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1553 | The Bucknell English Department provides students with opportunities for intensive study in language and literature. Courses in English introduce students to important works of literary art in the English and American literary traditions, to other national and regional literary traditions in English, and to diverse and multicultural voices and traditions. Students in English classes learn to express themselves critically and creatively, developing a sensitivity to language and precision in writing and speech as well as analytical skills that will serve them well in their other university courses and in their professional lives following their education at Bucknell. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in English - Concentration in Literary Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The minimum requirement for a major in English with a concentration in literary studies is nine courses in English; no foundation seminars or 100-level English courses other than Engl 199 will satisfy major requirements. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, 121 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1553 | The Bucknell English Department provides students with opportunities for intensive study in language and literature. Courses in English introduce students to important works of literary art in the English and American literary traditions, to other national and regional literary traditions in English, and to diverse and multicultural voices and traditions. Students in English classes learn to express themselves critically and creatively, developing a sensitivity to language and precision in writing and speech as well as analytical skills that will serve them well in their other university courses and in their professional lives following their education at Bucknell. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in English - Creative Writing | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | This program combines the core requirements of the English major with a series of courses in creative writing. This option allows students to learn to write creatively and artistically while encountering models for good writing through the study of literature. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include minimum of eight courses, including a survey course in literature, one course in literature before the 19th century, one course in 19th-century literature, one course in 20th-century literature, ENGL 202 Introduction to Creative Writing: Fiction or ENGL, 203 Introduction to Creative Writing: Nonfiction, ENGL 204 Creative Writing: Poetry, ENGL 210 Special Topics in Creative Writing, one seminar in creative writing. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, 121 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1553 | The Bucknell English Department provides students with opportunities for intensive study in language and literature. Courses in English introduce students to important works of literary art in the English and American literary traditions, to other national and regional literary traditions in English, and to diverse and multicultural voices and traditions. Students in English classes learn to express themselves critically and creatively, developing a sensitivity to language and precision in writing and speech as well as analytical skills that will serve them well in their other university courses and in their professional lives following their education at Bucknell. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in French | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | This program is best seen as a progression of linguistic cultural study organized in four stages. One hundred-level courses focus on language proficiency in cultural context. Two hundred-level courses consolidate language skills while beginning a more systematic study of French literature's and civilizations. A year or semester in France provides direct experience in the French culture. Three hundred-level courses focus on specific topics in literature, civilization, and cultural studies. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include a minimum of eight courses at the FREN 104 level or above, excluding FREN 201, 202, 301, and 302. These must include FREN 150, FREN 230, FREN 231, FREN 270 or 271, and three courses at the 300 level. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs, 200 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1353 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Geography | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography | This program of study in geography is designed to provide a strong background in the discipline and a substantial foundation for a liberal arts education. A major in geography is good preparation for those interested in graduate work in geography, environmental and resource fields, urban planning and policy, or in careers in law, journalism, government, international affairs, business, and public service. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include GEOG 209 - Economic Geography, GEOG 211 - Political Geography, GEOG 220 - Cultural Geography, GEOG 110 - World Environmental Systems (lab), GEOG 113 - Human Impact on the Environment (non-lab), GEOG 175 - Landforms of the World (lab), GEOG 231 - Weather and Climate (lab), GEOG 235 - Marine Environment (non-lab), GEOG 332 - Evolution, Ecology, and Human Impact (lab), GEOG 345 - Food and the Environment (lab), GEOG 204-Applied Geographic Information Systems. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Geography, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1421 | A variety is shown in the diversity of the geography department at Bucknell. Beyond their specific expertise in geography, the five faculty members bring to their work backgrounds in law, history, economics, anthropology, ecology and environmental science, and woman's studies. The strength of the department is its breadth - the variety of approaches to take, the variety of subjects and places to study and the simultaneous ability to work in depth, drawing upon overlapping and complementary faculty interests. The broad training of each of the geography faculty allows them to contribute to programs across the university as well. Geography courses open up connections across political, economic, cultural, and social dimensions of how people shape and are shaped by their environments around the world. Students benefit not only from the department's offerings, but also from related programs across the campus, including international relations, economics, environmental science, Latin American studies, political science, anthropology, and women's studies. Students unify their study through the three main themes in modern geography: culture, economy, and environment. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in German | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | The German studies program has as its goal that all majors achieve an intermediate-high to advanced-low proficiency in the areas of linguistic and cultural knowledge. This means that German majors can communicate not only about daily needs but that they also can understand and articulate positions on social, literary, or cultural topics with a reasonable amount of linguistic accuracy. A major in German may provide the basis for graduate work within the field. Moreover, German is considered a useful second language in many disciplines in the humanities, such as philosophy or art history. In combination with other majors, such as economics, international relations or management, a German major can prepare one for a career in international business or law or in the foreign service. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include the equivalent of seven full-credit courses at the GRMN 204 level and above. Four of these courses must meet specific requirements: Conversation and Composition (GRMN 204 or its equivalent), one course dealing with German cultural issues (GRMN 270, 272, 273 or its equivalent), a course focusing on German literary studies (GRMN 230 or its equivalent), and at least two courses at Bucknell at the 300 or Capstone level, only one of which may be independent study. GRMN 201-202 (Strategies in Speaking German) and GRMN 310 (German for Reading Knowledge) are not applicable to the major in German. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs, 200 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1353 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Greek | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | The program in classical languages is grouped into Latin and Greek and involves the study of the language and reading of primary authors. Although Latin and ancient Greek are no longer spoken, the department encourages students to study language knowing that work with the ancient languages encourages logical thought, provides a sophisticated grasp of the possibilities of language, enhances an understanding of the culture, and gives the student opportunities to study at first hand some of the greatest works of the human spirit. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include GREK 101-102 Introductory Classical and Biblical Greek, GREK 151 Intermediate Greek, GREK 201 Studies in Greek Authors, GREK 221 Studies in Greek Literature, GREK 235 Greek Complementary Reading (.5 credit), GREK 311 Independent Study in Greek. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, 6 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1335 | The Department of Classics offers courses in Classics which enable students to study the ancient Mediterranean world through a variety of perspectives: archaeology, art, architecture, history, language, literature, religion, and philosophy.The department prides itself on its interdisciplinarity, with faculty of the department collaborating with colleagues across the university, including Comparative Humanities, Religion, History, and Women's and Gender Studies. It is also especially proud of its continuing involvement in archaeological field excavations.The faculty routinely participate in and send Bucknell students to major excavations in Greece and the eastern Mediterranean. The Department attracts people with all sorts of interests, who go on to follow a wide variety of paths in life. Some go on to graduate school to study the classics or related fields. Some go to professional school for law, medicine, business or library services. Others become editors, translators, religious leaders, computer programmers, teachers, and leaders in the non-profit sector. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in History | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | This program in history is designed to encourage reflection on the nature, advantages, and struggles of human societies in different times and places, and to invite cross-cultural comparisons. Moreover, they are intended to stimulate the historical imagination and to promote critical and technical skills in the comprehension and production of historical narratives. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History, 107 Carnegie Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1123 | The history department at Bucknell includes scholars who are active in their professional subfields, who present a wide range of views and interests, and who take teaching seriously. Coursework in the department is demanding. Classes tend to be small, and students therefore can benefit from close contact with professional historians who take a personal interest in their students. Courses in history are designed to encourage reflection on the nature, advantages, and struggles of human societies in different times and places, and to invite cross-cultural comparisons. Moreover, they are intended to stimulate the historical imagination and to promote critical and technical skills in the comprehension and production of historical narratives. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in International Relations - Africa | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | International relations is a field of study concerned with the cultural, economic, environmental, military, and political interactions among the major units of the world, such as states, international organizations, transnational corporations, and nongovernmental organizations. The purposes of the major are to increase general knowledge about the history, institutions, interactions, and events of the international system; to develop insight into the objectives, beliefs, decisions, and policies of state and non-state actors; to provide a conceptual vocabulary and diverse theoretical perspectives to help explain and interpret international behavior; to build skills in critical analysis and evaluation of global issues; to develop an appreciation and tolerance of diversity and others and to encourage value evaluation and the solving of global problems. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include ANTH 227 (Witchcraft and Politics), ANTH 235 (Modern Africa), ECON 235 (African Economic Development), FREN 336 (Francophone Africa), GEOG 236 (Third World Development), HIST 290 (European Imperialism and Colonialism), HIST 291 (African History I), HIST 292 (African History II), HIST 299 (Topics in Non-western History)-when relevant, HIST 390 (Topics in African History), IREL 235 (Modern Africa), POLS 211 (Third World Politics), OCI 213 (Race in Historical and Comparative Perspective), SOCI 310 (The Sociology of Developing Societies). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1540 | This department has a thriving and well regarded international relations program. Distinguished faculty offer a carefully constructed, interdisciplinary major in international relations, which educates students generally about world affairs and prepares them for graduate study and professional careers in the international arena. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in International Relations - Asia | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | International relations is a field of study concerned with the cultural, economic, environmental, military, and political interactions among the major units of the world, such as states, international organizations, transnational corporations, and nongovernmental organizations. The purposes of the major are to increase general knowledge about the history, institutions, interactions, and events of the international system; to develop insight into the objectives, beliefs, decisions, and policies of state and non-state actors; to provide a conceptual vocabulary and diverse theoretical perspectives to help explain and interpret international behavior; to build skills in critical analysis and evaluation of global issues; to develop an appreciation and tolerance of diversity and others and to encourage value evaluation and the solving of global problems. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include EAST/ANTH 246 (Japanese Culture and Society), EAST/ANTH 247 (Japanese Film as Anthropology), EAST 248 (International Relations in East Asia), EAST/ANTH 249 (Inside the Japanese Corporations), EAST/ECON 274 (The Greater Chinese Economy), EAST/ECON 278 (Asian Economic Development), EAST/ECON 340 (Comparative Pacific Basin Economies), EAST 234/HIST 294 (China Since 1800), EAST 255/HIST 296 (Modern Japanese History), EAST 267/HIST 297 (The People's Republic of China), EAST 268/HIST 264 (Intellectual Conflict in Modern China), RELI 200/EAST 251 (Buddhism), RELI 202 (Hinduism), RELI 245/EAST 252 (Religions of China), RELI 246/EAST 253 (Religions of Japan), RELI 248/EAST 250 (Confucianism). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1540 | This department has a thriving and well regarded international relations program. Distinguished faculty offer a carefully constructed, interdisciplinary major in international relations, which educates students generally about world affairs and prepares them for graduate study and professional careers in the international arena. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in International Relations - Europe, Eurasia and Russia | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | This program is a field of study concerned with the cultural, economic, environmental, military, and political interactions among the major units of the world, such as states, international organizations, transnational corporations, and nongovernmental organizations. Courses from a number of departments and programs are drawn upon to offer an interdisciplinary major in international relations for the bachelor of arts degree. The purposes of the major are to increase general knowledge about the history, institutions, interactions, and events of the international system; to develop insight into the objectives, beliefs, decisions, and policies of state and nonstate actors; to provide a conceptual vocabulary and diverse theoretical perspectives to help explain and interpret international behavior; to build skills in critical analysis and evaluation of global issues; to develop an appreciation and tolerance of diversity and others and to encourage value evaluation and the solving of global problems. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include ECON 277 (The French Economy) open only to Bucknell en France students, ECON 305 (Comparative Economic Systems), ECON 317 (Economic Integration in Western Europe), ECON 324 (European Economic History), ECON 326 (History of Economic Thought), ECON 338 (Seminar in International Economics)-when relevant, FREN 270 (La France actuelle), FREN 370 (Topics in Civilization), GEOG 214 (Europe in the Age of Globalization), GRMN 270 (The Bourgeois Era: 19th-century Germany), GRMN 272 (Modern German Culture-)-when relevant, GRMN 295 (Topics in German Studies)-when relevant, GRMN 393 (Advanced Seminar in Selected Cultural Topics)-when relevant, GRMN 427 (The Culture of the Weimar Republic), HIST 233 (European State Systems), HIST 236 (Nineteenth-century Europe), HIST 239 (Contemporary Europe 1890-1995), HIST 260 (Race, Nation-state and International Relations), HIST 290 (European Imperialism and Colonialism), HIST 323 (U.S. Foreign Relations in the 19th Century). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1540 | This department has a thriving and well regarded international relations program. Distinguished faculty offer a carefully constructed, interdisciplinary major in international relations, which educates students generally about world affairs and prepares them for graduate study and professional careers in the international arena. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in International Relations - Latin America and Caribbean | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | International relations is a field of study concerned with the cultural, economic, environmental, military, and political interactions among the major units of the world, such as states, international organizations, transnational corporations, and nongovernmental organizations. The purposes of the major are to increase general knowledge about the history, institutions, interactions, and events of the international system; to develop insight into the objectives, beliefs, decisions, and policies of state and non-state actors; to provide a conceptual vocabulary and diverse theoretical perspectives to help explain and interpret international behavior; to build skills in critical analysis and evaluation of global issues; to develop an appreciation and tolerance of diversity and others and to encourage value evaluation and the solving of global problems. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include ANTH 252 (Peoples and Cultures of the Andean World), ECON 266 (Political Economy of the Caribbean), ECON 276 (Latin American Economic Development), ECON 338 (Seminar in International Economics)-when relevant, ENGL 397 (Seminar in Special Topics)-when relevant, GEOG 236 (Third World Development), GEOG 309 (Topics in Advanced Economic Geography), HIST 311 (U.S. History Since 1865: Foreign Relations), IREL 230 (International Relations of the Caribbean), IREL 400 (Latin American Economic Transition), LAMS 297 (Latin American History), LAMS 365 (Seminar in Latin American Studies), POLS 211 (Third World Politics), POLS 219 (Latin American Politics), POLS 285 (International Relations of the Western Hemisphere), POLS 350 (Seminar in Comparative Politics) when relevant SOCI 213 (Race in Historical and Comparative Perspective), SOCI 290 (Sociology of Caribbean Society), SOCI 310 (The Sociology of Developing Societies), SPAN 264 (Hispanic Topics)-when relevant, SPAN 280 (Spanish American Civilization). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1540 | This department has a thriving and well regarded international relations program. Distinguished faculty offer a carefully constructed, interdisciplinary major in international relations, which educates students generally about world affairs and prepares them for graduate study and professional careers in the international arena. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in International Relations - Middle East | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | International relations is a field of study concerned with the cultural, economic, environmental, military, and political interactions among the major units of the world, such as states, international organizations, transnational corporations, and nongovernmental organizations. The purposes of the major are to increase general knowledge about the history, institutions, interactions, and events of the international system; to develop insight into the objectives, beliefs, decisions, and policies of state and non-state actors; to provide a conceptual vocabulary and diverse theoretical perspectives to help explain and interpret international behavior; to build skills in critical analysis and evaluation of global issues; to develop an appreciation and tolerance of diversity and others and to encourage value evaluation and the solving of global problems. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include HIST 290 (European Imperialism and Colonialism), POLS 224 (Government and Politics of the Middle East), POLS 287 (United States and the Middle East), POLS 289 (Arab-Israeli Conflict), RELI 201 (Islam), RELI 210 (Judaism). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of International Relations, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1540 | This department has a thriving and well regarded international relations program. Distinguished faculty offer a carefully constructed, interdisciplinary major in international relations, which educates students generally about world affairs and prepares them for graduate study and professional careers in the international arena. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Latin | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | The program in classical languages is grouped into Latin and Greek and involves the study of the language and reading of primary authors. Although Latin and ancient Greek are no longer spoken, the department encourages students to study language knowing that work with the ancient languages encourages logical thought, provides a sophisticated grasp of the possibilities of language, enhances an understanding of the culture, and gives the student opportunities to study at first hand some of the greatest works of the human spirit. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include LATN 101-102 Introductory Latin, LATN 151 Intermediate Latin, LATN 221 Studies in Latin Literature (maybe repeated as authors vary), LATN 235 Latin Complementary Reading (.5 credit), LATN 311 Independent Study in Latin. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, 6 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1335 | The Department of Classics offers courses in Classics which enable students to study the ancient Mediterranean world through a variety of perspectives: archaeology, art, architecture, history, language, literature, religion, and philosophy.The department prides itself on its interdisciplinarity, with faculty of the department collaborating with colleagues across the university, including Comparative Humanities, Religion, History, and Women's and Gender Studies. It is also especially proud of its continuing involvement in archaeological field excavations.The faculty routinely participate in and send Bucknell students to major excavations in Greece and the eastern Mediterranean. The Department attracts people with all sorts of interests, who go on to follow a wide variety of paths in life. Some go on to graduate school to study the classics or related fields. Some go to professional school for law, medicine, business or library services. Others become editors, translators, religious leaders, computer programmers, teachers, and leaders in the non-profit sector. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Latin American Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American Studies Program | This program studies provides a framework, through interdisciplinary study in the humanities and social sciences, for systematic understanding of the Latin American cultural and historical experience and of the important role of Latin America in the world. Students are challenged by the study of a major Third World region to raise essential questions about human rights, responsibilities, values, and quality of life. Through the LAMS major, students develop broader perspectives on their own culture. These perspectives, combined with an expanded international world view, increased sensitivity to inter-American relations, and extensive study of the Spanish language, bring depth and sophistication to the major. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include LAMS 295 Topics in Latin American Studies, LAMS 297 Latin American History, LAMS 365 Seminar in Latin American Studies, SPAN 280 Spanish American Civilization, ANTH 252 Peoples and Cultures of the Andean World, ECON 276 Latin American Economic Development, ENST 325 Nature, Wealth, and Power, GEOG 236 Third World Development, IREL 230 International Relations of the Caribbean, LAMS 319 Independent Study, LAMS 499 Honors in Latin American Studies, POLS 211 Third World Politics, POLS 219 Latin American Politics, POLS 285 International Relations of the Western Hemisphere, POLS 350 Politics of Economic Development, SOCI 290 Sociology of Caribbean Society, SOCI 310 Sociology of Developing Societies, SPAN 222 Spanish American Literature, SPAN 285 Latino/Latina Literature in the U.S., SPAN 324 Twentieth-century Spanish American Literature, SPAN 351 Women's Writing in the Spanish-speaking World, SPAN 361 Topics in Hispanic Literature, SPAN 362 Topics in Hispanic Literature, SPAN 365 Topics in Spanish American Civilization, SPAN 461 Topics in Hispanic Literature, SPAN 462 Topics in Hispanic Literature, SPAN 465 Topics in Spanish American Civilization. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American Studies Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Latin American Studies Program, 103 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1421 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Myth and Text | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | This program focuses upon the study of the traditions of ancient mythology, the major Greek and Roman literary works and authors in translation, and the ways in which images and ideas from ancient myths and texts found shape in later literary traditions. Students interested in these topics may also want to consider the literature courses in Greek and Latin. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include CLAS 215 Classical Myth, CLAS 220 Classical Literature, CLAS 221 Tales of Heroes: Epic, CLAS 222 Greek Tragedy, CLAS 223 Ancient Laughter: Comedy, CLAS 224 Poetry of Passion in Greece and Rome. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, 6 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1335 | The Department of Classics offers courses in Classics which enable students to study the ancient Mediterranean world through a variety of perspectives: archaeology, art, architecture, history, language, literature, religion, and philosophy.The department prides itself on its interdisciplinarity, with faculty of the department collaborating with colleagues across the university, including Comparative Humanities, Religion, History, and Women's and Gender Studies. It is also especially proud of its continuing involvement in archaeological field excavations.The faculty routinely participate in and send Bucknell students to major excavations in Greece and the eastern Mediterranean. The Department attracts people with all sorts of interests, who go on to follow a wide variety of paths in life. Some go on to graduate school to study the classics or related fields. Some go to professional school for law, medicine, business or library services. Others become editors, translators, religious leaders, computer programmers, teachers, and leaders in the non-profit sector. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Philosophy | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philsophy | This program is designed to prepare students well for advanced work in philosophy, and some of Bucknell's philosophy students have gone on to do advanced work in philosophy at a number of the best graduate programs across the country. But philosophy at Bucknell has also prepared many students for a number of other vocations and supplemented their work in other fields. For this reason, philosophy is often chosen as a second major by students whose other major is preparing them for a specific vocation. In recent years, for example, students have majored in philosophy and economics, philosophy and political science, philosophy and biology, and philosophy and psychology. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The major in philosophy consists of a minimum of eight courses, which must include the following: PHIL 98 or 100 or 103 or 201 or 220, PHIL 103 (Logic) or 201 (Symbolic Logic), PHIL 205 (Greek Philosophy) and 207 (Development of Modern Philosophy), PHIL 213 (Ethics) or 228 (Contemporary Ethical Theory), two 300-level seminars or one 300-level seminar and either PHIL 323 or PHIL 321 and 322 and at least one additional elective course from the offerings in philosophy. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philsophy | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Philsophy, 69 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3461 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Political Science | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | This program is intended to contribute to the acquisition of skills and knowledge that form the foundation of a liberal arts education. The study of political science may provide background for careers in law, journalism, government service, international organizations, teaching, or business. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include 140 American Politics and Policy, 170 International Politics, 205 Comparative Politics, 210 Political Theory, electives in Political Science, one 300-level Political Science seminar. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, 265 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1300 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Psychology | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | This program analyzes the complex interactions between environmental and biological bases of behavior to study human and animal behavior. Students are trained in scientific methods and different theoretical perspectives in a variety of areas of psychology: physiological psychology, neuropsychology, sensation and perception, cognition, learning, child and adult development, social psychology, personality, health psychology, abnormal psychology, and animal behavior. In short, psychology analyzes the complex interactions between environmental and biological bases of behavior. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include PSYC 100 Introduction to Psychology, PSYC 215-Psychological Statistics or Math 216-Statistics, Five 200 level Courses, PSYC 203-Psychology of Learning, PSYC 204-Human Cognition, PSYC 250 Physiological Psychology, PSYC 252-Sensation and Perception, PSYC 266-Animal Behavior, PSYC 207-Developmental Psychology, PSYC 209-Social Psychology, PSYC 210-Abnormal Psychology, PSYC 212-Psychology of Emotion, PSYC 228-Personality Psychology, PSYC 290- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Physiological Psychology, PSYC 291- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Abnormal Psychology, PSYC 292- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Sensation and Perception, PSYC 293- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Learning, PSYC 294- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Human Cognition, PSYC 295- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Emotion ,PSYC 296- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Animal Behavior, PSYC 297- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Developmental Psychology, PSYC 298- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Personality, PSYC 299- Applied Research Methods Seminar in Social Psychology, PSYC 232-Psychology of Women, PSYC 233-Black Psychology, PSYC 234-Sport Psychology. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 203 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1200 | The psychology department trains students to understand and conduct studies of the mind and behavior, utilizing several perspectives and a variety of species. National surveys show that the psychology department at Bucknell is highly ranked among similar institutions in the number of majors going on to receive doctoral degrees. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Religion | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion | This program provides the context for historical and conceptual engagement with some of the most profound ideas, thinkers, and questions that challenge humanity. It also serves as the first stage for those interested in graduate work or a professional career in religion. Majors in religion have followed diverse national and international careers such as business, law, journalism, non-profit organizations, and public service. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religion, 6 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1205 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Russian Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | The Russian program offers four levels of Russian language study, striving to bring students to the intermediate high/advanced low level according to the ACTFL scale. This means that after graduation students are able to function effectively in Russian. Students majoring in Russian are strongly urged to deepen their knowledge of the language and country by studying in an approved summer or semester program in Russia. Students also may accelerate their language learning through intensive summer language study at other American universities. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Foreign Language Programs, 200 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1353 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Sociology (General) | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | The general major in sociology provides students with an overview of the discipline and exposure to a variety of specialty areas in the field. The general major is intended for students who wish a broad exposure to social issues and sociological concerns, either as part of their liberal arts education or in preparation for graduate study in the field. The general major is best suited for students who wish to study more than one area of sociology in depth. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The courses include sociology core courses: SOCI 208 Methods of Social Research and either SOCI 211 Classical Sociological Theory, or SOCI 212 Contemporary Sociological Theory. Students should take at least one sociology course at the 100 or 200 level before taking SOCI 208 Methods of Social Research. SOCI 208 is not intended for first-year students or first-semester sophomores. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 209 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1117 | Department of Sociology and Anthropology has two main areas: sociology and anthropology. Sociology offers a wide variety of integrative views of social life (theories), numerous techniques to research its patterns in understandable forms (methods) and just as many critical stances from which to judge the fairness of social orderings (values). Appropriately enough, this multiplicity provides a diversity to course offerings and, interestingly enough, a singularity of purpose for students in their study. Anthropology explores the diversity and integrity of other cultures, and shows the value of other ways of life. The discipline is, by nature, inclusive, importing ideas, methods, and subject matter from many sources to apply to its central focus: the study of human cultural behavior. The field also has significant applications to practical problems, both in this country and elsewhere. Theoretical, descriptive, and practical aspects of anthropology are represented among the department's faculty and courses. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Sociology - Concentration in Culture, Media and Leisure Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | This concentration is for sociology majors interested in the social production and reproduction of systems of meaning in the modern world. The concentration takes as its field of study all realms of cultural production and consumption. A specific focus is provided by mass media, popular culture, and public ritual forms (e.g., television, film, radio, popular press, the Internet and new media, video games, sport, fashion, popular music) that have assumed such critical importance in contemporary Western culture and increasingly in non-Western cultures under Western influence. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include Theory (one course): SOC 211: Classical Sociological Theory or SOC 212: Contemporary Sociological Theory, Methodology (two courses): SOC 208: Methods of Social Research and SOC 201: Field Research in Local Communities, Cultural Sociology (at least two courses from the following list): SOC 270: Popular Culture, SOC 335: Topics in Cultural Sociology, SOC 338: Culture and The Self, SOC 321: Sociology of Knowledge and Science, SOC 340: The Sociology of Religion, CAPS 428-01: Culture and Politics in the 1960s. Beyond these five courses, students must take at least one 300 or 400 level course from the following list which is not being applied to the cultural sociology component of the core: SOC 321: Sociology of Knowledge and Science, SOC 332: Seminar in American Society, SOC 335: Topics in Cultural Sociology, SOC 338: Culture and The Self, CAPS 428-01: Culture and Politics in the 1960s, SOC 306: Ethnographic Video, SOC 311: Globalization, Technology, and Cultural Change, SOC 340: The Sociology of Religion, SOC 434: Race, Gender, Sexuality, and Identity, CAPS 429: Disease, Bodies, and Culture, ANTH 410: Environmental Issues from a Cross-Cultural Perspective, SOC 410: Remembering the Holocaust, CAPS 428-02: Mating and Marrying: Families in America, SOC 447: Seminar in Social Mobility: Rags to Riches in America. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 209 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1117 | Department of Sociology and Anthropology has two main areas: sociology and anthropology. Sociology offers a wide variety of integrative views of social life (theories), numerous techniques to research its patterns in understandable forms (methods) and just as many critical stances from which to judge the fairness of social orderings (values). Appropriately enough, this multiplicity provides a diversity to course offerings and, interestingly enough, a singularity of purpose for students in their study. Anthropology explores the diversity and integrity of other cultures, and shows the value of other ways of life. The discipline is, by nature, inclusive, importing ideas, methods, and subject matter from many sources to apply to its central focus: the study of human cultural behavior. The field also has significant applications to practical problems, both in this country and elsewhere. Theoretical, descriptive, and practical aspects of anthropology are represented among the department's faculty and courses. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Sociology - Concentration in Human Services | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | This program focuses on institutions that serve and treat people with problems and also with the field of policy analysis. It often is chosen by students whose interest in sociology is related to a career interest in social work, education, a medical field, community development, or human services administration. The curriculum is intended to give students an exposure to the diversity of human service institutions. The courses emphasize field experiences, and encourage students to begin taking field-oriented courses as early in their career at Bucknell as possible. The concentration is rooted in sociology, but requirements for the major show recognition that the field by its nature is multi-disciplinary. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include SOCI 208 (Methods of Social Research), either SOCI 211 (The Sociological Tradition) or SOCI 212 (Social Theory), SOCI 215 (Human Service Systems), SOCI/ANTH 201 (Field Methods), At least one Capstone or 300-level course related to Human Services. SOCI 315 (Educational Policy and School Organization); SOCI 322 (Sociology of Medicine); SOCI 331 (Community Organizations in Northern Ireland); SOCI 402 (Public Service and Nonprofit Organizations); SOCI 418 (Social Services and Community: A Practicum). SOCI 110 (Social Problems in the 21st Century); SOCI 123 (Law and Society); SOCI 130 (Medicine and Society); SOCI 210 (Urban Condition); SOCI 213 (Race in Historical Perspective); SOCI 234 (Criminology); SOCI 239 (Deviance and Identity); SOCI 243 (Race and Ethnicity); SOCI 245 (Remaking America: Latin American Immigration); SOCI 251 (Violence and Society); SOCI 315 (Sociology of Education); SOCI 322 (Sociology of Medicine); SOCI 330 (Sectarian Conflict in Northern Ireland); SOCI 340 (Sociology of Religion); SOCI 360 (Third Sector Organizations: Nonprofits in America); SOCI 402 (Public Service and Nonprofit Organizations); SOCI 418 (Social Services and Community: A Practicum); SOCI 433 (Seminar on Law and Society); SOCI 434 (Seminar in Race/Ethnicity and Gender). ANTH 200 (Urban Anthropology), ANTH 251 (Women and Development), ANTH 265 (Food, Eating, and Culture); ANTH 270 (Sexuality and Culture), ANTH 287 (Anthropology in Action); and ANTH 410 (Environment in Cross-Cultural Perspectives). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 209 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1117 | Department of Sociology and Anthropology has two main areas: sociology and anthropology. Sociology offers a wide variety of integrative views of social life (theories), numerous techniques to research its patterns in understandable forms (methods) and just as many critical stances from which to judge the fairness of social orderings (values). Appropriately enough, this multiplicity provides a diversity to course offerings and, interestingly enough, a singularity of purpose for students in their study. Anthropology explores the diversity and integrity of other cultures, and shows the value of other ways of life. The discipline is, by nature, inclusive, importing ideas, methods, and subject matter from many sources to apply to its central focus: the study of human cultural behavior. The field also has significant applications to practical problems, both in this country and elsewhere. Theoretical, descriptive, and practical aspects of anthropology are represented among the department's faculty and courses. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Sociology - Concentration in Legal Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The concentration in legal studies requires 10 courses, no more han two of which may be at the 100 level in any department. |
Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology | College of Arts and Science, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, 209 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1117 | Department of Sociology and Anthropology has two main areas: sociology and anthropology. Sociology offers a wide variety of integrative views of social life (theories), numerous techniques to research its patterns in understandable forms (methods) and just as many critical stances from which to judge the fairness of social orderings (values). Appropriately enough, this multiplicity provides a diversity to course offerings and, interestingly enough, a singularity of purpose for students in their study. Anthropology explores the diversity and integrity of other cultures, and shows the value of other ways of life. The discipline is, by nature, inclusive, importing ideas, methods, and subject matter from many sources to apply to its central focus: the study of human cultural behavior. The field also has significant applications to practical problems, both in this country and elsewhere. Theoretical, descriptive, and practical aspects of anthropology are represented among the department's faculty and courses. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Spanish | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Spanish | The major in Spanish is designed to cultivate our students understanding, respect, and appreciation of the rich literary and cultural traditions of Spanish-speaking peoples; to provide a sound foundation for graduate study related to the Hispanic worlds; and to develop our students ability to analyze literary and cultural works in Spanish. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include 101 and 102 Elementary Spanish I and II, 101A Accelerated Elementary Spanish, 103 Intermediate Spanish I, 105 Intermediate Spanish II, 207 Grammar, Composition, and Conversation, 208 Advanced Conversation and Composition, 220 Spanish Literature, 222 Spanish American Literature, 270 Spanish Civilization, 280 Spanish American Civilization, 285 Latino/Latina Literature in the U. S., 295 Topics in Spanish, 310 Advanced Topics in Spanish Language, 322 Modern Spanish Literature, 323 Topics in Spanish American Short Story, 324 Twentieth-century Spanish American Literature, 331 Spanish Comedia and Shakespeare, 334 Garcia Lorca, Salvador Dali, and Luis Bunuel, 335 Spanish Drama Workshop, 338 Goya and the Drama of His Times. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Spanish | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Spanish, 200 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1353 | This department is committed to providing excellent instruction and learning opportunities that challenge majors and minors, and other interested students to develop their language proficiency in Spanish to the maximum, as well as to know and understand the literature and culture of the Spanish-speaking peoples of the world. It encourages students to think critically, to question their cultural assumptions about the Hispanic world, and to seek to immerse themselves, as much as possible, in a Spanish-speaking community. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Studio Art | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | The studio art major consists of a minimum of nine courses, seven of which must be in studio art and two of which must be in art history. No more than two of the nine required courses may be taken for credit elsewhere. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Art and Art History, Art Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1307 | The Department of Art and Art History encourages interactions among the disciplines of art, art history, museum studies, film studies, philosophy, history, modern languages and others. The curriculum enhances students' visual literacy and theory skills and prepares them for critical engagement in an increasingly visually oriented world. The faculty in art and art history, as well as the director and staff of the Samek Art Gallery, translate this ideal into courses appropriate for students in art, art history or related fields, to non majors seeking a well rounded academic background. | No | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Theatre | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Dance | The study and practice of theatre gives liberal arts students a deeper understanding of themselves and their world. They can awaken and discover their own creative impulses and imagination by inhabiting the poetic forms of other cultures, and they can develop an understanding of multiple perspectives by exploring the unique visions of theatre artists. It develops expertise in creative and collaborative problem solving, in visual and kinetic literacy, and in oral communication. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The core modules include THEA 256: Rituals, Festivals, Institutions, THEA 259: The Rise of Theatrical Realism, Performance course, Design and Technology course, Dramatic Literature and Criticism course, 300-level course, 300-level course, one additional THEA or DANC course, THEA 101, or THEA 102, or THEA 103, THEA 101, or THEA 102, or THEA 103. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Dance | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Theatre and Dance, 141 Coleman Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1235 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Major in Women's and Gender Studies | Full Time | Variable | US $43,250 a year | College of Arts and Sciences | A major in women's and gender studies may provide the first stage for graduate work in a number of disciplines. It also offers a background for careers in local and state agencies addressing the needs of girls and women, and in fields such as journalism, law, international affairs, teaching, and personnel management, as well as in public and private corporations. | Applicants must have a high school diploma, or a GED or the equivalent. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. Applicants are also required to submit SAT I scores for admission. | Major | Bucknell University | The modules include WMST 140: Introduction to Women's and Gender Studies, WMST 150: Introduction to Women's and Gender Studies, WMST 220: Introduction to Feminist Thought, ANTH 232 Gender and Sexuality in South Asia, ANTH 270 Sexuality and Culture, ANTH 273 Women Writing Culture, ANTH 282 Performance and Culture, CAPS 407 Women in the World Economy, ENGL 227 Contemporary Caribbean Literature: Voyages of Discovery, GEOG 223 Gender and Geography, SPAN 295 Escritoras Hispanoamericana, SPAN 324 El Genero en la Literature Hispanoamericana del siglo, WMST 232 Gender and Sexuality in South Asia, WMST 273 Women Writing Culture. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences | College of Arts and Sciences, 113 Marts Hall, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1301 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Arts in Biology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This degree in biology is designed to provide students with a solid foundation in their subfield of biology and to prepare them to either purse an advanced degree at another institution or obtain employment in industry, government or education. Graduate-level courses are offered in cell and molecular biology, organismal biology, and ecology and evolution. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 203 Biology Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1124 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Arts in Chemistry | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This program in chemistry is for high school teachers of chemistry. It is designed to allow high school teachers to experience chemistry as it is actually practiced. A goal of the department is to help the teachers see themselves as chemists as well as teachers. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, 203 Rooke Chemistry, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3258 | The Rooke Chemistry Building was opened in 1989 and is attached to the Biology Building. The combined buildings make it possible to teach biology, chemistry and biochemistry in a much more efficient and integrated way and the department conduct research in organic, inorganic, analytical, physical, biological, environmental and polymer chemistry. The chemistry department is exceptionally well-equipped with modern laboratory instrumentation. Students work "hands-on" with a wide assortment of instruments including UV-Visible and FTIR spectrophotometers, gas and liquid chromatographs, NMR spectrometers, and GC/mass spectrometers. Major instruments include a Bruker 300 MHz NMR spectrometer and a single-crystal X-ray diffractometer, an electrospray mass spectrometer equipped for LC/MS/MS, and three GC/MS instruments. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Arts in English | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | The graduate program in English offers the student a structure consisting of eight courses in English or six courses in English and two in other disciplines with adviser’s approval, and a thesis. This program is designed for those who plan to pursue a Ph.D. or an M.F.A; those who plan to teach in high school or community colleges; and those who desire to advance in related careers or programs of study. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English, 121 Vaughan Literature, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1553 | The Bucknell English Department provides students with opportunities for intensive study in language and literature. Courses in English introduce students to important works of literary art in the English and American literary traditions, to other national and regional literary traditions in English, and to diverse and multicultural voices and traditions. Students in English classes learn to express themselves critically and creatively, developing a sensitivity to language and precision in writing and speech as well as analytical skills that will serve them well in their other university courses and in their professional lives following their education at Bucknell. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Arts in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | In this program, candidates will confer with their academic adviser in the department of mathematics no later than the day of graduate enrollment. A tentative program of courses will be prepared; candidates may select programs with concentrations in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, or statistics. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include 604 Mathematical Statistics (AI or II; 3, 0), 605 Linear Statistical Models I (AI or II; 3, 0), 607 Statistical Design of Scientific Studies (II; 3, 0), 609 Introduction to Real Analysis II (AI or II; 3, 0), 611 Theory of Numbers (AI or II; 3, 0), 617 Statistics for the Biological Sciences (I; 3, 0), 619 Topics in Advanced Mathematics (I or II; R; 3, 0), 633 Topology (AI or II; 3, 0), 635 Geometry (I; 3, 0), 643 Numerical Analysis (I; 3, 0), 645 Linear Algebra (AI or II; 3, 0), 646 Modern Algebra (AI or II; 3, 0), 650 Methods in Applied Mathematics (AI or II; 3, 0), 658 Topics in Operations Research (AI orII; 3, 0), 662 Introduction to Complex Analysis (AI or II; 3, 0), 678 Seminar (AI or II; R; 2, 0), 691 and 692 Reading and Research (I or II or S; 2-8, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Animal Behavior | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program | This program is intended primarily for those who hope to later earn a Ph.D. or wish to amplify their expertise in animal-related career, such as laboratory research, field research, or conservation biology. The program is administered by the departments of biology and psychology. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include 603 Behavioral Neuroendocrinology (I or II; 3, 0), 613 Mammalogy (I; 3, 3), 617 Learning and Adaptive Behavior (I or II; 3, 0), 618 Comparative Physiology (I; 3, 0), 621 Behavioral Ecology (II; 3, 0), 624 Analysis of Psychological Data (I or II; 3, 0), 641 Organic Evolution (AI; 4, 0), 642 Neuroethology (II; 3, 0), 653 Ecosystem Ecology (II; 3, 0), 654 Tropical Ecology (II; 3, 0), 655 Behavior of Social Insects (I; 3, 3), 656 Plant-Animal Interactions (I; 3, 3), 657 Ornithology (II; 3, 3), 660 Graduate Research (I or II; R), 670 Primate Behavior and Ecology (I; 3, 3), 680 Thesis (I, II; or S), 686 Graduate Research (I or II) Half to full course. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program | College of Arts and Sciences, Animal Behavior Program, 203 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1200 | The College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization for 2700 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Biology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | This degree in biology is designed to provide students with a solid foundation in their subfield of biology and to prepare them to either purse an advanced degree at another institution or obtain employment in industry, government or education. Graduate-level courses are offered in cell and molecular biology, organismal biology, and ecology and evolution. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology, 203 Biology Building, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1124 | Bucknell's College of Arts and Sciences is one of the largest and most diverse of the top-ranked national liberal arts colleges. The College provides a strong liberal arts base-including both breadth of learning and depth of specialization-for 3000 Arts and Sciences students. In addition, the College of Arts and Sciences provides the basic mathematics, science, and liberal arts courses for students in the College of Engineering. The College comprises the three traditional liberal arts divisions: humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics. Over 275 faculty members in 31 departments and interdisciplinary programs offer 47 majors and 62 minors to Arts and Sciences students. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Chemical Engineering | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4624 per course | College of Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering | The candidates for a master’s degree in chemical engineering must complete three required core courses in chemical engineering, four elective courses, and a graduate thesis. The program requires an average of 24 months of full-time study. The core courses are offered in engineering mathematics, thermodynamics, reaction engineering, and transport theory. Topics offered as chemical engineering electives include polymer science, bioprocess engineering, advanced materials science and engineering, particle technology, fuel cell technology and independent study projects. In addition, graduate-level courses offered by other departments may be taken as electives with the approval of the chemical engineering department. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include 600 Process Engineering (I; 4, 2), 610 Advanced Process Engineering (II; 4, 2), 640 and 642 Chemical Engineering Projects (I and II; R; 1, 8), 644 Green Engineering (II; 4, 0), 650 Polymer Science (I or II; 3, 3), 651 Applied Process Analysis (II; 3, 2), 652 Applied Microbiology, Biochemistry, and Biochemical Engineering (I or II; 4, 0), 653 Product and Process Chemistry (II; 4, 0), 657 Applied Colloid, Surface, and Nanoscience (I; 4, 0), 670 and 672 Special Topics in Chemical Engineering (I and II; R; 4, 0), 680 Graduate Research and Thesis (I or II; 1, 6-12), 681 Topics in Reaction Engineering (I or II; 4, 0), 682 Topics in Chemical Engineering Applied Mathematics (I or II; 4, 0), 683 Topics in Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics (I or II; 4, 0), 685 Topics in Transport Theory (I or II; 4, 0), 686 Advanced Transport Theory (II; 4, 0), 687 and 688 Advanced Study in Chemical Engineering (I and II; R; 4, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1114 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Chemistry | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | This degree in chemistry is designed to ensure students a thorough foundation in their field and to prepare them to continue their graduate education elsewhere or to obtain attractive employment in industry, government, or education. Graduate-level courses are offered in analytical, biochemical, environmental, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Chemistry, 203 Rooke Chemistry, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3258 | The Rooke Chemistry Building was opened in 1989 and is attached to the Biology Building. The combined buildings make it possible to teach biology, chemistry and biochemistry in a much more efficient and integrated way and the department conduct research in organic, inorganic, analytical, physical, biological, environmental and polymer chemistry. The chemistry department is exceptionally well-equipped with modern laboratory instrumentation. Students work "hands-on" with a wide assortment of instruments including UV-Visible and FTIR spectrophotometers, gas and liquid chromatographs, NMR spectrometers, and GC/mass spectrometers. Major instruments include a Bruker 300 MHz NMR spectrometer and a single-crystal X-ray diffractometer, an electrospray mass spectrometer equipped for LC/MS/MS, and three GC/MS instruments. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Civil Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | In this program, the areas of specialization includes environmental engineering, soil mechanics and foundation engineering, structures, transportation, water resources, computer graphics, computer-aided design, railroad engineering, engineering mechanics, timber structures, pavement design, and materials performance and characterization, construction safety and innovation. The candidates are required to complete a theoretical research project. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include Design in Structural Engineering, Wood Engineering Design Principles, Advanced Structural Steel Design, Advanced Structural Stability, Finite Element Methods and Hydrology. | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1112 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Education - College Student Personnel (Non-Certification) | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | The purpose of the program is to prepare aspiring student affairs professionals for entry-level positions in residence life, student activities, career services, admissions, financial aid, and various other areas of practice. It is also designed to prepare those aspiring to faculty and upper-level administrative positions in academe for doctoral level study in higher education administration. A comprehensive program of graduate coursework provides a theoretical understanding of the processes of learning and development that occur in later adolescence and throughout adulthood, as well as the social, cultural, and organizational contexts in which these processes take place. This program of courses also introduces skills of intervention and inquiry, which are further refined through the completion of multiple internship experiences and a major scholarly project. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education, 457 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1324 | The Education Department works to prepare students for prominent roles as public intellectuals. Their blend of social sciences and professional preparation coursework is theoretically grounded and presents educational issues within social contexts that are diverse and evolving. Graduates will use their capacity for self-reflection and ethical reasoning to respond creatively to challenges encountered in their personal and professional lives. The Education Department's primary goal is the development of the students' thinking and problem-solving abilities so that they will be able to help people maximize their opportunities for success in educational environments. It views the field of education as a social science, and programs within the department reflect that perspective. In education, as in any other social or natural science, effectiveness is measured in terms of the ability of professionals to solve the problems of the discipline. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Education - School Psychology (Certification) | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | The school psychology program is designed to develop graduates who are adept at identifying and resolving the learning, social, and emotional problems of diverse learners. The program teaches graduate students to apply the scientific process to clinical issues, build and sustain consultative relationships and to conduct and evaluate research. It helps students develop problem-solving skills that are effective at the individual and systems levels. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Education, 457 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1324 | The Education Department works to prepare students for prominent roles as public intellectuals. Their blend of social sciences and professional preparation coursework is theoretically grounded and presents educational issues within social contexts that are diverse and evolving. Graduates will use their capacity for self-reflection and ethical reasoning to respond creatively to challenges encountered in their personal and professional lives. The Education Department's primary goal is the development of the students' thinking and problem-solving abilities so that they will be able to help people maximize their opportunities for success in educational environments. It views the field of education as a social science, and programs within the department reflect that perspective. In education, as in any other social or natural science, effectiveness is measured in terms of the ability of professionals to solve the problems of the discipline. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Electrical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering | The primary goal of the electrical engineering curriculum is to provide technical content that is current and relevant to present and future engineering practice at a level commensurate with students' abilities and interests. Another goal is to foster growth in students' analytical faculties, design abilities, and problem-solving skills. The third major emphasis is to encourage students to prepare for a lifetime of continuous learning in a world of accelerating change. Within electrical engineering, it is impossible to guarantee that any particular set of topics will retain its present importance. Given the dynamic nature of the field, it is important to provide a stable background in the fundamentals and continuously update the curriculum for new applications and emerging technologies. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include 608 and 609 Advanced Electrical Engineering Laboratory (I or II; R), 610 Biomedical Signal Processing and Instrumentation (I or II; 3), 611 Neural Signals and Systems (I or II; 3, 2), 628 and 629 Advanced Electrical Engineering Problems (I or II; R), 642 Digital VLSI Circuit Design (I or II; 3, 3), 643 High Performance Computer Architecture (I or II; 3, 0), 644 Advanced Digital Design (I or II; 3, 3), 645 Simulation (I or II; 3, 3), 652 Power Electronics (AI; 3), 660 Optoelectronic Materials and Devices (I or II; 3, 3), 662 Fiber Optics Fundamentals (I or II; 3, 3), 663 Introduction to Mechatronics (I; 2, 2), 670 Communication and Information Systems (I or II; 3, 0), 671 Random Signals and Noise (II; 4, 0), 672 Digital Signal Processing (II; 3, 2), 674 Digital Image Processing (AI; 3, 0), 675 Computer Communication Networks (II; 3, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1234 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Environmental Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include 621 Hydrology (I or II; 3, 3), 622 Open Channel Flow (I or II; 4, 0), 629 Advanced Topics in Water Resources (I or II; 4, 0), 640 Physical/Chemical Treatment Processes (I or II; 3, 3), 641 Environmental Engineering Biotechnology (I or II; 3, 3), 642 Solid Waste Management (I or II; 4, 0), 644 Hazardous Waste Management (I or II; 3, 3), 645 Environmental Engineering Chemistry (I or II ; 3, 3), 646 Water Treatment Design (I or II; 4, 0), 647 Air Pollution Control (I; 3, 1), 648 Environmental Engineering Unit Operations and Processes (I or II; 3, 3), 649 Advanced Topics in Environmental Engineering (I or II; R; 4, 0), 651 Environmental Geotechnology (II; 3, 3), 699 Thesis (I and/or II). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1112 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. | |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in General Experimental Psychology | Full Time | 2 Year(s) | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | The general experimental program is intended primarily for students planning to enter a Ph.D. program and pursue a career in research or teaching. The program involves both research and course work but is unusual in the extent to which it provides students with extensive research experience and skills under the close supervision of faculty members. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include 601 History of Psychology (II; 3, 0), 604 Advanced Developmental Psychology (I or II; 3, 0) , 605 Developmental Psychopathology (I or II; 3, 0) , 606 Advanced Abnormal Psychology (I or II; 3, 0) , 607 Culture and Child Development (I or II; 3, 0), 609 Appetite and Eating Behavior (I or II; 3, 0), 616 Advanced Social Psychology (I or II; 3, 0) , 617 Learning and Adaptive Behavior (I or II; 3, 0), 618 Cognitive Aging (I or II; 3, 0) , 619 Topics in Psychology (I and II; R; 3, 0) , 624 Analysis of Psychological Data (I or II; 3, 0) , 625 Advanced Personality Theory (I or II; 3, 0), 639 Psychology of Music (I or II; 3, 0) , 643 Neural Plasticity (I; 3, 0) , 649 Human Neuropsychology (I or II; 3, 0) , 652 Advanced Perception (I or II; 3, 0) , 669 Psychology of Beauty and Attraction (I or II; 3, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Psychology, 203 O'Leary, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1200 | The psychology department trains students to understand and conduct studies of the mind and behavior, utilizing several perspectives and a variety of species. National surveys show that the psychology department at Bucknell is highly ranked among similar institutions in the number of majors going on to receive doctoral degrees. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Mathematics | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | In this program, candidates will confer with their academic adviser in the department of mathematics no later than the day of graduate enrollment. A tentative program of courses will be prepared; candidates may select programs with concentrations in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, or statistics. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include 604 Mathematical Statistics (AI or II; 3, 0), 605 Linear Statistical Models I (AI or II; 3, 0), 607 Statistical Design of Scientific Studies (II; 3, 0), 609 Introduction to Real Analysis II (AI or II; 3, 0), 611 Theory of Numbers (AI or II; 3, 0), 617 Statistics for the Biological Sciences (I; 3, 0), 619 Topics in Advanced Mathematics (I or II; R; 3, 0), 633 Topology (AI or II; 3, 0), 635 Geometry (I; 3, 0), 643 Numerical Analysis (I; 3, 0), 645 Linear Algebra (AI or II; 3, 0), 646 Modern Algebra (AI or II; 3, 0), 650 Methods in Applied Mathematics (AI or II; 3, 0), 658 Topics in Operations Research (AI orII; 3, 0), 662 Introduction to Complex Analysis (AI or II; 3, 0), 678 Seminar (AI or II; R; 2, 0), 691 and 692 Reading and Research (I or II or S; 2-8, 0). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics | College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Mathematics, 380 Olin Science, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1343 | In the Department of Mathematics at Bucknell University, they offer students the opportunity to learn about many of the branches of mathematical science. Students can take courses in pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and math education. Through these courses and the other activities in the department, students will experience the elegance and beauty of mathematical thought and will prepare themselves for a wide variety of opportunities after graduation whether in the workplace or graduate studies. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 211291 | Bucknell University | Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering | Full Time | Variable | $4624 per course | College of Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering | This program requires six graduate level courses and a thesis for the master’s degree. Of these six courses, five must be in the department of mechanical engineering; one may be a graduate level course in physics or in the College of Engineering. The master’s thesis is regarded as both education for the candidate and a contribution to public knowledge. This requirement of a 1.5 course credit thesis in the mechanical engineering department may be satisfied by: an exercise utilizing novel approaches to solve a practical engineering problem; an exercise designed to develop research ability and to demonstrate research performance; an experimental or theoretical research project. A final oral examination must be passed at least two weeks before the degree is to be received. The students must defend a thesis proposal prior to registration for thesis credit. | Applicants must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution or certification of corresponding achievement from a foreign institution. A minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 (on a scale of 4.0) is required for admission. Applicants must also submit their scores on the Graduate Record Examination general test and a subject test (if required by department). The minimum score on the general test is 1000. International students whose native language is not English must demonstrate English language proficiency by obtaining minimum TOEFL score of 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based). Applicants may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7.0 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY | The modules include 622 Advanced Energy Conversion (I or II; 4, 0), 624 Internal Combustion Engines (I; 4, 0), 632Compressible Fluid Dynamics (I or II; 4, 0), 635 Aerodynamics (I or II; 4, 0), 645 Engineering Acoustics and Noise Control (I or II; 4, 0), 646 Flow-induced Noise and Vibration (I or II; 4, 0), 652 Advanced Dynamics (I or II; 4, 0), 653 Robotics (I or II; 4, 0), 660 Engineering Optimization (I or II; 4, 0), 660 Engineering Optimization (I or II; 4, 0), 663 Introduction to Mechatronics (I or II; 4, 0), 664 Mechanism Design (I or II; 3,0), 666 Applied Fracture Mechanics (I or II; 4, 0), 667 Finite Element Methods (I or II; 3, 2). | Bucknell University | Michael Trace Coats, Study Abroad Advisor | 3550 | 701 Moore Avenue, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 1304 | College of Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering | College of Engineering, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Bucknell University, LEWISBURG, Pennsylvania, 17837, +1 570 577 3193 | Bucknell's College of Engineering provides its students with the tools to question, explore, synthesize, and fully participate in the achievement of their professional and personal goals. The College of Engineering is dedicated to providing outstanding educational opportunities in engineering to a predominantly undergraduate student body of talented men and women. In accord with the University's Mission Statement, the College nurtures the intellectual, professional, and personal development of its students. The College strives to prepare them for entry into the engineering profession, related fields and graduate programs, and for continuing development as highly competent professionals and responsible members of society. A Bucknell engineering education is distinguished by frequent interaction between students and faculty, a strong laboratory component in the curricula, and an emphasis on learning within a liberal arts university environment. The faculty are dedicated to teaching excellence and are actively engaged in scholarship in support of the educational mission, the discipline, or the profession. | Yes | All first-year students live on floors with other first-year students. Besides the traditional residence hall experience, students can choose from a residential College, a CHOICE hall, a quiet floor and the Leadership Living Community. After their first year, students can apply to live in a variety of settings:traditional residence halls, apartment-style facilities, small house communities (which include both special interest houses and theme houses), substance-free or quiet housing, as well as off-campus housing with priority given to rising seniors. Bucknell guarantees housing for all four years. Bucknell continually renovates its residence halls to make them a welcoming place for students during their years at Bucknell. From traditional residence hall rooms to apartment-style living, the university offers a variety of housing options to students. All the residential houses have cable TV lounge, loftable furniture, built in closet, Internet, laundry room, computer lab, common area, and vending machines. |
| 165015 | Brandeis University | Master of Arts in Teaching in Elementary Education: Jewish Day School/ DeLeT | Full Time | 12 Month(s) | $7125 per term | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | The Jewish Day Schools/DeLeT concentration of the MAT opens a door to day schooling teaching. DeLeT (Day School Leadership through Teaching; the Hebrew word for door) prepares recent college graduates and midcareer changers to teach general and Judaic studies in the elementary grades in Jewish day school. Generous financial assistance is awarded to DeLeT students. DeLeT is a joint initiative of the Mandel Center for Studies in Jewish Education and the Brandeis Education Program. | Applicants should have earned a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution for graduate admissions. International students, whose native language is not English, must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (paper-based), 250 (computer-based) or 79 (internet-based). Students may also take the International English Language Testing Service (IELTS) in lieu of the TOEFL. A minimum score of 7 is required for the IELTS. | Masters | BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY | Brandeis University | 5598 | 415 South Street, WALTHAM, Massachusetts, 02453, +1 781 736 3480 | Established in 1953, Near Eastern and Judiac Studies (NEJS) is the oldest program of its kind in the United States with the largest instructional staff of any secular university outside of the State of Israel. Its faculty covers the ancient Near East, the modern Middle East, Christian and Islamic studies, and the range of Jewish experience from the Bible and the ancient Near East to present-day world Jewry. The variety of scholarly disciplines represented by members of the Department include history, philology, history of religions, literary criticism, political science, and sociology. The Department's Hebrew Program is the largest in the country. The international scholarly journal, POLIN: A Journal of Polish-Jewish Studies, is edited within the department. The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project focuses on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The University library has one of the best collections of Hebraica and Judaica in the nation. In the NEJS Department students have the opportunity to pursue course work in such specialty areas as Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Jewish History, and the Modern Middle East. | Yes | Brandeis has nine campus residence areas, with a 10th scheduled to open in spring 2009. Students are guaranteed four consecutive semesters of on-campus housing, unless they are part of an entering midyear class. Charles River Apartments: Apartment complex that houses upper-class students and graduate students. For More Information, Contact: Richard DeCapua-Director of Residence Life,781-736-5060. E-mail:decapua@brandeis.edu. Room and board charges $9908 per year. |